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Elbow To Play Biggest Show So Far

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Elbow have announced the biggest live show of their careers taking place in Manchester on September 18. The band have billed the MEN Arena show as a 'homecoming' before they take a break to finish their next album, the award-winning 'The Seldom Seen Kid.' Tickets for the gig will go on sale on Fri...

Elbow have announced the biggest live show of their careers taking place in Manchester on September 18.

The band have billed the MEN Arena show as a ‘homecoming’ before they take a break to finish their next album, the award-winning ‘The Seldom Seen Kid.’

Tickets for the gig will go on sale on Friday (May 1).

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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 @uncutmagazinePic credit: Andy Willsher

Bob Dylan – London 02 Arena, Saturday April 25, 2009/London Roundhouse, Sunday April 26, 2009

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The last time I was on a boat on the Thames, The Sex Pistols were playing “Pretty Vacant” as we sailed downriver past the Houses Of Parliament. It was Jubilee Day, 1977, and the cruiser we were on had just been surrounded by police launches, their searchlights raking the upper deck of our craft, dozens of their baton-wielding colleagues lined up in sinister ranks on Westminster Pier, waiting for us to dock so they could storm aboard and crack heads, which they eventually did with painful abandon. Tonight is altogether more sedate and I am heading downriver towards the 02, standing on deck of a Thames Clipper like Washington crossing the Delaware, no tube service this weekend to the Greenwich Peninsular, a pain for many, but not quite the cataclysmic inconvenience claimed elsewhere by some disgruntled individuals for whom it is all a bit of a palaver. The 02 is the biggest London venue Dylan’s played in years - apart from a two night residency at Wembley Arena in April 2007, Dylan often preferring the funky surroundings of Brixton Academy and in November 2003 even fetching up for one memorable show at Shepherd’s Bush Empire. That’s the kind of place you’d love to see him play more often, which even as the boat I’m on approaches the site of the former Millennium Dome, makes the prospect of tomorrow night’s gig at the Roundhouse so thrilling. As fearsomely large and invariably inhospitable indoor arenas go, the 02 is better than most, not unlike the venues I saw Dylan play on the opening North American dates of the Modern Times tour in late 2006. Usually, of course, when people play places like this, there is an inclination toward pyrotechnics, flamboyant stage sets, huge video screens to bring the audience closer to what’s happening on stage, which from the furthermost seats doubtless will seem remote. Dylan, though, has no time for such fripperies, that kind of showiness simply not his style, the music everything to him and who he is, the point of him – and us – being where we are tonight. It’s amazing, though, that what he does is so often continually misinterpreted – and that his recasting in often unexpected musical styles of various acknowledged classics from his vast back catalogue is still seen as wilful tampering, evidence in the disparaging opinion of some of a wilful tampering with and heedless butchering of his musical legacy, Dylan in their view not giving a toss about he plays or the way he plays it, which is rarely the way some of the songs originally sounded. This sad perspective is in opposition to others among us for whom Dylan’s unpredictability - his willingness to re-address his songbook typical of his creative restlessness than some woebegone indifference - is what makes, year after year, the narrative of the Never-Ending Tour so uniquely compelling. It’s an approach that doesn’t always work, admittedly. There is for instance a version at the 02 of “Chimes Of Freedom” that struggles in this particular incarnation to clearly match the potency of the song’s poetic imagery, the result somewhat muffled, not to mention unrecognisable at first to a lot of people (there’s an amusing cheer a few minutes in from one part of the crowd when they realise what it is he’s playing). Similarly, a version of “The Lonesome Death Of Hattie Carroll” as a fatalistic waltz slightly spurns the song’s bitter anger. When it does work, which is more often than not, the results can be spectacular – witness here “The Times They Are A-Changin’”, newly-minted as a serrated waltz, and the show’s possible highlight, a suitably dark and harrowing “Ballad Of Hollis Brown” played with the kind of nightmarish venom latterly reserved for the overhauled “It’s Alright Ma (I’m Only Bleeding)”, a similar highlight of recent tours, Donnie Herron’s spectral banjo plucking set against lead guitarist Denny Freeman’s ghostly twanging. And it’s not as if everything Dylan plays is wholly re-imagined from the original blueprint. Songs from “Love And Theft” and Modern Times like “Po’ Boy”, “Honest With Me”, “When The Deal Goes Down”, “Thunder On The Mountain” and, best of all, “Workingman’s Blues # 2” are all fairly faithfully - and in the case of the latter quite beautifully – rendered. And of course the by now standard set closers, “Like A Rolling Stone” and “All Along The Watchtower” exert an indefatigable magic. If the 02 show was in most respects great, the Roundhouse show was just as often astonishing – despite Dylan’s reluctance to mark the occasion by giving debut live airings to anything from the new Together Through Life, as many of the Uncut readers I spoke to were hoping. Not that there wasn’t much to absolutely relish, the Roundhouse the kind of venue where you’d ideally love to see Dylan more often and Sunday’s set afire with many tremendous moments, from rowdy opener “Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat” to the closing “Blowin’ In The Wind”, which has in the last few years sometimes been played as a wonderful bluegrass ballad and is in its current, similarly unexpected, setting a woozy soulful blues. Elsewhere and in between, there’s a rasping, staccato “Don’t Think Twice”, a gripping “Tangled Up In Blue”, and a take on “Million Miles” that recalls “Ballad Of A Thin Man”. There’s also a sulphuric all guns-blazing “Rollin’ And Tumblin’”, a lovely “Tryin’ To Get To Heaven”, a dark and ominous “High Water” – as much a highlight as “Hollis Brown” the night before – a stately “Ain’t Talkin’”. A version meanwhile of “I Don’t Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met)” in the rollicking style of The Faces, as Uncut’s Gavin Martin sharply observed on this morning’s Today Programme on Radio 4. All in all, unmissable. The set list for Bob Dylan's 02 show was: Maggie's Farm The Times They Are A-Changin' Things Have Changed Chimes Of Freedom Rollin' And Tumblin' The Lonesome Death Of Hattie Carroll 'Til I Fell In Love With You Workingman's Blues #2 Highway 61 Revisited Ballad Of Hollis Brown Po' Boy Honest With Me When The Deal Goes Down Thunder On The Mountain Like A Rolling Stone (encores) All Along The Watchtower Spirit On The Water Blowin' In The Wind The set list for Dylan's Roundhouse show was: Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat Don't Think Twice, It's All Right Tangled Up In Blue Million Miles Rollin' And Tumblin' Tryin' To Get To Heaven Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum Sugar Baby High Water (For Charley Patton) I Don't Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met) Po' Boy Highway 61 Revisited Ain't Talkin' Summer Days Like A Rolling Stone (encores) All Along The Watchtower Spirit On The Water Blowin' In The Wind

The last time I was on a boat on the Thames, The Sex Pistols were playing “Pretty Vacant” as we sailed downriver past the Houses Of Parliament. It was Jubilee Day, 1977, and the cruiser we were on had just been surrounded by police launches, their searchlights raking the upper deck of our craft, dozens of their baton-wielding colleagues lined up in sinister ranks on Westminster Pier, waiting for us to dock so they could storm aboard and crack heads, which they eventually did with painful abandon.

Pearl Jam Announce UK Live Shows

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Pearl Jam have announced that they are to perform four special shows in four venues in Europe this August. The headline gigs start in Rotterdam on August 13, followed by Berlin (15)Manchester (17) before ending at London's O2 Arena on August 18. These new dates are Pearl Jam's first in two years, ...

Pearl Jam have announced that they are to perform four special shows in four venues in Europe this August.

The headline gigs start in Rotterdam on August 13, followed by Berlin (15)Manchester (17) before ending at London’s O2 Arena on August 18.

These new dates are Pearl Jam’s first in two years, although they anticipate returning to Europe around the release of their next studio album, possibly in Autumn.

Member of Pearl Jam’s Ten Club are able to buy tickets for these show until April 29. After which general sale will begin on May 8.

Pearl Jam will play:

Rotterdam, Ahoy (August 13)

Berlin, Germany, Kindl-Bühne Wuhlheide (15)

Manchester, England, M.E.N. Arena (17)

London, England, 02 Arena (18)

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Green Day Announce UK Tour

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Green Day have announced their first UK and Ireland shows since 2005, to promote their forthcoming new studio album ‘21st Century Breakdown’ which is released on May 15. Green Day will headline ten shows, starting in Glasgow on October 19 and ending with two nights at Manchester MEN on October ...

Green Day have announced their first UK and Ireland shows since 2005, to promote their forthcoming new studio album ‘21st Century Breakdown’ which is released on May 15.

Green Day will headline ten shows, starting in Glasgow on October 19 and ending with two nights at Manchester MEN on October 30 and 31.

Green Day will play the following venues, Ttckets will be on sale on Friday (May 1) at 10am.

Glasgow SECC (October 19)

Belfast Oddessy Arena (20)

Dublin 02 (21)

London O2 Arena (23, 24)

Sheffield Arena (26)

Birmingham LG Arena (27, 28)

Manchester MEN Arena (30, 31)

More info about the album from the band’s website here: www.greenday.com

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Soap – Series 1 (TV)

Soap, which originally ran for four seasons in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s, is arguably one of the most influential sitcoms of all time. As its title unsubtly suggested, it was a satire of the tropes of soap opera. This in itself would have been an achievement – successfully satirising what i...

Soap, which originally ran for four seasons in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s, is arguably one of the most influential sitcoms of all time. As its title unsubtly suggested, it was a satire of the tropes of soap opera. This in itself would have been an achievement – successfully satirising what is already self-evidently absurd is extremely difficult. But Soap managed much more besides.

Admittedly, the targets Soap hunted weren’t that difficult to hit. The show expended barely a fraction of the creative ammunition at its disposal as it mowed down interminable and lamentable serials like The Young And The Restless and Days Of Our Lives (this first series of Soap, at least, narrowly pre-dated the advent of Dallas and Dynasty). The real accomplishment of the programme was its gleeful bending, breaking and/or cavalier disregarding of the parameters in which situation comedy could operate. Traces of its post-modern deadpan, running jokes and self-referential gags have since become stapes in other significant sit-coms like Seinfeld, Scrubs and Arrested Development.

There were plots, as such, chiefly chronicling the domestic upheavals of the wealthy Tate family (Tate patriarch Chester was played by Robert Mandan, previously best-known for starring in genuine soap Search For Tomorrow) and the less well-off Campbells. These storylines were preposterous to the point of opacity – later series involved demonic possession and alien abduction, no less. But the principal joys of Soap were the studied overacting of the cast, the cascading expository voiceovers of veteran gameshow announcer Rod Roddy, and a fizzy script by creator Susan Harris that managed to work in themes – homosexuality, race, religion – seldom touched on in mainstream American entertainment.

Early in the very first episode, Tate’s long-suffering wife Jessica (the very fabulous Katherine Helmond) marvels of black butler Benson (Robert Guillame): “Such a mind of your own!” Benson’s subsequent facial expression is a masterpiece in its own right.

Timeless and damn near flawless, Soap ranks alongside Police Squad! as a genuine pathfinder.

EXTRAS: tbc

ANDREW MUELLER

Bob Dylan – Together Through Life

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Bob Dylan had the devil of a time working on the soundtrack for Sam Peckinpah’s Pat Garrett & Billy The Kid, caught up in the director’s typically tempestuous war with the film’s producers over a movie they didn’t understand and eventually butchered, Dylan’s musical contributions suffe...

Bob Dylan had the devil of a time working on the soundtrack for Sam Peckinpah’s Pat Garrett & Billy The Kid, caught up in the director’s typically tempestuous war with the film’s producers over a movie they didn’t understand and eventually butchered, Dylan’s musical contributions suffering a similar fate in the fragmented version originally released in 1973.

Hollywood, though, has been kinder since to Bob. Asked in 2000 to write something for LA Confidential director Curtis Hanson’s Wonder Boys, he came up with “Things Have Changed”, his first new song since 1997’s Time Out Of Mind. It duly won him an Oscar and a Golden Globe – awards that could have as easily gone to “Cross The Green Mountain”, a sombre Civil War epic full of gloomy portent he wrote for 2003’s Gods And Generals. The song, however, was played over the closing credits of a film no-one went to see and before it was rehabilitated on last year’s Tell Tale Signs collection, was available only on a soundtrack CD hardly anyone had heard.

Now apparently we have another movie project to thank for not just a single song, but an entire album.

Last year, French filmmaker Olivier Dahan, director of Edith Piaf biopic La Vie En Rose, invited Dylan to write some songs for his new film, My Own Love Song, a romantic road movie of sorts starring Renée Zellweger and Forest Whitaker. Dylan responded with “Life Is Hard”, an aching ballad, mandolin, pedal steel and Dylan’s dark and wounded voice to the fore. Suddenly inspired, Dylan, as legend now insists, kept on writing and the next thing anyone knew he had nine more new songs and not long after that had finished the album, which is now upon us in all its rowdy glory.

It sounds pretty much like you hoped it would – like something recorded and written quickly, not quite on the hoof, but close to it, Dylan apparently eager to get these new songs down with a raw immediacy, which he largely has. My immediate opinion, since it seems that’s what’s required here, is that Together Through Life is in many respects as raffishly ebullient as any record Dylan has put his name to since The Basement Tapes. It was great to hear him sounding so wry and playful on, say, “Love And Theft”, an album of bountiful humour. But here Bob sounds like he’s having a ball in different ways, the joint jumping with him, everybody digging the groove, Dylan’s redoubtable touring band augmented by David Hidalgo from Los Lobos, whose accordion is featured just about everywhere, and Heartbreakers guitarist Mike Campbell. The album’s a gas, a riot, a hoot.

And this despite the disconsolate mood of key tracks and the hard look the album takes at what’s left of the world at the time of writing (“Widows cry, orphans bleed/Everywhere you look, there’s more misery”). There’s an inclination to see Dylan’s late songs – let’s say from Time Out Of Mind on – as largely preoccupied with mortality, principally his own, the general passing of things, among them youthful vigour, and the bad bits life has waiting for us, licking their chops. This is perhaps because of Time Out Of Mind’s “Not Dark Yet”, a great song that yet casts a somewhat distorted shadow over a lot that’s followed, as if it alone defines his later repertoire.

Much of Together Through Life can be seen as further unflinching reflection on life’s transience, it’s true, as Dylan dwells on time doing nothing but running out fast and the hostility of an unfriendly world, from whose clutches, repeatedly, the singer wants to escape – into dreams, memories, a past that haunts him, the arms of those he’s loved now lost to him.

The lyrics allude frequently to sinking suns, chilly winds, eternal loneliness, twilight reveries, final voyages to unspecified destinations, the seeping away of the day’s last light. But despite the admittedly bereft mood and musical voicings of songs like, say, “Life Is Hard” (the only example of the crooning vocal style latterly favoured by Dylan), “Forgetful Heart” (its stalking tempo reminiscent of “Ain’t Talkin’”), “This Dream Of You”(a fiddle-led waltz), or the gorgeous “I Feel A Change Coming On” (passingly reminiscent of “Workingman’s Blues #2”), the album can barely be described as mordant or particularly downbeat.

The record, you could say, in fact is characterised by a kind of boisterous fatalism, a stoic swagger that may remind you of the old blues dictum: “You might get better, but you’ll never get well.” By which is meant, I suppose, that while what’s waiting for us is nothing we’ll be especially happy about, there may yet be adventure and high old times in the getting there. In other words, if life is something we lose, the least we can do is make the noisy most of it.

Thus, blues romps like “Jolene” and “Shake Mama Shake” share a carnal jauntiness, full of rollicking good humour, sound more sulphuric, less formal than their comparatively more stately equivalents on Modern Times, “Rollin’ And Tumblin” and “Someday Baby”. Opener “Beyond Here Lies Nothing” does much to set the rambunctious tone of a lot that follows, Hidalgo’s accordion fronting a flurry of horns, tumbling drums and a wonderfully lithe instrumental groove, Dylan’s vocal gloriously growly.

The sardonic “My Wife’s Hometown”, meanwhile, is another stripped down blues, at once wry and exclamatory, as cracked and leathery as an old saddle or the nag it sits upon. On the sheerly irresistible Texas jump of “If You Ever Go To Houston”, the band are uncommonly lively company, powered by Hidalgo’s riffing accordion and kicking up the dust like people who turn up at a party and before you know it are blowing doors off their hinges, juggling cats and running around with their hair on fire, that kind of crowd. “If you ever go to Austin, Fort Worth or San Anton’,” Dylan sings, “Find the barrooms I got lost in and send my memories home”.

The album’s inclination towards bleak humour finds its most vivid expression on darkly ironic closer, “It’s All Good”, a litany of personal and national woe on which Dylan takes a jaundiced look at the republic – “Big politician tellin’ lies/Restaurant kitchen all full of flies” – and finds little to admire, much that draws his contempt.

More scholarly types than myself are already hovering over Together Through Life, no doubt to tell us from which obscure blues or classical source Dylan has imported lyrics (“Beyond Here Lies Nothing” is apparently a quote from Ovid, a very funny couplet in “My Wife’s Hometown” is evidently derived from Chaucer). I’ll cheerfully leave them to it, turn the record up real loud and shake this mama one more time.

ALLAN JONES

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Morrissey – Southpaw Grammar/ Maladjusted

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Southpaw Grammar 4* Maladjusted 1* At a recent concert, Morrissey announced that he was about to play a song from his 1995 album, Southpaw Grammar – at which point an excited whoop went up from the audience. It was a response that the singer clearly wasn’t expecting. “Really? Did anyone buy it?” he enquired. “Could you furnish me with receipts?” These days, Morrissey is a National Treasure. His arena gigs sell out in minutes, his singles go Top 10 on both sides of the Atlantic, his half-baked opinions on immigration are earnestly debated on Question Time. Once-hostile publications slaver over his new LPs and prominent Labour and Conservative front benchers fight over his oeuvre. So it seems difficult to believe that, little more than a decade ago, he seemed all but washed up. On its release, Southpaw Grammar seemed to be the point where the Great British Public officially fell out of love with Morrissey. The casual Smiths fan had all but lost interest while even the scary Moz obsessives were a little puzzled. Unlike all other Morrissey albums, Southpaw came illustrated with a picture of a person who wasn’t Morrissey. It kicked off with a terrifying 11-minute track that sampled a discordant eight-note phrase from Shostakovich’s Fifth. It had a track that started with a three-minute Buddy Rich drum solo. Its two lead singles seemed to be blatant paeans to man-love, both based around fiendishly complicated chord cycles. The album, which Morrissey initially approached Brian Eno to produce before sheepishly returning to Steve Lillywhite, was dismissed as Moz’s bonkers prog album. As bonkers prog albums go, it was scarcely a Kid A, a Sandinista! or an Achtung Baby, as is confirmed by this rejigged and remastered edition. The previous opening track, “The Teachers Are Afraid Of The Pupils” (a towering, majestic, dystopian sequel to “The Headmaster Ritual”), has been pushed to the back, while the album is frontloaded with some of Morrissey’s finest three-minute pop gems. “Dagenham Dave” was savaged at the time as the nadir of his homoerotic class tourism, but it now stands up as one of his finest singles – a maddeningly catchy tangle of spiky chords, Motown drums and Morricone strings. The Angus Young-meets-Phil Spector rampage of “Boy Racer” is almost as good; “Reader Meet Author” and “Best Friend On The Payroll” are equally memorable. There are four previously unreleased tracks – “Honey, You Know Where To Find Me” (which sounds like the backing track to “You’re The One For Me, Fatty”, but with better lyrics), the punky “Fantastic Bird”, and two faintly forgettable ballads, “You Should Have Been Nice To Me” and “Nobody Loves Us”. Morrissey was clearly hurt by the muted critical response to the efforts of Southpaw and, in response, he reverted to his comfort zone. Maladjusted, however, merited only passing mention in 1997 and its status has not improved since then. Rather bafflingly, this package sees Morrissey remove the album’s only decent single, “Roy’s Keen”, and – even weirder – its best song, the Syd Barrett-ish “Papa Jack”. It only emphasises the sheer lack of memorable melodies on the rest of the album. There are bruise-coloured ballads, only one of them, “Trouble Loves Me”, being any good (“on the flesh rampage/at YOUR age?”), there is a so-so rockabilly number (“Satan Rejected My Soul”); and there is Morrissey’s worst single, “Alma Matters”. This time there are seven extra tracks. Moz’s ballad about the Northern Ireland troubles, “This Is Not Your Country”, somehow manages to be worse than Spandau Ballet’s “Between The Barricades”; written before the Good Friday Agreement, it now sounds about as relevant as a song about the repeal of the Corn Laws. “Sorrow Will Come In The End” (previously omitted from UK releases) sees Morrissey whining about his treatment in the Mike Joyce court case and is the sonic equivalent of being emailed a tiresome list of “hilarious lawyer jokes”. “Heir Apparent” has one nice guitar riff. “Now I Am A Was” probably wouldn’t have even made it into a Smiths rehearsal room. Much more than The Smiths, Morrissey as a solo artist lives or dies on his singles – or, at the very least, standout album tracks that serve as talking points. His steroid-injected albums since You Are The Quarry, while variable, are at least redeemed by a string of cracking singles. Southpaw Grammar has at least half a dozen. Maladjusted, in this version at least, has none. For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

Southpaw Grammar 4*

Maladjusted 1*

At a recent concert, Morrissey announced that he was about to play a song from his 1995 album, Southpaw Grammar – at which point an excited whoop went up from the audience. It was a response that the singer clearly wasn’t expecting. “Really? Did anyone buy it?” he enquired. “Could you furnish me with receipts?”

These days, Morrissey is a National Treasure. His arena gigs sell out in minutes, his singles go Top 10 on both sides of the Atlantic, his half-baked opinions on immigration are earnestly debated on Question Time. Once-hostile publications slaver over his new LPs and prominent Labour and Conservative front benchers fight over his oeuvre. So it seems difficult to believe that, little more than a decade ago, he seemed all but washed up. On its release, Southpaw Grammar seemed to be the point where the Great British Public officially fell out of love with Morrissey. The casual Smiths fan had all but lost interest while even the scary Moz obsessives were a little puzzled.

Unlike all other Morrissey albums, Southpaw came illustrated with a picture of a person who wasn’t Morrissey. It kicked off with a terrifying 11-minute track that sampled a discordant eight-note phrase from Shostakovich’s Fifth. It had a track that started with a three-minute Buddy Rich drum solo. Its two lead singles seemed to be blatant paeans to man-love, both based around fiendishly complicated chord cycles. The album, which Morrissey initially approached Brian Eno to produce before sheepishly returning to Steve Lillywhite, was dismissed as Moz’s bonkers prog album.

As bonkers prog albums go, it was scarcely a Kid A, a Sandinista! or an Achtung Baby, as is confirmed by this rejigged and remastered edition. The previous opening track, “The Teachers Are Afraid Of The Pupils” (a towering, majestic, dystopian sequel to “The Headmaster Ritual”), has been pushed to the back, while the album is frontloaded with some of Morrissey’s finest three-minute pop gems.

“Dagenham Dave” was savaged at the time as the nadir of his homoerotic class tourism, but it now stands up as one of his finest singles – a maddeningly catchy tangle of spiky chords, Motown drums and Morricone strings. The Angus Young-meets-Phil Spector rampage of “Boy Racer” is almost as good; “Reader Meet Author” and “Best Friend On The Payroll” are equally memorable. There are four previously unreleased tracks – “Honey, You Know Where To Find Me” (which sounds like the backing track to “You’re The One For Me, Fatty”, but with better lyrics), the punky “Fantastic Bird”, and two faintly forgettable ballads, “You Should Have Been Nice To Me” and “Nobody Loves Us”.

Morrissey was clearly hurt by the muted critical response to the efforts of Southpaw and, in response, he reverted to his comfort zone. Maladjusted, however, merited only passing mention in 1997 and its status has not improved since then. Rather bafflingly, this package sees Morrissey remove the album’s only decent single, “Roy’s Keen”, and – even weirder – its best song, the Syd Barrett-ish “Papa Jack”. It only emphasises the sheer lack of memorable melodies on the rest of the album. There are bruise-coloured ballads, only one of them, “Trouble Loves Me”, being any good (“on the flesh rampage/at YOUR age?”), there is a so-so rockabilly number (“Satan Rejected My Soul”); and there is Morrissey’s worst single, “Alma Matters”.

This time there are seven extra tracks. Moz’s ballad about the Northern Ireland troubles, “This Is Not Your Country”, somehow manages to be worse than Spandau Ballet’s “Between The Barricades”; written before the Good Friday Agreement, it now sounds about as relevant as a song about the repeal of the Corn Laws. “Sorrow Will Come In The End” (previously omitted from UK releases) sees Morrissey whining about his treatment in the Mike Joyce court case and is the sonic equivalent of being emailed a tiresome list of “hilarious lawyer jokes”. “Heir Apparent” has one nice guitar riff. “Now I Am A Was” probably wouldn’t have even made it into a Smiths rehearsal room.

Much more than The Smiths, Morrissey as a solo artist lives or dies on his singles – or, at the very least, standout album tracks that serve as talking points. His steroid-injected albums since You Are The Quarry, while variable, are at least redeemed by a string of cracking singles. Southpaw Grammar has at least half a dozen. Maladjusted, in this version at least, has none.

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

Bob Dylan’s Two Night Stand In London

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Bob Dylan played two wildly different venues in London over the weekend, as part of the current leg of his Never-Ending Tour On Saturday, April 25, he played the 20,000 capacity 02 Arena, whilst on Sunday, April 26, Dylan played at the 4,800 capacity Roundhouse in Camden. The show – the sma...

Bob Dylan played two wildly different venues in London over the weekend, as part of the current leg of his Never-Ending Tour

On Saturday, April 25, he played the 20,000 capacity 02 Arena, whilst on Sunday, April 26, Dylan played at the 4,800 capacity Roundhouse in Camden.

The show – the smallest on his current world tour – was also attended by a number of celebrities, including Bill Wyman, Jude Law, Terry Gilliam and Bill Nighy.

Uncut’s Allan Jones will be filing a full report on both shows later today (April 27). So check back here for Allan’s blog.

The set list for Bob Dylan’s 02 show was:

Maggie’s Farm

The Times They Are A-Changin’

Things Have Changed

Chimes Of Freedom

Rollin’ And Tumblin’

The Lonesome Death Of Hattie Carroll

‘Til I Fell In Love With You

Workingman’s Blues #2

Highway 61 Revisited

Ballad Of Hollis Brown

Po’ Boy

Honest With Me

When The Deal Goes Down

Thunder On The Mountain

Like A Rolling Stone

(encore)

All Along The Watchtower

Spirit On The Water

Blowin’ In The Wind

The set list for Dylan’s Roundhouse show was:

Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat

Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right

Tangled Up In Blue

Million Miles

Rollin’ And Tumblin’

Tryin’ To Get To Heaven

Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum

Sugar Baby

High Water (For Charley Patton)

I Don’t Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met)

Po’ Boy

Highway 61 Revisited

Ain’t Talkin’

Summer Days

Like A Rolling Stone

(encore)

All Along The Watchtower

Spirit On The Water

Blowin’ In The Wind

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The Pretenders Added To Latitude Festival Bill

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The Pretenders are one of the latest additions to the bill for this year's Latitude Festival which takes place from July 16- 19 in Southwold in Suffolk. Chrissie Hynde and co. will play from their nine-album back catologue, including hits "I'll Stand By You" and "Back On The Chain Gang". They will ...

The Pretenders are one of the latest additions to the bill for this year’s Latitude Festival which takes place from July 16- 19 in Southwold in Suffolk.

Chrissie Hynde and co. will play from their nine-album back catologue, including hits “I’ll Stand By You” and “Back On The Chain Gang”. They will play the Obelisk Arena on Friday July 17.

Also added to the Obelisk billing are White Lies, the Brits who scored a number one with their debut album ‘To Lose My Life’ in January and have since been in huge demand for live performances. The band return to Latitude’s main stage graduating from being last year’s opening act on the same stage.

Also playing are Flashguns hotly tipped new signings to Rough Trade and the Verve influenced The Chakras.

The new additions join previously announced headliners Pet Shop Boys, Grace Jones and Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, as well as Doves, Editors, Magazine, Spiritualized and Regina Spector

Latitude, now in it’s fourth year is also jam packed with even more theatre, dance, comedy and poetry than ever before.

Sadler’s Wells, the Royal Opera House, National Theatre, Royal Shakespeare Company, and The Bush theatre group will all be bringing their repetoire to Latitude this year, some of it bespoke for their surroundings.

This year will also see the Britten Sinfonia performing in the lush outdoor space.

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

For more music and film news click here

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Wilco – Ashes Of American Flags

Whether they were aware of it or not, filmmakers Christoph Green and former Fugazi drummer Brendan Canty have a problem. Thanks to Sam Jones’ 2002 documentary, I Am Trying To Break Your Heart, any film about Wilco courts high expectations. Jones captured the implosion and rebirth of Wilco, and – a rarity for a rock film – added considerably to the audience’s understanding of the band and, particularly, its creative centre, Jeff Tweedy. That may have been an accident of circumstance, but it does mean that any straightforward portrayal of the band on tour is likely to disappoint. But Green and Canty have been down this road before. They directed Tweedy’s 2006 live DVD, Sunken Treasure, and their unobtrusive approach worked, largely because Tweedy was uncharacteristically chatty during that solo tour. Here, with the whole band in tow, it admittedly becomes a little harder to find a coherent narrative. The filmmakers locate a sense of nostalgia for a disappearing America through the Polaroids keyboardist Pat Sansone takes of urban wastelands – “capturing these little pieces of a fading America with a fading technology”. There’s moments, too, of offstage intimacy. We see Jeff having his throat examined and the band discussing various ailments, including fused vertebrae and – a problem for percussionist Glenn Kotche –hand abuse. If there’s one theme Green and Canty touch on it’s the vague rootlessness common to all rock tours: cue the moody shot of the silver bus rolling along the horizon. And then the penny drops. The pictures are pretty enough, but close your eyes and listen, and Ashes Of American Flags is revealed as an understated record of a band at ease with itself, playing some of the most beautiful music of their careers. The music is tight and tough; a perfect hybrid of Wilco’s country rock twang and their more eclectic experiments. Mostly, they resist the urge to replicate Tweedy’s sonic migraines, opting instead for melodic interplay and wiry repetitions of riffs. Sometimes – on “Kingpin”, say – they sound positively dirty, and they’re not beyond moments of absurd showmanship, such as the mock electrical storm that punctuates “Via Chicago”. And, yes, Tweedy plays “Heavy Metal Drummer” with a bra suspended from his guitar. So, a quiet triumph, and a beautiful document of a confident moment in the life of Wilco. Jeff’s dad can be proud. Evidently, when he appears backstage at a meet-and-greet, he is. EXTRAS: Seven additional bonus tracks, “I’m The Man Who Loves You”, “Airline To Heaven”, “It’s Just That Simple”, “At Least That’s What You Said”, “I Am Trying To Break Your Heart”, “Theologians”, “Hate It Here”. With this DVD, you can also download the audio of all the tracks via the Wilco website. Alastair McKay

Whether they were aware of it or not, filmmakers Christoph Green and former Fugazi drummer Brendan Canty have a problem. Thanks to Sam Jones’ 2002 documentary, I Am Trying To Break Your Heart, any film about Wilco courts high expectations. Jones captured the implosion and rebirth of Wilco, and – a rarity for a rock film – added considerably to the audience’s understanding of the band and, particularly, its creative centre, Jeff Tweedy. That may have been an accident of circumstance, but it does mean that any straightforward portrayal of the band on tour is likely to disappoint.

But Green and Canty have been down this road before. They directed Tweedy’s 2006 live DVD, Sunken Treasure, and their unobtrusive approach worked, largely because Tweedy was uncharacteristically chatty during that solo tour. Here, with the whole band in tow, it admittedly becomes a little harder to find a coherent narrative. The filmmakers locate a sense of nostalgia for a disappearing America through the Polaroids keyboardist Pat Sansone takes of urban wastelands – “capturing these little pieces of a fading America with a fading technology”. There’s moments, too, of offstage intimacy. We see Jeff having his throat examined and the band discussing various ailments, including fused vertebrae and – a problem for percussionist Glenn Kotche –hand abuse. If there’s one theme Green and Canty touch on it’s the vague rootlessness common to all rock tours: cue the moody shot of the silver bus rolling along the horizon.

And then the penny drops. The pictures are pretty enough, but close your eyes and listen, and Ashes Of American Flags is revealed as an understated record of a band at ease with itself, playing some of the most beautiful music of their careers. The music is tight and tough; a perfect hybrid of Wilco’s country rock twang and their more eclectic experiments.

Mostly, they resist the urge to replicate Tweedy’s sonic migraines, opting instead for melodic interplay and wiry repetitions of riffs. Sometimes – on “Kingpin”, say – they sound positively dirty, and they’re not beyond moments of absurd showmanship, such as the mock electrical storm that punctuates “Via Chicago”. And, yes, Tweedy plays “Heavy Metal Drummer” with a bra suspended from his guitar.

So, a quiet triumph, and a beautiful document of a confident moment in the life of Wilco. Jeff’s dad can be proud. Evidently, when he appears backstage at a meet-and-greet, he is.

EXTRAS: Seven additional bonus tracks, “I’m The Man Who Loves You”, “Airline To Heaven”, “It’s Just That Simple”, “At Least That’s What You Said”, “I Am Trying To Break Your Heart”, “Theologians”, “Hate It Here”. With this DVD, you can also download the audio of all the tracks via the Wilco website.

Alastair McKay

Tarantino’s latest, plus Woodstock movie all heading to the Cannes Film Festival

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It remains to be seen whether the global credit gloom will have a negative effect on the parties, the glamour and the excessively large yachts that tend to provide entertaining if diversionary colour from the Cannes Film Festival. But, certainly, in terms of heavyweight talent on display at this year's festival, you might be hard pressed to think of a more Cannes-like line-up. In fact, it's difficult to think of a year when I've been more excited about the films showing. Lately, it's sometimes felt like the serious matter of showcasing important movies has been obscured by big studios unveiling their Spring/Summer blockbusters -- Star Wars and Indiana Jones spring to mind -- films that have been bolted on to the festival, simply because half the world's media will be there to give them a publicity boost. This year, though, it looks like Cannes is, well, back on track. Highlights include new films from festival veterans like Quentin Tarantino, Ken Loach, Jane Campion, Lars von Trier, Terry Gilliam, Michael Haneke, Ang Lee and Pedro Almodóvar, as well as relative newcomer Andrea Arnold, whose debut Red Road was one of my favourite films of the last few years. Anyway, here's 5 that deserve a heads up in UNCUT's world: INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS. Tarantino's latest, a WW2 movie with Brad Pitt leading a group of Jewish-American soldiers into occupied France to dish out bloody revenge against the Nazis. All, presumably, in appallingly bad taste. Tarantino, of course, won the Palm D'Or in 1994 with Pulp Fiction. [youtube]9TadvFY3rA8[/youtube] THE IMAGINARIUM OF DOCTOR PARNASSUS. Heath Ledger died while filming this fantasy with Terry Gilliam about a travelling theatre troupe who make a deal with the Devil, his role taken up by Johnny Depp, Colin Farrell and Jude Law. In shoe-in casting, Tom Waits plays Satan. Of course. [youtube]jRYXNk-qZAs[/youtube] TAKING WOODSTOCK. Ang Lee's comedy follows aspiring Greenwich Village interior designer Elliot Tiber, who becomes involved in organising a small music festival outside New York in 1969. [youtube]7Iq8z2WDbKo[/youtube] ANTICHRIST. Horror from Lars von Trier, with Willem Dafoe and Charlotte Ginasborg as a couple who, following the death of their child, retreat to a remote cabin only to find something extremely unpleasant in the woods. [youtube]8kFnO4hyhO8[/youtube] FISH TANK. From British director Andrea Arnold. A 15-year old girl's life is turned on its head when her mother brings home a new boyfriend. Anyway, you can read the full line-up here.

It remains to be seen whether the global credit gloom will have a negative effect on the parties, the glamour and the excessively large yachts that tend to provide entertaining if diversionary colour from the Cannes Film Festival. But, certainly, in terms of heavyweight talent on display at this year’s festival, you might be hard pressed to think of a more Cannes-like line-up.

The Specials Play First Reunion Show

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The Specials began their comeback reunion tour at the Newcastle Academy on Wednesday (April 22). Terry Hall led the band through a greatest hits set starting with "Do The Dog" and encoring with 1980 No.1 "Too Much Too Young". The Specials will also play in Sheffield, Birmingham and Manchester befo...

The Specials began their comeback reunion tour at the Newcastle Academy on Wednesday (April 22).

Terry Hall led the band through a greatest hits set starting with “Do The Dog” and encoring with 1980 No.1 “Too Much Too Young”.

The Specials will also play in Sheffield, Birmingham and Manchester before a five night stand at London’s Brixton Academy.

The 30th anniversary tour finale will take place in Coventry on May 15th, however the band are booked to play a handful of festivals this Summer, including V Festival.

The anticipated reunion shows are all sold-out:

NEWCASTLE, Academy (April 22)

SHEFFIELD, Academy (23)

BIRMINGHAM, Academy (25, 26)

GLASGOW, Academy (28, 29)

MANCHESTER, Apollo (May 3, 4)

LONDON, Brixton Academy (6, 7, 8, 11, 12)

COVENTRY, Ricoh Arena (15)

The Specials first night set list was:

‘Do The Dog’

‘Dawning Of A New Era’

‘Gangsters’

‘It’s Up To You’

‘Rat Race’

‘Monkey Man’

‘Blank Expression’

‘Too Hot’

‘Doesn’t Make It Alright’

‘Concrete Jungle’

‘Friday Night Saturday Morning’

‘Stereotype’

‘Man At C&A’

‘A Message To You Rudy’

‘Do Nothing’

‘Hey Little Rich Girl’

‘Nite Klub’

‘You’re Wondering Now’

‘Ghost Town’

‘Too Much Too Young’

‘Skinhead Moonstomp’

‘Enjoy Yourself’

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Win Tickets To See Bob Dylan At The Roundhouse!

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Uncut has been given A PAIR OF TICKETS to giveaway to Bob Dylan's nigh-on-impossible to get into show at London's Roundhouse this coming Sunday (April 26)! Dylan, who is playing just a handful of shows in the UK this week, in the run-up to the release of his 46th studio album 'Together Through Lif...

Uncut has been given A PAIR OF TICKETS to giveaway to Bob Dylan‘s nigh-on-impossible to get into show at London’s Roundhouse this coming Sunday (April 26)!

Dylan, who is playing just a handful of shows in the UK this week, in the run-up to the release of his 46th studio album ‘Together Through Life‘ (released on Monday April 27), is playing a special fans-only show at the intimate Camden venue.

For your chance to win these money-can’t buy tickets, simply log in and answer the simple question HERE

For more information about the new album, the UK tour dates and to read Dylan’s conversations with Bill Flanagan, log in to : www.bobdylan.com

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Pixies To Release Collector’s Box

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The Pixies have announced that they are to release a career-spanning luxury collector's box 'Minotaur' this Summer. The collection will feature Pixies albums 'Come On Pilgrim' (1987), 'Surfer Rosa' (1988), 'Doolittle' (1989), 'Bossanova' (1990), and 'Trompe Le Monde' (1991) all remastered onto layered CD and Blu-ray discs. A deluxe version of Minotaur will also include an additional live DVD, filmed at the band's Brixton Academy show in 1991 as well as all Pixies promotional videos and a 54-page book. Original sleeve artwork designer Vaughan Oliver has re-shot some of the designs, collaborating with photographer Simon Larbalestier. As well as these two sets, there will also be a limited vinyl edition of the package, with in addition to the deluxe items, will also feature all the albums pressed on heavyweight 180-gram vinyl, an artwork print and an additional 72-page hardback book. Minotaur is available to pre-order from June 15. 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 Pixies have announced that they are to release a career-spanning luxury collector’s box ‘Minotaur‘ this Summer.

The collection will feature Pixies albums ‘Come On Pilgrim’ (1987), ‘Surfer Rosa’ (1988), ‘Doolittle’ (1989), ‘Bossanova’ (1990), and ‘Trompe Le Monde’ (1991) all remastered onto layered CD and Blu-ray discs.

A deluxe version of Minotaur will also include an additional live DVD, filmed at the band’s Brixton Academy show in 1991 as well as all Pixies promotional videos and a 54-page book.

Original sleeve artwork designer Vaughan Oliver has re-shot some of the designs, collaborating with photographer Simon Larbalestier.

As well as these two sets, there will also be a limited vinyl edition of the package, with in addition to the deluxe items, will also feature all the albums pressed on heavyweight 180-gram vinyl, an artwork print and an additional 72-page hardback book.

Minotaur is available to pre-order from June 15.

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The Gossip Announce UK Live Dates

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The Gossip are set to play five shows in the UK in May, their first live dates here since 2007. They perform at Radio 1's Big Weekend on May 10 before returning at the end of the month for four further dates in Brighton, London, Manchester and Glasgow. The Gossip's anticipated new studio album 'Mu...

The Gossip are set to play five shows in the UK in May, their first live dates here since 2007.

They perform at Radio 1’s Big Weekend on May 10 before returning at the end of the month for four further dates in Brighton, London, Manchester and Glasgow.

The Gossip’s anticipated new studio album ‘Music For Men’ is set for release on June 22, preceded by a lead single “Heavy Cross” the week before (June 15).

The Gossip’s European Tour Dates are:

Radio 1 Big Weekend (May 10)

Graz, Electric Beats Festival (20)

Berlin, Astra (22)

Ewerk, Electronic Beat Festival (23)

Amsterdam, Paradiso (24)

Brighton, Digital (27)

London, Scala (28)

Manchester, Club Academy (29)

Glasgow, The Arches (30)

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Free William Elliott Whitmore Track To Download

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Uncut is pleased to be able to offer you a free William Elliot Whitmore track (courtesy of Anti- records) to download! Last month's Club Uncut headliner (see the review here), the track "Old Devils" is featured on the Iowa bluesman's latest studio album 'Animals In The Dark'. Click here for your download of William Elliot Whitmore's Old Devils. Whitmore is also due to appear on Later With Jools Holland, tonight (April 21, repeated on Friday April 24). He will be playing his banjo alongside other show guests which include Madness and Bat For Lashes. 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

Uncut is pleased to be able to offer you a free William Elliot Whitmore track (courtesy of Anti- records) to download!

Last month’s Club Uncut headliner (see the review here), the track “Old Devils” is featured on the Iowa bluesman’s latest studio album ‘Animals In The Dark’.

Click here for your download of William Elliot Whitmore’s Old Devils.

Whitmore is also due to appear on Later With Jools Holland, tonight (April 21, repeated on Friday April 24). He will be playing his banjo alongside other show guests which include Madness and Bat For Lashes.

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

New Nirvana Live DVD To Be Released

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Nirvana's legendary Reading Festival gig in August 1992 was recorded and is now to be released on DVD on May 4. The live DVD 'Life Takes No Prisoners' captures the band performing 27 tracks including covers of the "Star Spangled Banner" and Boston's "More Than A Feeling". The festival set saw fron...

Nirvana‘s legendary Reading Festival gig in August 1992 was recorded and is now to be released on DVD on May 4.

The live DVD ‘Life Takes No Prisoners’ captures the band performing 27 tracks including covers of the “Star Spangled Banner” and Boston‘s “More Than A Feeling”.

The festival set saw front man Kurt Cobain come onstage wearing a hospital gown in a wheelchair.

You can see a clip of Nirvana doing the Star Spangled here:

‘Life Takes No Prisoners’ full track listing is:

‘The Rose’/ ‘Intro’

‘Breed’

‘Drain You’

‘Aneurysm’

‘School’

‘Sliver’

‘In Bloom’

‘Come As You Are’

‘Lithium’

‘About A Girl’

‘Tourette’s’

‘Polly’

‘Lounge Act’

‘More Than A Feeling’/’Smells Like Teen Spirit’

‘On A Plain’

‘Negative Creep’

‘Been A Son’

‘All Apologies’

‘Blew’

‘Dumb’

‘Stay Away’

‘Spank Thru’

‘Love Buzz’

‘The Money Will Roll Right In’

‘D-7’

‘Territorial Pissings’

‘The Star Spangled Banner’

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Pic credit: PA Photos

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Elbow, Coldplay And More Nominated for Songwriters Award

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Elbow, Coldplay and Last Shadow Puppets are amongst the nominees for this year's Ivor Novello Awards, the industry honour for songwriting achievement. The annual celebration of British talent is now in it's 54th year and other shortlisted artists include Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood, Dizzee Rascal a...

Elbow, Coldplay and Last Shadow Puppets are amongst the nominees for this year’s Ivor Novello Awards, the industry honour for songwriting achievement.

The annual celebration of British talent is now in it’s 54th year and other shortlisted artists include Radiohead‘s Jonny Greenwood, Dizzee Rascal and MIA.

The full list of nominations are:

Best Song Musically And Lyrically:

The Last Shadow Puppets – ‘My Mistakes Were Made For You’

Elbow – ‘One Day Like This’

The Leisure Society – ‘The Last Of The Melting Snow’

Best Contemporary Song:

Dizzee Rascal – ‘Dance Wiv Me’

Elbow – ‘Grounds For Divorce’

The Ting Tings – ‘That’s Not My Name’

Best Original Film Score:

David Arnold – ‘Quantum of Solace’

Benjamin Wallfisch – ‘The Escapist’

Jonny Greenwood – ‘There Will Be Blood’

Best Television Soundtrack:

Ben Bartlett – ‘Fiona’s Story’

Anne Dudley – ‘Trial and Retribution 2008’

Julian Nott – ‘Wallace And Gromit (A Matter of Loaf and Death)’

PRS For Music Most Performed Work:

Duffy – ‘Mercy’

Gabriella Cilmi – ‘Sweet About Me’

Coldplay – ‘Viva La Vida’

Best Selling British Song:

Duffy – ‘Mercy’

M.I.A – ‘Paper Planes’

Coldplay – ‘Viva La Vida’

Album Award:

Duffy – ‘Rockferry’

Coldplay – ‘Viva La Vida or Death And All His Friends’

The Ting Tings – ‘We Started Nothing’

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Blur Announce More Intimate Warm Up Shows

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Blur have announced three new intimate warm-up shows, ahead of their big Summer shows. The reunited Blur will now play dates in Southend, Wolverhapmton and Newcastle ahead of their their first arena show in Manchester on June 26. Tickets for the intimate venues will go on sale via Blur.co.uk from ...

Blur have announced three new intimate warm-up shows, ahead of their big Summer shows.

The reunited Blur will now play dates in Southend, Wolverhapmton and Newcastle ahead of their their first arena show in Manchester on June 26.

Tickets for the intimate venues will go on sale via Blur.co.uk from 9am on Wednesday April 22 and will be on general sale from Friday April 24.

Blur will play the following, newly announced, venues:

Southend Cliff Pavillion (June 21)

Wolverhampton Civic Hall (24)

Newcastle O2 Academy (25)

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Regina Spektor and Passion Pit Added To Latitude Bill!

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Regina Spektor is the latest artist to join the Latitude Festival Obelisk Arena bill, playing on the same stage as previously announced headliners Pet Shop Boys, Grace Jones and Nick Cave. The Bronx raised multi-instrumentalist singer will be bringing her combination of blues, jazz and punk to the ...

Regina Spektor is the latest artist to join the Latitude Festival Obelisk Arena bill, playing on the same stage as previously announced headliners Pet Shop Boys, Grace Jones and Nick Cave.

The Bronx raised multi-instrumentalist singer will be bringing her combination of blues, jazz and punk to the open air arena at Henham Park.

Also announced for the July festival, is the first act for the Sunrise Arena, the stage for hotly-tipped new acts; Massachusetts Passion Pit. The pop electronica group will play on Saturday July 16.

Latitude, now in it’s fourth year is also jam packed with even more theatre, dance, comedy and poetry than ever before.

Sadler’s Wells, the Royal Opera House, National Theatre, Royal Shakespeare Company, and The Bush theatre group will all be bringing their repetoire to Latitude this year, some of it bespoke for their surroundings.

This year will also see the Britten Sinfonia performing in the lush outdoor space.

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

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