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Watch: Music For Your Heart

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A beautiful bit of work today, with this video to “Unwound”, by Music For Your Heart. Very taken with this; imagine a subtle and warm torch song built on the spare dynamics of something from Slint’s “Spiderland”, and you’re close to the appeal of this opening track from Sandra Zettpunkt’s forthcoming album. An unfamiliar name, perhaps, though “Turning Marvel” was recorded by Teenage Fanclub’s Raymond McGinley and mastered by Shellac’s Bob Weston, and features double bass from Calexico’s Volker Zander. Auspicious company, I guess. In the spirit of full disclosure, I should mention that Sandra (who currently lives in Berne) is an old friend, but this is genuinely lovely. Have a look and let me know what you think. There are more songs at her Myspace. [youtube]6Zrlicb4Ysk[/youtube]

A beautiful bit of work today, with this video to “Unwound”, by Music For Your Heart. Very taken with this; imagine a subtle and warm torch song built on the spare dynamics of something from Slint’s “Spiderland”, and you’re close to the appeal of this opening track from Sandra Zettpunkt’s forthcoming album. An unfamiliar name, perhaps, though “Turning Marvel” was recorded by Teenage Fanclub’s Raymond McGinley and mastered by Shellac’s Bob Weston, and features double bass from Calexico’s Volker Zander.

Neil, Bruce and Killers Hard Rock Calling New Supports Confirmed

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Howling Bells, Magic Numbers, Starsailor and The Low Anthem are just some of the latest artists confirmed to play this month's Hard Rock Calling festival in London. The three night event, which takes place in Hyde Park from June 26, is headlined by The Killers, Neil Young and Bruce Springsteen, wit...

Howling Bells, Magic Numbers, Starsailor and The Low Anthem are just some of the latest artists confirmed to play this month’s Hard Rock Calling festival in London.

The three night event, which takes place in Hyde Park from June 26, is headlined by The Killers, Neil Young and Bruce Springsteen, with appearances from bands such as Fleet Foxes and The Pretenders already announced.

Some limited Friday (June 26) tickets have just been released and there are some weekend passes still available too, from www.hardrockcalling.co.uk.

This year’s Hard Rock Calling full artist listing so far is:

Friday June 26:

MAIN STAGE

The Killers

The Kooks

Howling Bells

PEPSI MAX STAGE

Metric

Silversun Pickups

Saturday June 27:

MAIN STAGE

Neil Young

Fleet Foxes

Ben Harper & Relentless7

Seasick Steve

The Pretenders

PEPSI MAX STAGE

Magic Numbers

Johnny Flynn

Mumford and Sons

Priscilla Ahn

Sunday June 28:

MAIN STAGE

Bruce Springsteen

Dave Matthews Band

James Morrison

The Gaslight Anthem

PEPSI MAX STAGE

Starsailor

Joshua Radin

The Low Anthem

The Pretty Things

For more music and film news click here

You can also now follow Uncut on Twitter! For news alerts, to find out what we’re playing on the stereo and more, join us here @uncutmagazine

Pic credit: PA Photos

Neil Young – Archives Vol 1

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From the very beginning of his musical career, Neil Perceval Young has never doubted his own importance, even in his high school days. The recollections of colleagues and friends recently gathered in Uncut Take 142 describe a young man utterly focused on writing, playing and the technology of stardom, be it guitars or blagging gigs. The first disc of Archives offers a fascinating glimpse of the teenage Neil, already able to blaze out on electric guitar with The Squires, but also venturing into the twee folk of “I’ll Love You Forever”, delivered in the vulnerable, melodic falsetto that’s been his calling card ever since. The demo of “Sugar Mountain” at age 20 finds him almost fully formed. It’s telling that “Sugar Mountain” is a song about leaving childhood behind; there never was a time when Neil Young wasn’t staring into his rear-view mirror, chewing over experience, whether reminiscing on “Helpless” about “the town in North Ontario/all my changes were there” or delivering at the ripe age of 26, a film called Journey Through The Past, more of which later. It’s entirely in character that at 63 Young should issue the obsessively detailed electronic documentation of his life that is Archives Vol 1, the most ambitious retrospective any musician has undertaken. It’s a behemoth of a boxset, firstly as there are several versions of it. Do you go for the DVD version, which delivers 10 discs, including the movie, and a plethora of photos, lyrics and memorabilia? Or the economy set, which delivers audio content only? Or do you dig deep for the Blu-Ray version, where you can browse through the time-line of Neil’s life and discover hidden tracks and such odd video clips as Neil in the corner of a New York bar, playing for passing strangers, before swapping media horses to leaf through the gloss of the colour book? One suspects most fans will take options two or three, since the DVD version won’t deliver in your CD player (or download to iTunes), and listening to Neil’s archives while watching an antique record player or tape recorder, YouTube style, soon gets old. Interactive trickery aside, what does the committed Young fan get for their bucks? For many, the answer may be not as much as they hoped. As deep musical archaeology the disc of Young’s formative years is intriguing and largely unreleased, but predictably in a lesser class to what followed after he’d joined Buffalo Springfield in 1966, or his solo output after signing to Reprise in 1968. The Springfield material is all extant in one form or another apart from “Sell Out”, a quirky commentary on commercial pressure with a “Subterranean Homesick Blues” tinge to it, and “Slowly Burning”, a dreamy string-laden guitar instrumental. The 26 tracks from the era of Neil Young and Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (Disc02 and Disc04) likewise hold few surprises beyond a a live session in which Young berates his audience – “You’re all so down, I’m going home to write for a month” – before delivering a beatific version of “Sugar Mountain”. His show at Toronto’s Riverboat club in January 1969 – the content of Disc03 – offers an equally compelling sample of Young’s live act. Neil spoofs his meagre crowd with rambling asides about “the English guitarist Alan O’Dale – he’s better than Clapton” between poised takes of Springfield’s (and his own) songs. The crowd clearly don’t realise to what they’re being treated by a man who within the year would become a major star. His mercurial ascent with Crazy Horse and then Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young is well captured here, demonstrating how Young songs like “I Believe In You” and “Helpless” overlapped the styles of both bands: the muscular approach of Crazy Horse (perfectly captured live on Disc05) and the intricate harmonies of CSN&Y. By the turn of the decade Young was writing profusely and with an acuteness that his earlier work lacked. After The Gold Rush – profiled extensively on Disc06 – with its themes of mortality and vulnerability, ecology and political anger, perfectly caught the mood of disillusion that greeted the departure of the ’60s. If the follow-up, 1972’s Harvest, took that mood to a more self-satisfied place it was understandable; Young was by now a wealthy star esconced on his Broken Arrow ranch in California, with a laid-back lifestyle enforced on him by spinal surgery. Disc08 is given over to this period, interspersing original album versions with out-takes that vindicate the original choice, and sundry live takes that include a superb “Heart Of Gold”. In there, too, is 1971’s Toronto concert at Massey Hall (Disc07) – previously released but here endowed with grainy live footage and home movies from Broken Arrow – you want to know who inspired “Old Man”? Here he is, in all his weatherbeaten glory. That leaves Journey Through The Past (Disc09), Young’s first directorial outing as Bernard Shakey, released in 1973 to a critical panning and dormant until now. As a movie it’s a mess, a hopeless mix of documentary footage from the 1970-71 CSN &Y tour, clips of Neil that invariably involve cars, and a long end sequence of clumsy symbolism involving black-hooded horsemen, a robed scholar stranded in a desert and suchlike. As a piece of history it’s priceless, capturing CSN&Y in blistering, indeed, deranged form onstage, spaced out offstage amid fields of clover, and articulating the paranoia that had infested the hippy dream –cutting away to a clip of Richard Nixon promising America “clean air and clean water” or seeing “Ohio” to the Kent State massacre, you get a whiff of the times. Indeed, an entire wordless scene is devoted to Neil and his old lady sitting on a vintage car fender smoking a doobie; the hippyidyll in aspic. Archives bristles with much more – you’ll find, for example Young’s father’s review of his 1971 show – and it’s hard not to believe that Neil the tech-head has not laid down a template for all future retrospectives (one can imagine Dylan and McCartney, the only artists of comparable stature and longevity, paying close attention). There’s more, too much more, to come, but for now, Volume One will do just fine. For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive For more music and film news click here NEIL SPENCER

From the very beginning of his musical career, Neil Perceval Young has never doubted his own importance, even in his high school days. The recollections of colleagues and friends recently gathered in Uncut Take 142 describe a young man utterly focused on writing, playing and the technology of stardom, be it guitars or blagging gigs. The first disc of Archives offers a fascinating glimpse of the teenage Neil, already able to blaze out on electric guitar with The Squires, but also venturing into the twee folk of “I’ll Love You Forever”, delivered in the vulnerable, melodic falsetto that’s been his calling card ever since. The demo of “Sugar Mountain” at age 20 finds him almost fully formed.

It’s telling that “Sugar Mountain” is a song about leaving childhood behind; there never was a time when Neil Young wasn’t staring into his rear-view mirror, chewing over experience, whether reminiscing on “Helpless” about “the town in North Ontario/all my changes were there” or delivering at the ripe age of 26, a film called Journey Through The Past, more of which later. It’s entirely in character that at 63 Young should issue the obsessively detailed electronic documentation of his life that is Archives Vol 1, the most ambitious retrospective any musician has undertaken.

It’s a behemoth of a boxset, firstly as there are several versions of it. Do you go for the DVD version, which delivers 10 discs, including the movie, and a plethora of photos, lyrics and memorabilia? Or the economy set, which delivers audio content only? Or do you dig deep for the Blu-Ray version, where you can browse through the time-line of Neil’s life and discover hidden tracks and such odd video clips as Neil in the corner of a New York bar, playing for passing strangers, before swapping media horses to leaf through the gloss of the colour book? One suspects most fans will take options two or three, since the DVD version won’t deliver in your CD player (or download to iTunes), and listening to Neil’s archives while watching an antique record player or tape recorder, YouTube style, soon gets old.

Interactive trickery aside, what does the committed Young fan get for their bucks? For many, the answer may be not as much as they hoped. As deep musical archaeology the disc of Young’s formative years is intriguing and largely unreleased, but predictably in a lesser class to what followed after he’d joined Buffalo Springfield in 1966, or his solo output after signing to Reprise in 1968. The Springfield material is all extant in one form or another apart from “Sell Out”, a quirky commentary on commercial pressure with a “Subterranean Homesick Blues” tinge to it, and “Slowly Burning”, a dreamy string-laden guitar instrumental.

The 26 tracks from the era of Neil Young and Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (Disc02 and Disc04) likewise hold few surprises beyond a a live session in which Young berates his audience – “You’re all so down, I’m going home to write for a month” – before delivering a beatific version of “Sugar Mountain”.

His show at Toronto’s Riverboat club in January 1969 – the content of Disc03 – offers an equally compelling sample of Young’s live act. Neil spoofs his meagre crowd with rambling asides about “the English guitarist Alan O’Dale – he’s better than Clapton” between poised takes of Springfield’s (and his own) songs. The crowd clearly don’t realise to what they’re being treated by a man who within the year would become a major star. His mercurial ascent with Crazy Horse and then Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young is well captured here, demonstrating how Young songs like “I Believe In You” and “Helpless” overlapped the styles of both bands: the muscular approach of Crazy Horse (perfectly captured live on Disc05) and the intricate harmonies of CSN&Y.

By the turn of the decade Young was writing profusely and with an acuteness that his earlier work lacked. After The Gold Rush – profiled extensively on Disc06 – with its themes of mortality and vulnerability, ecology and political anger, perfectly caught the mood of disillusion that greeted the departure of the ’60s. If the follow-up, 1972’s Harvest, took that mood to a more self-satisfied place it was understandable; Young was by now a wealthy star esconced on his Broken Arrow ranch in California, with a laid-back lifestyle enforced on him by spinal surgery. Disc08 is given over to this period, interspersing original album versions with out-takes that vindicate the original choice, and sundry live takes that include a superb “Heart Of Gold”.

In there, too, is 1971’s Toronto concert at Massey Hall (Disc07) – previously released but here endowed with grainy live footage and home movies from Broken Arrow – you want to know who inspired “Old Man”? Here he is, in all his weatherbeaten glory.

That leaves Journey Through The Past (Disc09), Young’s first directorial outing as Bernard Shakey, released in 1973 to a critical panning and dormant until now. As a movie it’s a mess, a hopeless mix of documentary footage from the 1970-71 CSN &Y tour, clips of Neil that invariably involve cars, and a long end sequence of clumsy symbolism involving black-hooded horsemen, a robed scholar stranded in a desert and suchlike. As a piece of history it’s priceless, capturing CSN&Y in blistering, indeed, deranged form onstage, spaced out offstage amid fields of clover, and articulating the paranoia that had infested the hippy dream –cutting away to a clip of Richard Nixon promising America “clean air and clean water” or seeing “Ohio” to the Kent State massacre, you get a whiff of the times. Indeed, an entire wordless scene is devoted to Neil and his old lady sitting on a vintage car fender smoking a doobie; the hippyidyll in aspic.

Archives bristles with much more – you’ll find, for example Young’s father’s review of his 1971 show – and it’s hard not to believe that Neil the tech-head has not laid down a template for all future retrospectives (one can imagine Dylan and McCartney, the only artists of comparable stature and longevity, paying close attention). There’s more, too much more, to come, but for now, Volume One will do just fine.

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

For more music and film news click here

NEIL SPENCER

Album Reviews: The Rolling Stones Reissues

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THE ROLLING STONES Reissues: Sticky Fingers 5* Goats Head Soup 5* It’s Only Rock’N’Roll 4* Black And Blue 4* Some Girls 5* Emotional Rescue 3* Tattoo You 4* Undercover 4* *** If you grew up in the 1970s, The Rolling Stones were not Lucifer or Jumpin’ Jack Flash. They were five guys in Gene Kelly sailor suits cavorting inside a striped tent filled with foam. They looked as hammy as Elton, yet had godless dark shadows around their eyes. Talk about intriguing! However, even as that 1974 promo film for “It’s Only Rock’N’Roll (But I Like It)” flickered on children’s TV, our elders were declaring the Stones a spent force with a dead-duck dictator, his power reduced to a pair of rubber lips and a black, rotting soul. Today, the viewpoint prevails that the Stones took their eye off the ball somewhere around 1973 and never regained momentum. We’ve heard the theories. Bianca ruined Mick. Heroin ruined Keith. Money, arrogance and complacency ruined whatever was left. But while their growing fondness for sentimental ballads like “Angie” (Goats Head Soup), “Till The Next Goodbye” (It’s Only Rock’N’Roll) and “Memory Motel” (Black And Blue) must have dismayed fans who craved a return to top-dollar rock’n’roll, it’s clear in hindsight that the Stones had entered the most musically accomplished – and most unfairly criticised – phase in their history. The tempos slowed, lead guitarist Mick Taylor rose silkily to the challenge, and discreet influences of Stevie Wonder, Van Morrison and Traffic blended subtly into an exotic, herbal, soulful, timeless, rather melancholy strain of mid-Atlantic rock. Some of it was beautiful: “Angie, Angie, you can’t say we never tried”. Some of it was less so. (West Indian accent: “I’m workin’ so hard to keep you in de luxury.”) Keyboards were prominent, notably electric pianos and Motown-favoured clavinets, and ‘outside’ musicians were used extensively. On Black And Blue (1976), the recording sessions and the auditions for Taylor’s replacement became one and the same thing. Even after Ronnie Wood’s arrival, and notwithstanding the back-to-basics approach that they took on Some Girls (and its less appealing follow-up, Emotional Rescue), the Stones continued to be musicians worth paying attention to. They simply do not play their instruments like any other band, and can sound both sloppy and sophisticated; garage-y and precision-honed; behind the beat and dead-on-the-nail. Some songs appear to have very little going for them (“Dance Little Sister”, “Hey Negrita”, “Pretty Beat Up”) except for a riff, a bassline, a rattlesnake attitude and some little twist that nags at your brain. These songs sometimes prove the most rewarding in the long term. Above all, and let’s be unequivocal, the sequence of albums from Sticky Fingers (1971) to Undercover (1983) constitutes one of the most jaw-dropping, unrepentant narratives from rock’s golden age. It has ineffable swagger, groove and plot. It tells a story of slave ships, houseboys, morphine addicts, starfuckers, FBI phone-tappers, vengeful murderers, prospective Toronto jailbirds and South American revolutionaries. It begins with a song written in the middle of an Australian desert and recorded five days prior to Altamont (“Brown Sugar”), and ends by dropping us into a madhouse full of TV evangelists and prisoners of war (“It Must Be Hell”). En route, we hear three of the greatest guitar solos of the 1970s (Mick Taylor’s “Sway” and “Time Waits For No One”, and Wayne Perkins’ “Hand Of Fate”), as well as the most viciously syncopated, instinctively wrist-driven rhythm guitar player that popular music has ever known. Last remastered in 1994, these records scarcely require a legitimate excuse to play them again and again. Discovering that I have woken up and am still alive is usually enough of a reason to put on a Stones album, and no morning is so baleful, so clouded with dread, that it cannot be appeased by strong Italian coffee and Sticky Fingers, Some Girls, Black And Blue or Tattoo You. These 2009 remasters sound fine, possibly up a notch in the bass frequencies, though there isn’t too overt a sonic upgrade from ’94 – a touch of wrinkle-remover here and there, perhaps, rather than a comprehensive Swiss clinic blood transfusion. Exile On Main Street, the 1972 classic, is excluded from the current batch of reissues and will follow early next year. If one listens to all eight of these albums in a row (as I’ve done a few times), one can trace the journey of a ‘connoisseur’ Stones, an intensely musical Stones, from Sticky Fingers (the seven-minute Latin-rock excursion “Can’t You Hear Me Knocking”) to Goats Head Soup and It’s Only Rock’N’Roll (“Coming Down Again”, “Winter”, “Fingerprint File”) to Black And Blue (“Fool To Cry”, “Memory Motel”). The last-named album, almost universally dismissed as substandard in 1976, now makes perfect sense in the Stones’ career arc as a truly satisfying road-trip from beach to motel to sugar shack, via funk, rock, soul, jazz and reggae. It’s hard to see why there was such a furore over it. Once Wood staggers on board (his first album as a full member was Some Girls), proceedings become a lot more abrasive and frenetic, which came as a relief to critics and listeners in 1978, but which now, funnily enough, seems like a step backwards into unnecessary simplicity. It’s true that Some Girls is a landmark Stones album, very much conscious of punk, with wonderful songs everywhere you look (“Miss You”, “Beast Of Burden”, “Shattered”); but the thrashy, pell-mell riffing of “Lies” and “Respectable” – not so impressive – was to become a serious irritation the more Richards, Wood and Jagger repeated it on Emotional Rescue, Undercover and the outtake collection, Tattoo You. Tattoo You (1981), a multi-genre grower once the instant thrill of “Start Me Up” has subsided, has often been described as the last great Rolling Stones album. Any mid-’70s Stones fan can tell you why. Five songs (“Tops”, “Waiting On A Friend”, “Black Limousine”, “Slave”, “Worried About You”) date from 1972–75 sessions, and were originally recorded for Goats Head Soup, It’s Only Rock’N Roll and Black And Blue. It proves a point, you know. In the tale of the Stones, even the so-called worst of times are among the best. DAVID CAVANAGH For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive For more Rolling Stones news click here. For more music and film news click here

THE ROLLING STONES

Reissues:

Sticky Fingers 5*

Goats Head Soup 5*

It’s Only Rock’N’Roll 4*

Black And Blue 4*

Some Girls 5*

Emotional Rescue 3*

Tattoo You 4*

Undercover 4*

***

If you grew up in the 1970s, The Rolling Stones were not Lucifer or Jumpin’ Jack Flash. They were five guys in Gene Kelly sailor suits cavorting inside a striped tent filled with foam. They looked as hammy as Elton, yet had godless dark shadows around their eyes. Talk about intriguing! However, even as that 1974 promo film for “It’s Only Rock’N’Roll (But I Like It)” flickered on children’s TV, our elders were declaring the Stones a spent force with a dead-duck dictator, his power reduced to a pair of rubber lips and a black, rotting soul.

Today, the viewpoint prevails that the Stones took their eye off the ball somewhere around 1973 and never regained momentum. We’ve heard the theories. Bianca ruined Mick. Heroin ruined Keith. Money, arrogance and complacency ruined whatever was left. But while their growing fondness for sentimental ballads like “Angie” (Goats Head Soup), “Till The Next Goodbye” (It’s Only Rock’N’Roll) and “Memory Motel” (Black And Blue) must have dismayed fans who craved a return to top-dollar rock’n’roll, it’s clear in hindsight that the Stones had entered the most musically accomplished – and most unfairly criticised – phase in their history.

The tempos slowed, lead guitarist Mick Taylor rose silkily to the challenge, and discreet influences of Stevie Wonder, Van Morrison and Traffic blended subtly into an exotic, herbal, soulful, timeless, rather melancholy strain of mid-Atlantic rock. Some of it was beautiful: “Angie, Angie, you can’t say we never tried”. Some of it was less so. (West Indian accent: “I’m workin’ so hard to keep you in de luxury.”) Keyboards were prominent, notably electric pianos and Motown-favoured clavinets, and ‘outside’ musicians were used extensively. On Black And Blue (1976), the recording sessions and the auditions for Taylor’s replacement became one and the same thing.

Even after Ronnie Wood’s arrival, and notwithstanding the back-to-basics approach that they took on Some Girls (and its less appealing follow-up, Emotional Rescue), the Stones continued to be musicians worth paying attention to. They simply do not play their instruments like any other band, and can sound both sloppy and sophisticated; garage-y and precision-honed; behind the beat and dead-on-the-nail. Some songs appear to have very little going for them (“Dance Little Sister”, “Hey Negrita”, “Pretty Beat Up”) except for a riff, a bassline, a rattlesnake attitude and some little twist that nags at your brain. These songs sometimes prove the most rewarding in the long term.

Above all, and let’s be unequivocal, the sequence of albums from Sticky Fingers (1971) to Undercover (1983) constitutes one of the most jaw-dropping, unrepentant narratives from rock’s golden age. It has ineffable swagger, groove and plot. It tells a story of slave ships, houseboys, morphine addicts, starfuckers, FBI phone-tappers, vengeful murderers, prospective Toronto jailbirds and South American revolutionaries. It begins with a song written in the middle of an Australian desert and recorded five days prior to Altamont (“Brown Sugar”), and ends by dropping us into a madhouse full of TV evangelists and prisoners of war (“It Must Be Hell”).

En route, we hear three of the greatest guitar solos of the 1970s (Mick Taylor’s “Sway” and “Time Waits For No One”, and Wayne Perkins’ “Hand Of Fate”), as well as the most viciously syncopated, instinctively wrist-driven rhythm guitar player that popular music has ever known.

Last remastered in 1994, these records scarcely require a legitimate excuse to play them again and again. Discovering that I have woken up and am still alive is usually enough of a reason to put on a Stones album, and no morning is so baleful, so clouded with dread, that it cannot be appeased by strong Italian coffee and Sticky Fingers, Some Girls, Black And Blue or Tattoo You.

These 2009 remasters sound fine, possibly up a notch in the bass frequencies, though there isn’t too overt a sonic upgrade from ’94 – a touch of wrinkle-remover here and there, perhaps, rather than a comprehensive Swiss clinic blood transfusion. Exile On Main Street, the 1972 classic, is excluded from the current batch of reissues and will follow early next year.

If one listens to all eight of these albums in a row (as I’ve done a few times), one can trace the journey of a ‘connoisseur’ Stones, an intensely musical Stones, from Sticky Fingers (the seven-minute Latin-rock excursion “Can’t You Hear Me Knocking”) to Goats Head Soup and It’s Only Rock’N’Roll (“Coming Down Again”, “Winter”, “Fingerprint File”) to Black And Blue (“Fool To Cry”, “Memory Motel”). The last-named album, almost universally dismissed as substandard in 1976, now makes perfect sense in the Stones’ career arc as a truly satisfying road-trip from beach to motel to sugar shack, via funk, rock, soul, jazz and reggae. It’s hard to see why there was such a furore over it.

Once Wood staggers on board (his first album as a full member was Some Girls), proceedings become a lot more abrasive and frenetic, which came as a relief to critics and listeners in 1978, but which now, funnily enough, seems like a step backwards into unnecessary simplicity. It’s true that Some Girls is a landmark Stones album, very much conscious of punk, with wonderful songs everywhere you look (“Miss You”, “Beast Of Burden”, “Shattered”); but the thrashy, pell-mell riffing of “Lies” and “Respectable” – not so impressive – was to become a serious irritation the more Richards, Wood and Jagger repeated it on Emotional Rescue, Undercover and the outtake collection, Tattoo You.

Tattoo You (1981), a multi-genre grower once the instant thrill of “Start Me Up” has subsided, has often been described as the last great Rolling Stones album. Any mid-’70s Stones fan can tell you why. Five songs (“Tops”, “Waiting On A Friend”, “Black Limousine”, “Slave”, “Worried About You”) date from 1972–75 sessions, and were originally recorded for Goats Head Soup, It’s Only Rock’N Roll and Black And Blue. It proves a point, you know. In the tale of the Stones, even the so-called worst of times are among the best.

DAVID CAVANAGH

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

For more Rolling Stones news click here.

For more music and film news click here

Sonic Youth – The Eternal

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After 2006’s light, poppy Rather Ripped, The Eternal offers a return to discord and polemic: “Anti-Orgasm” is out to “smash the moral hypocrisy”, Kim Gordon and Lee Ranaldo chanting radical feminist slogans between cacophonic guitar shred-outs, while “Thunderclap For Bobby Pyn”, a tribute to Darby Crash of The Germs, eulogises the ’70s LA punk scene with almost religious terminology. Good, but the exciting notion of a genuine career left turn feels increasingly unlikely. LOUIS PATTISON For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music reviews archive For more music and film news click here

After 2006’s light, poppy Rather Ripped, The Eternal offers a return to discord and polemic: “Anti-Orgasm” is out to “smash the moral hypocrisy”, Kim Gordon and Lee Ranaldo chanting radical feminist slogans between cacophonic guitar shred-outs, while “Thunderclap For Bobby Pyn”, a tribute to Darby Crash of The Germs, eulogises the ’70s LA punk scene with almost religious terminology.

Good, but the exciting notion of a genuine career left turn feels increasingly unlikely.

LOUIS PATTISON

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

For more music and film news click here

Kasabian – West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum

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Kasabian’s third sees their bounding riffs and rock-electro mixture still in evidence, not least in first single “Fire”, but they’ve added extra tints and layers. “Secret Alphabets” is sleek, creepy and conspiratorial, while singer Tom Meighan and Hollywood actress Rosario Dawson trade v...

Kasabian’s third sees their bounding riffs and rock-electro mixture still in evidence, not least in first single “Fire”, but they’ve added extra tints and layers. “Secret Alphabets” is sleek, creepy and conspiratorial, while singer Tom Meighan and Hollywood actress Rosario Dawson trade vocals in the surreal “West Ryder And Silver Bullet”.

Then there’s whomping monster-rock with “Vlad The Impaler”, but also buskerish balladeering like “Thick As Thieves”, which sounds like Ray Davies hitch-hiking around Eastern Europe. The instrumental “Swarfiga” even verges on the Krautrockish. A world away from their ladrock roots, you might say.

ADAM SWEETING

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

For more music and film news click here

Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr Launch ‘The Beatles: Rock Band’

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Beatles' icons Sir Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr both appeared at the launch of the forthcoming Beatles Rock Band game at Microsoft's Electronic Entertainment Expo yesterday (June 1). The Harmonix title's launch, which took place at the University of Southern California was also attended by Yoko O...

Beatles‘ icons Sir Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr both appeared at the launch of the forthcoming Beatles Rock Band game at Microsoft’s Electronic Entertainment Expo yesterday (June 1).

The Harmonix title’s launch, which took place at the University of Southern California was also attended by Yoko Ono and Olivia Harrison.

‘The Beatles : Rock Band’, on sale from September 9, features 45 Beatles songs which users of the game will be able to play karaoke-style, performing vocals, guitar and drums. The game is the first-ever agreed third party licensing for use of the band’s back catalogue.

Speaking animatedly about the game, at the first public viewing of the game’s graphics, Sir Paul McCartney said: “We love the game, it’s fantastic”, with Ringo Starr adding “The game is good, the graphics are very good, and we were great.”

For more music and film news click here

Pic credit: PA Photos

St Etienne plus all latest LATITUDE additions!

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St Etienne have been confirmed for the Uncut Arena at this July's Latitude Festival, which takes place from July 16-19. The band who have recently reissued deluxe editions of their acclaimed albums Fox Base Alpha and Continental ( Win copies here!) will join previously announced headliners Bat Fo...

St Etienne have been confirmed for the Uncut Arena at this July’s Latitude Festival, which takes place from July 16-19.

Wedding Present’s David Gedge To DJ in London this week

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David Gedge of Wedding Present and Cinerama fame is guest DJ at this week's How Does It Feel To Be Loved club night in Brixton. The monthly indie-pop club is a regular spot for Gedge, with this Friday (June 5) being his fourth appearance at the club. He has previously spun weird surprise choices in...

David Gedge of Wedding Present and Cinerama fame is guest DJ at this week’s How Does It Feel To Be Loved club night in Brixton.

The monthly indie-pop club is a regular spot for Gedge, with this Friday (June 5) being his fourth appearance at the club. He has previously spun weird surprise choices including the Sugababes, PJ Harvey and Ciccione Youth.

HDIF takes place at the Canterbury Arms, SW9, more information and advance tickets are available here

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St Etienne and more added to Latitude Festival Bill

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St Etienne have been confirmed for the Uncut Arena at this July's Latitude Festival, which takes place from July 16-19. The band who have recently reissued deluxe editions of their acclaimed albums Fox Base Alpha and Continental ( Win copies here!) will join previously announced headliners Bat For ...

St Etienne have been confirmed for the Uncut Arena at this July’s Latitude Festival, which takes place from July 16-19.

The band who have recently reissued deluxe editions of their acclaimed albums Fox Base Alpha and Continental ( Win copies here!) will join previously announced headliners Bat For Lashes, Spiritualized and Gossip in the popular covered tent.

Also announced this week are further additions for the Literary, Comedy and Music & Film Arenas; highlights including Frank Skinner, Jeremy Warmsley and a collaboration between Grace Maxwell and Edwyn Collins.

Latitude, now in it’s fourth year, is Uncut’s festival of the Summer, and tickets for the weekend are still available for £150 for the weekend, from nme.com/gigs and www.latitudefestival.co.uk.

If you’re feeling lucky, don’t forget there’s a chance to win a pair of tickets, at Uncut’s competitions page here.

Latitude takes place in Henham Park, Suffolk, we’ll see you there!

The latest additions for the festival are as follows, for all previous updates see our dedicated Latitude 2009 blog here.

UNCUT ARENA:

Saint Etienne

The Temper Trap

SUNRISE ARENA:

Kap Bambino

FILM & MUSIC ARENA:

Future Cinema Presents Black Cat White Cat with Taraf de Haidouks

Noise Of Art presents ‘Love Bites – The Dance Of The Vampires

Vashti Bunyan: From Here to Before with Kieran Evans, Adem & Friends

Jeremy Deller

Jeremy Warmsley

One eskimO

London Short Film Festival

Night Of The Living Dead – 3D

LITERARY ARENA:

Frank Skinner

Grace Maxwell & Edwyn Collins

Punk Fiction with Cathi Unsworth, Nicholas Hogg,

Janine Bullman, Salena Godden, Dev Hynes, Lee Bullman

COMEDY ARENA:

Lee Mack

Stephen Grant

Rob Rouse

John Gordillo

Kerry Godliman

CABARET ARENA:

The Whoopee Club

Ima Doll

Fancy Chance

Ekat

Beaux Belles

Russella

The Two Wrongies

Miss Lady G Luck

Simon Deville

Des O’Connor

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Muse Announce UK and Ireland Arena Tour

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Muse have announced a UK and Ireland arena tour to take place this winter. The seven live shows start in Sheffield on November 4 and end with a two-night stint at London's O2 Arena on November 12 and 13. The band, fronted by Matt Bellamy are currently working on their fifth studio album The Resist...

Muse have announced a UK and Ireland arena tour to take place this winter.

The seven live shows start in Sheffield on November 4 and end with a two-night stint at London’s O2 Arena on November 12 and 13.

The band, fronted by Matt Bellamy are currently working on their fifth studio album The Resistance, which is expected to be completed and released by the end of 2009.

Tickets for the winter tour will go on sale at 9am on Friday June 5, calling at the following venues:

Sheffield Arena (November 4)

Liverpool Echo Arena (5)

Dublin O2 Depot (6)

Glasgow SECC (9)

Birmingham NIA (10)

London 02 Arena (12, 13)

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Arctic Monkeys’ Josh Homme Produced Album Tracklisting Revealed!

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Arctic Monkeys have confirmed the tracklisting for their forthcoming as-yet-untitled third album, due for release on August 24, just before their headline appearances at the Reading and Leeds Festivals. Producing duties for the ten new tracks have been split between Queens of the Stone Age mainman ...

Arctic Monkeys have confirmed the tracklisting for their forthcoming as-yet-untitled third album, due for release on August 24, just before their headline appearances at the Reading and Leeds Festivals.

Producing duties for the ten new tracks have been split between Queens of the Stone Age mainman Josh Homme in Nevada and James Ford over in New York.

The tracklisiting for the album, which will be available on CD, Vinyl and via digital download, is as follows:

“My Propeller”

“Crying Lightning”

“Dangerous Animals”

“Secret Door”

“Potion Approaching”

“Fire And The Thud”

“Cornerstone”

“Dance Little Liar”

“Pretty Visitors”

“The Jeweller’s Hands”

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Pic credit: Guy Aroch

The 21st Uncut Playlist Of 2009

A bit of a Wilco binge in the last couple of days, since I’ve been trying to write a review of “Wilco (the album)” for the next issue of Uncut. Auspicious arrivals, too, from Wild Beasts and from Ben Reynolds, who’s the guitarist of Trembling Bells and who seems to have slotted rather gracefully into the space left by James Blackshaw on the Tompkins Square roster. I’ll write about those two soon, and also the Cornershop album, which is bedding in nicely now. Space in the playlist, too, for Phoenix’s peerless “Alphabetical”, which has become something of a default summer record for me over the past few years. 1 Ben Reynolds – How Day Earnt Its Night (Tompkins Square) 2 Wild Beasts – Two Dancers (Domino) 3 Brendan Benson – My Old, Familiar Friend (Echo) 4 Cornershop – Judy Sucks A Lemon For Breakfast (Meccico/Ample Play) 5 Wilco – Sky Blue Sky (Nonesuch) 6 Wilco – Wilco (the album) (Nonesuch) 7 The Soundtrack Of Our Lives – Communion (Album sampler) (TSOOL) 8 Deradoorian – Mind Raft EP (Lovepump United) 9 Soulsavers – Broken (V2) 10 Astra – The Weirding (Rise Above) 11 Tobacco – Fucked Up Friends (Anticon) 12 Tune-Yards – Hatari (http://www.myspace.com/tuneyards) 13 Six Organs Of Admittance – Luminous Night (Drag City) 14 Sleeping States – In The Gardens Of The North (Bella Union) 15 Busta Rhymes – Back On My BS (Universal Motown) 16 Phoenix – Alphabetical (Source) 17 The Fiery Furnaces – The End Is Near (Thrill Jockey)

A bit of a Wilco binge in the last couple of days, since I’ve been trying to write a review of “Wilco (the album)” for the next issue of Uncut. Auspicious arrivals, too, from Wild Beasts and from Ben Reynolds, who’s the guitarist of Trembling Bells and who seems to have slotted rather gracefully into the space left by James Blackshaw on the Tompkins Square roster.

Alice Cooper To Bring Theatre Of Death Tour To UK

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Alice Cooper is set to bring his Theatre of Death Tour to the UK this November. Starting at the Manchester Apollo on November 24, Cooper will bring his most visual show to the UK in more intimate venues than in recent years. Commenting on the newly announced tour, Cooper explains: "I always prefer...

Alice Cooper is set to bring his Theatre of Death Tour to the UK this November.

Starting at the Manchester Apollo on November 24, Cooper will bring his most visual show to the UK in more intimate venues than in recent years.

Commenting on the newly announced tour, Cooper explains: “I always prefer to play theatres because it makes the theatrics of our show so much more intense. With this being a new show, with things we’ve never done before, we’re proving that Alice is totally indestructible. It’s still pure rock ‘n roll of course. The great thing is that England always gets our shows better than anyone else.”

UK tour support comes from Man-Raze, featuring: Def Leppard’s Phil Collen on vocals and former Sex Pistol Paul Cook on drums.

Alice Cooper’s Theatre of Death tour calls at:

Manchester Apollo (November 24)

Glasgow Clyde Auditorium (25)

Newcastle City Hall (27)

Sheffield City Hall (28)

Swindon Oasis (29)

Wolverhampton Civic Hall (December 1)

Plymouth Pavilions (2)

Nottingham Royal Concert Hall (4)

Brighton Centre (5)

London HMV Hammersmith Apollo (6)

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Richard Thompson Four Disc Collection To Be Released

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A four-disc collection, spanning forty years of Richard Thompson's work is to be released on August 10. Starting in 1968 and bringing us up to the present, Walking On A Wire begins with Fairport Convention and ends with material from his twenty year solo career via collaborations with Linda Thompson. The 71-track collection has been personally chosen and produced by Thompson and will come with a 60 page book. The full track listing for Walking On A Wire: Richard Thompson (1968-2009) is as follows: Disc One: 1. Time Will Show The Wiser - Fairport Convention (Fairport Convention) 2. Meet On The Ledge - Fairport Convention (What We Did On Our Holidays) 3. Genesis Hall - Fairport Convention (Unhalfbricking) 4. Crazy Man Michael - Fairport Convention (Liege & Lief) 5. Sloth - Fairport Convention (Full House) 6. Roll Over Vaughn Williams (Starring As Henry The Human Fly) 7. The Poor Ditching Boy (Starring As Henry The Human Fly) 8. The Angels Took My Racehorse Away (Starring As Henry The Human Fly) 9. The Great Valerio - Richard & Linda Thompson (I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight) 10. When I Get To The Border - Richard & Linda Thompson (I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight) 11. Withered And Died - Richard & Linda Thompson (I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight) 12. I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight - Richard & Linda Thompson (I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight) 13. Down Where The Drunkards Roll - Richard & Linda Thompson (I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight) 14. The Calvary Cross - Richard & Linda Thompson (I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight) 15. I'll Regret It All In The Morning - Richard & Linda Thompson (Hokey Pokey) 16. Old Man Inside A Young Man - Richard & Linda Thompson (Hokey Pokey) 17. For Shame Of Doing Wrong - Richard & Linda Thompson (Pour Down Like Silver) 18. Night Comes In - Richard & Linda Thompson (Pour Down Like Silver) Disc Two: 1. Dimming Of The Day/Dargai - Richard & Linda Thompson (Pour Down Like Silver) 2. A Heart Needs A Home - Richard & Linda Thompson 3. Don't Let A Thief Steal Into Your Heart - Richard & Linda Thompson (First Light) 4. Strange Affair - Richard & Linda Thompson (First Light) 5. Sunnyvista - Richard & Linda Thompson (Sunnyvista) 6. Sisters - Richard & Linda Thompson (Sunnyvista) 7. Rockin' In Rhythm Strict (Tempo!) 8. Did She Jump Or Was She Pushed - Richard & Linda Thompson (Shoot Out The Lights) 9. Man In Need - Richard & Linda Thompson (Shoot Out The Lights) 10. Shoot Out The Lights - Richard & Linda Thompson (Shoot Out The Lights) 11. Wall Of Death - Richard & Linda Thompson (Shoot Out The Lights) 12. Walking On A Wire - Richard & Linda Thompson (Shoot Out The Lights) 13. Tear Stained Letter (Hand Of Kindness) 14. How I Wanted To (Hand Of Kindness) 15. Hand Of Kindness (Hand Of Kindness) 16. Beat The Retreat (Live) Small Town Romance (Live/Solo In New York, 1982) 17. I Ain't Going To Drag My Feet No More (Across A Crowded Room) Disc Three: 1. Little Blue Number (Across A Crowded Room) 2. She Twists The Knife Again (Across A Crowded Room) 3. Valerie (Daring Adventures) 4. Turning Of The Tide (Amnesia) 5. I Still Dream (Amnesia) 6. Waltzing's For Dreamers (Amnesia) 7. Read About Love (Rumor And Sigh) 8. I Feel So Good (Rumor And Sigh) 9. I Misunderstood (Rumor And Sigh) 10. 1952 Vincent Black Lightning (Rumor And Sigh) 11. Put Your Trust In Me Sweet Talker (Original Soundtrack) 12. From Galway To Graceland (Live) Watching The Dark 13. I Can't Wake Up To Save My Life (Mirror Blue) 14. MGB-GT (Mirror Blue) 15. Mingus Eyes (Mirror Blue) 16. Beeswing (Mirror Blue) 17. Taking My Business Elsewhere (Mirror Blue) 18. King Of Bohemia (Mirror Blue) 19. Don't Roll Those Bloodshot Eyes At Me (Live) - Richard Thompson with Danny Thompson Live At Crawley 1993 - Richard Thompson with Danny Thompson 20. Razor Dance (Voltage Enhanced) Disc Four: 1. Hide It Away (Voltage Enhanced) 2. Last Shift - Richard Thompson & Danny Thompson Industry 3. Big Chimney - Richard Thompson & Danny Thompson Industry 4. Lotteryland - Richard Thompson & Danny Thompson Industry 5. Persuasion (Live) - Richard Thompson Celtschmerz (Live UK '98) 6. Cooksferry Queen (Mock Tudor) 7. Bathsheba Smiles (Mock Tudor) 8. Hard On Me (Live) Semi-Detached (Mock Tudor) 9. Gethsemane (The Old Kit Bag) 10. A Love You Can't Survive (The Old Kit Bag) 11. A Legal Matter (Live) 1000 Years Of Popular Music 12. Main Title From Grizzly Man Grizzly Man (Original Soundtrack) 13. Al Bowlly's In Heaven (Live) Live From Austin TX 14. I'll Never Give It Up (Sweet Warrior) 15. Dad's Gonna Kill Me (Sweet Warrior) 16. She Sang Angels To Rest (Sweet Warrior) For more music and film news click here You can also now follow Uncut on Twitter! For news alerts, to find out what we're playing on the stereo and more, join us here @uncutmagazine

A four-disc collection, spanning forty years of Richard Thompson‘s work is to be released on August 10.

Starting in 1968 and bringing us up to the present, Walking On A Wire begins with Fairport Convention and ends with material from his twenty year solo career via collaborations with Linda Thompson.

The 71-track collection has been personally chosen and produced by Thompson and will come with a 60 page book.

The full track listing for Walking On A Wire: Richard Thompson (1968-2009) is as follows:

Disc One:

1. Time Will Show The Wiser – Fairport Convention (Fairport Convention)

2. Meet On The Ledge – Fairport Convention (What We Did On Our Holidays)

3. Genesis Hall – Fairport Convention (Unhalfbricking)

4. Crazy Man Michael – Fairport Convention (Liege & Lief)

5. Sloth – Fairport Convention (Full House)

6. Roll Over Vaughn Williams (Starring As Henry The Human Fly)

7. The Poor Ditching Boy (Starring As Henry The Human Fly)

8. The Angels Took My Racehorse Away (Starring As Henry The Human Fly)

9. The Great Valerio – Richard & Linda Thompson (I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight)

10. When I Get To The Border – Richard & Linda Thompson (I Want To See

The Bright Lights Tonight)

11. Withered And Died – Richard & Linda Thompson (I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight)

12. I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight – Richard & Linda Thompson (I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight)

13. Down Where The Drunkards Roll – Richard & Linda Thompson (I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight)

14. The Calvary Cross – Richard & Linda Thompson (I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight)

15. I’ll Regret It All In The Morning – Richard & Linda Thompson (Hokey Pokey)

16. Old Man Inside A Young Man – Richard & Linda Thompson (Hokey Pokey)

17. For Shame Of Doing Wrong – Richard & Linda Thompson (Pour Down Like Silver)

18. Night Comes In – Richard & Linda Thompson (Pour Down Like Silver)

Disc Two:

1. Dimming Of The Day/Dargai – Richard & Linda Thompson (Pour Down Like Silver)

2. A Heart Needs A Home – Richard & Linda Thompson

3. Don’t Let A Thief Steal Into Your Heart – Richard & Linda Thompson (First Light)

4. Strange Affair – Richard & Linda Thompson (First Light)

5. Sunnyvista – Richard & Linda Thompson (Sunnyvista)

6. Sisters – Richard & Linda Thompson (Sunnyvista)

7. Rockin’ In Rhythm Strict (Tempo!)

8. Did She Jump Or Was She Pushed – Richard & Linda Thompson (Shoot Out The Lights)

9. Man In Need – Richard & Linda Thompson (Shoot Out The Lights)

10. Shoot Out The Lights – Richard & Linda Thompson (Shoot Out The Lights)

11. Wall Of Death – Richard & Linda Thompson (Shoot Out The Lights)

12. Walking On A Wire – Richard & Linda Thompson (Shoot Out The Lights)

13. Tear Stained Letter (Hand Of Kindness)

14. How I Wanted To (Hand Of Kindness)

15. Hand Of Kindness (Hand Of Kindness)

16. Beat The Retreat (Live) Small Town Romance (Live/Solo In New York, 1982)

17. I Ain’t Going To Drag My Feet No More (Across A Crowded Room)

Disc Three:

1. Little Blue Number (Across A Crowded Room)

2. She Twists The Knife Again (Across A Crowded Room)

3. Valerie (Daring Adventures)

4. Turning Of The Tide (Amnesia)

5. I Still Dream (Amnesia)

6. Waltzing’s For Dreamers (Amnesia)

7. Read About Love (Rumor And Sigh)

8. I Feel So Good (Rumor And Sigh)

9. I Misunderstood (Rumor And Sigh)

10. 1952 Vincent Black Lightning (Rumor And Sigh)

11. Put Your Trust In Me Sweet Talker (Original Soundtrack)

12. From Galway To Graceland (Live) Watching The Dark

13. I Can’t Wake Up To Save My Life (Mirror Blue)

14. MGB-GT (Mirror Blue)

15. Mingus Eyes (Mirror Blue)

16. Beeswing (Mirror Blue)

17. Taking My Business Elsewhere (Mirror Blue)

18. King Of Bohemia (Mirror Blue)

19. Don’t Roll Those Bloodshot Eyes At Me (Live) – Richard Thompson with Danny Thompson Live

At Crawley 1993 – Richard Thompson with Danny Thompson

20. Razor Dance (Voltage Enhanced)

Disc Four:

1. Hide It Away (Voltage Enhanced)

2. Last Shift – Richard Thompson & Danny Thompson Industry

3. Big Chimney – Richard Thompson & Danny Thompson Industry

4. Lotteryland – Richard Thompson & Danny Thompson Industry

5. Persuasion (Live) – Richard Thompson Celtschmerz (Live UK ’98)

6. Cooksferry Queen (Mock Tudor)

7. Bathsheba Smiles (Mock Tudor)

8. Hard On Me (Live) Semi-Detached (Mock Tudor)

9. Gethsemane (The Old Kit Bag)

10. A Love You Can’t Survive (The Old Kit Bag)

11. A Legal Matter (Live) 1000 Years Of Popular Music

12. Main Title From Grizzly Man Grizzly Man (Original Soundtrack)

13. Al Bowlly’s In Heaven (Live) Live From Austin TX

14. I’ll Never Give It Up (Sweet Warrior)

15. Dad’s Gonna Kill Me (Sweet Warrior)

16. She Sang Angels To Rest (Sweet Warrior)

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Blur Raffling Last Tickets To Warm-Up Shows For Charity

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Blur have launched a competition for fans to win the chance to see them at two intimate warm-up shows to raise money for charities. The band who have recently re-united have 26 pairs of tickets available for their Colchester East Anglian Railway Museum gig on June 13 and 20 pairs up for grabs for t...

Blur have launched a competition for fans to win the chance to see them at two intimate warm-up shows to raise money for charities.

The band who have recently re-united have 26 pairs of tickets available for their Colchester East Anglian Railway Museum gig on June 13 and 20 pairs up for grabs for the intimate London Goldsmith’s College show on June 22.

Fans are being asked for £5 to enter the competition, and all monies raised will be split between the East Anglian Railway Museum, Teenage Cancer Trust and the Aldham Village Hall.

You can enter from June 1, HERE.

Blur’s reunion tour will call at the following venues this summer:

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)

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Neil Young Kicks Off European Tour 2009 in Spain

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Neil Young started his the European leg of his 2009 World tour in Spain on Saturday night (May 30) at the Primavera Sound Festival in Barcelona. Playing a similar track list to recent shows in the US, the singer performed a customarily exhilarating finale covering the Beatles classic "A Day In The ...

Neil Young started his the European leg of his 2009 World tour in Spain on Saturday night (May 30) at the Primavera Sound Festival in Barcelona.

Playing a similar track list to recent shows in the US, the singer performed a customarily exhilarating finale covering the Beatles classic “A Day In The Life”.

Young’s UK dates begin in Nottingham on June 23, before headlining slots at London’s Hard Rock Calling and Glastonbury festivals the weekend beginning June 27.

Neil Young’s first night set list was:

Mansion On The Hill

Hey Hey, My My (Into The Black)

Are You Ready For The Country?

Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere

Pocahontas

Spirit Road

Cortez The Killer

Cinnamon Girl

Mother Earth

The Needle And The Damage Done

Unknown Legend

Heart Of Gold

Old Man

Down By The River

Get Behind The Wheel

Rockin’ In The Free World

Encore:

A Day In The Life

Neil Young’s European tour dates 2009 continue at:

Nantes, France (June 3)

Paris, France (4)

Antwerpen Sportpalais, Belgium (6)

Rotterdam, Netherlands (7)

Erfurt Messehalle, Germany (9)

Oslo “The Norwegian Wood Festival” (11)

Stockholm “Where the action is”-Festival, Sweden (12)

Isle of Wight Festival”, UK (14)

Berlin O² World, Germany (16)

München Olympiahalle, Germany (17)

Köln Tanzbrunnen, Germany (19)

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)

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Deradoorian: “Mind Raft”

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When I was grappling with the Dirty Projectors’ “Bitte Orca” a while back, I came to the fairly trite conclusion that I liked the band best when Angel Deradoorian or Amber Coffman took the lead, rather than David Longstreth. I’m indebted, then, to Jake from the Love Pump United label, who last week sent me Deradoorian’s debut solo EP, “Mind Raft”, which is quite wonderful. Longstreth is listed as executive producer, and various other members of Dirty Projectors, TV On The Radio, Animal Collective and Grizzly Bear all figure in the acknowledgements, anointing “Mind Raft” as very much a product of the current Brooklyn illuminati. No problem with that, of course, and what a wonderful record it turns out to be. There’s still a generally brittle quality to these five songs, but unlike much of the Dirty Projectors’ work, they don’t seem overburdened by complexity. In fact, the opening “Weed Jam” (a superbly unsuitable title, given what those words normally infer), simply pits wordless multi-tracked harmonies against minimalist breaks, a crisp mixture of (faintly medieval) church music and hip hop; someone here wisely mentioned David Axelrod, which perhaps amounts to the same thing. Everything here is great, actually. “You Carry The Deed” is a beautiful, soul-inflected acoustic ballad which would sit neatly as an adjunct to that blessed run of “Stillness Is The Move” and “Two Doves” on “Bitte Orca”. “High Road” and “Holding Pattern” have a kind of crepuscular intensity that remind me a bit of another Brooklyn act, Telepathe, though Deradoorian generally works with orthodox rock settings rather than with synthpop, and she’s technically a much stronger singer. The standout here, though, in very elevated company, is the final “Moon”, dust-gathering liturgical drone-folk that reminds me a little of the first couple of Marissa Nadler records, and of Fursaxa, the witchiest outrider in what used to be called, quaintly enough, the acid-folk scene. It all amounts to one of the best things I’ve heard all year, and I’m hearing some very interesting rumours about what she might have planned for an album...

When I was grappling with the Dirty Projectors’ “Bitte Orca” a while back, I came to the fairly trite conclusion that I liked the band best when Angel Deradoorian or Amber Coffman took the lead, rather than David Longstreth.

James Brown – The Night James Brown Saved Boston

The night after a sniper’s bullet struck down Martin Luther King on 4 April 1968, 150 US cities were ablaze, their streets turned into battlegrounds between police and national guardsmen and incendiary, looting mobs. It remains the greatest civil insurrection in modern American history. The fury of black America at the assassination of its political figurehead burned even deeper than the ghettoes put to the torch. In the words of Princetown professor Cornel West, “We were a people whose hearts had been shattered.” Boston, the city dubbed the ‘Cradle of Liberty’ on account of its leading role in US independence, had escaped with a few ugly scenes and minor fires in its Roxbury ghetto, but no-one doubted the potential for something far worse. To add to the edgy, volatile atmosphere, the city’s premier arena, The Garden, was due to stage a James Brown show for a 14,000 strong crowd. Fearing it would be hosting a riot, the Garden was already issuing refunds. The city’s only black councillor, Tom Atkins, realised that this could only make matters worse, as flocks of disappointed young fans, faced with a no-show, roamed uptown streets looking to vent their compounded fury. The only solution, he realised, was to get Brown – the biggest star in the black American firmament after Muhammed Ali – to perform. Better still, to get the show broadcast live on television, to keep the black community at home. It was a brilliant yet almost impossible strategy, requiring a TV station to throw over its prime time schedule, and for the Garden and Brown to accept an empty stadium – for how many cash-strapped fans would pay for a show they could watch at home for free? The only solution was for the city itself to underwrite the losses, estimated at a colossal $60,000. The financial equation presented to newly elected mayor Kevin White was brutal: “If we didn’t come up with the money, the blacks were gonna burn the city down.” White had never heard of James Brown, but he learned fast, negotiating with a furious Soul Brother Number One in the limo from the airport. For their part, Brown and his manager were unequivocal – they would be paid in full – while Brown quickly absorbed the extraordinary situation. Though he would describe King as “America’s best friend”, Brown was no pacifist, nor was he a militant – his version of “Black Power” involved neither saintly non-violence nor the gunplay urged by hardliners like Stokely Carmichael. Brown believed in black empowerment through success – like him, owning radio stations and a restaurant franchise. Just the previous year the ex-jailbird and shoeshine boy had urged “Don’t Be A Drop Out”. Amazingly, a deal was cut. Public television channel WGBH would broadcast the show (displacing a Laurence Olivier drama), while Brown would be paid by the city and maybe, just maybe, Boston wouldn’t burn, baby, burn. The two discs here tell the breathless story with panache. The second offers the show, in grainy black and white, as witnessed by the stay-at-homes and the 2000 fans who attended. And what a show. Clips of Brown’s dazzling showmanship - the ankle-breaking, knee-splitting dance routines, the sobbing ballads, shrieking funk work-outs – are familiar enough. Here you get the complete arc of the JB experience; his squat physical presence, the canny interplay between hammer-drill vocals, dazzling spins and struts, cooking, compliant band and shimmering, razor sharp tailoring. It’s a compelling performance, culminating in a stage invasion that threatened to trigger the riot everyone feared. Brown seizes the moment heroically, keeping cops and kids apart, but the tension is palpable. “I thought we were gonna leave in a ball of fire,” admits drummer John Starks. Instead, the stadium and streets of Boston stayed quiet (the show was quickly re-run). The background footage on disc one is scarcely less arresting, a montage of interviews with many of the original protagonists, footage of King’s ascendancy and the riots that ensued his murder, Brown’s confused politics in the aftermath of ’68, controversially playing for the troops in Vietnam, and campaigning for the reactionary Herbert Hoover while releasing “Say It Loud I’m Black and I’m Proud”. The show’s the thing, but here it’s rounded into a historical chapter. Essential viewing. EXTRAS: 3* Interviews with Reverend Al Sharpeton, Dr Cornel West and Charles Bobbit, Brown’s manager. NEIL SPENCER

The night after a sniper’s bullet struck down Martin Luther King on 4 April 1968, 150 US cities were ablaze, their streets turned into battlegrounds between police and national guardsmen and incendiary, looting mobs. It remains the greatest civil insurrection in modern American history.

The fury of black America at the assassination of its political figurehead burned even deeper than the ghettoes put to the torch. In the words of Princetown professor Cornel West, “We were a people whose hearts had been shattered.”

Boston, the city dubbed the ‘Cradle of Liberty’ on account of its leading role in US independence, had escaped with a few ugly scenes and minor fires in its Roxbury ghetto, but no-one doubted the potential for something far worse. To add to the edgy, volatile atmosphere, the city’s premier arena, The Garden, was due to stage a James Brown show for a 14,000 strong crowd. Fearing it would be hosting a riot, the Garden was already issuing refunds.

The city’s only black councillor, Tom Atkins, realised that this could only make matters worse, as flocks of disappointed young fans, faced with a no-show, roamed uptown streets looking to vent their compounded fury. The only solution, he realised, was to get Brown – the biggest star in the black American firmament after Muhammed Ali – to perform. Better still, to get the show broadcast live on television, to keep the black community at home.

It was a brilliant yet almost impossible strategy, requiring a TV station to throw over its prime time schedule, and for the Garden and Brown to accept an empty stadium – for how many cash-strapped fans would pay for a show they could watch at home for free? The only solution was for the city itself to underwrite the losses, estimated at a colossal $60,000. The financial equation presented to newly elected mayor Kevin White was brutal: “If we didn’t come up with the money, the blacks were gonna burn the city down.”

White had never heard of James Brown, but he learned fast, negotiating with a furious Soul Brother Number One in the limo from the airport. For their part, Brown and his manager were unequivocal – they would be paid in full – while Brown quickly absorbed the extraordinary situation. Though he would describe King as “America’s best friend”, Brown was no pacifist, nor was he a militant – his version of “Black Power” involved neither saintly non-violence nor the gunplay urged by hardliners like Stokely Carmichael. Brown believed in black empowerment through success – like him, owning radio stations and a restaurant franchise. Just the previous year the ex-jailbird and shoeshine boy had urged “Don’t Be A Drop Out”.

Amazingly, a deal was cut. Public television channel WGBH would broadcast the show (displacing a Laurence Olivier drama), while Brown would be paid by the city and maybe, just maybe, Boston wouldn’t burn, baby, burn.

The two discs here tell the breathless story with panache. The second offers the show, in grainy black and white, as witnessed by the stay-at-homes and the 2000 fans who attended. And what a show. Clips of Brown’s dazzling showmanship – the ankle-breaking, knee-splitting dance routines, the sobbing ballads, shrieking funk work-outs – are familiar enough. Here you get the complete arc of the JB experience; his squat physical presence, the canny interplay between hammer-drill vocals, dazzling spins and struts, cooking, compliant band and shimmering, razor sharp tailoring. It’s a compelling performance, culminating in a stage invasion that threatened to trigger the riot everyone feared. Brown seizes the moment heroically, keeping cops and kids apart, but the tension is palpable. “I thought we were gonna leave in a ball of fire,” admits drummer John Starks. Instead, the stadium and streets of Boston stayed quiet (the show was quickly re-run).

The background footage on disc one is scarcely less arresting, a montage of interviews with many of the original protagonists, footage of King’s ascendancy and the riots that ensued his murder, Brown’s confused politics in the aftermath of ’68, controversially playing for the troops in Vietnam, and campaigning for the reactionary Herbert Hoover while releasing “Say It Loud I’m Black and I’m Proud”. The show’s the thing, but here it’s rounded into a historical chapter. Essential viewing.

EXTRAS: 3* Interviews with Reverend Al Sharpeton, Dr Cornel West and Charles Bobbit, Brown’s manager.

NEIL SPENCER

The Spirit

Directed by Frank Miller (from Will Eisner’s comic books), this may be less twisted and cruel than Sin City, but it’s briskly witty, with a script so “meta” it all but nudges you. “My city screams. She is my mother. She is my lover”, growls Gabriel Macht’s The Spirit as he battles The Octopus (Samuel L Jackson) and is purred at by Sand Saref (Eva Mendes) and Silken Floss (Scarlett Johansson) in a hyper-stylised world of noir. EXTRAS:4* Director’s commentary, three featurettes, trailer. CHRIS ROBERTS

Directed by Frank Miller (from Will Eisner’s comic books), this may be less twisted and cruel than Sin City, but it’s briskly witty, with a script so “meta” it all but nudges you.

“My city screams. She is my mother. She is my lover”, growls Gabriel Macht’s The Spirit as he battles The Octopus (Samuel L Jackson) and is purred at by Sand Saref (Eva Mendes) and Silken Floss (Scarlett Johansson) in a hyper-stylised world of noir.

EXTRAS:4* Director’s commentary, three featurettes, trailer.

CHRIS ROBERTS