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Snow Patrol Add New Dates To UK Arena Tour

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Snow Patrol have added three extra dates to their Spring 2009 Arena tour, which was announced last week. The band, whose fifth studio album A Hundred Million Suns was released last week, charting at number 5 this week, will now play extra shows at Dublin's O2 on March 3, London's O2 on March 15 an...

Snow Patrol have added three extra dates to their Spring 2009 Arena tour, which was announced last week.

The band, whose fifth studio album A Hundred Million Suns was released last week, charting at number 5 this week, will now play extra shows at Dublin’s O2 on March 3, London’s O2 on March 15 and Belfast Odyssey on March 20.

Snow Patrol also confirm that the second single from the new LP will be “Crack The Shutters” and will be released on December 15.

You can a clip of the band, rehearsing the song in the studio here:

Snow Patrol’s live dates will now be:

Bournemouth BIC (February 22)

Glasgow SECC (24)

Aberdeen AECC (26)

Dublin Point Depot (28 and March 3)

Sheffield Hallam Arena (March 4)

Liverpool Arena (6)

Manchester MEN (7)

Cardiff Arena (8)

Newcastle Arena (10)

Birmingham NEC (11)

Nottingham Arena (12)

London O2 (14, 15)

Belfast Odyssey (19, 20)

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Coldplay Are Confirmed ‘Biggest Selling Act In The World’

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Coldplay have been confirmed as the world's best-selling act in 2008, at the annual World Music Awards (WMAs) which took place in Monaco last night (November 9). The band also scooped the prize of 'Rock Act of the Year', for their number one charting album "Viva La Vida or Death and All His Friends...

Coldplay have been confirmed as the world’s best-selling act in 2008, at the annual World Music Awards (WMAs) which took place in Monaco last night (November 9).

The band also scooped the prize of ‘Rock Act of the Year’, for their number one charting album “Viva La Vida or Death and All His Friends”. The band fronted by Chris Martin beat off other nominees Metallica, Kings of Leon and R.E.M.

Leona Lewis won the Best Pop Female award, beating Madonna and Mariah Carey in sales with her debut album “Spirit”. Lewis also picked up the New Artist award.

US rocker Kid Rock won two hounours, picking up Best Pop Male and Best Pop/Rock Artist.

Amy Winehouse won the Female Pop/Rock Artist award, whilst Beyonce picked up the Outstanding contribution prize.

Beatles’ drummer Ringo Starr picked up the Diamond Award, on behalf of the band. The Diamond award was created in 2001, to honour artists who have sold over 100 million records and is not awarded every year. Past recipients include Rod Stewart, Celine Dion, Bon Jovi and Michael Jackson.

For the full list of winners, click here.

For more music and film news click here

Justice: “A Cross The Universe”

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I was thinking the other day about live albums, specifically those ones where crowd noise takes over: things, I guess, like Suicide’s “23 Minutes Over Brussels” and that “Black Sabbath Riot” record that came out a few years ago (was it something to do with Alec Empire? I can’t remember). I was sent off on this trajectory by “A Cross The Universe” (see what they did there?), a live album by Justice recorded in Chicago and, I think, something to do with a DVD tour documentary as well. “A Cross The Universe” is not, obviously, an hour or so of crowd noise. But it does use the roars and screams as a constant and integral part of the mix. I guess the premise behind this is to effectively recreate the excitement of a Justice live show: the intricate mixing of tracks, as themes loop in and out of one another, is one skill to show off, but a recording of a live, pre-programmed techno show is never going to be a showcase for virtuoso freestyling like, I don’t know, Neil Young's “Weld” or something. Instead, “A Cross The Universe” documents the manipulative, bludgeoning brilliance of a dance act at the height of their powers. It’s about the scientific distribution of euphoric peak after peak after peak, a superbly crude way of ramping up excitement which is amped up further by all that ecstatic crowd noise. I seem to recall Fatboy Slim doing something similar with a live album of one of his Brighton Beach shows, but that didn’t work so well. Maybe here it’s the adeptness of Justice’s mixing, and the way they skilfully deploy that crowd noise as a critical part of their overall sound design. It might not be as extreme as that “Black Sabbath Riot” record, where the noise is all there is, but it recognises how euphoria is an aesthetic tool as well as an emotional prompt. Oh, and the tunes are great, too. Listening to “A Cross The Universe”, it’s amazing to think how Justice have only released one album thus far. This feels like a greatest hits, so strong are the anthems that they keep blasting out: “D.A.N.C.E”, “Phantom”, “DVNO”, “Waters Of Nazareth”, “Stress” and, of course, their Simian makeover, “We Are Your Friends” – one song that launched two significant careers. “We Are Your Friends” becomes such an epic of crowd participation and tease here that it’s the only part of the album that becomes tricky to listen to – an irritating panto, really. But it’s endemic of Justice’s bombastic shamelessness that they end up hammering it together with the first of a series of what we reckon are thrash-era Metallica samples. It’s indicative too, maybe, of Justice’s stadium ambitions, their grandiose, calculated crassness, that it works perfectly.

I was thinking the other day about live albums, specifically those ones where crowd noise takes over: things, I guess, like Suicide’s “23 Minutes Over Brussels” and that “Black Sabbath Riot” record that came out a few years ago (was it something to do with Alec Empire? I can’t remember).

Leonard Cohen: Behind The Scenes, Part 3!

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Hallelujah!: LEONARD COHEN SPECIAL In the December issue of Uncut, we celebrate Leonard Cohen’s comeback by getting the inside story from his bandmates on their extraordinary year on the road. Here at www.uncut.co.ukover the next month, we’ll be posting the full, unedited transcripts of those interviews in a new, seven-part series. Today we present trusted guitar technician, Leif Bodnarchuk. Self-described “mercenary, Buddhist, jerk,” Bodnarchuk is trusted guitar tech on the tour, a job he summed up for the roadie’s online bible, *Sure Notes*, thusly: “Day to day, you take it out of the box, tune it, fix it, play with it, let some famous man or woman play with it, put it back in the box and put that box into the truck-shaped box.…” Part four of seven, is coming up on November 12! **** UNCUT: When did you get involved? BODNARCHUK: I got involved in April this year. I think the band rehearsed from around February until May, give or take. This leg, they were in for less than two weeks. They seem to have it covered. How's it going? In a nutshell: OK. We've just been in rehearsals for a couple of weeks in LA, following a three week break after our gruelling Canadian/European trek of May-July. We're set to be out until the very end of November on this run, with a December break; if rumours are to be believed, we shall get another crack at it in early January with rehearsals and gigs to follow. What does the job involve? My job involves looking after Bob Metzger's and Dino [Soldo]'s guitars; 4 electrics, two acoustics, a National/Dobro sort of dealy and a pedal steel guitar. During the last leg, I was looking after Bob, Roscoe [Beck], the bassist/MD and a couple of 22-string harps belonging to Hattie Webb, but that was crazy! Too many strings - 114 per night - that translates into 19 guitars belonging to 4 other sets of ears - sod that! Thankfully, we drafted Chris Bynum in to halve my workload. He's a very welcome addition to our dysfunctional family. I don't look after Leonard personally, Mickey Sullivan does. Mickey also looks after Javier's instruments. Basically, Mickey's the acoustic guy, I'm the electric guy. but in a pinch, we all look out for one another anyway. It's a pretty cozy atmosphere on stage left. How hands on has Cohen been with the production? Well, I haven't seen him in the truck! He is actually very aware of what's going on. He's as sharp as a tack, approachable, generous and humble. I saw one article describing him as the godfather of misery! That couldn't be further from reality. But if he's not happy with something in the gig, he'll let it be known. We respect him a great deal, so if the man asks for something, we try our best to make it happen. He doesn't ask for anything outrageous, nor does he throw tantrums - and I've seen my fair share of those from a few pop stars. Does he have any special requirements with guitars and amplification and so on? On stage, he plays Godin guitars for a few songs, dropped down in key. We were using an SWR amp, but he's not all that bothered with sound coming from behind him; he's fine with it in his monitors. And it's one less thing on stage with a mic, picking up other things. He seems genuinely interested in the quality of the final product on a nightly basis. He's not selfish - he just wants to play his part. As for "so on" you could stick him in a broom closet and he'd be happy. He's an inspiration to us - how to be happy with what you have and not long for what's not there. What have the highlights been for you? The first show, Fredericton was a mind blower - the initial audience reaction to Leonard's presence on stage was amazing. I don't think I've ever seen such a genuinely enthusiastic reception. I've see kids go wild, but this older audience was incredible. Over on stage left, we were stunned! I don't think I've seen a stage entrance reception that rivals it. The Dublin crowd are my personal running favourite; they sang the loudest and had the most fun of that leg. And the crowd in Glastonbury was overwhelming. It was a surreal experience. Call me crazy, but even I got a little emotional! Has the tour changed or evolved since it started? It has changed a little - all tours do. We all know one another a little better now than we did in the beginning. Right now, we have a good feeling. We're in a "been there, done that" position. INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS

Hallelujah!: LEONARD COHEN SPECIAL

In the December issue of Uncut, we celebrate Leonard Cohen’s comeback by getting the inside story from his bandmates on their extraordinary year on the road. Here at www.uncut.co.ukover the next month, we’ll be posting the full, unedited transcripts of those interviews in a new, seven-part series.

Today we present trusted guitar technician, Leif Bodnarchuk.

Self-described “mercenary, Buddhist, jerk,” Bodnarchuk is trusted guitar tech on the tour, a job he summed up for the roadie’s online bible, *Sure Notes*, thusly: “Day to day, you take it out of the box, tune it, fix it, play with it, let some famous man or woman play with it, put it back in the box and put that box into the truck-shaped box.…”

Part four of seven, is coming up on November 12!

****

UNCUT: When did you get involved?

BODNARCHUK: I got involved in April this year. I think the band rehearsed from around February until May, give or take. This leg, they were in for less than two weeks. They seem to have it covered.

How’s it going?

In a nutshell: OK. We’ve just been in rehearsals for a couple of weeks in LA, following a three week break after our gruelling Canadian/European trek of May-July. We’re set to be out until the very end of November on this run, with a December break; if rumours are to be believed, we shall get another crack at it in early January with rehearsals and gigs to follow.

What does the job involve?

My job involves looking after Bob Metzger’s and Dino [Soldo]’s guitars; 4 electrics, two acoustics, a National/Dobro sort of dealy and a pedal steel guitar. During the last leg, I was looking after Bob, Roscoe [Beck], the bassist/MD and a couple of 22-string harps belonging to Hattie Webb, but that was crazy! Too many strings – 114 per night – that translates into 19 guitars belonging to 4 other sets of ears – sod that! Thankfully, we drafted Chris Bynum in to halve my workload. He’s a very welcome addition to our dysfunctional family. I don’t look after Leonard personally, Mickey Sullivan does. Mickey also looks after Javier’s instruments. Basically, Mickey’s the acoustic guy, I’m the electric guy. but in a pinch, we all look out for one another anyway. It’s a pretty cozy atmosphere on stage left.

How hands on has Cohen been with the production?

Well, I haven’t seen him in the truck! He is actually very aware of what’s going on. He’s as sharp as a tack, approachable, generous and humble. I saw one article describing him as the godfather of misery! That couldn’t be further from reality. But if he’s not happy with something in the gig, he’ll let it be known. We respect him a great deal, so if the man asks for something, we try our best to make it happen. He doesn’t ask for anything outrageous, nor does he throw tantrums – and I’ve seen my fair share of those from a few pop stars.

Does he have any special requirements with guitars and amplification and so on?

On stage, he plays Godin guitars for a few songs, dropped down in key. We were using an SWR amp, but he’s not all that bothered with sound coming from behind him; he’s fine with it in his monitors. And it’s one less thing on stage with a mic, picking up other things. He seems genuinely interested in the quality of the final product on a nightly basis. He’s not selfish – he just wants to play his part. As for “so on” you could stick him in a broom closet and he’d be happy. He’s an inspiration to us – how to be happy with what you have and not long for what’s not there.

What have the highlights been for you?

The first show, Fredericton was a mind blower – the initial audience reaction to Leonard’s presence on stage was amazing. I don’t think I’ve ever seen such a genuinely enthusiastic reception. I’ve see kids go wild, but this older audience was incredible. Over on stage left, we were stunned! I don’t think I’ve seen a stage entrance reception that rivals it. The Dublin crowd are my personal running favourite; they sang the loudest and had the most fun of that leg. And the crowd in Glastonbury was overwhelming. It was a surreal experience. Call me crazy, but even I got a little emotional!

Has the tour changed or evolved since it started?

It has changed a little – all tours do. We all know one another a little better now than we did in the beginning. Right now, we have a good feeling. We’re in a “been there, done that” position.

INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS

Leonard Cohen: Behind The Scenes, Part 3!

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Hallelujah!: LEONARD COHEN SPECIAL In the December issue of Uncut, we celebrate Leonard Cohen’s comeback by getting the inside story from his bandmates on their extraordinary year on the road. Here at www.uncut.co.ukover the next month, we’ll be posting the full, unedited transcripts of those interviews in a new, seven-part series. Today we present long time guitar technician, Leif Bodnarchuk. Self-described “mercenary, Buddhist, jerk,” Bodnarchuk is trusted guitar tech on the tour, a job he summed up for the roadie’s online bible, *Sure Notes*, thusly: “Day to day, you take it out of the box, tune it, fix it, play with it, let some famous man or woman play with it, put it back in the box and put that box into the truck-shaped box.…” Part four of seven, is coming up on November 12! Click here to read the full transcript.

Hallelujah!: LEONARD COHEN SPECIAL

In the December issue of Uncut, we celebrate Leonard Cohen’s comeback by getting the inside story from his bandmates on their extraordinary year on the road. Here at www.uncut.co.ukover the next month, we’ll be posting the full, unedited transcripts of those interviews in a new, seven-part series.

Today we present long time guitar technician, Leif Bodnarchuk.

Self-described “mercenary, Buddhist, jerk,” Bodnarchuk is trusted guitar tech on the tour, a job he summed up for the roadie’s online bible, *Sure Notes*, thusly: “Day to day, you take it out of the box, tune it, fix it, play with it, let some famous man or woman play with it, put it back in the box and put that box into the truck-shaped box.…”

Part four of seven, is coming up on November 12!

Click here to read the full transcript.

Arctic Monkeys At The Apollo

Concert films are often horrible things. Why anybody would want to have a big loud exciting experience in a hall full of noise and singing shrunk down like a crisp packet on a radiator to a small speakered, small screened, jump cut-edited DVD is one of the great mysteries of rock. The human attention span, which might be able to cope with a live album, is severely tested by being asked to look at four or five people playing instruments on the same stage for 60 minutes. And frankly, some crappy “inserts” of the group talking about themselves in a dressing room, or meeting Japanese fans, or gurning at the camera, are not going to be that thrilling. All these thoughts and more run through the mind when taking this DVD out of its tiny sleeve. But there is good news for modern man here; this is not bad at all. Directed by The IT Crowd’s Richard Ayoade, who also directed the Arctic Monkeys’ “Florescent Adolescent” video, this film is very much what it says it is; a film of a live concert by The Arctic Monkeys at… well, you can see where they’re going with the title. And that’s both its flaw and its brilliance. With an utter lack of flash, the film – like the band – is almost completely devoid of effects, irrelevant detail or general flash. There’s the odd bit of split screen and that’s it. Even the occasional lulls between songs, those weird bits in gigs when things stop happening for a minute and nobody ever seems to know why, have been left in. And if you’re a fan of drummers drinking lager, you’re in for a real treat at 42 minutes and 20 seconds. But cameras move about enough and the whole things suits and mirrors the band’s own style, which is hard work and talent disguised as effortlessness. It’s more and more effective as the concert goes on, and gives the viewer the feeling that they’re at the gig, rather than locked in the editing suite with a maniac. Asides become high points – one doubts that Mick Jagger has ever told an audience, “I’m in two minds as to taking this jumper off,” – while the band’s Spartan energy is enhanced by Ayoade’s methodology. So what’s it like beyond the camera-pointing? On record, Arctic Monkeys sound pretty live anyway, so the songs come over well; loud and spotty and splenetic. Alex Turner’s lyrics have a splendid I Am A Camera, witty and distant quality to them that isn’t served well by idle comparisons to Jarvis Cocker and that one from The Smiths. This film serves very much as the old snapshot of a moment in time, although what that time is in the Arctic Monkey’s career is, right now, hard to say. Certainly one wonders if their commercial peak has been reached; but for now this film shows a far from ordinary band doing a very good job all round. Arctic Monkeys fans will fail to even go near a sense of disappointment; the rest of us will make a mental note to congratulate them and their film crew should we be seated next to them at dinner some time. Well, it could happen. What else? Well, it was filmed in Super 16 in 2K digital camera with 5.1 surround sound, and there’s some grainy footage at the end of the band running around on a beach, and a really nice feedback noise. And there are 20 songs, including all the hits, and they don’t do anything by The Last Shadow Puppets. And that’s pretty much it. EXTRAS: None. DAVID QUANTICK Pic credit: PA Photos

Concert films are often horrible things. Why anybody would want to have a big loud exciting experience in a hall full of noise and singing shrunk down like a crisp packet on a radiator to a small speakered, small screened, jump cut-edited DVD is one of the great mysteries of rock. The human attention span, which might be able to cope with a live album, is severely tested by being asked to look at four or five people playing instruments on the same stage for 60 minutes. And frankly, some crappy “inserts” of the group talking about themselves in a dressing room, or meeting Japanese fans, or gurning at the camera, are not going to be that thrilling.

All these thoughts and more run through the mind when taking this DVD out of its tiny sleeve. But there is good news for modern man here; this is not bad at all. Directed by The IT Crowd’s Richard Ayoade, who also directed the Arctic Monkeys’ “Florescent Adolescent” video, this film is very much what it says it is; a film of a live concert by The Arctic Monkeys at… well, you can see where they’re going with the title. And that’s both its flaw and its brilliance. With an utter lack of flash, the film – like the band – is almost completely devoid of effects, irrelevant detail or general flash.

There’s the odd bit of split screen and that’s it. Even the occasional lulls between songs, those weird bits in gigs when things stop happening for a minute and nobody ever seems to know why, have been left in. And if you’re a fan of drummers drinking lager, you’re in for a real treat at 42 minutes and 20 seconds. But cameras move about enough and the whole things suits and mirrors the band’s own style, which is hard work and talent disguised as effortlessness. It’s more and more effective as the concert goes on, and gives the viewer the feeling that they’re at the gig, rather than locked in the editing suite with a maniac. Asides become high points – one doubts that Mick Jagger has ever told an audience, “I’m in two minds as to taking this jumper off,” – while the band’s Spartan energy is enhanced by Ayoade’s methodology.

So what’s it like beyond the camera-pointing? On record, Arctic Monkeys sound pretty live anyway, so the songs come over well; loud and spotty and splenetic. Alex Turner’s lyrics have a splendid I Am A Camera, witty and distant quality to them that isn’t served well by idle comparisons to Jarvis Cocker and that one from The Smiths. This film serves very much as the old snapshot of a moment in time, although what that time is in the Arctic Monkey’s career is, right now, hard to say. Certainly one wonders if their commercial peak has been reached; but for now this film shows a far from ordinary band doing a very good job all round. Arctic Monkeys fans will fail to even go near a sense of disappointment; the rest of us will make a mental note to congratulate them and their film crew should we be seated next to them at dinner some time. Well, it could happen.

What else? Well, it was filmed in Super 16 in 2K digital camera with 5.1 surround sound, and there’s some grainy footage at the end of the band running around on a beach, and a really nice feedback noise. And there are 20 songs, including all the hits, and they don’t do anything by The Last Shadow Puppets. And that’s pretty much it.

EXTRAS: None.

DAVID QUANTICK

Pic credit: PA Photos

Tigrero – A Film That Was Never Made

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In 1954, 20th Century Fox chief Dary F Zanuck called writer-director Sam Fuller: he’d read about “tigreros,” bare-handed Brazilian forest hunters, and reckoned you could make a movie about such a character. Fuller agreed - but first, he wanted to see the place for himself. So, packing a 16mm camera, two guns, 75 boxes of cigars and two cases of vodka, he hacked his way by horseback into the Amazon jungle, at a time when interior tribes were still notorious for collecting enemies’ heads. Fuller never lost his head; instead, he lost his heart. He eventually pitched up in the remote village the Karaja, a small, peaceful tribe of river Indians, and fell in love with their isolated way of life. He stayed for weeks, filming their ceremonies, learning their culture, and left promising he’d soon return to make his film – but it never happened. The project was scrapped. Released in 1994, Mika Kaurismaki’s deceptively slight, utterly beguiling shaggy-dog documentary picks up the story four decades later, as, appetite for adventure undimmed, the 82-year-old Fuller decides the time has come for him to meet the Karaja again, and sets off down the Amazon once more, taking friend and fan Jim Jarmusch along for the ride. Kaurismaki is alive to the odd couple Fuller and Jarmusch present - Fuller a diminutive, hardboiled yet impish old Quixote, filling the air with talk; Jarmusch a towering, laconic, sceptical young hipster in a Ramones T-shirt – and inserts framing scenes of invented road-movie business between them. Mostly, though, he keeps his film a very straight, simple record of Fuller’s trip. Still, he unpeels layers of meaning. Fuller discovers the landscapes he remembers have changed almost beyond recognition, and, when he eventually finds them, none among the Karaja seem to recall this cigar-chewing figure from the past. (Curiously, though, this DVD seems to have misplaced the Karaja’s subtitles, present on the original release; an oversight that seriously diminishes the film.) The movie’s heart, however, lies in the scene where Fuller screens the footage he shot there forty years earlier: the entire village huddled around a single television by night, beginning to murmur as they recognise faces unseen for decades, old friends, parents and partners long dead, conjured back to life. Around this evocation of cinema’s essential power, without pressing hard, Kaurismaki offers an anthropological sketch, forgotten Hollywood history, a ramshackle meditation on time and memory and, as Fuller and Jarmusch banter, a gentle buddy movie. More than anything, though, the film stands as a portrait of Fuller himself. He died three years after this: yet, here he is, full of piss, vinegar, mischief, energy, emotion, adventure and, always, endless stories. A small man, bigger than life. EXTRAS: None; which, along with those missing subtitles, is a real shame. A well-appointed Region One DVD exists, though... DAMIEN LOVE

In 1954, 20th Century Fox chief Dary F Zanuck called writer-director Sam Fuller: he’d read about “tigreros,” bare-handed Brazilian forest hunters, and reckoned you could make a movie about such a character. Fuller agreed – but first, he wanted to see the place for himself. So, packing a 16mm camera, two guns, 75 boxes of cigars and two cases of vodka, he hacked his way by horseback into the Amazon jungle, at a time when interior tribes were still notorious for collecting enemies’ heads.

Fuller never lost his head; instead, he lost his heart. He eventually pitched up in the remote village the Karaja, a small, peaceful tribe of river Indians, and fell in love with their isolated way of life. He stayed for weeks, filming their ceremonies, learning their culture, and left promising he’d soon return to make his film – but it never happened. The project was scrapped.

Released in 1994, Mika Kaurismaki’s deceptively slight, utterly beguiling shaggy-dog documentary picks up the story four decades later, as, appetite for adventure undimmed, the 82-year-old Fuller decides the time has come for him to meet the Karaja again, and sets off down the Amazon once more, taking friend and fan Jim Jarmusch along for the ride.

Kaurismaki is alive to the odd couple Fuller and Jarmusch present – Fuller a diminutive, hardboiled yet impish old Quixote, filling the air with talk; Jarmusch a towering, laconic, sceptical young hipster in a Ramones T-shirt – and inserts framing scenes of invented road-movie business between them. Mostly, though, he keeps his film a very straight, simple record of Fuller’s trip. Still, he unpeels layers of meaning.

Fuller discovers the landscapes he remembers have changed almost beyond recognition, and, when he eventually finds them, none among the Karaja seem to recall this cigar-chewing figure from the past. (Curiously, though, this DVD seems to have misplaced the Karaja’s subtitles, present on the original release; an oversight that seriously diminishes the film.) The movie’s heart, however, lies in the scene where Fuller screens the footage he shot there forty years earlier: the entire village huddled around a single television by night, beginning to murmur as they recognise faces unseen for decades, old friends, parents and partners long dead, conjured back to life.

Around this evocation of cinema’s essential power, without pressing hard, Kaurismaki offers an anthropological sketch, forgotten Hollywood history, a ramshackle meditation on time and memory and, as Fuller and Jarmusch banter, a gentle buddy movie. More than anything, though, the film stands as a portrait of Fuller himself. He died three years after this: yet, here he is, full of piss, vinegar, mischief, energy, emotion, adventure and, always, endless stories. A small man, bigger than life.

EXTRAS: None; which, along with those missing subtitles, is a real shame. A well-appointed Region One DVD exists, though…

DAMIEN LOVE

The Baader Meinhoff Complex

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DIRECTED BY: Uli Edel STARRING: Alexandra Maria Lara, Bruno Ganz, Jan Josef Liefers, Martina Gedeck, Moritz Bleibtreu The international success of The Lives of Others and Downfall may have encouraged those involved in the production of The Baader Meinhof Complex that the wider world is uncommonly interested in recent German history. Much has been made of the involvement of Downfall producer Bernd Eichinger, who writes the story, from the book by Stefan Aust. But it’s probably more instructive to see it in relation to his previous work with director Uli Edel – on that gritty tale of druggy Berlin, Christiane F, and Last Exit To Brooklyn. Edel also directed several episodes of pre-Wire tale of Baltimore cops, Homicide: Life On The Street, and the Madonna clunker, Body of Evidence, but we’ll put the latter down to misplaced ambition. The film tells the story of the German terrorist group – also known as the Red Army Faction – which grew out the radical politics of 1968, the anti-Vietnam movement, and the perceived authoritarianism of the West German state. The echoes of their brutal campaign live on in Germany, but here – such is our shallow understanding of recent European history – if the Baader Meinhof gang is remembered at all, it is as a vague symbol of rebellion. (Joe Strummer’s punk wardrobe included an RAF t-shirt.) Eichinger favours a fragmented brand of storytelling rather than a rounded narrative, and Edel is happy to avoid the moral judgments that a Hollywood film on terrorism would be forced to make. That said, if the film isn’t exactly on the side of the Red Army Faction, it does a splendid job of making them sexy. This isn’t necessarily a fabrication – they were, in the main, young and good-looking and, in the spirit of the times, advocated sexual liberation. So it is that Gudrun Ensslin (Johanna Wokalek) is pictured naked on the roof of a Lebanese terrorist training camp, taunting her Palestinian hosts: “What’s the matter? Fucking and shooting; it’s the same thing!” By contrast, the authorities are characterless figures, with the exception of their main adversary Horst Herold (the reliable Bruno Ganz, Hitler in Downfall), and though the futility and the brutality of the campaign eventually become clear, the filmmakers are at risk of being seen as too sympathetic to these beautiful terrorists. Eichenger’s back is covered slightly by a subplot about the power of martyrdom and myths, and the sense of period is beautifully captured. It sprawls messily towards the end, and the violence becomes banal, but the overall effect is explosive: a Molotov cocktail of sex, violence, and dangerous ideals. ALASTAIR McKAY

DIRECTED BY: Uli Edel

STARRING: Alexandra Maria Lara, Bruno Ganz, Jan Josef Liefers, Martina Gedeck, Moritz Bleibtreu

The international success of The Lives of Others and Downfall may have encouraged those involved in the production of The Baader Meinhof Complex that the wider world is uncommonly interested in recent German history. Much has been made of the involvement of Downfall producer Bernd Eichinger, who writes the story, from the book by Stefan Aust. But it’s probably more instructive to see it in relation to his previous work with director Uli Edel – on that gritty tale of druggy Berlin, Christiane F, and Last Exit To Brooklyn. Edel also directed several episodes of pre-Wire tale of Baltimore cops, Homicide: Life On The Street, and the Madonna clunker, Body of Evidence, but we’ll put the latter down to misplaced ambition.

The film tells the story of the German terrorist group – also known as the Red Army Faction – which grew out the radical politics of 1968, the anti-Vietnam movement, and the perceived authoritarianism of the West German state. The echoes of their brutal campaign live on in Germany, but here – such is our shallow understanding of recent European history – if the Baader Meinhof gang is remembered at all, it is as a vague symbol of rebellion. (Joe Strummer’s punk wardrobe included an RAF t-shirt.)

Eichinger favours a fragmented brand of storytelling rather than a rounded narrative, and Edel is happy to avoid the moral judgments that a Hollywood film on terrorism would be forced to make. That said, if the film isn’t exactly on the side of the Red Army Faction, it does a splendid job of making them sexy. This isn’t necessarily a fabrication – they were, in the main, young and good-looking and, in the spirit of the times, advocated sexual liberation. So it is that Gudrun Ensslin (Johanna Wokalek) is pictured naked on the roof of a Lebanese terrorist training camp, taunting her Palestinian hosts: “What’s the matter? Fucking and shooting; it’s the same thing!”

By contrast, the authorities are characterless figures, with the exception of their main adversary Horst Herold (the reliable Bruno Ganz, Hitler in Downfall), and though the futility and the brutality of the campaign eventually become clear, the filmmakers are at risk of being seen as too sympathetic to these beautiful terrorists. Eichenger’s back is covered slightly by a subplot about the power of martyrdom and myths, and the sense of period is beautifully captured. It sprawls messily towards the end, and the violence becomes banal, but the overall effect is explosive: a Molotov cocktail of sex, violence, and dangerous ideals.

ALASTAIR McKAY

The 45th Uncut Playlist Of 2008

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Yes yes I know it's only a couple of days since the last one, but I have an interview to prepare for in an hour or so, and yesterday's post brought a bunch of stuff we should probably talk about, or at least flag up, now. Namely. . . 1 Eagles Of Death Metal - Heart On (Downtown/V2) 2 Antony & The Johnsons - The Crying Light (Secretly Canadian) 3 Titus Andronicus - The Airing Of Grievances (Merok/XL) 4 Various Artists - The Original Eight Mile: Westbound Records: 40th Anniversary (Westbound/Ace) 5 Diplo - Decent Work For Decent Pay: Collected Works Volume One (Big Dada) 6 Charlie Louvin - Sings Murder Ballads & Disaster Songs (Tompkins Square) 7 The Kinks - Picture Book (Sanctuary) 8 Animal Collective - Campfire Songs (Catsup Plate) 9 Q-Tip - The Renaissance (Island)

Yes yes I know it’s only a couple of days since the last one, but I have an interview to prepare for in an hour or so, and yesterday’s post brought a bunch of stuff we should probably talk about, or at least flag up, now. Namely. . .

The Doors 1967 Two Disc Live Album To Get Release

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A new archive live album of The Doors performing in San Francisco just weeks before the release of their (breakthrough) second single "Light My Fire", is to be issued as a two disc set on November 18. Recorded at The Matrix venue over two nights in March 1967, The Doors perform much of what appears on their self-titled debut album plus several tracks from their second LP Strange Days. Original band member Ray Manzarek writes in the sleeve notes for the release: "It was early 1967 and The Doors were about to enter the consciousness of the nation. And this is the way it sounded.” Live At The Matrix producer Bruce Botnick adds:"This is probably the closest we’ve come to a true document of The Doors without constraints". Some previously unreleased songs that feature on the album include The Doors' cover of Allen Toussaint’s "Get Out Of My Life, Woman". The Doors Live At The Matrix 1967 track listing is: Disc One: 1. “Break On Through (To The Other Side)” 2. “Soul Kitchen” 3. “Money” 4. “The Crystal Ship” 5. “Twentieth Century Fox” 6. “I’m A King Bee” 7. “Alabama Song (Whisky Bar)” 8. “Summer’s Almost Gone” 9. “Light My Fire” 10. “Get Out Of My Life Woman” 11. “Back Door Man” 12. “Who Do You Love” 13. “The End” Disc Two: 1. “Unhappy Girl” 2. “Moonlight Drive” 3. “Woman Is A Devil/Rock Me” 4. “People Are Strange” 5. “Close To You” 6. “My Eyes Have Seen You” 7. “Crawling King Snake” 8. “I Can’t See Your Face In My Mind” 9. “Summertime” 10. “When The Music’s Over” 11. “Gloria” For more music and film news click here

A new archive live album of The Doors performing in San Francisco just weeks before the release of their (breakthrough) second single “Light My Fire”, is to be issued as a two disc set on November 18.

Recorded at The Matrix venue over two nights in March 1967, The Doors perform much of what appears on their self-titled debut album plus several tracks from their second LP Strange Days.

Original band member Ray Manzarek writes in the sleeve notes for the release: “It was early 1967 and The Doors were about to enter the consciousness of the nation. And this is the way it sounded.”

Live At The Matrix producer Bruce Botnick adds:”This is probably the closest we’ve come to a true document of The Doors without constraints”.

Some previously unreleased songs that feature on the album include The Doors’ cover of Allen Toussaint’s “Get Out Of My Life, Woman”.

The Doors Live At The Matrix 1967 track listing is:

Disc One:

1. “Break On Through (To The Other Side)”

2. “Soul Kitchen”

3. “Money”

4. “The Crystal Ship”

5. “Twentieth Century Fox”

6. “I’m A King Bee”

7. “Alabama Song (Whisky Bar)”

8. “Summer’s Almost Gone”

9. “Light My Fire”

10. “Get Out Of My Life Woman”

11. “Back Door Man”

12. “Who Do You Love”

13. “The End”

Disc Two:

1. “Unhappy Girl”

2. “Moonlight Drive”

3. “Woman Is A Devil/Rock Me”

4. “People Are Strange”

5. “Close To You”

6. “My Eyes Have Seen You”

7. “Crawling King Snake”

8. “I Can’t See Your Face In My Mind”

9. “Summertime”

10. “When The Music’s Over”

11. “Gloria”

For more music and film news click here

Lightspeed Champion To Perform Cat Stevens Soundtrack Live

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Lightspeed Champion is to perform songs by Cat Stevens from the soundtrack to cult film Harold and Maude at a special screening in London next month. The 'Roots and Shoots' winter edition takes place at London's NFT1 on December 11 and will see Lightspeed Champion, aka Dev Hynes perform a special a...

Lightspeed Champion is to perform songs by Cat Stevens from the soundtrack to cult film Harold and Maude at a special screening in London next month.

The ‘Roots and Shoots’ winter edition takes place at London’s NFT1 on December 11 and will see Lightspeed Champion, aka Dev Hynes perform a special acoustic set after Hal Ashby’s film screens.

Harold and Maude is an uplifting dark comedy and stars Ruth Gordon, Bud Cort and Vivian Pickles, Harold and Maude is an oddball existential black comedy exploring an unlikely relationship between death-obsessed rich boy Harold (Bud Cort), and the lively, eccentric septuagenarian Maude (Ruth Gordon), who he meets at a funeral.

Highlights from the Cat Stevens-penned soundtrack include

“If You Want To Sing Out, Sing Out” and “Don’t Be Shy” –

most of the tracks from the film’s OST also appear on Stevens’

Tea For The Tillerman album.

Tickets for the unique event are available from the NFT box

office here, www.bfi.org.uk

For more music and film news click here

New Bruce Springsteen Album To Be Released In January

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Bruce Springsteen is expected to release his new album the follow-up to last year's Magic, around the time of the Presidential inauguration in January. Springsteen has been campaigning for Barack Obama and performed at the president elect's rally in Cleveland on November 2, premiering a new song, a...

Bruce Springsteen is expected to release his new album the follow-up to last year’s Magic, around the time of the Presidential inauguration in January.

Springsteen has been campaigning for Barack Obama and performed at the president elect’s rally in Cleveland on November 2, premiering a new song, a duet with his wife Patti, called “Workin’ On A Dream” – which is likely to be included on the new record.

Springsteen has been working on his 16th studio album this autumn.

Another new track has also appeared on new Mickey Rourke movie The Wrestler, the song of the same name features on the closing credits.

For more music and film news click here

Pic credit: PA Photos

Amadou and Mariam To Play London Show

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Amadou & Mariam have announced that they will play a one-off headline show at London’s Koko February 25, 2009. The Mali-duo whose new album ‘Welcome to Mali,’ is released on November 17, return to the UK after performing with Africa Express as part of the BBC Electric Proms last month. ...

Amadou & Mariam have announced that they will play a one-off headline show at London’s Koko February 25, 2009.

The Mali-duo whose new album ‘Welcome to Mali,’ is released on November 17, return to the UK after performing with Africa Express as part of the BBC Electric Proms last month.

The lead single to be taken from the new album is the Damon Albarn guest produced “Sabali” which will be released on November 20.

You can read the five-star rated Uncut review of Welcome To Mali here

For more music and film news click here

Belle And Sebastian Finish Follow-Up To The Life Pursuit

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Belle and Sebastian have revealed that work on their anticipated eighth studio album is finished, and singer Stuart Murdoch hopes to finish mastering it this month. Updates on the follow-up to 2006's The Life Pursuit have not been fortchcoming from the band, but Murdoch has finally spoken through t...

Belle and Sebastian have revealed that work on their anticipated eighth studio album is finished, and singer Stuart Murdoch hopes to finish mastering it this month.

Updates on the follow-up to 2006’s The Life Pursuit have not been fortchcoming from the band, but Murdoch has finally spoken through the B&S website, saying that the album called God Help The Girl is nearly ready.

Murdoch writes: “I’m aiming to master all the ‘God Help The Girl’ songs by the end of November. I think there are 18 of them. It’s a good feeling to think about making records. Sleeves and schedules, running orders and what not. It’s been so long since I did it that, I suspect the landscape has changed”.

He adds contemplatively: “Do you get the same thrill when you look forward to a record coming out? I suppose I must ask the youngsters among you, because age dulls most thrills. But youngsters, where are your thrills coming from? Do you desire the sensation that is the Long Playing Record. Does pop music teach you and hold you and thrill you the way it used to? The way it did to us?”

The Divine Comedy’s Neil Hannon and Smoosh’s Asy are both guest vocalists on the forthcoming album.

Belle and Sebastian are also confirmed to perform at this year’s Hogmanay celebration in Edinburgh.

The bands BBC Sessions album is also set for release this month, out on November 17.

Read Murdoch’s diary entry by clicking here.

For more music and film news click here

Mothers Of Invention Drummer Dies

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Jimmy Carl Black drummer for Frank Zappa and Captain Beefheart's Magic Band amongst others, has died aged 70, after illness in Germany. Black was drummer, vocalist, and sometime trumpet player for Zappa's legendary band The Mothers Of Invention from 1964 to 1969. Black also fronted his own band, G...

Jimmy Carl Black drummer for Frank Zappa and Captain Beefheart’s Magic Band amongst others, has died aged 70, after illness in Germany.

Black was drummer, vocalist, and sometime trumpet player for Zappa’s legendary band The Mothers Of Invention from 1964 to 1969.

Black also fronted his own band, Geronimo Black in the early 70s.

From 1990, Texan-born Black also played with The Muffin Men, a UK based tribute act to Zappa, featuring many other alumni from Frank’s original bands.

Black died from lung cancer which was only diagnosed in

August this year, in Siegsdorf, Germany on Saturday

(November 1), reports Associated Press.

A tribute concert is to be held in London on November 9. The

Muffin Men are amongst the acts who will play the charity show

at the Bridge House 2 venue in Canning Town.

For more details, click here

For more music and film news click here

Pic credit: Rex Pictures

Animal Collective Announce Live Shows

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Animal Collective have announced that they will play a series of live dates, around the release of their brand new album Merriweather Post Pavillion. The tour spans three continents, and kicks off at London's Koko venue on the day of the album's release, January 12. For a preview of the album cli...

Animal Collective have announced that they will play a series of live dates, around the release of their brand new album Merriweather Post Pavillion.

The tour spans three continents, and kicks off at London’s Koko venue on the day of the album’s release, January 12.

For a preview of the album click here for Uncut’s Wild Mercury Sound album blog.

Animal Collective will play the following venues in early 2009:

London Koko (January 12)

Glasgow School Of Arts (13)

Manchester Club Academy (14)

Brighton Concorde 2 (15)

Paris Bataclan (16)

Leuven Stuk (17)

Berlin Postbahnhof (18)

New York Grand Ballroom (20)

Chicago Metro(22)

Los Angeles Fonda Theater (23)

For more music and film news click here

Babe, Terror and Animal Collective

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I’ve written about this guy Babe, Terror before here, but he emailed me about a new track he’d posted the other day, and I think it might be his best one yet. It’s called “Summertime Our League”, and you can find it on his Myspace. Again, the obvious comparison is with Animal Collective (who are playing Babe, Terror’s hometown of Sao Paolo soon, I think), but this more than ever is about the possible scientific/emotional experiments that can be conducted on the human voice. If you need a specific AC reference, I’d actually go for Panda Bear’s “Young Prayer” solo album; that gaseous, nebulous melancholy built out of wordless falsetto. We’re advised to listen to this one on headphones, which makes sense. Watch out, though: what initially seems immersive, chorally soothing, gets pretty disorienting with some vicious jump-edits and a smear of distortion that jars somewhere around the middle of its eight-minute run. Lovely, still. Every time Babe, Terror (he’s called Claudio, really) emails with a new track, it makes me naively excited about where we’ve come to with online musical communties: that a man making fearless and uncommercial ethereal music in Brazil, stuff of value that I’d like, can come to my attention so easily. It’s nice to see, too, that I’m not alone: Arto Lindsay appears to have booked him for the Worldtronics festival in Berlin at the end of the month. Talking of Animal Collective yet again, the obsession with “Merriweather Post Pavilion” only gets stronger and deeper, happily. Can I say once more, though, that while I understand how frustrating the teasing nature of these blogs can sometimes be, I’m afraid I’m never going to leak this or any other promo I get sent, no matter how many times you send me emails like “LEAK THE FUCKING ALBUM!” Just saying.

I’ve written about this guy Babe, Terror before here, but he emailed me about a new track he’d posted the other day, and I think it might be his best one yet.

Paul McCartney To Get Special MTV Award

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Paul McCartney is to be awarded an especially created Ultimate Legend Award at the annual MTV Europe Music Awards on Thursday (November 6). The event, which this year takes place at the Echo Arena in the former Beatles' hometown of Liverpool, is now in it's 15th year. MTV Awards executive producer...

Paul McCartney is to be awarded an especially created Ultimate Legend Award at the annual MTV Europe Music Awards on Thursday (November 6).

The event, which this year takes place at the Echo Arena in the former Beatles‘ hometown of Liverpool, is now in it’s 15th year.

MTV Awards executive producer Richard Godfrey says the award was fitting for the musical legend, saying: “Sir Paul’s dedication to sharing his experience and nurturing the next generation of talented artists is remarkable”.

McCartney is not expected to join The Killers, Take That, Beyonce and Katy Perry in performing at the ceremony, but will attend to pick up his award.

The MTV Europe Music Awards are expected to be watched by an estimated audience of 30 million.

For more music and film news click here

The Uncut Review: Ryan Adams and The Cardinals!

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Uncut.co.uk publishes a weekly selection of music album reviews; including new, reissued and compilation albums. Find out about the best albums here, by clicking on the album titles below. All of our album reviews feature a 'submit your own album review' function - we would love to hear your opinio...

Uncut.co.uk publishes a weekly selection of music album reviews; including new, reissued and compilation albums. Find out about the best albums here, by clicking on the album titles below.

All of our album reviews feature a ‘submit your own album review’ function – we would love to hear your opinions on the latest releases!

These albums are all set for release on November 10, 2008:

ALBUM REVIEW: RYAN ADAMS & THE CARDINALS – CARDINOLOGY 3* Intermittent greatness from Americana’s hardest-working man

ALBUM REVIEW: AMADOU & MARIAM – WELCOME TO MALI 5* Malian Afro-pop troubadours team up with Damon Albarn and others for this assault on the Western pop market

ALBUM REISSUES: THE BUZZCOCKS – ANOTHER MUSIC IN A DIFFERENT KITCHEN 4* + Love Bites 2* and A Different Kind Of Tension 3*Melodic punks’ first three LPs reissued in 2CD editions

ALBUM REVIEW: BRIGHTBLACK MORNING LIGHT – MOTION TO REJOIN 4* Shiny hippy people: intoxicating psychedelic grooves from the New Mexican desert

Plus here are some of UNCUT’s recommended new releases from the past month – check out these albums if you haven’t already:

ALBUM REVIEW: PAUL WELLER – PAUL WELLER AT THE BBC 4* 4CD set proves he’s more changing man than Plodfather

ALBUM REVIEW: THE SMITHS – THE SOUND OF THE SMITHS 4* The definitive compilation of Morrissey and Marr. So far

ALBUM REVIEW: GENESIS – 1970 – 75 3* A suitably hefty compendium – five early, extravagant albums, extras, plus archive video footage – PLUS interview with Mike Rutherford and Tony Banks here

ALBUM REVIEW: AC/DC – BLACK ICE 3* Four songs with rock in the title. . . Business as usual? Not quite. Band’s first album since 2001’s Stiff Upper Lip.

ALBUM REVIEW: KAISER CHIEFS – OFF WITH THEIR HEADS 4* Third album from the Leeds band unites them with producer du jour Mark Ronson, plus Q&A with KC drummer Nick Hodgson

ALBUM REVIEW: BOB DYLAN – THE BOOTLEG SERIES VOL 8: TELL TALE SIGNS – 5* Highly anticipated installation in the Bootleg Series, read Allan Jones’ in depth review here.

ALBUM REVIEW: OASIS – DIG OUT YOUR SOUL – 3* Noel and the boys get back in the groove but face some bleak home truths

ALBUM REVIEW: NEW ORDER – REISSUES – Movement 3*/ Power, Corruption & Lies 3*/ Low-Life 5*/ Brotherhood 4*/ Technique 4*: A startling, diverse legacy, augmented with bonus discs

ALBUM REVIEW: KINGS OF LEON – ONLY BY THE NIGHT – 4* Slowing the tempos, the Followills speed their ascent to the rock pantheon. Currently riding high in the UK album charts.

ALBUM REVIEW: METALLICA – DEATH MAGNETIC – 4* Troubled Dark Knights of metal return to form – check out the review of the current UK Album Chart Number 1 here.

ALBUM REVIEW: LINDSEY BUCKINGHAM – GIFT OF SCREWS – 4* Fleetwood Mac man’s punchy pop-rock manifesto

For more album reviews from the 3000+ UNCUT archive – check out: www.www.uncut.co.uk/music/reviews.

Ryan Adams & The Cardinals – Cardinology

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The most driven – and almost always the most interesting – artists are those pursued, constantly and remorselessly, by the nagging feeling that they didn’t get it quite right last time. Ryan Adams is quantifiably more driven than most. “Cardinology” is the tenth full-length album to bear his name. Added to the three he cut as the frontman of Whiskeytown, this amounts to a teetering discography for someone still not yet 35 – even when one doesn’t count the reams of stuff Adams creates under aliases in his spare time, to give away online. And no reader of this publication will require persuasion of Adams’ epic capacity for dissatisfaction. 2007’s “Easy Tiger” had barely settled into the shelves before Adams was harumphing to Uncut in his Greenwich Village apartment that it wasn’t the album he’d wanted to make, that he’d been half-nelsoned by his record company into making their idea of a Ryan Adams solo album, when what he’d wanted to do was make something “rockier, more bombastic”, and co-credited to his adored backing band, The Cardinals. He wanted, he said, to play less acoustic guitar, to do something that more precisely echoed the music that was singing to him loudest – which, at that point, or so he claimed, wasn’t the wistful alt.country with which he’d made his name, but the prog meanderings of The Grateful Dead and the lager-sweating metal of Black Sabbath. In one respect, at least, Adams can be lauded for his consistency: according to a statement on his website, “Cardinology” will be his last album for Lost Highway, ending an association dating back to 2001’s Uncut Album of the Year “Gold”. However, upon hearing “Cardinology”, one is forced to wonder quite what vexed Adams to the point of removing his bat and ball from the field of play. The Cardinals – guitarist Neal Casal, bassist Chris Feinstein, pedal steel Jon Graboff, drummer Brad Pemberton – receive due billing on the sleeve. The ghosts of Jerry Garcia and Tony Iommi, meanwhile, are conspicuous only by their absence. There is no way that anybody would mistake “Cardinology” for anything but a Ryan Adams album. Which is, of course, a good thing: Adams has, the odd erratic detour (notably 2003’s tossed-off “Rock & Roll”) notwithstanding, been prodigious in terms of quantity as well as quality. And Cardinology is, by most standards, a good record. Unfortunately, by the extremely rarefied standards of Adams at his astonishing pinnacles (“Heartbreaker”, “Jacksonville City Nights”, “Cold Roses”), it isn’t a great one. Not one of these dozen songs connects as instantly, or lingers as potently, as a “To Be Young”, a “The End”, a “Let It Ride”. Some of them, indeed, are startlingly generic, especially from a writer whose work usually twitches with wit and invention: the shuddering rocker “Magick”, with its choruses about “What goes around comes around” and “turn the radio up”, sounds like it took as long to write as it does to play. Others feel half-finished, half-thought: “Sink Ships” belabours a klutzy metaphor (“This position is not open now for applicants/The application forms got shredded/There was faulty wording in the documents”: ouch), its gorgeous, pedal-steel drenched chorus a frustrating hint, in context, of what might have been. “Evergreen” and “Let Us Down Easy” are as pretty, sweet and ultimately insubstantial as candyfloss. Though “Cardinology” as a whole is flawed, there are worthwhile pickings for those who buy music by pointing and clicking. The album probably amounts to Adams’ best performance yet as a vocalist, increasingly confident of what can be wrung from the bottom and top reaches of his formidable register. The acoustic shimmer “Crossed Out Name” evokes the melancholy, rueful sighs of Mark Eitzel. In the coda of the modestly epic “Cobwebs”, Adams locates a tremulous falsetto that recalls Bono circa “Unforgettable Fire” (a compliment, lest there be any doubt). And when the songs are good, they’re stunning. “Fix It” is another in Adams’ catalogue of baffled heartbreakers, a sequel to “Why Do They Leave?” and “How Do You Keep Love Alive?”. “Go Easy”, a breathy rocker with a whooping chorus, would have ranked among the better tracks even on the nigh perfect “Gold”. “Stop”, the aptly titled finale, is a wracked, hungover croon over a piano, haunted by desultory percussion and a late-arriving string section, as bleakly beautiful as anything by Paul Westerberg in his more reflective moments. Ultimately, “Cardinology” serves as another minor indictment of Adams’ famously lackadaisical internal editor. Neveretheless, it is still, almost infuriatingly, a stretch better than most people at their best. And, it being a Ryan Adams album, its misfires and drop-shorts matter less than they otherwise might. He clearly can’t help himself. There’ll be another one along presently. ANDREW MUELLER For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

The most driven – and almost always the most interesting – artists are those pursued, constantly and remorselessly, by the nagging feeling that they didn’t get it quite right last time. Ryan Adams is quantifiably more driven than most. “Cardinology” is the tenth full-length album to bear his name. Added to the three he cut as the frontman of Whiskeytown, this amounts to a teetering discography for someone still not yet 35 – even when one doesn’t count the reams of stuff Adams creates under aliases in his spare time, to give away online.

And no reader of this publication will require persuasion of Adams’ epic capacity for dissatisfaction. 2007’s “Easy Tiger” had barely settled into the shelves before Adams was harumphing to Uncut in his Greenwich Village apartment that it wasn’t the album he’d wanted to make, that he’d been half-nelsoned by his record company into making their idea of a Ryan Adams solo album, when what he’d wanted to do was make something “rockier, more bombastic”, and co-credited to his adored backing band, The Cardinals. He wanted, he said, to play less acoustic guitar, to do something that more precisely echoed the music that was singing to him loudest – which, at that point, or so he claimed, wasn’t the wistful alt.country with which he’d made his name, but the prog meanderings of The Grateful Dead and the lager-sweating metal of Black Sabbath.

In one respect, at least, Adams can be lauded for his consistency: according to a statement on his website, “Cardinology” will be his last album for Lost Highway, ending an association dating back to 2001’s Uncut Album of the Year “Gold”. However, upon hearing “Cardinology”, one is forced to wonder quite what vexed Adams to the point of removing his bat and ball from the field of play. The Cardinals – guitarist Neal Casal, bassist Chris Feinstein, pedal steel Jon Graboff, drummer Brad Pemberton – receive due billing on the sleeve. The ghosts of Jerry Garcia and Tony Iommi, meanwhile, are conspicuous only by their absence. There is no way that anybody would mistake “Cardinology” for anything but a Ryan Adams album.

Which is, of course, a good thing: Adams has, the odd erratic detour (notably 2003’s tossed-off “Rock & Roll”) notwithstanding, been prodigious in terms of quantity as well as quality. And Cardinology is, by most standards, a good record. Unfortunately, by the extremely rarefied standards of Adams at his astonishing pinnacles (“Heartbreaker”, “Jacksonville City Nights”, “Cold Roses”), it isn’t a great one. Not one of these dozen songs connects as instantly, or lingers as potently, as a “To Be Young”, a “The End”, a “Let It Ride”. Some of them, indeed, are startlingly generic, especially from a writer whose work usually twitches with wit and invention: the shuddering rocker “Magick”, with its choruses about “What goes around comes around” and “turn the radio up”, sounds like it took as long to write as it does to play. Others feel half-finished, half-thought: “Sink Ships” belabours a klutzy metaphor (“This position is not open now for applicants/The application forms got shredded/There was faulty wording in the documents”: ouch), its gorgeous, pedal-steel drenched chorus a frustrating hint, in context, of what might have been. “Evergreen” and “Let Us Down Easy” are as pretty, sweet and ultimately insubstantial as candyfloss.

Though “Cardinology” as a whole is flawed, there are worthwhile pickings for those who buy music by pointing and clicking. The album probably amounts to Adams’ best performance yet as a vocalist, increasingly confident of what can be wrung from the bottom and top reaches of his formidable register. The acoustic shimmer “Crossed Out Name” evokes the melancholy, rueful sighs of Mark Eitzel. In the coda of the modestly epic “Cobwebs”, Adams locates a tremulous falsetto that recalls Bono circa “Unforgettable Fire” (a compliment, lest there be any doubt). And when the songs are good, they’re stunning. “Fix It” is another in Adams’ catalogue of baffled heartbreakers, a sequel to “Why Do They Leave?” and “How Do You Keep Love Alive?”. “Go Easy”, a breathy rocker with a whooping chorus, would have ranked among the better tracks even on the nigh perfect “Gold”. “Stop”, the aptly titled finale, is a wracked, hungover croon over a piano, haunted by desultory percussion and a late-arriving string section, as bleakly beautiful as anything by Paul Westerberg in his more reflective moments.

Ultimately, “Cardinology” serves as another minor indictment of Adams’ famously lackadaisical internal editor. Neveretheless, it is still, almost infuriatingly, a stretch better than most people at their best. And, it being a Ryan Adams album, its misfires and drop-shorts matter less than they otherwise might. He clearly can’t help himself. There’ll be another one along presently.

ANDREW MUELLER

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