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Bjork Teams Up With Radiohead’s Thom Yorke

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Bjork has teamed up Radiohead's Thom Yorke on forthcoming new single "Nattura", which is released next week. Yorke provides backing vocals on the track, which is being released to raise money for the Nattura Environmental Campaign which aims to gather sustainable and eco-friendly ideas suitable for...

Bjork has teamed up Radiohead‘s Thom Yorke on forthcoming new single “Nattura”, which is released next week.

Yorke provides backing vocals on the track, which is being released to raise money for the Nattura Environmental Campaign which aims to gather sustainable and eco-friendly ideas suitable for Iceland.

The track also features Lightning Bolt‘s Brian Chippendale on drums.

“Nattura” will be available as an iTunes exclusive for one week from October 20, before being digitally released everywhere from October 27.

More information about the environmental campaign is available here: www.nattura.info

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Here it is… The Uncut Music Award Shortlist!

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As you’ve doubtless gathered by now, we’ve started our own prestigious Uncut Music Award this year, for the most rewarding album released between September 2007 and August 2008. We've revealed the 25 albums that made it onto our longlist. Now, we’re thrilled to unveil the shortlist. They are, in alphabetical order: 1. BON IVER – For Emma, Forever Ago (4AD) 2. DRIVE BY TRUCKERS – Brighter Than Creation’s Dark (New West) 3. ELBOW – The Seldom-Seen Kid (Fiction) 4. THE FELICE BROTHERS - The Felice Brothers (Loose) 5. FLEET FOXES – Fleet Foxes (Bella Union) 6. THE RACONTEURS – Consolers Of The Lonely (XL) 7. RADIOHEAD - In Rainbows (XL) 8. VAMPIRE WEEKEND – Vampire Weekend (XL) Our illustrious judges – Peter Hook, Linda Thompson, Edwyn Collins, Bob Harris, Mark Radcliffe, Danny Kelly, Vince Power, Tony Wadsworth, Alison Howe and Allan Jones – will be meeting up any day now to choose their winner. We’ll announce their choice in early November here. But in the meantime, please join in the discussion on who should win. Let us know what you think in the comment box below.

As you’ve doubtless gathered by now, we’ve started our own prestigious Uncut Music Award this year, for the most rewarding album released between September 2007 and August 2008. We’ve revealed the 25 albums that made it onto our longlist. Now, we’re thrilled to unveil the shortlist.

Fall Out Boy Postpone Album To Post-US Election

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Fall Out Boy have announced that they are to postpone the release of their new studio album 'Folie A Deux', which originally was meant to be released for 'fun' on the same day as the US presedential election next month (November 4). In an about-turn, the band led by Pete Wentz have now posted a mes...

Fall Out Boy have announced that they are to postpone the release of their new studio album ‘Folie A Deux’, which originally was meant to be released for ‘fun’ on the same day as the US presedential election next month (November 4).

In an about-turn, the band led by Pete Wentz have now posted a message on their website to say that even though hosting the launch of the disc on the same night reflected the “social commentary” and was “relevant to the candidates”, they felt it was not the right thing to do. Adding that “This is not the election to be cute. This is the most important election of our time.”

FoB also said on their post: “We felt as though rather than making a commentary we were only riding the wave of the election. This seemed less and less like what we intended to do and more of a gimmick.”

The band add in their message: “While we have all individually expressed our positions on the candidates that we support we feel that many of the interviews and press for the record have skewed us into a partisan band. While it may be obvious where we stand. We never intended to be the band that shoved our ideas down peoples throats. We only hope people look at the bigger picture and investigate the issues further on their own.”

Folie A Deux will now be released on December 16, although the band intend to release some new songs through iTunes in the meantime. They also plan on playing some intimate club shows in US cities in November, tickets for which will only be available on the day.

Fall Out Boy’s previous album, last year’s Infinity on High, spawned their biggest UK hit to date with “This Ain’t A Scene, It’s An Arms Race”.

Read the band’s full blog here.

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American Artists Dominate Inauguaral Uncut Music Award Shortlist

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Bon Iver, Fleet Foxes and The Raconteurs are among the US artists to dominate the inaugural Uncut Music Award shortlist which has been announced today (October 14). Others to be picked from the longlist of 25 albums (Click here for the full list) released between September 1, 2007 and August 31, 20...

Bon Iver, Fleet Foxes and The Raconteurs are among the US artists to dominate the inaugural Uncut Music Award shortlist which has been announced today (October 14).

Others to be picked from the longlist of 25 albums (Click here for the full list) released between September 1, 2007 and August 31, 2008 were The Felice Brothers, The Drive-By Truckers and Vampire Weekend.

Flying the flag for British artists are this year’s Mercury Music Prize winners Elbow and Radiohead.

The ten-strong industry panel which includes artsists, producers, writers and promotors and includes Peter Hook, Linda Thompson, Vince Power, Tony Wadsworth and Edwyn Collins have whittled the list down to a final eight by ranking their five favourites from the year.

Uncut editor Allan Jones, who will chair the panel when choosing the Uncut Music Prize winner has commented on the shortlist, saying: “I can safely say on behalf of all the judges that reducing our original list of 25 albums to a short list of eight was not what you call an easy task. I’m very excited, though, by the final selection of albums that will contest the inaugural Uncut Music Award. The eight short listed albums is an exciting reflection of the great music produced over the last year and highlights the diversity of music regularly championed by Uncut. What happens next is going to be very interesting indeed.”

Another Uncut Music Award panellist, Mark Radcliffe has added: “This shortlist is filled with exciting innovations in music as well as just some really lovely tunes. What Uncut are doing by opening a music award to artists worldwide means that we will truly find the best album of the last 12 months”

Now that the short list of eight albums has been generated, the panellists will now fight it out at a round table event in central London to pick the very best to take the first ever Uncut Music Award. The winner will be announced in early November.

The Uncut Music Award shortlist 2008 is: (in alphabetical order)

1. BON IVER – For Emma, Forever Ago

2. ELBOW – The Seldom Seen Kid

3. THE DRIVE-BY TRUCKERS – Brighter Than Creation’s Dark

4. THE FELICE BROTHERS – The Felice Brothers

5. FLEET FOXES – Fleet Foxes

6. THE RACONTEURS – Consolers Of The Lonely

7. RADIOHEAD – In Rainbows

8. VAMPIRE WEEKEND – Vampire Weekend

Keep up to date with the Uncut Music Award, with info about all the albums, at our dedicated blog here.

For more music and film news click here

AC/DC Announce UK Tour Dates

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AC/DC have announced some UK tour dates to take place in April 2009. The band who's world tour kicks off in the US on October 28, in support of their first album since 2001, will bring the Black Ice shows to London, Manchester and Birmingham next year. The three dates so far announced are the AC/...

AC/DC have announced some UK tour dates to take place in April 2009.

The band who’s world tour kicks off in the US on October 28, in support of their first album since 2001, will bring the Black Ice shows to London, Manchester and Birmingham next year.

The three dates so far announced are the AC/DC’s first in the UK in eight years.

Black Ice is released next Monday.

Tickets go on sale this Friday (October 17) at 10am.

AC/DC will play:

London 02 Arena (April 14)

Manchester MEN Arena (21)

Birmingham LG Arena (23)

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Pic credit: PA Photos

The Damned Return With First Album Since 2001

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Veteran purveyours of goth punk The Damned have announced details of a brand new album 'So, Who's Paranoid?', which will be released on November 17. The album, 32 years into their career as a band, the new 13-track studio album David Vanian and Captain Sensible's first new material since 2001's 'Grave Disorder'. The Damned will tour to support the disc, with shows starting in Southampton on November 15. So, Who's Paranoid track listing is: 'A Nation Fit For Heroes' 'Under The Wheels' 'Dr. Woofenstein' 'Shallow Diamonds' 'Since I Met You' 'A Danger To Yourself' 'Maid For Pleasure' 'Perfect Sunday' 'Nature's Dark Passion' 'Little Miss Disaster' 'Just Hangin'' 'Nothing' 'Dark Asteroid' The Damned's tour dates are: Talking Heads, Southampton (November 15, 16) Islington Academy, London (19) Button Factory, Dublin (28) Empire Belfast (29) Carling Academy, Newcastle (30) Junction, Cambridge (December 2) Rockhouse, Derby (3) Irish Centre, Leeds (4) Academy 2, Manchester (5) Liquid Rooms, Edinburgh (6) All Tomorrow's Parties, Minehead (7) Queens Hall, Narbeth (9) The M Club, Crewe (10) Waterfront, Norwich (11) Corporation, Sheffield (12) The Forum, London 913) Academy, Bristol (14) The Point, Cardiff (16) Guild Gall, Gloucester (17) Robin II, Bilston (18) Academy, Oxford (19) Roadmender, Northampton (20) Komedia, Brighton (21) For more music and film news click here Pic credit: PA Photos

Veteran purveyours of goth punk The Damned have announced details of a brand new album ‘So, Who’s Paranoid?’, which will be released on November 17.

The album, 32 years into their career as a band, the new 13-track studio album David Vanian and Captain Sensible‘s first new material since 2001’s ‘Grave Disorder’.

The Damned will tour to support the disc, with shows starting in Southampton on November 15.

So, Who’s Paranoid track listing is:

‘A Nation Fit For Heroes’

‘Under The Wheels’

‘Dr. Woofenstein’

‘Shallow Diamonds’

‘Since I Met You’

‘A Danger To Yourself’

‘Maid For Pleasure’

‘Perfect Sunday’

‘Nature’s Dark Passion’

‘Little Miss Disaster’

‘Just Hangin”

‘Nothing’

‘Dark Asteroid’

The Damned’s tour dates are:

Talking Heads, Southampton (November 15, 16)

Islington Academy, London (19)

Button Factory, Dublin (28)

Empire Belfast (29)

Carling Academy, Newcastle (30)

Junction, Cambridge (December 2)

Rockhouse, Derby (3)

Irish Centre, Leeds (4)

Academy 2, Manchester (5)

Liquid Rooms, Edinburgh (6)

All Tomorrow’s Parties, Minehead (7)

Queens Hall, Narbeth (9)

The M Club, Crewe (10)

Waterfront, Norwich (11)

Corporation, Sheffield (12)

The Forum, London 913)

Academy, Bristol (14)

The Point, Cardiff (16)

Guild Gall, Gloucester (17)

Robin II, Bilston (18)

Academy, Oxford (19)

Roadmender, Northampton (20)

Komedia, Brighton (21)

For more music and film news click here

Pic credit: PA Photos

The Real Bob Dylan – Part Six of our Online Exclusives!

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BOB DYLAN SPECIAL: The Complete Tell Tale Signs In this month’s issue of Uncut, we celebrate the release of Tell Tale Signs, the Bootleg Series Vol 8, Bob Dylan’s astonishing 2 and 3CD collection of unreleased material from 1989-2006. We spoke to the musicians, producers and crew who worke...

BOB DYLAN SPECIAL: The Complete Tell Tale Signs

In this month’s issue of Uncut, we celebrate the release of Tell Tale Signs, the Bootleg Series Vol 8, Bob Dylan’s astonishing 2 and 3CD collection of unreleased material from 1989-2006.

We spoke to the musicians, producers and crew who worked with him during this period. And now, here’s your chance to read the full, unedited transcripts of those interviews.

Today, we present guitarist David Lindley‘s story about the making of Under The Red Sky, while Daniel Lanois, Jim Keltner and others will follow in a further seven parts in the coming month. .

Click here to read the transcript.

You can read previous transcripts by clicking on the side panel (right).

Next one up Wednesday (October 15)!

Dylan’s Tell Tale Signs: Online Exclusive! Part Six!

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BOB DYLAN SPECIAL: The Complete Tell Tale Signs In this month’s issue of Uncut, we celebrate the release of Tell Tale Signs, the Bootleg Series Vol 8, Bob Dylan’s astonishing 2 and 3CD collection of unreleased material from 1989-2006. We spoke to the musicians, producers and crew who worke...

BOB DYLAN SPECIAL: The Complete Tell Tale Signs

In this month’s issue of Uncut, we celebrate the release of Tell Tale Signs, the Bootleg Series Vol 8, Bob Dylan’s astonishing 2 and 3CD collection of unreleased material from 1989-2006.

We spoke to the musicians, producers and crew who worked with him during this period. And now, here’s your chance to read the full, unedited transcripts of those interviews.

Today, we present guitarist David Lindley‘s story about the making of Under The Red Sky, while Daniel Lanois, Jim Keltner and others will follow in a further seven parts in the next two weeks. .

You can read previous transcripts by clicking on the side panel (right).

Next one up Wednesday (October 15)!

***

DAVID LINDLEY

A guitarist sought out by Warren Zevon, Graham Nash, Ry Cooder and Curtis Mayfield, David Lindley was one of the ever-revolving cast assembled for 1990’s Under The Red Sky.

I had known Dylan from way back. I was called to be in his band at one time. Dylan was familiar with my stuff with Jackson [Browne] and Ry Cooder and I knew the man had ears. I mean, he listens to everything. On a musical basis, I had run into him here and there before. He was a big fan of [Lindley’s band] El Rayo-X and I remember him coming to one of the gigs we did in New York at a place called Sounds Of Brazil. He was a friend of Smitty [William Smith], the keyboard player, and was really into the band. So I got to talk to him. He was real personable. A lot of people get the impression he has a star complex, but he really doesn’t. He’s not like that at all. He’s just saving his energy for what he’s doing, because it’s like kung-fu, y’know. People come at him from all angles and directions and he has to deal with them. We’d talk about all sorts of things, mainly music and guitars: which ones sound good when you play them a certain way, which strings you use. He’s a big fan of the Teisco guitar. He actually used mine on one of the sessions and liked it a lot. The sound is way different from a Gibson or Fender. It’s more transparent and glassy, almost acoustic-sounding. And he particularly liked the nasty twang to it.

Under The Red Sky was big thing for me. I think they called me in because they didn’t want a stock guitar sound, or even a stock Lindley sound. Dylan would organise stuff in the studio as we were going along, as he heard certain things. He’d shuffle verses around a lot. It was amazing to watch him do it, quite a process. He was always working on stuff, organising verses and finishing things, changing words if he felt they worked better. And it was all done within the structure of what was going on. He was pretty impressive, shooting from the hip. Like Jackson Browne and Lowell George, he knew what he wanted in the studio. There would be basic chord charts and we’d go through them and explain things like tempo. Don Was, being a musician, would say things like “Well, it goes like this, but leave it open.” That wasn’t the case with every song. I remember a couple of songs being used as alternatives. I was mostly working on overdubs. The tracks would be laid down, then Jimmy Vaughan and I would put rhythm and slide over it. He was a fun guy to play with on songs like “Cat’s In The Well” and “10,000 Men”. Contrary to what people think, there weren’t a lot of takes of those songs. Both of the Vaughan brothers [Jimmy and Stevie Ray] were amazing to be with, both killer players.

There was always the freedom to bring your own ideas to the table. Dylan was very approachable in that respect. We’d talk in the studio. He’d say simple things like “I like that” and “Yeah, do that”. He’s kinda like Ry Cooder in that he does things the same way. With Dylan and Ry, it’s very much a case of “Do that”, “Don’t play there”, “Stop there”. But it wasn’t oppressive in any way, it was really fun. I mean, it was Dylan. C’mon! Then when things started to take form, Don would get more into specifics. He’d work with what was there, organise it then put it together. In the end, he’d just go “Fuck all that. Just play!” And it would always sound way better. It was get outta jail time.

I remember playing bouzouki, with Elton John on piano, on “2 X 2”, but there’s a lot of stuff I don’t remember about those sessions, if you know what I mean. And I haven’t heard those songs in a long time. But it was a case of me listening to the words to hear what Dylan was saying and thinking I should be careful in certain places. A lot of times I felt I should just not play at all and leave it sounding very spare. Don was always open for that. It was Dylan who was the ultimate authority, always. Don deferred to Dylan in that respect. But sometimes he would insist he was right, in a very nice way. On those occasions, Dylan would listen to it and then say “No no, I like my way of doing it.” But, y’know, they’re his tunes and he knew what kind of feeling he wanted them to ride out on.

ROB HUGHES

Paul Weller To Play Second UK Tour This Winter

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Paul Weller is to play a second tour of the UK this Winter, kicking off in Crawley on November 6. The Modfather previously played twelve dates in May, but now returns for a bigger, 13 date arena tour. In the capital, Weller will play three nights at the Brixton Academy venue. Weller is currently o...

Paul Weller is to play a second tour of the UK this Winter, kicking off in Crawley on November 6.

The Modfather previously played twelve dates in May, but now returns for a bigger, 13 date arena tour. In the capital, Weller will play three nights at the Brixton Academy venue.

Weller is currently on the road in support his latest studio album 22 Dreams, which was released in June.

The dates are:

Crawley K2 (November 6)

Southend Cliffs Pavilion (8)

Dublin RDS Arena (10)

Belfast Odyssey (11)

Aberdeen Press & Journal Arena (13)

Glasgow SECC (14)

Newcastle Metro Radio Arena (15)

Liverpool Echo Arena (17)

Manchester Evening News Arena (18)

Cardiff International Arena (20)

Birmingham NEC (21)

Nottingham Arena (22)

London Brixton Academy (24, 25, 26)

For more music and film news click here

Teddy Thompson To Tour UK Next Year

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Teddy Thompson has announced a full UK and Ireland tour to take place throughout January and February next year. The singer, who is currently just finishing up as support for James Blunt's tour, will hit the road at the Cork Opera House on January 17, winding up at London's Shepherd's Bush Empire o...

Teddy Thompson has announced a full UK and Ireland tour to take place throughout January and February next year.

The singer, who is currently just finishing up as support for James Blunt‘s tour, will hit the road at the Cork Opera House on January 17, winding up at London’s Shepherd’s Bush Empire on February 12.

Thompson will also have a single “The Things I Do” released at the same time as the shows (January 19), taken from his top ten charting album A Piece of What You Need’.

Thompson’s dates/venues are:

Cork, Opera House (January 17)

Nottingham, Rescue Rooms (19)

Cardiff, Glee Club (20)

Exeter, Phoenix (21)

Brighton, Concorde 2 (22)

Norwich, Arts Centre (24)

York, Duchess (25)

Stockton, The Arc (26)

Aberdeen, Lemon Tree (29)

Edinburgh, Queens Hall (30)

Manchester, Academy (February 1)

Sheffield, Memorial Hall (2)

Bristol, Thekla (4)

Cambridge, Junction (5)

Birmingham, Town Hall (7)

Durham, Gala (8)

Belfast, Spring & Airbrake (9)

Dublin, Vicar Street (10)

London, Shepherds Bush Empire (12)

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Beatles’ Starr Says ‘No More Autographs’

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Former Beatles drummer Ringo Starr has posted a video online, declaring that he will not autograph anything for fans as of next week citing that he "has to much to do". The musician who most recently caused a stir when promoting his contribution to the Liverpool 08 album saying that there was 'nothing he missed about the city' now says that all fan mail he receives will be "tossed". In the video, Starr says: "Please do not send fan mail to any address you have. Nothing will be signed after the 20th of October. If that is the date on the envelope, it's gonna be tossed." "I'm warning you with peace and love I have too much to do" he added. And just in case it wasn't clear, he repeats: "No more fan mail and no objects to be signed. Nothing." Watch the video here at Ringo's official website: ringostarr.com For more music and film news click here

Former Beatles drummer Ringo Starr has posted a video online, declaring that he will not autograph anything for fans as of next week citing that he “has to much to do”.

The musician who most recently caused a stir when promoting his contribution to the Liverpool 08 album saying that there was ‘nothing he missed about the city’ now says that all fan mail he receives will be “tossed”.

In the video, Starr says: “Please do not send fan mail to any address you have. Nothing will be signed after the 20th of October. If that is the date on the envelope, it’s gonna be tossed.”

“I’m warning you with peace and love I have too much to do” he added.

And just in case it wasn’t clear, he repeats: “No more fan mail and no objects to be signed. Nothing.”

Watch the video here at Ringo’s official website: ringostarr.com

For more music and film news click here

Oasis Top UK Albums Chart For Seventh Time

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Oasis have continued their unbroken run of debuting at number one in the UK album's chart with their seventh studio release Dig Out Your Soul. The band, who started their UK Arena tour last week (October 7) have now scored the top spot with every studio album since their debut Definitely Maybe in 1...

Oasis have continued their unbroken run of debuting at number one in the UK album’s chart with their seventh studio release Dig Out Your Soul.

The band, who started their UK Arena tour last week (October 7) have now scored the top spot with every studio album since their debut Definitely Maybe in 1994.

Kings Of Leon who have held the summit for the past two weeks with their fourth album Only By The Night are now at number two.

Bob Dylan’s Bootleg Series Vol 8: Tell Tale Signs has gone in the Top ten at number nine.

This week’s (w/c October 12, 2008) album chart is:

1. Oasis – ‘Dig Out Your Soul’

2. Kings Of Leon – ‘Only By The Night’

3. Will Young – ‘Let It Go’

4. Rihanna – ‘Good Girl Gone Bad’

5. James Morrison – ‘Songs For You, Truths For Me’

6. Ne-Yo – ‘Year Of The Gentleman’

7. Bette Midler – ‘The Best Bette’

8. Andrew Johnston – ‘One Voice’

9. Bob Dylan – ‘Tell Tale Signs – Bootleg Series Volume 8’

10. Duffy – ‘Rockferry’

This week’s (w/c October 12, 2008) top ten UK singles are:

1. Pink – ‘So What’

2. Kings Of Leon – ‘Sex On Fire’

3. Sugababes – ‘Girls’

4. Rihanna – ‘Disturbia’

5. Kaiser Chiefs – ‘Never Miss A Beat’

6. Ne-Yo – ‘Miss Independent’

7. Katy Perry – ‘I Kissed A Girl’

8. Pussycat Dolls – ‘When I Grow Up’

9. Gym Class Heroes ft The Dream – ‘Cookie Jar’

10. Iglu & Hartly – ‘In This City’

For album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

For more music and film news click here

Pic credit: PA Photos

Led Zeppelin Ditch Robert Plant To Press On With Reunion?

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Led Zeppelin are said to have got a replacement singer, Myles Kennedy, to take over Robert Plant's role according to The Sun newspaper and other internet sites such as Much Music. Band members Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones and Jason Bonham are said to have been rehearsing in the studio for several mo...

Led Zeppelin are said to have got a replacement singer, Myles Kennedy, to take over Robert Plant‘s role according to The Sun newspaper and other internet sites such as Much Music.

Band members Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones and Jason Bonham are said to have been rehearsing in the studio for several months, but their possible plans to get orignial singer Robert Plant to agree to record and tour as Led Zep again have been thwarted by his ongoing refusal to join them.

Plant issued a statement on September 29, saying: “It’s both frustrating and ridiculous for this story to continue to rear its head when all the musicians that surround the story are keen to get on with their individual projects and move forward”, adding: “I wish Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones and Jason Bonham nothing but success with any future projects.”

US singer Myles Kennedy, who is frontman and guitarist for a Washington based band called Alter Bridge is named by The Sun and music blog site Much Music as the replacement singer after an interview with Twisted Sister’s Dee Snider, who shares a manager with Plant, names Kennedy.

Snider in the taped interview describes the band as delivering the following ultimatum to Plant: “If you don’t do it, we’re going out with this kid. Snider adding: “And he can sing the shit out of Zeppelin And they’re gonna hope that Robert, at the last minute, will go, ‘OK’, and step in.”

For more music and film news click here

Pic credit: Getty Images

Neil Young’s Sugar Mountain Tracklisting Revealed

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As previously reported, Neil Young is to release 'Sugar Mountain Live' the next installment in his 'Archive Performance Series', and www.uncut.co.uk can reveal what the tracklisting is. Young played two solo gigs at the The Canterbury House in Ann Arbor, Michigan on November 9 and 10, 1968 and recorded those nights on a TEAC 2 track tape recorder, which until now have never been released. The 23-track, 13 song, Sugar Mountain Live album includes songs written during his time with Buffalo Springfield as well as then new material as well as Young's anecdotes inbetween songs. The live album is released on November 25 through Reprise, and will not be included in the 'imminent' Neil Young Archives Vol. 1 (1963 - 1972). The Archives which were meant to be released this Autumn, have now been postponed to Spring 2009, with a date still to confirmed. The Sugar Mountain Live track listing is: '(Emcee intro)' 'On The Way Home' 'Songwriting rap' 'Mr. Soul' 'Recording rap' 'Expecting To Fly' 'The Last Trip To Tulsa' 'Bookstore rap' 'The Loner' '"I used to" rap' 'Birds' 'Winterlong' (excerpt) and 'Out of My Mind' (intro) 'Out Of My Mind' 'If I Could Have Her Tonight' 'Classical Gas rap' 'Sugar Mountain' (intro) 'Sugar Mountain' 'I've Been Waiting For You' 'Songs rap' 'Nowadays Clancy Can't Even Sing' 'Tuning Rap & The Old Laughing Lady' (intro) 'The Old Laughing Lady' 'Broken Arrow' For more music and film news click here

As previously reported, Neil Young is to release ‘Sugar Mountain Live’ the next installment in his ‘Archive Performance Series’, and www.uncut.co.uk can reveal what the tracklisting is.

Young played two solo gigs at the The Canterbury House in Ann Arbor, Michigan on November 9 and 10, 1968 and recorded those nights on a TEAC 2 track tape recorder, which until now have never been released.

The 23-track, 13 song, Sugar Mountain Live album includes songs written during his time with Buffalo Springfield as well as then new material as well as Young’s anecdotes inbetween songs.

The live album is released on November 25 through Reprise, and will not be included in the ‘imminent’ Neil Young Archives Vol. 1 (1963 – 1972).

The Archives which were meant to be released this Autumn, have now been postponed to Spring 2009, with a date still to confirmed.

The Sugar Mountain Live track listing is:

‘(Emcee intro)’

‘On The Way Home’

‘Songwriting rap’

‘Mr. Soul’

‘Recording rap’

‘Expecting To Fly’

‘The Last Trip To Tulsa’

‘Bookstore rap’

‘The Loner’

‘”I used to” rap’

‘Birds’

‘Winterlong’ (excerpt) and ‘Out of My Mind’ (intro)

‘Out Of My Mind’

‘If I Could Have Her Tonight’

‘Classical Gas rap’

‘Sugar Mountain’ (intro)

‘Sugar Mountain’

‘I’ve Been Waiting For You’

‘Songs rap’

‘Nowadays Clancy Can’t Even Sing’

‘Tuning Rap & The Old Laughing Lady’ (intro)

‘The Old Laughing Lady’

‘Broken Arrow’

For more music and film news click here

Uncut’s Weekly Album Review Round-Up

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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 October 13, 2008:

ALBUM REVIEW: LUCINDA WILLIAMS – LITTLE HONEY – 4* Nine albums in, the queen of heartbreak tempts fate by cheering up

ALBUM REVIEW: RAY LAMONTAGNE – GOSSIP IN THE GRAIN – 4* Tortured troubadour shows courage on nakedly emotional third LP

ALBUM REVIEW: KEANE – PERFECT SYMMETRY 3* Depressingly impressive third album

ALBUM REVIEW: THE GRATEFUL DEAD – ROCKING THE CRADLE: EGYPT 1978 – 3*The Dead take Egypt. “No cops, no parents,” approves Jerry

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: 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: THE CLASH – LIVE AT SHEA STADIUM 5* Legendary bootleg finally gets official release

ALBUM REVIEW: LAMBCHOP – OH (OHIO) – 4* Best in nearly a decade from newly-trimmed Nashville collective

ALBUM REVIEW: SEASICK STEVE – SEASICK STEVE – 4* Hobo blues maverick tentatively ropes in guest musicians for his major label debut

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: FOTHERINGAY – FOTHERINGAY 2 -5* Lovingly salvaged second album, with Sandy Denny and Trevor Lucas

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 with their first UK Singles Chart number one with lead single “Crawl” – will their album follow suit and debut at the top spot?

ALBUM REVIEW: TV ON THE RADIO – DEAR SCIENCE -4* David Bowie’s pals Dave Sitek and Kyp Malone mix the pop and avant garde

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: CALEXICO – CARRIED TO DUST – 4* After a mystifying diversion, Arizona duo return (in part) to familiar, dusty territory

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

THE HOLD STEADY – STAY POSITIVE – 5* Elliptical, euphoric and “staggeringly good” says Allan Jones, plus a Q&A with Craig Finn

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

Burn After Reading

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Burn After Reading HHHH DIRECTED BY JOEL AND ETHAN COEN STARRING JOHN MALKOVICH, GEORGE CLOONEY, FRANCES MCDORMAND, BRAD PITT, TILDA SWINTON Kicked out of the CIA, Balkans expert Osbourne Cox (John Malkovich) decides to write his memoirs, detailing his distinguished career with the agency, but accidentally leaves his drunken ramblings on a computer disc in the Hardbodies gym. They are picked up by fitness workers Chad Feldheimer (Brad Pitt) and Linda Litzke (France McDormand), who mistake them for government secrets and hatch a plan to blackmail him. But Cox is an angry man, and not an easy target. When Joel and Ethan Coen collected their Best Director and Best Picture awards last Oscar night for No Country For Old Men, you might have wondered what they were planning next. After all, one of the Coens’ most familiar traits is their ability to swerve from screwball comedy to deadpan noir, often within the space of the same film. So, after their dry, lean adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s novel, it should come as no surprise that Burn After Reading is, broadly speaking, a very funny comedy, one we might put along side The Hudsucker Proxy, The Big Lebowski and, more controversially, Intolerable Cruelty and The Ladykillers. It [ital]could[ital] even be called screwball; it certainly moves at the kind of quickfire pace familiar from Hawks’ pictures like Bringing Up Baby or His Girl Friday. But, in fact, Burn After Reading is quite possibly one of the least attractive films the Coens have ever made, to the extent that its populated by some of the most grizzly, greedy and ugly characters they’ve ever created. Nobody here is likeable. Everyone has an ill-conceived hare-brained scheme. It's like Fargo without Marge Gunderson, the good-hearted police detective of Brainerd, Minnesota. Except that the actress who [ital]played[ital] Marge is in it, and she's the worst of the bunch. Life's unfair, and she's the proof. Overleaf, the Coens tell us that Burn After Reading started out as an experiment, with each part, except the character played by Tilda Swinton, tailored to a specific actor. And certainly there’s plenty of entertainment to be found watching George Clooney (in his third Coens film), Brad Pitt and John Malkovitch play such awful, unredeemable people. Though Clooney and Pitt are the movie’s marquee sells, the film’s anchor is Malkovich’s Osbourne Cox – an angry, sulky CIA agent who gets fired within minutes of the film starting. Cox thinks he's a big-time agent, but he's not even the master of his own home: his frosty wife Katie (Swinton) is having an affair with Harry Pfarrer (Clooney), a federal Marshall who is also married, miserably, to a famous children's author. Pfarrer regularly cheats on her, making assignations through internet dating sites, which is how he meets fitness trainer Linda Litzke (McDormand). Clooney does his best work for ages here, as a grinning, sleazy dork who thinks he's charming but in truth comes across as rather needy and pathetic. Harry has a secret life as a DIY man, and his pride and joy is an X-rated rocking chair with a pink dildo attached and whose special features Harry guides an excited Linda through with equal enthusiasm. Though this might appear to have the makings of a zippy, madcap comedy, as ever with the Coens, there's darkness here. Cox has a violent temper as well as a serious drink problem; Katie, his wife, is avaricious and calculating; Harry Pfarrer is a paranoid sex addict; Linda Litzke is out for all she can get, desperate for the cosmetic surgeries that her health insurance won't pay for. Meanwhile, the would-be “player”, Pitt’s Chad Feldheimer is splendidly gormless. The only character with any morality is Ted Treffon (Richard Jenkins), the manager of the Hardbodies gym who has a thing for Linda, but whose heart, you figure without too much trouble, is bound to get broken along the way. With all these big names jostling for screen time, it’s perhaps surprising that the standout is Pitt, who rarely does straight comedy these days. Chad’s gurning, goofy antics offer by far the most obvious laughs here, while another plus is that his preposterously styled hair is at least as memorable as Javier Bardem’s baroque fringe in No Country For Old Men. Chad is the focus of the film’s first hour, and it’s one of Burn…’s many achievements that you find yourself rooting for this witless idiot, particularly when he comes up against the rancorous Cox. In trying to identify what all this means, it’s tempting to suggest that Burn After Reading is about how, as much as we try to organise our lives, things rarely ever go to plan, particularly where money is concerned. That, in itself, has been the spark for many Coens films – from Jerry’s kidnap plot in Fargo through the confusions over the correct Mr Lebowski all the way back to the first double cross that precipitates the grim unspooling of events in Blood Simple. The Coens explain how Burn After Reading partly harks back to the political conspiracy thrillers of the Seventies, and it’s just possible to see this as an allegory for America’s post-9/11 paranoia. Certainly, it says something about the impossibility of intelligence-gathering when human beings are themselves so unintelligent, a reality faced by the superb JK Simmons in a role that saves the film from being just too depressingly acerbic. With CIA “secrets” on the market, and two gym bunnies brokering the deal, he can only look and wonder, instructing his equally disbelieving staff in the only way he can fathom. “Watch them, see what they do,” he suggests, awkwardly. “And let me know when it all makes sense.” As for the Coens, and their career so far… Oscar or no Oscar, this puts it rather perfectly. DAMON WISE

Burn After Reading

HHHH

DIRECTED BY JOEL AND ETHAN COEN

STARRING JOHN MALKOVICH, GEORGE CLOONEY, FRANCES MCDORMAND, BRAD PITT, TILDA SWINTON

Kicked out of the CIA, Balkans expert Osbourne Cox (John Malkovich) decides to write his memoirs, detailing his distinguished career with the agency, but accidentally leaves his drunken ramblings on a computer disc in the Hardbodies gym. They are picked up by fitness workers Chad Feldheimer (Brad Pitt) and Linda Litzke (France McDormand), who mistake them for government secrets and hatch a plan to blackmail him. But Cox is an angry man, and not an easy target.

When Joel and Ethan Coen collected their Best Director and Best Picture awards last Oscar night for No Country For Old Men, you might have wondered what they were planning next. After all, one of the Coens’ most familiar traits is their ability to swerve from screwball comedy to deadpan noir, often within the space of the same film. So, after their dry, lean adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s novel, it should come as no surprise that Burn After Reading is, broadly speaking, a very funny comedy, one we might put along side The Hudsucker Proxy, The Big Lebowski and, more controversially, Intolerable Cruelty and The Ladykillers. It [ital]could[ital] even be called screwball; it certainly moves at the kind of quickfire pace familiar from Hawks’ pictures like Bringing Up Baby or His Girl Friday. But, in fact, Burn After Reading is quite possibly one of the least attractive films the Coens have ever made, to the extent that its populated by some of the most grizzly, greedy and ugly characters they’ve ever created.

Nobody here is likeable. Everyone has an ill-conceived hare-brained scheme. It’s like Fargo without Marge Gunderson, the good-hearted police detective of Brainerd, Minnesota. Except that the actress who [ital]played[ital] Marge is in it, and she’s the worst of the bunch. Life’s unfair, and she’s the proof. Overleaf, the Coens tell us that Burn After Reading started out as an experiment, with each part, except the character played by Tilda Swinton, tailored to a specific actor. And certainly there’s plenty of entertainment to be found watching George Clooney (in his third Coens film), Brad Pitt and John Malkovitch play such awful, unredeemable people.

Though Clooney and Pitt are the movie’s marquee sells, the film’s anchor is Malkovich’s Osbourne Cox – an angry, sulky CIA agent who gets fired within minutes of the film starting. Cox thinks he’s a big-time agent, but he’s not even the master of his own home: his frosty wife Katie (Swinton) is having an affair with Harry Pfarrer (Clooney), a federal Marshall who is also married, miserably, to a famous children’s author. Pfarrer regularly cheats on her, making assignations through internet dating sites, which is how he meets fitness trainer Linda Litzke (McDormand). Clooney does his best work for ages here, as a grinning, sleazy dork who thinks he’s charming but in truth comes across as rather needy and pathetic. Harry has a secret life as a DIY man, and his pride and joy is an X-rated rocking chair with a pink dildo attached and whose special features Harry guides an excited Linda through with equal enthusiasm.

Though this might appear to have the makings of a zippy, madcap comedy, as ever with the Coens, there’s darkness here. Cox has a violent temper as well as a serious drink problem; Katie, his wife, is avaricious and calculating; Harry Pfarrer is a paranoid sex addict; Linda Litzke is out for all she can get, desperate for the cosmetic surgeries that her health insurance won’t pay for. Meanwhile, the would-be “player”, Pitt’s Chad Feldheimer is splendidly gormless. The only character with any morality is Ted Treffon (Richard Jenkins), the manager of the Hardbodies gym who has a thing for Linda, but whose heart, you figure without too much trouble, is bound to get broken along the way.

With all these big names jostling for screen time, it’s perhaps surprising that the standout is Pitt, who rarely does straight comedy these days. Chad’s gurning, goofy antics offer by far the most obvious laughs here, while another plus is that his preposterously styled hair is at least as memorable as Javier Bardem’s baroque fringe in No Country For Old Men. Chad is the focus of the film’s first hour, and it’s one of Burn…’s many achievements that you find yourself rooting for this witless idiot, particularly when he comes up against the rancorous Cox.

In trying to identify what all this means, it’s tempting to suggest that Burn After Reading is about how, as much as we try to organise our lives, things rarely ever go to plan, particularly where money is concerned. That, in itself, has been the spark for many Coens films – from Jerry’s kidnap plot in Fargo through the confusions over the correct Mr Lebowski all the way back to the first double cross that precipitates the grim unspooling of events in Blood Simple. The Coens explain how Burn After Reading partly harks back to the political conspiracy thrillers of the Seventies, and it’s just possible to see this as an allegory for America’s post-9/11 paranoia. Certainly, it says something about the impossibility of intelligence-gathering when human beings are themselves so unintelligent, a reality faced by the superb JK Simmons in a role that saves the film from being just too depressingly acerbic. With CIA “secrets” on the market, and two gym bunnies brokering the deal, he can only look and wonder, instructing his equally disbelieving staff in the only way he can fathom.

“Watch them, see what they do,” he suggests, awkwardly. “And let me know when it all makes sense.” As for the Coens, and their career so far… Oscar or no Oscar, this puts it rather perfectly.

DAMON WISE

Dylan Tell Tale Signs Online Exclusive! Part Five!

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BOB DYLAN SPECIAL: The Complete Tell Tale Signs In this month’s issue of Uncut, we celebrate the release of Tell Tale Signs, the Bootleg Series Vol 8, Bob Dylan’s astonishing 2 and 3CD collection of unreleased material from 1989-2006. We spoke to the musicians, producers and crew who worke...

BOB DYLAN SPECIAL: The Complete Tell Tale Signs

In this month’s issue of Uncut, we celebrate the release of Tell Tale Signs, the Bootleg Series Vol 8, Bob Dylan’s astonishing 2 and 3CD collection of unreleased material from 1989-2006.

We spoke to the musicians, producers and crew who worked with him during this period. And now, here’s your chance to read the full, unedited transcripts of those interviews.

Today, we present guitarist Robben Ford‘s story about the making of Under The Red Sky, while Daniel Lanois, Jim Keltner and others will follow in a further eight parts in the coming month. .

You can read previous transcripts by clicking on the side panel (right).

Next one up Monday (October 13)!

***

ROBBEN FORD

One of the guitarists parachuted in for Under The Red Sky, Ford also worked with Miles Davis and toured in the bands of Joni Mitchell and George Harrison

I had met Dylan a couple of times over the years. I had met him when I was working with Joni Mitchell, and again when I was working with George Harrison. And on both those occasions, I didn’t really meet him. He was there, he was hanging out with Joni, or hanging out with George, but he really avoided all contact with other humans if he could.

On the Under The Red Sky album, the concept was kind of, each day of the sessions, the record would have a different band. The bass and drums remained the same, but beyond that, the players changed every day in the studio. An interesting concept. The day they brought me in, when I got there, I was the first person to arrive, and other people started filing in about an hour later, so it was really kid of loose. Bruce Hornsby was there on that session, playing the piano.

Anyway, finally Bob arrived, and he had on like a sweatshirt with a hood, a baseball cap, these kind of jogging pants. And motorcycle boots. Kind of an odd combination. I found myself in the studio tracking room with him, and it was just him and me for a few moments, so I said, “So, Bob, I met you some years ago, with Joni Mitchell. I was touring with her, and you came on the trip for a little.”

And he hadn’t said a word, and then he just goes, “Awww, Joni, man!”

Nothing else. That was it. Not another word about her.

So, a moment later, I said, “Also, with George Harrison. I was on the road with him on that Dark Horse tour, and you were on the plane there for a couple of days.”

And he goes, “Awww, George, man!”

And that was it. Not another peep. I mean, the guy just *wouldn’t* speak. But he obviously really loved Joni and George, and he liked the fact that there was some connection – but he had nothing to say about it.

Don Was just revered Dylan. You could tell. He was just a God to him. Don was the producer, but Bob Dylan was in control of the session. I’ve worked with Don on a couple of occasions, and he doesn’t say a lot himself in my experience. Don is very influential in things like picking the studio, picking the band, creating the environment for the artist. But then, he’s one of those guys who likes to stay in the background, but is very important there. He just kind of hangs back, lets the artist do his thing. But I remember one moment, Don was just sitting down on the floor and asking Bob: “So, did you ever wonder, *‘Why me?’*” Y’know, why he’s the one who became this huge icon and made all this incredible music. Dylan didn’t say anything, he just didn’t say anything.

When we started recording, Dylan, basically, would just start some kind of a vamp going on the guitar. The whole band was out in the room, in contact with each other, there wasn’t a lot of separation. And Bob has a table in front of him, with pages and pages and pages of lyrics, and he would just start some kind of a thing going on the guitar, and we’d all fall in behind him, and just start jamming. And as soon as he kinda liked what was happening, he’d start picking up lyrics, going through the pages, and just start trying to sing it over whatever we were doing. If he didn’t care for that one after a while, he’d put it down, pick up another page, and start trying something with that. So, literally, we just jammed.

At first, it was very hard to tell what he was thinking, because he just didn’t say a word to anybody. But I got the impression he was happy to be there. And when something would start happening that he liked, he would get very animated. You could tell he was excited. He’d pick up the harmonica and start blowing, and start trying to sing his lyrics, that he’s reading off the pages. And there were literally, pages and pages, loose pages, they weren’t bound or anything. There must have been 40 or 50 pages on the table, and he’d just start fishing through them and start singing them.

There was one piece of music I worked on, “Born In Time”, he’d written it on the piano, and he played it on the piano for Bruce Hornsby, and then Hornsby picked up on that and we all started playing, and Dylan sang the tune. That was a very cool song, I remember everybody liking that. He had a suggestion for the guitar solo on that, and he kind of sang it to me, and I thought it might work if we used a delay – he had these back and forth notes going on, and I thought we might use a delay for the second and fourth notes – and he said, “Okay. We’ll try that.” And so we did that. And then, we’d only been recording for about maybe four hours, and we were all in the control room, and Dylan said to Don Was, “How many takes did we make today, Don?”

How many takes did we make? I thought that was hilarious. But Don said, “I dunno, I think …about five?” And Dylan said, “Okay, well, I guess that’s about it.” And he decided to split.

I remember really not wanting the day to end. There was something about being there with the guy that just had its own power. As I said, he didn’t talk to people. He never really spoke to anyone except for Don, the producer. But, still, there was an aurua to the environment around him, you felt like you were part of something really special. I’ve been around a lot of famous people and played for them – Joni, George Harrison, Miles Davis – but Dylan really was unique.

Years later, in 2000, I did a tour with Phil Lesh, and Bob Dylan was co-billed, so we were out on the road together for like two-and-a-half months. And Dylan wouldn’t allow people near him at all. You just couldn’t go *near* the guy. You couldn’t be in the hallway if he was walking down the hall – like that. That’s how extreme it was, he didn’t even want to *walk by* a person. So that was the last time I saw him.

DAMIEN LOVE

Dylan Tell Tale Signs Online Exclusive! Part Five!

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BOB DYLAN SPECIAL: The Complete Tell Tale Signs In this month’s issue of Uncut, we celebrate the release of Tell Tale Signs, the Bootleg Series Vol 8, Bob Dylan’s astonishing 2 and 3CD collection of unreleased material from 1989-2006. We spoke to the musicians, producers and crew who worke...

BOB DYLAN SPECIAL: The Complete Tell Tale Signs

In this month’s issue of Uncut, we celebrate the release of Tell Tale Signs, the Bootleg Series Vol 8, Bob Dylan’s astonishing 2 and 3CD collection of unreleased material from 1989-2006.

We spoke to the musicians, producers and crew who worked with him during this period. And now, here’s your chance to read the full, unedited transcripts of those interviews.

Today, we present guitarist Robben Ford‘s story about the making of Under The Red Sky, while Daniel Lanois, Jim Keltner and others will follow in a further eight parts in the coming month. .

Click here to read the transcript.

You can read previous transcripts by clicking on the side panel (right).

Next one up Monday (October 13)!

The Cure To Play Free Concert

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The Cure are to headline the sixth annual Coca Cola Live@MTV concert in Rome tomorrow (October 11). The special show, which is free to attend, will see the band play all thirteen tracks from their forthcoming new studio album '4:13 Dream', as well as playing other hits from their long career. The ...

The Cure are to headline the sixth annual Coca Cola Live@MTV concert in Rome tomorrow (October 11).

The special show, which is free to attend, will see the band play all thirteen tracks from their forthcoming new studio album ‘4:13 Dream’, as well as playing other hits from their long career.

The concert is being held at the Piazza San Giovanni at 6:30pm and will also be broadcast live on MTV Italia, before being aired later worldwide.

More information is available here: mtv.it/cocacolalive and here: thecure.com

As previously reported, 4:13 Dream is released on October 27 through Suretone/Geffen.

The full track listing is:

‘Underneath The Stars’

‘The Only One’

‘The Reasons Why’

‘Freakshow’

‘Sirensong’

‘The Real Snow White’

‘The Hungry Ghost’

‘Switch’

‘The Perfect Boy’

‘This. Here And Now. With You.’

‘Sleep When I’m Dead’

‘The Scream’

‘It’s Over’

For more music and film news click here

Uncut Interview: Joel and Ethan Coen

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UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL: JOEL AND ETHAN COEN UNCUT: What was the starting point for Burn After Reading? ETHAN: We wrote it as an exercise in thinking about what kind of parts these actors might play. All of their parts were written for Brad [Pitt], George [Clooney], Fran [Frances McDormand], John M...

UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL: JOEL AND ETHAN COEN

UNCUT: What was the starting point for Burn After Reading?

ETHAN: We wrote it as an exercise in thinking about what kind of parts these actors might play. All of their parts were written for Brad [Pitt], George [Clooney], Fran [Frances McDormand], John Malkovich and Richard Jenkins. Except Tilda Swinton’s. We just wanted to do something with these specific people. It was an exercise in thinking about what kind of characters they might play, and what kind of story they might inhabit.

And you wouldn’t have done it without them?

ETHAN: I don’t know..! We considered ourselves really lucky when they all agreed to do it. I don’t know what we would have done. But we have written specific parts for actors before and not done the movie because they couldn’t do it. The Big Lebowski was something we wrote for Jeff Bridges, and we set it aside for a couple of years because he wasn’t available. John Goodman also had a problem and nearly didn’t do it.

JOEL: (Surprised, to Ethan) Didn’t he???

Why choose Washington and the world of espionage?

JOEL: I don’t know. Honestly. We just said, “Let’s do a spy movie,” I think mostly because we had never done one before. Honestly, it could have been a dog movie or an outer-space movie.

What’s going on with Brad Pitt’s hair?

JOEL: (To Joel) Er, what was it? He’d done a commercial…?

ETHAN: He’d done a commercial with his hair like that, and he just happened to go into wardrobe fittings for this movie with that hair. And we all thought, us and Brad, that it was a good picture. It kind of happened by happenstance, and we looked at it and it just kind of worked with the outfit.

JOEL: We like to give our actors haircuts that they have to cover up when they’re away from the set.

ETHAN: It’s all part of defining the external part of the character: the haircut and clothes.

The names are an essential part of the character too. Linda Litzke, Chad Feldheimer, Harry Pfarrer… Do you agonise over them?

ETHAN: That’s an interesting question, because it’s so arbitrary – and yet sometimes you do go, “Right, it has to be this.” And sometimes you make a mistake. We realised a few years too late that Jon Polito’s character in The Man Who Wasn’t There [ital]should[ital] have been named Larry London. I can’t even remember what name we gave him. But it was the wrong one.

JOEL: It was Creighton…

ETHAN: Creighton Tolliver. yeah.

JOEL: Creighton Tolliver. Yeah. But he should have been Larry London. True!

ETHAN: So we fucked that one up.

Is there any reason why they often sound German?

JOEL: No. Until someone pointed it out, we had never thought about it. It wasn’t conscious. Litzke is the name of a bakery near where we grew up. Feldheimer…? No idea. It’s names that you’ve heard before, that you pick out, and they come from all kinds of places. Just weird names, like businesses you sometimes see. It’s very arbitrary.

Do you see it as a political film?

ETHAN: No. With those characters, it’s not political per se. Although it does hark back to the paranoia movies that were popular in the 60 and 70s. Those were kinda political movies, but our film is more about those movies than politics. I don’t think it’s making a political statement.

So there’s no politics in your comedy. But do you see comedy in politics?

JOEL: Well, sure. Some of the stuff that happens, yeah.

Anything specific..?

ETHAN: Well, I tell you, the one thing we were thinking about was the Bill Clinton impeachment thing, the Monica Lewinsky affair. There was this woman called Linda Tripp – you might not know or remember the name, but she was the middle-aged confidante of…

JOEL: …Monica Lewinsky. And early on, we thought, “Wouldn’t it be fun to see Fran play a character that’s a little like Linda Tripp?” Linda Tripp went on to have all these cosmetic surgeries done. She complete redid her appearance through cosmetic surgery, from the beginning of this political scandal to the end of it. So, take away all the political intrigue…

ETHAN: …And the character itself is interesting. This Washington woman whose decided she needs to have all this plastic surgery. And so we put that character in a different context.

Was it more fun to make than No Country For Old Men?

JOEL: Yes.

ETHAN: Yes, for any number of reasons. We weren’t at the mercy of the weather as much, obviously.

And did the Oscar change things for you?

JOEL: No.

ETHAN: No.

Come on… Don’t you want to talk about it?!

JOEL: No, it’s not that. It’s just that this movie and the movie we’re about to start shooting in a week or two were both written and financed before we made No Country For Old Men.

ETHAN: In this case, we shot most of it before we got the Oscar.

JOEL: Y’know, life goes on. It doesn’t affect us in any substantive way on a day-to-day basis, or even significantly on a long-term basis. It’s just this weird thing that happened to us and will be forgotten about in a few months.

ETHAN: It’s funny. There’s something very odd about it. It goes right in the Life Is Strange box. It was never an ambition to grow up and win an Academy Award, so when it happens you go, “Weird!”

JOEL: But it’s great.

ETHAN: It is good, because the physical award is so iconic. It’s a shape that everyone knows. You stick ’em there in the office…

JOEL: [Laughs] We could bowl with these things! Just line ’em up.

Do you enjoy going to the Oscars?

JOEL: Well, the first time we went was really interesting, because it was a new experience. It’s like a lot of things. You know the saying: “Once is an experiment, twice you’re a pervert.” It’s interesting the first time, but to go back repeatedly… It’s long and it’s tedious.

ETHAN: There isa bar.

DAMON WISE