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Radiohead Start Work On New Album

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Radiohead have begun work on the follow-up to 2007's In Rainbows, their bassist Colin Greenwood has revealed. The band went back to the studio "last week" Greenwood said at a conference at Brighton's Great Escape Festival which took place at the weekend, saying "It was really good. It was really no...

Radiohead have begun work on the follow-up to 2007’s In Rainbows, their bassist Colin Greenwood has revealed.

The band went back to the studio “last week” Greenwood said at a conference at Brighton’s Great Escape Festival which took place at the weekend, saying “It was really good. It was really noisy and chaotic and really fun.”

“We’re at the stage where we’ve got the big Lego box out and we’ve tipped it out on the floor and we’re looking at all the bits and thinking, what next?”

Greenwood added: “We’ve got lots of ideas but we don’t decide what we’re going to do until we’ve finished the thing. It’s all up in the air, but it was up in the air last time.”

The album will be produced by Nigel Godrich.

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Tori Amos Confirms UK Tour

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Tori Amos has announced that she will perform four live dates in the UK this Autumn. The mini-tour takes place this September in Manchester, Birmingham, Glasgow and London. Tori Amos releases a new studio album, her tenth called 'Abnormally Attracted To Sin', this (May 18). Amos' live dates are:...

Tori Amos has announced that she will perform four live dates in the UK this Autumn.

The mini-tour takes place this September in Manchester, Birmingham, Glasgow and London.

Tori Amos releases a new studio album, her tenth called ‘Abnormally Attracted To Sin’, this (May 18).

Amos’ live dates are:

Manchester Apollo (September 6)

Birmingham Symphony Hall (7)

Glasgow Royal Concert Hall (8)

London HMV Hammersmith Apollo (10)

The tracklisting for ‘Abnormally Attracted To Sin’ is:

‘Give’

‘Welcome To England’

‘Strong Black Vine’

‘Flavour’

‘Not Dying Today’

‘Maybe California’

‘Curtain Call’

‘Fire To Your Plain’

‘Police Me’

‘That Guy’

‘Abnormally Attracted To Sin’

‘500 Miles’

‘Mary Jane’

‘Starling’

‘Fast Horse’

‘Ophelia’

‘Lady In Blue’

‘Oscar’s Theme’ (UK bonus track)

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Dinosaur Jr: “Farm”

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I’m conscious that, with the Lemonheads and Sonic Youth posts last week, the blog’s slightly in danger of degenerating into something of a dewy-eyed home for alt-rock fans who were students in the late ‘80s. But unfortunately, I’m going to have to keep this going for a while longer, since the new Dinosaur Jr album represents another band of that generation sustaining their current run of form. Mascis, Barlow and Murph’s comeback album, "Beyondâ€, was the subject of the very first – and with hindsight somewhat sketchy – post on Wild Mercury Sound, and much of the same things hold true for “Farmâ€. If anything, though, this one’s even better than “Beyondâ€, very much bucking the trend of bands putting out a serviceable reunion album, using it to keep the comeback tour rolling for another 12 months, then quietly dissolving again. Thinking about it this morning, there’s very little reason why Dinosaur Jr should be able to return with such a hot streak – with two albums that are probably better than virtually everything J Mascis has recorded since Lou Barlow first jumped ship. The chemistry of lineups is a peculiarly unsteady science at the best of times, but that which empowers the original Dinosaur trio is especially baffling. How can we talk of chemistry at all, really, in a band that was always so legendarily dysfunctional, or at least run as some kind of passive-aggressive autocracy by Mascis? Perhaps Barlow and Murph, for all their caution, understand Mascis and the way his songs work better than any other musicians, and perhaps Mascis himself, in spite of the mythical blankness of his demeanour, is motivated by their presence? Whatever: they’ve made a generally pretty thrilling album. “Farm†is a bit more varied, relatively speaking, with fractionally less of the hardcore thrust of “Beyond†– a thrust you could probably ascribe to them recording that comeback on the back of live shows that pivoted around “You’re Living All Over Meâ€. There are some gentler, more or less, songs here like “See You†and “Plansâ€, the odd moment where a certain keening Southern rock groove emerges (on “Friendsâ€, especially) from the usual protean chug, and the occasional air between the effects (on the outstanding solo in “I Don’t Wanna Go Thereâ€, specifically) where Mascis reveals the delicacy and technical precision of his playing that’s often so gloriously fudged and obscured. Mostly, though, it’s a typical J Mascis/Dinosaur album, but a much better than average one. The song titles remain heroically unmemorable: surely, he must have including a great lurching song called “I Don’t Wanna Go There†on every album he’s made in the past two decades? It begins, again, with a song that appears to have already been going on for about a minute – this one’s called “Piecesâ€, has a marvellous hook, and follows what we might call the “Wagon†model. Then there are Lou’s songs – two this time – which again present the tantalising vision of his great mature songwriting allied to Dinosaur’s incomparable muscle. The first one, “Your Weatherâ€, is a classic even by his standards, fit to stand comparison with his finest surging folk-rockers like “Beauty Of The Rideâ€. Heartening stuff. As, by the looks of it, were the performances on the Uncut stage at Brighton’s Great Escape festival. A quick reminder that Tom’s been blogging about White Denim, Abe Vigoda et al here for us.

I’m conscious that, with the Lemonheads and Sonic Youth posts last week, the blog’s slightly in danger of degenerating into something of a dewy-eyed home for alt-rock fans who were students in the late ‘80s. But unfortunately, I’m going to have to keep this going for a while longer, since the new Dinosaur Jr album represents another band of that generation sustaining their current run of form.

White Denim, Vivian Girls play Club Uncut at The Great Escape

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White Denim, Vivian Girls and Crystal Antlers were among the acts who performed at Club Uncut nights at Brighton's Great Escape festival over the weekend. The Acorn and The Week That Was headlined the first night of the festival at the city's Pavilion Theatre (May 14). They were joined by Miles Be...

White Denim, Vivian Girls and Crystal Antlers were among the acts who performed at Club Uncut nights at Brighton‘s Great Escape festival over the weekend.

The Acorn and The Week That Was headlined the first night of the festival at the city’s Pavilion Theatre (May 14).

They were joined by Miles Benjamin Anthony Robinson and DM Stith – read Uncut’s review of their performances.

Abe Vigoda, Vivian Girls, The Phantom Band, Crystal Antlers and Blind Pilot performed on Friday night (May 15) – you can read a blog on their sets here.

The final Club Uncut night at The Great Escape (May 16) was headlined by former London Club Uncut headliners White Denim.

The Texans were joined by School Of Seven Bells, Three Trapped Tigers and Banjo Or Freakout – read the Uncut review of the night here.

Other acts who performed at the festival included Gang Of Four, Metronomy and Kasabian.

Club Uncut @ The Great Escape: White Denim, School Of Seven Bells, Three Trapped Tigers, Banjo Or Freakout – 16/05/09

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Banjo Or Freakout open the last of Uncut's nights at The Great Escape, perhaps the weirdest line-up of the weekend, with a pretty uncompromising set. Their recordings are purely the work of Italian-born London resident Alessio Natalizia, but live they're a duo who mess around with samplers, addin...

Banjo Or Freakout open the last of Uncut‘s nights at The Great Escape, perhaps the weirdest line-up of the weekend, with a pretty uncompromising set.

Club Uncut @ The Great Escape: Abe Vigoda, Vivian Girls, The Phantom Band, Crystal Antlers, Blind Pilot – 15/05/09

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If last night was loosely the folk night of Club Uncut’s Great Escape bill, this is probably the ‘rock’ or ‘psych’ night. The evening starts with a red herring, though. Blind Pilot, a quartet from Portland, Oregon, are folk-rock through and through. Grounded by a double bassist and fleshed out by a banjo player, they’re obviously country-influenced, but tastefully so. Frontman Israel Nebeker’s clear Fleet Foxes-esque vocals are well complimented by hired hands Katie Claborn and Luke Ydstie’s harmonies. Their Neil Young stylings on tracks like “Go On Say It†are certainly pleasant and entirely listenable, but hardly unique, so it’s relieving that they turn all tribal and Glitter Band for one track, with Claborn joining drummer Ryan Dobrowski to bash out a heavy rhythm on the toms. An invigorating set then, although it would have been better if Claborn’s lead banjo had been louder than Nebeker’s rhythmic, but less interesting, acoustic strumming. Next up are Crystal Antlers, former headliners of a recent Club Uncut night in London. The six-piece are on blistering form, segueing between their prog epics with hardly a word to the audience. With their Doors organ, Cuban-sounding percussion and hoarse screaming, the Long Beach group sound like a cross between The Mars Volta and At The Drive-In – fitting, then, that their debut EP was produced by the former’s keyboardist. The Pavilion Theatre’s great system really gives definition to each distorted, echo-laden instrument, averting the risk of the sound turning into a swampy psychedelic soup. In his blog on their previous Club Uncut set, John Mulvey complained that Andrew King’s frantic wah wah solo-ing is unfortunately pushed to the back of the mix, again a slight problem tonight. New songs from their forthcoming album “Tentacles†are the highlight of the set; in particular, new single “Andrew†is a swirling 6/8 blues treat. Glasgow’s The Phantom Band begin their set all striking percussion instruments as Moog synth loop burbles underneath. The six-piece are as progressive as Crystal Antlers, but embrace pulsing Krautrock instead of the Long Beach residents’ hairy jamming. Songs like set highlights “The Howling†– their next single – “Burial Sounds†and “Crocodile†invoke the eccentric, fluorescent spirit of Super Furry Animals and The Beta Band, or a less lysergic Animal Collective. The instruments they use are as eclectic as any of the above, their guitars and odd synths joined by duelling melodicas on one track, and all manner of percussion on others. Again, they say little to the crowd, relying on the force of their motorik rhythms and analogue electronics to keep interest. Vivian Girls bring the evening back to a more stripped-down rock’n’roll feel after all the, admittedly impressive, prog excess. The trio of tattoo-ed Brooklyn-ites mix up the energy and speed of hardcore punk with the beat feel of early Beatles, and showcase most of the tracks from their self-titled debut tonight. They’re as raucous and messy live as they are on record, their lack of technical proficiency countered by their frenzied delivery. At times, it’s like watching your friend’s teenage garage band – just way more exciting. “Is the reverb on?†asks drummer Ali Koehler at the start of the set, not the only time she checks their echoey sound is right – at times, the ambience is almost like a fourth member, and it perfectly suits their vintage sound. To be honest, Uncut loses count of how many songs they play, as they’re all well below the two-minute mark and fired off in quick succession. During the final song, the only one that appears to be longer than three minutes, the trio all switch their instruments, while still raggedly playing the song, of course. Impressive stuff. Californians Abe Vigoda close the packed line-up at the theatre tonight. The four-piece take joy in irritating the crowd by chatting geekily onstage – “So Club Uncut – Uncut – you know what that means in the US?†laughs guitarist Juan Velazquez like a naughty schoolboy. Luckily, their music is much more interesting than their onstage chat, their circular songs clattering along like a cross between The Fall and Fela Kuti. In keeping with the slapdash performance, there seems to be no setlist, and lyrics are virtually inaudible beneath the slap-back echo of their cheap guitars. During the penultimate song, Vivian Girls get up onstage and end up spanking Velazquez with tambourines, rocking the band’s amps back and forth. A fitting end to an intense night, then. Check back tomorrow for more on Club Uncut’s last night at The Great Escape, featuring School Of Seven Bells and White Denim.

If last night was loosely the folk night of Club Uncut’s Great Escape bill, this is probably the ‘rock’ or ‘psych’ night.

Mark Kozelek: “Lost Verses – Live”

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The arrival this week of a new live album from Mark Kozelek, “Lost Verses – Liveâ€, has prompted me to go on something of a Red House Painters/Sun Kil Moon binge (a contrast, for sure, to that concurrent Funkadelic trip; thanks, incidentally, for the recommendations – must check that Eddie Hazel solo album out). I was listening to “Lost Verses – Live†this morning, and composing a bunch of things in my head to write about it. Upon checking my blog for the last Sun Kil Moon album, “Aprilâ€, however, it seems I made pretty much all the same points and deployed all the same adjectives for that record. Which further emphasises the point, I guess, that it’s hard to think of many artists in the past 20 years who have been quite as consistent, both in the tone and in the quality of his material (and, come to think of it, in the typefaces and presentation of the CDs), as Kozelek. The pile of CDs – 14 of them, I think – that I brought in this morning to load onto iTunes, could more or less merge into one giant entity, one vast, dolorous song that tracked Kozelek from Ohio to a permanently fog-bound San Francisco, with sojourns in Bilbao, Brockwell Park and wherever else he’s fetched up on tour, turning over and over evocative images from his childhood and sundry, often unresolved relationships. As the years go by, his voice and playing get stronger, and the lyrics become more reflective than melancholy, but it’s only ever a case of tinkering with nuances. If that sounds repetitive and boring, many who’ve heard Kozelek’s work would probably agree. But for those of us who know and love his records, it’s his persistence and calm adherence to his strengths that makes his music so compelling. “Lost Verses – Live†ends with “Blue Orchidsâ€, from last year, and “Katy Songâ€, from 1993, but they could have been written hours apart, so unvarying is the style. That pleasurable homogeny comes even more to the surface on Kozelek’s solo and live recordings like this, where the tone remains unstintingly stark and acoustic, missing those thicker, Crazy Horse-like bursts which have punctuated many of his later band albums. Even more here, the impact of his music is cumulative: the longer it goes on, the more potency it gathers, so that when Track 9, the exceptional “Lucky Manâ€, rolls around, you suddenly notice how much you’ve been enjoying the whole trip. There’s quite an overlap between “Lost Verses†and 2006’s “Little Drummer Boy – Live†double set: again, the tracks are taken from a bunch of different shows rather than presenting one concert, and Kozelek is stealthily tracked by a second guitarist, Phil Carney. This time, though, most of the old Red House Painters songs are absent, replaced by great swathes – eight tracks, I make it – of “Aprilâ€. As much as anything else, it serves as a reminder of what a terrific record “April†is – one I think I underestimated in that previous blog, as songs like “Lucky Manâ€, “Tonight In Bilbaoâ€, “Lost Verses†itself, “Moorestown†and “Tonight The Sky†(the latter not attempted on “Lost Verses – Liveâ€) really bed in. Last time I wondered, “Part of me wishes that [Kozelek] would be a little more adventurous, inch tentatively out of his comfort zone.†Thinking about it again today, though, that not only seems unrealistic, but actually undesirable. At the end of that “April†blog, someone called Piers posted, “This is still growing on me and prob will for some time.†And maybe that’s the most remarkable thing about Kozelek: for all the simplicity and familiarity of his schtick, all his records seem to accumulate more and more richness and gravity with age. Think I might put together a playlist for the journey home…

The arrival this week of a new live album from Mark Kozelek, “Lost Verses – Liveâ€, has prompted me to go on something of a Red House Painters/Sun Kil Moon binge (a contrast, for sure, to that concurrent Funkadelic trip; thanks, incidentally, for the recommendations – must check that Eddie Hazel solo album out).

Club Uncut @ The Great Escape: The Acorn, The Week That Was, Miles Benjamin Anthony Robinson, DM Stith – 14/05/09

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Club Uncut is back at The Great Escape, and this year proceedings are taking place in the civilised surroundings of the Pavilion Theatre. DM Stith, the first artist to perform, is flanked by an impressive band - a violinist, cellist, drummer and bassist/guitarist. With Stith sounding like a highe...

Club Uncut is back at The Great Escape, and this year proceedings are taking place in the civilised surroundings of the Pavilion Theatre.

Queen Split From Frontman Paul Rodgers

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Queen and Paul Rodgers have announced that they are to part ways after just over four years' collaboration, touring and recording last year's 'The Cosmos Rocks' album. Speaking to VH1 news earlier this month, the former Free singer explained: “Well, you know, we did a world tour, we did a second ...

Queen and Paul Rodgers have announced that they are to part ways after just over four years’ collaboration, touring and recording last year’s ‘The Cosmos Rocks’ album.

Speaking to VH1 news earlier this month, the former Free singer explained: “Well, you know, we did a world tour, we did a second tour of Europe and the Far East and Eastern Europe and we did a studio album and I think we’re kind of leaving it there gently. It’s out there for us to do things in the future if there’s something, a huge charity say like Nelson Mandela, I’m always open to that, but I think we are pretty much done.â€

Additionally, speaking to Billboard magazine, Rodgers added it was never intended to be a long-term arrangement with Queen, adding: “At this point we’re gonna sit back from this. My arrangement with (Queen) was similar to my arrangement with Jimmy (Page) in The Firm in that it was never meant to be a permanent arrangement.

Bad Company’s tour kicks off on June 20 in Charlotte, North Carolina. Meanwhile Brian May and Roger Taylor are helping on an Italian version of their smash hit musical ‘We Will Rock You.’

More info on Queen is available here: BrianMay.com

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Awaydays

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AWAYDAYS DIRECTED BY Pat Holden STARRING Stephen Graham, Nicky Bell, Liam Boyle *** As anyone tuning in their television set recently might have noticed, the North of England in the late Seventies was, apparently, not a particularly nice place to be. At least, according to Red Riding, Channel 4â...

AWAYDAYS

DIRECTED BY Pat Holden

STARRING Stephen Graham, Nicky Bell, Liam Boyle

***

As anyone tuning in their television set recently might have noticed, the North of England in the late Seventies was, apparently, not a particularly nice place to be. At least, according to Red Riding, Channel 4’s ultimately unsatisfactory attempt to explore the psychogeographical landscape of Yorkshire during a particularly blighted period in its history. Awaydays similarly attempts to draw cultural connections in another Northern area (the Wirral) during roughly the same time period. And the conclusion is, broadly speaking, the same: it’s grim up North.

The starting point for author Kevin Samson, in this screenplay from his own novel, is a link between music and football; both of which adhere to strict rituals, fashions and codes of behaviour. On one hand, the North at the start of Thatcher’s premiership is viewed as an incredibly dark, violent place (cf: Red Ridings passim), with the closure of indigenous industries, the rise of heroin and football violence. The prevalent colour scheme in Awaydays is beige, and “Summer holidays and the Christmas piss-up are all [anyone’s] got to look forward to.†Yet, Samson acknowledges that it’s also an incredible fertile time for music – the Eric’s scene in Liverpool, Factory in Manchester, Gang Of Four in Leeds, and further north, Postcard in Glasgow.

The football hooligans, in their regulation wedge haircuts, Peter Storm cagoules and Adidas Forest Hills are at least superficially similar to the New Wavers with their floppy fringes, army greatcoats and motorcycle boots. The difference, of course, is the way they celebrate their allegiances. To the music fans, it’s watching Echo & The Bunnymen gigs at nightclubs; to The Pack, Awaydays contingent of football hooligans, it’s fighting in car parks.

You might think that the twain were never destined to meet, but in fact the core of Samson’s story concerns the relationship between art school student and emergent hooligan Carty (Nicky Bell), and Elvis (Liam Boyle), a charismatic if troubled member of The Pack who also shares Carty’s love for all things post-punk. As Carty finds himself drawn deeper into the brutal world of football hooliganism, so Elvis longs to get out; out of The Pack, out of the Wirral and, as he turns to heroin, out of his head. T

here is a vaguely-defined homoerotic subtext, between Carty and Elvis and also, perhaps, among the testosterone banter of The Pack themselves. But there’s a lot that’s vaguely-defined about Awaydays. You might wonder, for instance, why The Pack would allow a flouncing neurotic boy outsider like Elvis on their rampages. Or exactly what motives a seemingly nice young kid like Carty to want to express himself with a Stanley knife. There’s little context, too, for The Pack themselves, particularly their terrifying father figure/leader, John Godden (Stephen Gaghan, channelling the spirit of Combo from This Is England in a sheepskin jacket). But director Holden at least manages some grand flourishes.

The sight of The Pack turning a corner in slow-motion as they head towards their latest fight soundtracked to Magazine’s “The Light Pours Out Of Me†may be derivative of the Scorsese/Meadows model, but it stills feels exhilarating. For a more articulate expression of the casual/music crossover, you’re better off tracking down Flowered Up’s magnificent Weekender film.

MICHAEL BONNER

Bukowski – Born Into This

Charles Bukowski was the curator of his own myth: his writing made fiction from the fuzzy lines of blurred reality. Barfly, in which Henry ‘Hank’ Chinaski is a drinker and a would-be writer, is a reflection of the period when Henry ‘Hank’ Charles Bukowski was an employee of the LA Post Offic...

Charles Bukowski was the curator of his own myth: his writing made fiction from the fuzzy lines of blurred reality. Barfly, in which Henry ‘Hank’ Chinaski is a drinker and a would-be writer, is a reflection of the period when Henry ‘Hank’ Charles Bukowski was an employee of the LA Post Office, composing blunt poetry from the comfort of a bar stool. The real Hank was an unreliable memoirist, often hiding behind a wisecrack. Often, it was the drink talking. “Anybody can be a non-drunk,†he told one interviewer. “It takes a special talent to be a drunk.â€

And so it went on. Before Bukowski died in 1994 and the myth turned to marble, there was more booze, more smoke, more lonely verse. He is now celebrated as a kind of metholated Hemingway, a gold-plated loser. His gravestone bears the legend “Don’t tryâ€.

Sensibly, director John Dullaghan, who spent seven years assembling his biographical documentary, starts with the Bukowski we know; the bull-faced misanthrope, leering towards the camera, demanding another bottle of fucking wine. The film cuts to an earlier interview, from 1972. Bukowski is younger, no happier, and still suckling alcohol. He leers at the camera. “Whaddya want, motherfuck?â€

There is much of this and, frankly, it ain’t pretty. You could, in a spirit of gonzo abandon, enjoy the story of the time Bukowski pulled a blade on the maitre d’ of The Polo Lounge, or applaud the unpretentious nature of his advice on how to live: “Drink, write and fuck.†A generous viewer might sympathise with Bukowski’s mournful observation that his success was mistimed: “You know,†he moans, “the young blondes with the tight pussies came too late.†(This was in 1972.)

He does the funny drunk well. But there is a horrible sequence, shot by Barbet Schroeder, in which Bukowksi has too much medicine and turns on his girlfriend, Linda. He tells her he is going to hire an attorney to throw her out of the house, then he rains abuse at her, kicking her from the couch. It’s not forgivable, but Linda takes it, and hangs around, eventually marrying Bukowski, and, to a degree, sorting him out.

Why did she bother? Presumably, because the real Hank, the less drunk one, was worth it. Dullaghan doesn’t quite find the private man, but sometimes the mask slips, and Bukowski displays pain in the place where his anger usually resides. There is a strange sequence in his old family home, when he stands in the hall where his father used to beat him. He is happy to indulge the memory of his pockmarked teens, with a face covered in bleeding sores. Writing, he says, was a way of escaping this “sourful deadlinessâ€.

Fame didn’t help. After a few of the European interviews in which Bukowski is treated as a rebellious jukebox of beat wisdom, you start to sympathise with the writer’s predicament. When German Cosmopolitan asks him for a definition of sex, he gamely replies: “Sex is something you do when you can’t sleep.†The interview continues: “Who was your first woman?†“Well,†says Bukowski, “there was the 300lb whore.â€

An absurd encounter with an unnamed Belgian offers a glimpse of his more sensitive side, when the Belgian informs Bukowski that his books use love as a synonym for sexual intercourse. “Where do you get this crap, baby?†Bukowski replies. “Love is a dog from hell. That’s all. It has its own agonies.†German Cosmo gets a more lyrical definition. “Love is a fog that burns with the first daylight of reality.â€

More poetry and less myth would have been interesting, but might not have been more true. Sometimes, as Bukowski disciple Tom Waits understands, the art is fashioned from the myth. (Waits is uncommonly candid here; Bono is reliably verbose.)

In the end, Dullagher enforces Bukowski’s legend, without providing enough evidence of his genius. There is a glimmer in the extras, in a home video shot by Linda two months before his death. There is no violence, no drink, and no boasting about his purple onion. He reads quietly, talking about “wax lightning†and luck. It’s a rush to hear the musicality of the poet’s words. “Forget it,†he says quietly. “It’s a farce.â€

EXTRAS:4* Interviews, readings by Bono, Tom Waits, publisher John Martin, home movie, film by Taylor Hackford.

ALASTAIR McKAY

Bruce Springsteen To Release New Greatest Hits Album

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Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band are to release a European-only ‘Greatest Hits’ compilation next month, just prior to their UK live shows. Bonus tracks on the compilation are two live tracks "Because The Night" and "Fire", previously only available on Springsteen's 'Live 1975 – 1985â...

Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band are to release a European-only ‘Greatest Hits’ compilation next month, just prior to their UK live shows.

Bonus tracks on the compilation are two live tracks “Because The Night” and “Fire”, previously only available on Springsteen’s ‘Live 1975 – 1985’ box set.

Springsteen & The E Street Band will appear in the UK for live dates which include headlining Glastonbury and Hard Rock Calling festivals.

More information about the new collection and the shows, see www.brucespringsteen.net for more details.

The ‘Greatest Hits’ track listing as follows:

1. Blinded By the Light

2. Rosalita

3. Born to Run

4. Thunder Road

5. Badlands

6. Darkness On the Edge of Town

7. Hungry Heart

8. The River

9. Born In the USA

10. I’m On Fire

11. Glory Days

12. Dancing in the Dark

13. The Rising

14. Lonesome Day

15. Radio Nowhere

16. Long Walk Home

Bonus Tracks:

17. Because the Night (Live)

18. Fire (Live)

For more Bruce Springsteen news on Uncut click here.

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Wilco Stream New Album Ahead Of June Release

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Wilco have been previewing their forthcoming new album 'Wilco (The Album)' on their website Wilcoworld.net, after the new material leaked illegally on the web. The band, led by Jeff Tweedy decided to make the songs available as a stream through their own site, issuing the following statement. They...

Wilco have been previewing their forthcoming new album ‘Wilco (The Album)’ on their website Wilcoworld.net, after the new material leaked illegally on the web.

The band, led by Jeff Tweedy decided to make the songs available as a stream through their own site, issuing the following statement.

They said: “Well, we made it nearly a month with copies of Wilco (the album) floating around out there before it leaked. Pretty impressive restraint in this day and age. But the inevitable happened last night. Since we know you’re curious and probably have better things to do than scour the internet for a download (though we do understand the attraction of the illicit), we’ve posted a stream of the full album…Feel free to refer to it as ‘wilco (the stream)’ if you must.”

You can listen to Wilco (The Album) here.

The full track listing is:

Wilco (the song)

Deeper Down

One Wing

Bull Black Nova

You And I

You Never Know

Country Disappeared

Solitaire

I’ll Fight

Sonny Feeling

Everlasting Everything

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Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder To Answer Your Questions!

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Eddie Vedder – political activist, soundtrack composer, sports fan and sometime rock star – is soon to be the subject of Uncut ’s regular An Audience With...feature, and we’re after your questions. So, we wonder, is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask him? Where’s his favourite ...

Eddie Vedder – political activist, soundtrack composer, sports fan and sometime rock star – is soon to be the subject of Uncut ’s regular An Audience With…feature, and we’re after your questions.

So, we wonder, is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask him?

Where’s his favourite place to surf?

What’s the prize record in his apparently huge collection of classic vinyl?

What does he remember about playing with The Who at the Royal Albert Hall in 2000?

Send your questions to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com by Wednesday, May 20.

Your best questions and of course, Vedder’s answers will be published in a future edition of the magazine.

Tim Hecker and Sir Richard Bishop

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A couple of records today that I’ve mysteriously failed to write about over the past month or two, both excellent. First up is “An Imaginary Country†by Tim Hecker, a more or less electronic musician from Montreal, whose music on this evidence is distinct kin to that of Christian Fennesz. I always get Tim Hecker and Florian Hecker mixed up, so I’ll have to be rather guarded about what I’ve got of his previous stuff. But “An Imaginary Country†is a gaseous and lovely piece of dense ambience, very much in keeping with that idea of a sentimental avant-garde that I cooked up in the Fennesz blog. Like “Black Seaâ€, “An Imaginary Country†quietly encourages a bunch of oceanic metaphors, with titles like “Sea Of Pulsesâ€, “The Inner Shore†and so on. If anything, though, these pieces are often lusher than those of Fennesz, and the process doesn’t seem to play quite such an integral part in Hecker’s final sound design. Digitally-adjusted guitar doesn’t have such a prominent role, either, apart from an intense hedge of noise on “Paragon Pointâ€: typical of the album, it’s a highly aestheticised and controlled cacophony, and beneath it lies one of those ghostly submerged melodies favoured by Autechre. Generally, though, Hecker achieves a tremulous, devotional atmosphere, using some reverberant organ tones and, on “Utropicsâ€, what seems to be a choir briefly appearing out of the ether. It’s hard to be certain about specific sounds, of course, but a beautiful record which, in the best traditions of quasi-ambient music, doesn’t just soundtrack an environment but subtly transforms your perceptions of it. Sir Richard Bishop’s “Freak Of Arabyâ€, meanwhile, finds the awesome old Sun City Girls guitarist focusing his talents somewhat. If “Polytheistic Fragments†acted as a kind of de facto sampler of Bishop’s range – moving gracefully from Django Rheinhardt to John Fahey, for instance – “Freak Of Araby†is a much more specific project. It’s explicitly inspired by the Egyptian guitarist Omar Khorshid, who I must admit I’ve never heard, and finds Bishop mixing up his old songs with traditional Arabic material, ending up with a Moroccan chanter freakout called “Blood-Stained Sands†in a Master Musicians Of Joujouka style (which reminds me, there’s a new album from Sun City Girls associates The Master Musicians Of Bukkake kicking around which I need to play). Anyway, “Freak Of Arabyâ€, in the way that it privileges the eastern influences that often sit deep in the mix on Takoma School/Takoma-derived/American primitive jams, is quite a revelation (as is “Open Strings – Early Virtuoso Recordings From The Middle East, And New Responsesâ€, which features Bishop alongside Ben Chasny, MV & EE, Rick Tomlinson and others, and which I’ll write more about soonish). In the meantime, if anyone has any good tips on what to check out by Omar Khorshid or similar, please let me know.

A couple of records today that I’ve mysteriously failed to write about over the past month or two, both excellent.

Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest

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One day in 2006, a fat package arrived at my door, from the techno label Warp. Ten CDs: a whole lotta techno. Ever listened to nine techno albums consecutively? “This has been a character-building afternoon,†I thought, slipping the tenth CD (Yellow House by someone called Grizzly Bear) into the machine. Then, amazingly, out poured flutes, banjos, church-y pianos from Little House On The Prairie, haiku-like lyrics about rooms with frozen pipes, and heavenly vocal harmonies. The ghosts of Smile and Music From Big Pink wandered close at hand. This was a masterpiece. Warp’s anomaly turned out to be a precociously talented Brooklyn four-piece, whose mysterious folk-pop-chorale hybrids can sometimes sound like they’re reconfiguring 150 years of Americana at the drop of a hat. With three ex-music students in the lineup, Grizzly Bear are both versatile and punctilious. Bassist Chris Taylor, for example, plays a lot of woodwind and keyboard instruments, while drummer Chris Bear has the precise technique of a trained percussionist. Grizzly Bear’s admirers – a growing army – include Radiohead (with whom they’ve toured), Paul Simon [see Q&A] and Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold, who has already called Veckatimest the album of the decade. A 12-song set lasting 53 minutes, Veckatimest has a different atmosphere to Yellow House. Grizzly Bear have made a big virtue of its dynamic range –the fourth track, “Fine For Nowâ€, climaxes in a violent ensemble shit-storm, which would never have happened on Yellow House – and they’ve spoken of its increased sonic clarity. True, we hear not only the words and instruments, but even the click of Daniel Rossen’s tongue on the roof of his mouth as he sings the word “goneâ€. Yellow House felt like it took place entirely indoors. It was hushed, dusty and you could imagine creaking floorboards. Veckatimest is an outdoor record. Part of it was made on Cape Cod (a peninsula linked by bridges to mainland Massachusetts), and the album is within sight of blue water from the moment Rossen sings its opening line (“A haven on the southern point is calling usâ€) over a gently rolling groove. The song flickers with subliminal images. With a tiny glint of a Cornish accent, Rossen delivers one line (“Avert yer eyes from all o’ thisâ€) that had me seeing visions of Robert Louis Stevenson’s Hispaniola. Veckatimest – named after one of the Elizabethan Islands off Cape Cod – is ambitious, elegant and an absolute bugger to describe. As on Yellow House, Grizzly Bear juxtapose forms as wide apart as post-rock, doo-wop, Philip Glass and The Threepenny Opera, to say nothing of the thrilling Beach Boys references that got some of us so excited in 2006. But what’s becoming clearer, particularly since Rossen’s second band, Department Of Eagles, released a fine album (In Ear Park) last year, is the distinction between the Grizzly Bear tunes that he sings, and the ones sung by his fellow lead vocalist, Ed Droste. A Rossen song (“Doryâ€, “Hold Stillâ€, “I Live With Youâ€) will often feature unusual guitar chords and have a dreamy, Disney-esque quality, accentuated by the sweet, Van Dyke Parks lilt in Rossen’s voice. Droste, for his part, is a remarkable combination of blue-eyed soul, 10cc and Benjamin Britten. Droste’s tunes (“Two Weeksâ€, “Cheerleaderâ€, “About Faceâ€) can sound facile in their early stages, a bit too simple, but when their sumptuous arrangements kick in, the melodies quickly attain grandeur and become lethally infectious. Rossen is a pure original, but it’s the Droste songs that you may find yourself humming around the house.Hints of Radiohead are also discernible here and there, which may be unintentional. As things stand, ovations from Radiohead and Fleet Foxes look sure to propel Grizzly Bear to wider renown. While I’m not sure Veckatimest is the huge improvement on Yellow House that some blogs claim it to be, it’s unquestionably a lovely record and it deserves to be heard on land, sea, indoors and out. UNCUT Q&A: Ed Droste Fleet Foxes have praised Veckatimest to the skies. Are you friends? Is there a shared purpose? I wouldn’t say a shared purpose, but I greatly respect them. I’ve never met Robin [Pecknold], but we talk all the time via email or Twitter. He lives in Seattle and I’m in New York, so we haven’t crossed paths yet. I’m sure I’ll meet him this year at some festival. Grizzly Bear are often compared to Van Dyke Parks. Do you play his music much? I didn’t grow up listening to him as much as my band-mates, but I went to college with his daughter and she became one of my best friends. Ironically enough, I’m sitting in her house in California right now, so it’s funny you should bring up his name… You performed at Paul Simon’s concerts in Brooklyn last year. How did that happen? A total fluke, actually. He met our friend Feist at a taping of Saturday Night Live, and said he needed bands who could perform his music. She mentioned that Grizzly Bear cover “Gracelandâ€. He was like, “Great, when are they playing?†She said: “In about 90 minutes, about four blocks away.†Next thing you know, he’s sitting backstage with us. INTERVIEW: DAVID CAVANAGH For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

One day in 2006, a fat package arrived at my door, from the techno label Warp. Ten CDs: a whole lotta techno. Ever listened to nine techno albums consecutively? “This has been a character-building afternoon,†I thought, slipping the tenth CD (Yellow House by someone called Grizzly Bear) into the machine. Then, amazingly, out poured flutes, banjos, church-y pianos from Little House On The Prairie, haiku-like lyrics about rooms with frozen pipes, and heavenly vocal harmonies. The ghosts of Smile and Music From Big Pink wandered close at hand. This was a masterpiece.

Warp’s anomaly turned out to be a precociously talented Brooklyn four-piece, whose mysterious folk-pop-chorale hybrids can sometimes sound like they’re reconfiguring 150 years of Americana at the drop of a hat. With three ex-music students in the lineup, Grizzly Bear are both versatile and punctilious. Bassist Chris Taylor, for example, plays a lot of woodwind and keyboard instruments, while drummer Chris Bear has the precise technique of a trained percussionist. Grizzly Bear’s admirers – a growing army – include Radiohead (with whom they’ve toured), Paul Simon [see Q&A] and Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold, who has already called Veckatimest the album of the decade.

A 12-song set lasting 53 minutes, Veckatimest has a different atmosphere to Yellow House. Grizzly Bear have made a big virtue of its dynamic range –the fourth track, “Fine For Nowâ€, climaxes in a violent ensemble shit-storm, which would never have happened on Yellow House – and they’ve spoken of its increased sonic clarity. True, we hear not only the words and instruments, but even the click of Daniel Rossen’s tongue on the roof of his mouth as he sings the word “goneâ€. Yellow House felt like it took place entirely indoors. It was hushed, dusty and you could imagine creaking floorboards. Veckatimest is an outdoor record. Part of it was made on Cape Cod (a peninsula linked by bridges to mainland Massachusetts), and the album is within sight of blue water from the moment Rossen sings its opening line (“A haven on the southern point is calling usâ€) over a gently rolling groove. The song flickers with subliminal images.

With a tiny glint of a Cornish accent, Rossen delivers one line (“Avert yer eyes from all o’ thisâ€) that had me seeing visions of Robert Louis Stevenson’s Hispaniola. Veckatimest – named after one of the Elizabethan Islands off Cape Cod – is ambitious, elegant and an absolute bugger to describe. As on Yellow House, Grizzly Bear juxtapose forms as wide apart as post-rock, doo-wop, Philip Glass and The Threepenny Opera, to say nothing of the thrilling Beach Boys references that got some of us so excited in 2006.

But what’s becoming clearer, particularly since Rossen’s second band, Department Of Eagles, released a fine album (In Ear Park) last year, is the distinction between the Grizzly Bear tunes that he sings, and the ones sung by his fellow lead vocalist, Ed Droste. A Rossen song (“Doryâ€, “Hold Stillâ€, “I Live With Youâ€) will often feature unusual guitar chords and have a dreamy, Disney-esque quality, accentuated by the sweet, Van Dyke Parks lilt in Rossen’s voice. Droste, for his part, is a remarkable combination of blue-eyed soul, 10cc and Benjamin Britten. Droste’s tunes (“Two Weeksâ€, “Cheerleaderâ€, “About Faceâ€) can sound facile in their early stages, a bit too simple, but when their sumptuous arrangements kick in, the melodies quickly attain grandeur and become lethally infectious.

Rossen is a pure original, but it’s the Droste songs that you may find yourself humming around the house.Hints of Radiohead are also discernible here and there, which may be unintentional. As things stand, ovations from Radiohead and Fleet Foxes look sure to propel Grizzly Bear to wider renown. While I’m not sure Veckatimest is the huge improvement on Yellow House that some blogs claim it to be, it’s unquestionably a lovely record and it deserves to be heard on land, sea, indoors and out.

UNCUT Q&A: Ed Droste

Fleet Foxes have praised Veckatimest to the skies. Are you friends? Is there a shared purpose?

I wouldn’t say a shared purpose, but I greatly respect them. I’ve never met Robin [Pecknold], but we talk all the time via email or Twitter. He lives in Seattle and I’m in New York, so we haven’t crossed paths yet. I’m sure I’ll meet him this year at some festival.

Grizzly Bear are often compared to Van Dyke Parks. Do you play his music much?

I didn’t grow up listening to him as much as my band-mates, but I went to college with his daughter and she became one of my best friends. Ironically enough, I’m sitting in her house in California right now, so it’s funny you should bring up his name…

You performed at Paul Simon’s concerts in Brooklyn last year. How did that happen?

A total fluke, actually. He met our friend Feist at a taping of Saturday Night Live, and said he needed bands who could perform his music. She mentioned that Grizzly Bear cover “Gracelandâ€. He was like, “Great, when are they playing?†She said: “In about 90 minutes, about four blocks away.†Next thing you know, he’s sitting backstage with us.

INTERVIEW: DAVID CAVANAGH

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

Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit – Self Titled

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As the third-string songwriter in The Drive By-Truckers, Jason Isbell had an enviable gig. For six eventful years and three magnificent albums, all that was required of him, with the prolific Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley contributing most of the material, was the odd carefully burnished gem. These, Isbell delivered – among them the title track of 2003’s classic Decoration Day and that album’s clear highlight, the careworn, hilarious, father-to-son lecture “Outfitâ€. Isbell outgrew the arrangement – and also, it seems reasonable to assume, the novelty of touring in the same band as one’s ex-wife (DBT bassist Shonna Tucker). He left the Truckers and made his solo bow with 2007’s Sirens Of The Ditch, a frustratingly uneven album which contained the best thing Isbell had written to date (the stunning “Dress Bluesâ€, a bitterly eloquent elegy for a school acquaintance killed in Iraq), but was burdened by much lesser stuff that might have struggled for space on a DBT album: the question of whether Isbell was cut out to be a solo artist remained an open one. Not any longer. Isbell’s second studio album redeems his promise in spectacular fashion, though a slight retreat from the spotlight is an important reason for this. It is telling that Isbell’s touring group, The 400 Unit – named after a psychiatric facility in Isbell’s native Florence, Alabama – are elevated to equal billing in credits and title: this sounds like it was made by a confederation of equals, the curious employment of a session drummer notwithstanding. Though the songs – and that fabulous, wracked drawl of a voice – are recognisably Isbell’s, The 400 Unit impose themselves confidently: the keyboards of Derry deBorja (ex-Son Volt) are especially commanding, recalling the backdrops created by Drive-By Truckers collaborators Spooner Oldham and Booker T Jones. This is best thought of as ‘country soul’. Isbell’s words, in style and content, are old-school tears-in-the-beer laments, deftly lightened by exquisite deadpan payoffs: the stumbling barfly of “Streetlightsâ€, who thinks “I blocked just a park away, but I can’t really sayâ€; or the haplessly besotted wastrel of the Tom Waits-like “Cigarettes & Wine†reminiscing that “She kept me happy all the time/I know that ain’t much of a line/But it’s the Gods’ own truthâ€. The 400 Unit’s music, however, forsakes pedal steels and strings for those grand, gloomy keyboards of deBorja’s, guitars both delicate and destructive – “Good†and “However Long†rock like Slobberbone or The Damnwells – and, on the adulterer’s confessional “No Choice In The Matterâ€, pugnacious horns summoned straight from Muscle Shoals (this was recorded at the same Shoals studio, FAME, as any number of cuts by The Allman Brothers and Wilson Pickett, whose ghosts are prominent here). Whether encouraged by the triumph of “Dress Bluesâ€, or fuelled by other preoccupations, Isbell is again at his best when contemplating the intersection of those two realms of endeavour in which all is said to be fair. On the knelling ballad, “Sunstrokeâ€, he scourges himself and a vexatious paramour for their insistence on creating further strife in a world full of people who can’t avoid it, along with all other such self-dramatising grandstanders “who sleep while the soldiers get sunstroke/And make little fools of ourselvesâ€. And “Soldiers Get Strange†is a brilliantly effective sketch of the derangement of a returning serviceman. The 400 Unit sound like Tom Petty’s Heartbreakers, Isbell’s staggering veteran like a man who can no longer see life unless it’s defined by death (“Maybe you’ll re-enlist/It couldn’t be worse than thisâ€). The song, much like the rest of this terrific album, is an acknowledgement that while love is assuredly a battlefield, a battlefield, in its way, can almost offer love. ANDREW MUELLER UNCUT Q&A: Jason Isbell Why did you decide to credit The 400 Unit so prominently? Sirens Of The Ditch was more of a solo project – I just used whoever I could find. But I’d been touring for a couple of years, and found quite a cohesive group of people, and they contributed quite a bit. Rather than me dictating, I’d play the songs and they’d come up with the arrangements. You’ve a big soul sound here. Is that a consequence of recording at FAME studios? It definitely didn’t hurt. Being in that room does put you in that mindset, but that was how the songs presented themselves – and it’s what I listen to and what I write most. It wasn’t something we did on purpose, but I’m sure the atmosphere added to that. Post-Truckers, do you find yourself writing about different things? The goal is still the same as what it was. When I was writing for the Truckers, I knew there was a certain thing we had as a group, so that would put me in a storytelling mode, and leaning towards Southern-oriented topics and sound. In this band I don’t feel that pressure. I can make any kind of music. But the material isn’t difficult to find. I write a lot. What’s hard is pacing myself for shows – to sing for two hours. ANDREW MUELLER For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

As the third-string songwriter in The Drive By-Truckers, Jason Isbell had an enviable gig. For six eventful years and three magnificent albums, all that was required of him, with the prolific Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley contributing most of the material, was the odd carefully burnished gem. These, Isbell delivered – among them the title track of 2003’s classic Decoration Day and that album’s clear highlight, the careworn, hilarious, father-to-son lecture “Outfitâ€.

Isbell outgrew the arrangement – and also, it seems reasonable to assume, the novelty of touring in the same band as one’s ex-wife (DBT bassist Shonna Tucker). He left the Truckers and made his solo bow with 2007’s Sirens Of The Ditch, a frustratingly uneven album which contained the best thing Isbell had written to date (the stunning “Dress Bluesâ€, a bitterly eloquent elegy for a school acquaintance killed in Iraq), but was burdened by much lesser stuff that might have struggled for space on a DBT album: the question of whether Isbell was cut out to be a solo artist remained an open one. Not any longer. Isbell’s second studio album redeems his promise in spectacular fashion, though a slight retreat from the spotlight is an important reason for this.

It is telling that Isbell’s touring group, The 400 Unit – named after a psychiatric facility in Isbell’s native Florence, Alabama – are elevated to equal billing in credits and title: this sounds like it was made by a confederation of equals, the curious employment of a session drummer notwithstanding. Though the songs – and that fabulous, wracked drawl of a voice – are recognisably Isbell’s, The 400 Unit impose themselves confidently: the keyboards of Derry deBorja (ex-Son Volt) are especially commanding, recalling the backdrops created by Drive-By Truckers collaborators Spooner Oldham and Booker T Jones.

This is best thought of as ‘country soul’. Isbell’s words, in style and content, are old-school tears-in-the-beer laments, deftly lightened by exquisite deadpan payoffs: the stumbling barfly of “Streetlightsâ€, who thinks “I blocked just a park away, but I can’t really sayâ€; or the haplessly besotted wastrel of the Tom Waits-like “Cigarettes & Wine†reminiscing that “She kept me happy all the time/I know that ain’t much of a line/But it’s the Gods’ own truthâ€. The 400 Unit’s music, however, forsakes pedal steels and strings for those grand, gloomy keyboards of deBorja’s, guitars both delicate and destructive – “Good†and “However Long†rock like Slobberbone or The Damnwells – and, on the adulterer’s confessional “No Choice In The Matterâ€, pugnacious horns summoned straight from Muscle Shoals (this was recorded at the same Shoals studio, FAME, as any number of cuts by The Allman Brothers and Wilson Pickett, whose ghosts are prominent here).

Whether encouraged by the triumph of “Dress Bluesâ€, or fuelled by other preoccupations, Isbell is again at his best when contemplating the intersection of those two realms of endeavour in which all is said to be fair. On the knelling ballad, “Sunstrokeâ€, he scourges himself and a vexatious paramour for their insistence on creating further strife in a world full of people who can’t avoid it, along with all other such self-dramatising grandstanders “who sleep while the soldiers get sunstroke/And make little fools of ourselvesâ€. And “Soldiers Get Strange†is a brilliantly effective sketch of the derangement of a returning serviceman. The 400 Unit sound like Tom Petty’s Heartbreakers, Isbell’s staggering veteran like a man who can no longer see life unless it’s defined by death (“Maybe you’ll re-enlist/It couldn’t be worse than thisâ€). The song, much like the rest of this terrific album, is an acknowledgement that while love is assuredly a battlefield, a battlefield, in its way, can almost offer love.

ANDREW MUELLER

UNCUT Q&A: Jason Isbell

Why did you decide to credit The 400 Unit so prominently?

Sirens Of The Ditch was more of a solo project – I just used whoever I could find. But I’d been touring for a couple of years, and found quite a cohesive group of people, and they contributed quite a bit. Rather than me dictating, I’d play the songs and they’d come up with the arrangements.

You’ve a big soul sound here. Is that a consequence of recording at FAME studios?

It definitely didn’t hurt. Being in that room does put you in that mindset, but that was how the songs presented themselves – and it’s what I listen to and what I write most. It wasn’t something we did on purpose, but I’m sure the atmosphere added to that.

Post-Truckers, do you find yourself writing about different things?

The goal is still the same as what it was. When I was writing for the Truckers, I knew there was a certain thing we had as a group, so that would put me in a storytelling mode, and leaning towards Southern-oriented topics and sound. In this band I don’t feel that pressure. I can make any kind of music. But the material isn’t difficult to find. I write a lot. What’s hard is pacing myself for shows – to sing for two hours.

ANDREW MUELLER

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

Patrick Wolf, Airborne Toxic Event and more added to Latitude bill!

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Patrick Wolf, The Airborne Toxic Event and Wild Beasts have all been confirmed for the Obelisk Arena at this year's Latitude Festival, on the the bill with headliners Pet Shop Boys, Grace Jones and Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds. The Uncut Arena, which boasts previously announced Bat For Lashes, Spi...

Patrick Wolf, The Airborne Toxic Event and Wild Beasts have all been confirmed for the Obelisk Arena at this year’s Latitude Festival, on the the bill with headliners Pet Shop Boys, Grace Jones and Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds.

The Uncut Arena, which boasts previously announced Bat For Lashes, Spiritualized and the Gossip as headliners, will also see Chairlift and hotly tipped The Mummers perform in the tent.

Elsewhere at the three day Suffolk festival, Chas & dave will perform as part of Mark Lamarr‘s annual ‘Presents’ series in the Film & Music Arena and !!! and the 1990 return to play the Sunrise Arena.

Weekend (July 16-19, 2009) tickets are a snip £150, day tickets are £60, and you can buy them here: www.festivalrepublic.com or here: www.latitudefestival.co.uk

The full list of Latitude’s latest musical additions are:

OBELISK ARENA

Patrick Wolf

The Airborne Toxic Event

Lisa Hannigan

Amazing Baby

Wild Beasts

UNCUT ARENA

Chairlift

The Mummers

White Belt Yellow Tag

The Invisible

SUNRISE ARENA

!!!

Skint And Demoralised

1990s

Animal Kingdom

Black Joe Lewis

Fight Like Apes

Kurran and the Wolfnotes

Juliette Commagere

THE LAKE STAGE

Bombay Bicycle Club

Little Comets

Casiokids

Marina and the Diamonds

Speech Debelle

Chew Lips

Django Django

Bishi

The Agitator

The Cheek

Not Squares

FILM & MUSIC ARENA

Mark Lamarr presents: T-99, Chas & Dave, The Asteroids Galaxy Tour, Prince Fatty

Birds Eye View presents Salome with Bishi, Zongamin & Neil Kaczor

Cape Farewell Project

Noise Of Art

Ditto

SonVer

Adam Buxton

Encounters Film Festival presents Tom Harper & Ivana Mackinnon

Beautiful & The Dammed DJs

The Posters Came From The Walls

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

Jesca Hoop To Headline Next Club Uncut!

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American songwriter Jesca Hoop is set to headline Club Uncut on June 30. The Californian singer who's lively CV includes a stint nannying for Tom Waits’ kids, as well as various hook-ups with Guy Garvey and Elbow will play Upstairs At The Garage, the newly reopened venue. A full supporting cast will be revealed soon, but tickets for the show are available now through seetickets.com If you missed the fantastic Pink Mountaintops headline show this week (May 11), you can check out Uncut's live report by clicking here! Remember, too, that we’ll be back at our usual venue, the Borderline in Manette Street, W1 on August 19, when the headliners will be San Francisco’s awesome psych groovers, Wooden Shjips. 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

American songwriter Jesca Hoop is set to headline Club Uncut on June 30.

The Californian singer who’s lively CV includes a stint nannying for Tom Waits’ kids, as well as various hook-ups with Guy Garvey and Elbow will play Upstairs At The Garage, the newly reopened venue. A full supporting cast will be revealed soon, but tickets for the show are available now through seetickets.com

If you missed the fantastic Pink Mountaintops headline show this week (May 11), you can check out Uncut’s live report by clicking here!

Remember, too, that we’ll be back at our usual venue, the Borderline in Manette Street, W1 on August 19, when the headliners will be San Francisco’s awesome psych groovers, Wooden Shjips.

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

The 18th Uncut Playlist Of 2009, plus more Neil Young

Plenty of discussion on last week’s Neil Young blog, and also, more fractiously, over at Thrasher’s Wheat, about the value/usefulness/etc of “Archivesâ€. A lot of the heat seems to revolve around definitions of “unreleased songsâ€, and whether that means unreleased recordings of known songs, or songs that have never been previously released in any form.The debate reaches a highpoint of sorts on Thrasher’s Wheat when one persistent critic suggests, “if you read the Uncut Blog, the author states that there is only one notable unreleased song worth listening to – ‘Everybody's Alone’. Neil Young has committed the greatest fraud in the history of music.†Blimey. That made me re-read my original post, and check that I called ‘Everybody’s Alone’ “the one really essential unheard song on the whole set†– not the only one worth listening to, quite. It strikes me, thinking about this some more, that the whole debate calls into question the main point of boxsets like this. Should we really expect most unreleased material to stand comparison with the best work of, in this case, Neil Young? Or should we see them more as historical research tools, where the unreleased songs are most more interesting as contextualising evidence rather than stand-alone tracks? If it’s the latter, maybe that makes these sort of projects a luxury too far for all but the most forensically-inclined fans. Or maybe they should buy a few of the “Archives†CDs separately – starting, maybe, with the Riverboat live show. Or, again, perhaps they should wait for “Volume Twoâ€, which should theoretically have a wealth of unheard stuff on it; the odd lost album even? Tricky questions, but I'm having fun with it. Anyhow, on to the generally new and unheard records we’ve played over the last few days. Special attention, I think, to the new Six Organs Of Admittance album, and I guess you should also know that amidst a lot of quite dodgy stuff on it, “Palermo Shooting†(the soundtrack to the new Wim Wenders film)includes a couple of new Grinderman tracks and an unreleased Bonnie Prince Billy & Matt Sweeney song. 1 Sonic Youth – The Eternal (Matador) 2 Miles Davis – Sketches Of Spain: 50th Anniversary Legacy Edition (Legacy) 3 Woods – Songs Of Shame (Shrimper) 4 Six Organs Of Admittance – Luminous Night (Drag City) 5 Mark Kozelek – Lost Verses – Live (Caldo Verde) 6 Various Artists – Legends Of Benin (Analog Africa) 7 Assemble Head in Sunburst Sound – When Sweet Sleep Returned (Tee Pee) 8 The Lemonheads – Varshons (Cooking Vinyl) 9 Funkadelic – Standing On The Verge Of Getting It On (Westbound) 10 Woebot – Woebot (Hollow Earth) 11 39 Clocks – Zoned (De Stijl) 12 Green Day – 21st Century Breakdown (Warners) 13 Charles Mingus – Mingus Ah Um: 50th Anniversary Legacy Edition (Legacy) 14 Various Artists – Palermo Shooting (City Slang) 15 Sir Richard Bishop – The Freak Of Araby (Drag City)

Plenty of discussion on last week’s Neil Young blog, and also, more fractiously, over at Thrasher’s Wheat, about the value/usefulness/etc of “Archivesâ€.