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Redbelt

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Directed by: David Mamet Starring: Chiwetel Ejiofor, Alice Braga, Emily Mortimer You don’t have to watch Redbelt for long to recognise something pugilistic in the rhythms of David Mamet’s dialogue. His characters jab at their lines, repeating them, stabbing them home after tactical pauses. And, since this is Mamet’s attempt at a fight movie, there’s a suspicion that he’s doing it deliberately. Mike Terry (Ejiofor) is an idealistic jiu-jitsu master, operating in the blurry territory where cops and ex-soldiers rub against Hollywood. His fate changes when jittery attorney, Laura (Mortimer), walks into his studio and tussles with Joe (Max Martini), a cop, and a gun goes off. That gunshot changes everything, and Mike is sucked into the fight game against his principles. Mamet (a jiu-jitsu blue belt) is more interested in Mike’s internal struggle than the action, and employs his usual Rubik’s cube plotting to evoke a world in which everything is showbiz, and everything is fixed. There are strong echoes of Robert Ryan in The Set-Up, and some great lines (“What do they want? Let’s financialize the problem.”) which suggest that behind Mamet’s tough guy façade there’s a romantic idealist struggling to get out. ALASTAIR McKAY

Directed by: David Mamet

Starring: Chiwetel Ejiofor, Alice Braga, Emily Mortimer

You don’t have to watch Redbelt for long to recognise something pugilistic in the rhythms of David Mamet’s dialogue. His characters jab at their lines, repeating them, stabbing them home after tactical pauses. And, since this is Mamet’s attempt at a fight movie, there’s a suspicion that he’s doing it deliberately.

Mike Terry (Ejiofor) is an idealistic jiu-jitsu master, operating in the blurry territory where cops and ex-soldiers rub against Hollywood. His fate changes when jittery attorney, Laura (Mortimer), walks into his studio and tussles with Joe (Max Martini), a cop, and a gun goes off. That gunshot changes everything, and Mike is sucked into the fight game against his principles.

Mamet (a jiu-jitsu blue belt) is more interested in Mike’s internal struggle than the action, and employs his usual Rubik’s cube plotting to evoke a world in which everything is showbiz, and everything is fixed. There are strong echoes of Robert Ryan in The Set-Up, and some great lines (“What do they want? Let’s financialize the problem.”) which suggest that behind Mamet’s tough guy façade there’s a romantic idealist struggling to get out.

ALASTAIR McKAY

Jack White and Alicia Keys Preview Bond Theme Online

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Jack White and Alicia Keys have made their duet "Another Way To Die", the new James Bond theme song available to hear online. The track written, produced and drummed on by the White Stripes and Raconteurs' frontman Jack White is the first time the Bond theme tune has been performed as a duet. The ...

Jack White and Alicia Keys have made their duet “Another Way To Die”, the new James Bond theme song available to hear online.

The track written, produced and drummed on by the White Stripes and Raconteurs‘ frontman Jack White is the first time the Bond theme tune has been performed as a duet.

The pair have amassed 18 Grammy Awards between them.

Quantum of Solace’s film score has been composed by David Arnold and the film is due for worldwide release on October 28.

‘Another Way To Day’ is available to buy digitally from today (September 19), in the US from next Tuesday (September 23), and on ltd 7″ in the US on the 30 and in the UK from October 6.

You can stream ‘Another Way To Die’ from here: www.thirdmanrecords.com

For more music and film news click here

Smashing Pumpkins Celebrate 20 Years With New DVD

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The Smashing Pumpkins are to release a 20th anniversary double DVD set - featuring their first ever live recording available on DVD. Entitled "If It All Goes Wrong", the DVD commemorates the band's reunion last year with a documentary charting the band's history since forming in Chicago in 1988. The set out on November 11, features a 105 minute live recording of the Smashing Pumpkins, culled from five shows of an eleven night residency at San Francisco's Fillmore Autitorium last August. If It All Goes Wrong has been directed and produced by Jack Gulick (Bruce Springsteen, Metallica, Steve Miller Band, Godsmack) and Daniel E Catullo III (Steve Miller Band, Godsmack, Rush, Dave Matthews Band), and bonus footage includes an interview with The Who's Pete Townshend too. Commenting on the forthcoming release, singer Billy Corgan says: "We went into the residencies hopeful to play some new music, with the idea I would write during the day and we could maybe even play new songs that same night,” “What I didn't anticipate is how much the process would inspire me, positively and negatively, to report what I was seeing and feeling from the shows. The documentary shows that process in an interesting way that reveals the link between the band and our audience.” Smashing Pumpkins' If It All Goes Wrong full tracklisting is: Disc One: "If All Goes Wrong" documentary "Voices Of The Ghost Children" featurette Interview with The Who guitarist, Pete Townshend Disc Two: *The Fillmore Residency 1. The Rose March* 2. Peace + Love* 3. 99 Floors* 4. Superchrist 5. Lucky 13 6. Starla 7. Death From Above 8. The Crying Tree Of Mercury 9. Winterlong 10. Heavy Metal Machine 11. Untitled 12. No Surrender* 13. Gossamer* 14. Zeitgeist Bonus Tracks: Live From The Floor Of The Fillmore *previously unreleased *"99 Floors" *”Peace + Love” *"No Surrender" *”Mama”* *”Promise Me”* For more music and film news click here

The Smashing Pumpkins are to release a 20th anniversary double DVD set – featuring their first ever live recording available on DVD.

Entitled “If It All Goes Wrong”, the DVD commemorates the band’s reunion last year with a documentary charting the band’s history since forming in Chicago in 1988.

The set out on November 11, features a 105 minute live recording of the Smashing Pumpkins, culled from five shows of an eleven night residency at San Francisco’s Fillmore Autitorium last August.

If It All Goes Wrong has been directed and produced by Jack Gulick (Bruce Springsteen, Metallica, Steve Miller Band, Godsmack) and Daniel E Catullo III (Steve Miller Band, Godsmack, Rush, Dave Matthews Band), and bonus footage includes an interview with The Who‘s Pete Townshend too.

Commenting on the forthcoming release, singer Billy Corgan says: “We went into the residencies hopeful to play some new music, with the idea I would write during the day and we could maybe even play new songs that same night,”

“What I didn’t anticipate is how much the process would inspire me, positively and negatively, to report what I was seeing and feeling from the shows. The documentary shows that process in an interesting way that reveals the link between the band and our audience.”

Smashing Pumpkins’ If It All Goes Wrong full tracklisting is:

Disc One:

“If All Goes Wrong” documentary

“Voices Of The Ghost Children” featurette

Interview with The Who guitarist, Pete Townshend

Disc Two:

*The Fillmore Residency

1. The Rose March*

2. Peace + Love*

3. 99 Floors*

4. Superchrist

5. Lucky 13

6. Starla

7. Death From Above

8. The Crying Tree Of Mercury

9. Winterlong

10. Heavy Metal Machine

11. Untitled

12. No Surrender*

13. Gossamer*

14. Zeitgeist

Bonus Tracks: Live From The Floor Of The Fillmore

*previously unreleased

*”99 Floors”

*”Peace + Love”

*”No Surrender”

*”Mama”*

*”Promise Me”*

For more music and film news click here

First Look — The Coens’ Burn After Reading

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At the tail end of 2006, I interviewed George Clooney in New York for our short-lived and sadly missed sister title, UNCUT DVD. It was around the time of Good Night, And Good Luck and Syriana, two movies that conspicuously harked back to the Seventies’ cinema of conscience. Syriana, particularly, referenced the political thrillers of the era, and during a lively, 40-minute conversation the man who in another life was the voice of Sparky the gay dog in South Park spoke enthusiastically about his love of great movies like Dr Strangelove, Network and All The President’s Men, and especially the classic alienated heroes from ‘60s and ‘70s cinema. There is, perhaps, something of Clooney playing around with that persona here in Burn After Reading, his third movie with Joel and Ethan Coen. Clooney – bearded like he was in Syriana – plays Federal Marshall Harry Pfarrer, married but with a taste for adultery, wooing a string of women via the Internet. He’s juggling affairs with icy Katie (Tilda Swinton), wife of ex-CIA analyst Osborne Cox (John Malkovich), and gym worker Linda Lizke (Frances McDormand). It’s Linda, and her colleague Chad Feldheimer (Brad Pitt), who find a disc containing Cox’s memoirs in a gym locker room and set in motion an attempted blackmail scam that provides Burn After Reading with its screwy plot. One of the things the Coens seem to take great delight with in their movies is seeing what happens when a bunch of idiots chase a pile of cash; usually with a disastrous outcome for all concerned. And at one point, an exasperated Cox describes the entire cast as “a league of morons”, which strikes me as wholly accurate. Chad, particularly, is a mouth-breathing moron of the first water. Vain, self-delusional and clearly without two brain cells to rub together, it’s brilliant to see Pitt doing this kind of hectic farce. Clooney, too, seems happy to send up his matinee star rep as Harry; riddled with insecurities and nowhere near the cool, composed stud he envisions himself to be. The plot itself proves to be as ridiculously complex and entertaining as you’d expect from the Coens. As JK Simmons’ CIA boss says on being appraised of the various scams and convoluted inter-personal relationships: “Watch them, see what they do. And let me know when it all makes sense.” Coming off the back of their Oscar haul for No Country For Old Men, Burn After Reading has provided the Coens with their biggest box office to date. And while Burn After Reading – as hilarious as it is – is no Fargo or Big Lebowski (let’s face it: what could be..?) it’s still a fantastically diverting 95 minutes. It seems incredible to me the ease with which they can cram so much into such a slender running time, but make it look so easy. Stylistically, there's perhaps only a few truly Coenesque moment. An opening shot of Earth from a surveillance satellite that zooms down into a CIA office in Washington echoes the opening shot from the head of a gargoyle on a Mississippi river bridge, overlooking barges as they deliver trash to an island dump in the delta. There's a nice sequence, too, where a camera at ground level follows a pair of feet walking across a number of different floor surfaces, some superb sound editing as the shoes cross from concrete to wood to carpet. But, certainly thematically, Burn After Reading is Coens through and through, particularly the money thing. In fact, I'm hard pushed to think of a Coens film that hasn’t been sparked by the pursuit of money. As you watch this gormless bunch of characters - most of whom, incidentally, are totally unlikable - murder and scam their way to what you assume won't be an entirely happy ending, you could, in fact, almost read Coens films as modern day versions of Chaucer’s Canterbury exemplums; Radix malorum est cupiditas, money is the root of all evil. Burn After Reading opens in the UK on October 17. You can see the trailer here.

At the tail end of 2006, I interviewed George Clooney in New York for our short-lived and sadly missed sister title, UNCUT DVD. It was around the time of Good Night, And Good Luck and Syriana, two movies that conspicuously harked back to the Seventies’ cinema of conscience. Syriana, particularly, referenced the political thrillers of the era, and during a lively, 40-minute conversation the man who in another life was the voice of Sparky the gay dog in South Park spoke enthusiastically about his love of great movies like Dr Strangelove, Network and All The President’s Men, and especially the classic alienated heroes from ‘60s and ‘70s cinema.

The 37th Uncut Playlist Of 2008

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A lovely morning here in London, as the newly expanded version of “Kind Of Blue” makes for a perfect start to the day. I imagine you may have seen this by now, but if not, please check out Ben Kingsley doing Minor Threat. That’s Ben Kingsley doing Minor Threat, and watching it doesn’t make the concept any more assimilable. After that, I suppose, a bunch of records we’ve played in the last couple of days might seem like a bit of an anti-climax. Some nice things here, though no mystery records this week – the last one, as you’ve probably guessed, was Bob Dylan’s “Tell Tale Signs”. Oh, and the arrival of the Robert Wyatt reissues has compelled me to start tidying up the full transcript of the interview I did with the great man last year. It’s about 10,000 words long, and there are a lot of typos to fix, but I should be able to post the whole thing next week. 1 Crystal Antlers – Crystal Antlers EP (Touch & Go) 2 Arthur Russell – Love Is Overtaking Me (Rough Trade) 3 Kevin Ayers – What More Can I Say (Reel) 4 Robert Wyatt – Ruth Is Stranger Than Richard (Domino) 5 Dawn Landes – Dawn’s Music (Boy Scout) 6 Chairlift – Does That Inspire You (Kanine) 7 Liquid Liquid – Remixes (Domino) 8 Brad Barr – The Fall Apartment: Instrumental Guitar (Tompkins Square) 9 Night Horse – The Dark Won’t Hide You (Tee Pee) 10 Essie Jain – The Inbetween (Leaf) 11 Zach Hill – Astrological Straits (Ipecac) 12 Bohren & Der Club Of Gore – Dolores (PIAS) 13 Lou Reed – Berlin Live At St Ann’s Warehouse (Matador) 14 Trees – The Garden Of Jane Delawney (SonyBMG) 15 Elbow – The Loneliness Of A Tower Crane Driver (Live In Manchester) 16 Terry Riley – A Rainbow In Curved Air (Columbia) 17 Peter Green – The Anthology (Salvo) 18 Miles Davis – Kind Of Blue: Deluxe Edition (SonyBMG)

A lovely morning here in London, as the newly expanded version of “Kind Of Blue” makes for a perfect start to the day. I imagine you may have seen this by now, but if not, please check out Ben Kingsley doing Minor Threat. That’s Ben Kingsley doing Minor Threat, and watching it doesn’t make the concept any more assimilable.

Motown Legend Norman Whitfield Has Died

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Legendary Motown producer and songwriter Norman Whitfield has died aged 67 (September 16) from an ongoing battle with diabetes and other ailments. Credited with creating the 'Motown Sound' and later the sub-genre of psychedelic soul, Whitfield alongside lyrical partner Barrett Strong produced swathes of hits throughout the 1960s, including Marvin Gaye's "I Heard It Through The Grapevine" and several for The Temptations including "Ain't Too Proud To Beg" and "Papa Was A Rolling Stone," which earnt him and Strong their first Grammy Award. In 1973, Whitfield left Berry Gordy's Motown to set up his own label Whitfield Records and had a huge smash with Rose Royce's "Car Wash" in 1976. The track earned Whitfield another Grammy award in 1977 for Best Score Soundtrack album. Returning to Motown in the 80s, Whitfield produced "Sail Away" a hit for The Temptations in 1983 and the soundtrack for martial arts film The Last Dragon in 1985. Whitfield was inducted, with Strong, into the Songwriter's Hall of Fame in 2004. Whitfield had been ill for several months, and resided at Los Angeles Cedars-Sinai hospital, where he went into a diabetic coma weeks ago, from which he initially recovered. His long standing illness was one of the reasons he was not jailed for tax evasion in January 2005, instead being fined £25, 000 and undergoing six months house arrest for failing to declare his income in the late 90s. For more music and film news click here

Legendary Motown producer and songwriter Norman Whitfield has died aged 67 (September 16) from an ongoing battle with diabetes and other ailments.

Credited with creating the ‘Motown Sound’ and later the sub-genre of psychedelic soul, Whitfield alongside lyrical partner Barrett Strong produced swathes of hits throughout the 1960s, including Marvin Gaye‘s “I Heard It Through The Grapevine” and several for The Temptations including “Ain’t Too Proud To Beg” and “Papa Was A Rolling Stone,” which earnt him and Strong their first Grammy Award.

In 1973, Whitfield left Berry Gordy’s Motown to set up his own label Whitfield Records and had a huge smash with Rose Royce‘s “Car Wash” in 1976.

The track earned Whitfield another Grammy award in 1977 for Best Score Soundtrack album.

Returning to Motown in the 80s, Whitfield produced “Sail Away” a hit for The Temptations in 1983 and the soundtrack for martial arts film The Last Dragon in 1985.

Whitfield was inducted, with Strong, into the Songwriter’s Hall of Fame in 2004.

Whitfield had been ill for several months, and resided at Los Angeles Cedars-Sinai hospital, where he went into a diabetic coma weeks ago, from which he initially recovered.

His long standing illness was one of the reasons he was not jailed for tax evasion in January 2005, instead being fined £25, 000 and undergoing six months house arrest for failing to declare his income in the late 90s.

For more music and film news click here

Dylan, SF Dirty Stealer, Appaloosa

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Quite a bit of activity on yesterday’s Dylan blog, as you might expect. Interesting, though, that most of the talk seems to not be about the music, but about SonyBMG’s marketing strategy for “Tell Tale Signs” – chiefly the high price being asked for the 3CD set which, as I pointed out, is certainly worth having. Here’s a fairly typical response from Kevin: “I think everyone should just boycott the whole Sony rip-off mess, including the 2CD version.” The upshot seems to be that a bunch of Dylan obsessives will be turning to crime to get their fix. “Sony is dreaming if they think many diehard fans like me will spend an ADDITIONAL $100+ for that third disc,” reckons Mr Jinks. “We're all gonna download it, instead.” Anyway, far away from that shitstorm, a couple of pretty nice new things today. Regulars will know of my near-pathological love of Comets On Fire, so the tentative appearance online of a new project called SF Dirty Stealer is definite cause for rejoicing in these parts, since it seems to involve all of the Comets apart from Ethan Miller, evidently up to his neck in Howlin Rain. SF Dirty Stealer, then, feature Utrillo Kushner, Ben Flashman, Noel Von Harmonson and Ben Chasny (listed as spiritual adviser), with the notable addition of Magik Markers’ Elisa Ambrogio (who also sometimes figures with Chasny in Six Organs Of Admittance) upfront. It’s hard to tell whether this is a serious ongoing band, or a who-gives-a-damn jam – maybe it’s both – since there’s only one song at their very new Myspace. But fortunately that song, “Too Long Waitin’”, is just great, being the sort of hotwired scuzz-riffing that Royal Trux were deep into around the time of “Accelerator”; is that Ambrogio on wailing lead, I wonder? Excellent stuff. As is, in a very different way, “The Day (We Fell In Love)” by Appaloosa, though they do list Royal Trux as an influence on their Myspace. I found this one hiding at the back end of the latest “Kitsuné Maison” comp (Number Six, to be precise). Appaloosa, as I learned from this useful feature, are a Berlin-based duo fronted by Anne-Laure Keib, a Frenchwoman who seems to be Chan Marshall’s best friend and former flatmate. “The Day (We Fell In Love)” begins not unlike a mid-period Cat Power piano ballad (something off “You Are Free”, perhaps), though Keib’s voice is tremendously European, resembling an implausibly lovestruck Nico. After about a minute, the song lifts off into a kind of gorgeous, twinkling electropop; not the sort of thing I often go for, but there’s a kind of still, calm euphoria to this which is really addictive and enchanting. The other tracks on the Myspace aren’t quite as arresting, edging a bit close to generic synthpop for my staunch tastes. That said, “Fantasy” and “Intimate” prove that Keid, whatever the shortcomings of the music, really has something about her; a warmth which belies all the glacial stereotypes that cluster round this sort of thing. Have a listen, anyway, and, as ever, please let me know what you think.

Quite a bit of activity on yesterday’s Dylan blog, as you might expect. Interesting, though, that most of the talk seems to not be about the music, but about SonyBMG’s marketing strategy for “Tell Tale Signs” – chiefly the high price being asked for the 3CD set which, as I pointed out, is certainly worth having.

Burt Bacharach and Razorlight For This Year’s Electric Proms

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Burt Bacharach, Razorlight and Goldfrapp are the latest artists announced to headline BBC Electic Proms shows at this year's event. Legendary songwriter Burt Bacharach, famous for his partnership with Hal David in the 50s and 60s as well as writing hits for artists as diverse as The Beatles, Neil ...

Burt Bacharach, Razorlight and Goldfrapp are the latest artists announced to headline BBC Electic Proms shows at this year’s event.

Legendary songwriter Burt Bacharach, famous for his partnership with Hal David in the 50s and 60s as well as writing hits for artists as diverse as The Beatles, Neil Diamond, Aretha Franklin and Tom Jones, will headline London’s Roundhouse venue on October 22; accompanied by BBC Concert Orchestra and singers Adele, Beth Rowley and Jamie Cullum.

Razorlight, whose anticipated third album ‘Slipaway Fires’ is due for release this November are set to headline a venue

at the Electric Proms twin city Liverpool, though date and place

are still to be confirmed.

Bee Gees man Robin Gibb is also set to collaborate with new popstar Sam Sparro and former Texas frontwoman Sharleen Spiteri to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Saturday Night Fever‘s soundtrack album being number one in the UK charts. All will perform with the BBC Concert Orchestra in London’s Roundhouse on October 25.

Goldfrapp will play London’s Cecil Sharp House on October 22.

As previously reported, The Last Shadow Puppets and Tony Christie will be playing in Liverpool on 24 October and 22.

Keane, The Streets, Nitin Sawhney, Wild Beasts and XX Teens are also appearing in London.

The five day festival runs from October 22-26, 2008, with highlights from the live shows set to be broadcast on BBC TV and radio.

More information is available from: bbc.co.uk/electricproms

For more music and film news click here

Jeff Beck Releases Ronnie Scotts’ Live DVD

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Legendary Yardbirds and now solo guitarist Jeff Beck is to release a live DVD recorded over his six show residency at world famous jazz club Ronnie Scotts last November. Backed by a full live band comprising drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, keyboardist Jason Rebello, and bassist Tal Wilkenfeld, Jeff Beck perfromed a wide selection of material from his 30 year career throughout the week. The live footage called ‘Performing This Week… Live At Ronnie Scott’s’ also includes Beck's version of the Beatles "A Day In The Life" and is released on Eagle Vision on November 10, 2008. The full lilve track listing is: Beck’s Bolero Eternity’s Breath Stratus Cause We’ve Ended As Lovers Behind The Veil You Never Know Nadia Blast From The East Led Boots Angels (Footsteps) Scatterbrain Goodbye Pork Pie Hat / Bush With The Blues Space Boogie Big Block A Day In The Life Where Were You For more music and film news click here

Legendary Yardbirds and now solo guitarist Jeff Beck is to release a live DVD recorded over his six show residency at world famous jazz club Ronnie Scotts last November.

Backed by a full live band comprising drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, keyboardist Jason Rebello, and bassist Tal Wilkenfeld, Jeff Beck perfromed a wide selection of material from his 30 year career throughout the week.

The live footage called ‘Performing This Week… Live At Ronnie Scott’s’ also includes Beck’s version of the Beatles “A Day In The Life” and is released on Eagle Vision on November 10, 2008.

The full lilve track listing is:

Beck’s Bolero

Eternity’s Breath

Stratus

Cause We’ve Ended As Lovers

Behind The Veil

You Never Know

Nadia

Blast From The East

Led Boots

Angels (Footsteps)

Scatterbrain

Goodbye Pork Pie Hat / Bush With The Blues

Space Boogie

Big Block

A Day In The Life

Where Were You

For more music and film news click here

Bryan Ferry 80s Concert Film Gets DVD Release

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Bryan Ferry's classic late 80's 'Bête Noire European Tour’ is finally being released on DVD next month. The concert was previously released as 'New Town' on VHS in '89, with footage culled from various venues on Ferry's tour, now has the sound remixed into 5.1. The bonus disc feature with the l...

Bryan Ferry‘s classic late 80’s ‘Bête Noire European Tour’ is finally being released on DVD next month.

The concert was previously released as ‘New Town’ on VHS in ’89, with footage culled from various venues on Ferry’s tour, now has the sound remixed into 5.1.

The bonus disc feature with the live DVD is the previously unavailable Virgin Germany 25th Birthday concert in Munich in 2002, at which Ferry showcased then new tracks from ‘Frantic’ as well as several Roxy Music classics.

‘The Bête Noire Tour’ DVD is out on October 27 through Virgin/EMI.

The live track listing is :

Limbo

The Chosen One

Casanova

Slave to Love

The Bogus Man

Ladytron

While my Heart is still Beating

Don’t Stop the Dance

A Waste Land

Windswept

In Every Dream Home a Heartache

New Town

Boys and Girls

Kiss and Tell

Love is the Drug

Avalon

Do the Strand

Konixxtreffen 2002 Concert (Previously unreleased)

The Thrill of it All

It’s all over now, Baby Blue

Can’t Let Go

Oh Yeah! (On the Radio)

My Only Love

Both Ends Burning

Don’t Think Twice it’s Alright

Limbo

Slave to Love

Virginia Plain

Jealous Guy

Let’s Stick Together

Love is the Drug

Do the Strand

For more music and film news click here

TV On The Radio Announce UK Shows

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TV On The Radio who release their third album 'Dear Science,' next week (September 22) have announced a short series of gigs in the UK. The New Yorkers will play four shows starting at Glasgow's ABC on November 16 and finish up at London's Shepherd's Bush Empire on the 19th. You can read a review ...

TV On The Radio who release their third album ‘Dear Science,’ next week (September 22) have announced a short series of gigs in the UK.

The New Yorkers will play four shows starting at Glasgow’s ABC on November 16 and finish up at London’s Shepherd’s Bush Empire on the 19th.

You can read a review of the follow-up to 2006’s acclaimed ‘Return To Cookie Mountain’ by clicking here.

Tickets for the shows go on sale on Friday (September 19) at 9am.

TV On The Radio will play the following venues:

Glasgow ABC (November 16)

Manchester Academy 2 (17)

Birmingham Carling Academy 2 (18)

London Shepherd’s Bush Empire (19)

For more music and film news click here

Kings of Leon – Read The Uncut Review here!

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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 September 22, 2008:

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: JENNY LEWIS – ACID TONGUE – 3* Rilo Kiley mainstay continues intriguing solo career. See the latest issue of Uncut for an interview with the ‘Lady of the Canyon.’

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

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: 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: QUEEN AND PAUL RODGERS – THE COSMOS ROCKS – 2* Freddie-less reunion debases Queen’s bonkers-rock legacy

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

ALBUM REVIEW: GLASVEGAS – GLASVEGAS – 3* Scots rockers provide throwback to pop’s golden age

BRIAN WILSON – THAT LUCKY OLD SUN – 4* Brian’s back! Again! A Californian song-cycle – Van Dyke Parks contributes words

LOUDON WAINWRIGHT III – RECOVERY – 4* The planet’s drollest songwriter shakes hands with his twentysomething self

THE VERVE – FORTH – 4* Stormy, heavenly and hymnal – it’s like they’ve never been away

WALTER BECKER – CIRCUS MONEY – 4* First in 14 years from the other Steely Dan man

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.

Kings Of Leon – Only By The Night

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When the Kings Of Leon recorded their Holy Roller Novocaine EP in 2002, they were musical novices ranging in age from 15 to 22, but they possessed amazing instincts, fueled by their shared DNA. In the six years since, the four Followills – three brothers and a cousin – have grown into one of most exciting rock’n’roll bands on the planet, the hand-picked touring partners of U2 and Bob Dylan, no less. And with their third album, 2007’s Because Of The Times, they unleashed a surprising new level of sophistication and daring. Oldest brother Nathan started whipping up all sorts of dynamic rhythmic counterpoints on every part of his kit, while kid brother Jared unleashed, thick, shuddering, super-melodic bass lines that meshed with Nathan’s hell-bent pummeling like Velcro. Cousin Matthew, meanwhile, took his guitar and effects pedals into all sorts of intriguing places, bringing atmosphere as well as edge, slicing through the carnivorous grooves as if his Gibson were a Ginsu knife. But they had the good sense to counterbalance their sonic explorations with a brace of signature barnburners. Now, with Only By The Night, they’ve taken their experimentation a bold (some might say foolhardy) step further, as these young dynamos, who’ve built their rep on bringing the heat, opt to slow down and mellow out. Relatively speaking. Tellingly, this is the first KOL recording not guided by the firm hand of Ethan Johns; instead they’ve co-produced themselves, in conjunction with their mentor Angelo Petraglia and Aha Shake Heartbreak engineer Jacquire King. The decision evidences their strapping self-confidence, which goes hand in hand with a joyous collective involvement in performance that Johns has referred to as “spiritual elevation” – to the point where they’re able to focus on the mise-en-scene, knowing the rawk will take care of itself. As always, the recipe starts with singer/rhythm guitarist Caleb Followill’s oddly shaped, cinematically vivid songs and always surprising vocals, as self-directed as those of the young Van Morrison. His is a strikingly original vocal character, at once conversational and incantatory, with its roil of phlegm, pine tar and raw silk, sliding upward at the ends of lines in a real-time metaphor of yearning. But beyond Caleb’s trump card, anything goes on this record. The Kings immediately set off into the unknown with the opener, which they’ve coyly titled “Closer”. The first sound we hear is the whoop-whoop-whoop of Matthew’s guitar, mimicking a sequencer oscillating forlornly, followed by a chilling howl off in the distance, like something from the audio track of The Blair Witch Project. That’s Matthew as well, singing wordlessly into his guitar pickup. In these first moments, he introduces the trippily symphonic, wildly inventive colorations that provide Only By The Night with its high, arching ceiling, while Nathan and Jared lay out its shuddering foundation. Caleb inhabits the shadowy space between with a mixture of brooding dislocation (this is a band that’s adored abroad while still fighting to prove itself in its homeland, after all) and primal emotion, laced with bursts of elation and defiance. “Closer” recedes like a fog bank, and “Crawl” blasts in with the metallic thrum of “Street Fightin’ Man”, the agitated urgency of “Gimme Shelter” and the swagger of “Whole Lotta Love,” sweeping in its savage grace. Jared’s aggro bass line is redically fuzzed-out like a pissed-off porcupine, as Caleb gets worked up about “The reds and the whites and abused/The crucified USA,” then turns into the spitting image of his Pentecostal preacher old man, warning, with End of Days fervor, “As every prophet unfolds/Hell is surely on its way.” “Sex On Fire” returns the band to familiar thematic territory of unbridled lust – no wonder it’s the label’s pick for the first single. The track races along like a guy steering with his dick (as we say in the USA) on a hopped-up reggae groove a la the last LP’s “Ragoo”. Then another quick shift of gears into “Use Somebody”, a rousing, full-throated indie anthem in the manner of Arcade Fire. It’s powered by one of those perfectly natural, utterly indelible refrains that have characterized Caleb’s best songs, as he sing/shouts Otis-style, “You know that I could use somebody” – somehow grabbing the word “use” from just beyond the top of his falsetto. Because their revved-up pulses are genetically in synch, the four players are able to design the tracks in architectural detail, each part locking into the rest with unerring precision, and this tautness keeps the album from sagging through its most challenging stretch – five midtempo songs in a row. In the simmering sequence, rippling with intertwined musical nuance, the band cruises confidently through the nocturne “Manhattan”, the nostalgia-drenched “Revelry”, the exceedingly tart “17” and the oblique, flaring “Notion” (featuring another of Caleb’s grabby refrains – “Don’t knock it, don’t knock it, you been there before”), on the way to the album’s most immediately captivating track. “I Want You” sways along on a languorous summertime groove, set off by a clattering cowbell/snare pattern from Nathan, quicksilver guitar arcs from Matthew and burbling, Keef-like changes from Caleb, who tosses off a litany of one-liners from the American vernacular, like “Pick me up some bottles of booze” and “I call shotgun.” It’s the most laidback piece they’ve ever attempted, and that the Kings pull off this beachy ballad so masterfully may be their biggest surprise of all. Following the blazing, double-time outro of “Be Somebody” – a brief exhibition of their young manhood, so to speak – the album goes out as ominously as it came in with “Cold Desert”, a panorama on the order of “Arizona” in which Caleb’s protagonist zigzags aimlessly across a harsh, Cormac McCarthy-like wasteland, hounded by the circling specters of sin and redemption. Mick Jagger might’ve come up with a line like “Jesus don’t love me” for Exile On Main Street, but in Caleb’s case the expression isn’t clever artifice – it’s a basic condition of his existence. There’s a touch of bravado even in this existential wilderness, as Caleb sings, “I’ve always been known to cross lines.” They no longer seem so much a Southern band as an American one, the Gen Y counterparts of The Band and Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers (both of which managed to slow the tempos while maintaining the intensity). While so many other young groups scrutinize and appropriate the music of the greats, playing rock’n’roll just comes naturally to the Followill boys, as if they were time-travelers from the golden age. The Kings aren’t impersonating the greats, they’re competing with them, on an increasingly level playing field, and that makes all the difference. BUD SCOPPA

When the Kings Of Leon recorded their Holy Roller Novocaine EP in 2002, they were musical novices ranging in age from 15 to 22, but they possessed amazing instincts, fueled by their shared DNA. In the six years since, the four Followills – three brothers and a cousin – have grown into one of most exciting rock’n’roll bands on the planet, the hand-picked touring partners of U2 and Bob Dylan, no less. And with their third album, 2007’s Because Of The Times, they unleashed a surprising new level of sophistication and daring.

Oldest brother Nathan started whipping up all sorts of dynamic rhythmic counterpoints on every part of his kit, while kid brother Jared unleashed, thick, shuddering, super-melodic bass lines that meshed with Nathan’s hell-bent pummeling like Velcro. Cousin Matthew, meanwhile, took his guitar and effects pedals into all sorts of intriguing places, bringing atmosphere as well as edge, slicing through the carnivorous grooves as if his Gibson were a Ginsu knife. But they had the good sense to counterbalance their sonic explorations with a brace of signature barnburners.

Now, with Only By The Night, they’ve taken their experimentation a bold (some might say foolhardy) step further, as these young dynamos, who’ve built their rep on bringing the heat, opt to slow down and mellow out. Relatively speaking.

Tellingly, this is the first KOL recording not guided by the firm hand of Ethan Johns; instead they’ve co-produced themselves, in conjunction with their mentor Angelo Petraglia and Aha Shake Heartbreak engineer Jacquire King. The decision evidences their strapping self-confidence, which goes hand in hand with a joyous collective involvement in performance that Johns has referred to as “spiritual elevation” – to the point where they’re able to focus on the mise-en-scene, knowing the rawk will take care of itself.

As always, the recipe starts with singer/rhythm guitarist Caleb Followill’s oddly shaped, cinematically vivid songs and always surprising vocals, as self-directed as those of the young Van Morrison. His is a strikingly original vocal character, at once conversational and incantatory, with its roil of phlegm, pine tar and raw silk, sliding upward at the ends of lines in a real-time metaphor of yearning. But beyond Caleb’s trump card, anything goes on this record.

The Kings immediately set off into the unknown with the opener, which they’ve coyly titled “Closer”. The first sound we hear is the whoop-whoop-whoop of Matthew’s guitar, mimicking a sequencer oscillating forlornly, followed by a chilling howl off in the distance, like something from the audio track of The Blair Witch Project. That’s Matthew as well, singing wordlessly into his guitar pickup. In these first moments, he introduces the trippily symphonic, wildly inventive colorations that provide Only By The Night with its high, arching ceiling, while Nathan and Jared lay out its shuddering foundation. Caleb inhabits the shadowy space between with a mixture of brooding dislocation (this is a band that’s adored abroad while still fighting to prove itself in its homeland, after all) and primal emotion, laced with bursts of elation and defiance.

“Closer” recedes like a fog bank, and “Crawl” blasts in with the metallic thrum of “Street Fightin’ Man”, the agitated urgency of “Gimme Shelter” and the swagger of “Whole Lotta Love,” sweeping in its savage grace. Jared’s aggro bass line is redically fuzzed-out like a pissed-off porcupine, as Caleb gets worked up about “The reds and the whites and abused/The crucified USA,” then turns into the spitting image of his Pentecostal preacher old man, warning, with End of Days fervor, “As every prophet unfolds/Hell is surely on its way.”

“Sex On Fire” returns the band to familiar thematic territory of unbridled lust – no wonder it’s the label’s pick for the first single. The track races along like a guy steering with his dick (as we say in the USA) on a hopped-up reggae groove a la the last LP’s “Ragoo”. Then another quick shift of gears into “Use Somebody”, a rousing, full-throated indie anthem in the manner of Arcade Fire. It’s powered by one of those perfectly natural, utterly indelible refrains that have characterized Caleb’s best songs, as he sing/shouts Otis-style, “You know that I could use somebody” – somehow grabbing the word “use” from just beyond the top of his falsetto.

Because their revved-up pulses are genetically in synch, the four players are able to design the tracks in architectural detail, each part locking into the rest with unerring precision, and this tautness keeps the album from sagging through its most challenging stretch – five midtempo songs in a row. In the simmering sequence, rippling with intertwined musical nuance, the band cruises confidently through the nocturne “Manhattan”, the nostalgia-drenched “Revelry”, the exceedingly tart “17” and the oblique, flaring “Notion” (featuring another of Caleb’s grabby refrains – “Don’t knock it, don’t knock it, you been there before”), on the way to the album’s most immediately captivating track. “I Want You” sways along on a languorous summertime groove, set off by a clattering cowbell/snare pattern from Nathan, quicksilver guitar arcs from Matthew and burbling, Keef-like changes from Caleb, who tosses off a litany of one-liners from the American vernacular, like “Pick me up some bottles of booze” and “I call shotgun.” It’s the most laidback piece they’ve ever attempted, and that the Kings pull off this beachy ballad so masterfully may be their biggest surprise of all.

Following the blazing, double-time outro of “Be Somebody” – a brief exhibition of their young manhood, so to speak – the album goes out as ominously as it came in with “Cold Desert”, a panorama on the order of “Arizona” in which Caleb’s protagonist zigzags aimlessly across a harsh, Cormac McCarthy-like wasteland, hounded by the circling specters of sin and redemption. Mick Jagger might’ve come up with a line like “Jesus don’t love me” for Exile On Main Street, but in Caleb’s case the expression isn’t clever artifice – it’s a basic condition of his existence. There’s a touch of bravado even in this existential wilderness, as Caleb sings, “I’ve always been known to cross lines.”

They no longer seem so much a Southern band as an American one, the Gen Y counterparts of The Band and Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers (both of which managed to slow the tempos while maintaining the intensity). While so many other young groups scrutinize and appropriate the music of the greats, playing rock’n’roll just comes naturally to the Followill boys, as if they were time-travelers from the golden age. The Kings aren’t impersonating the greats, they’re competing with them, on an increasingly level playing field, and that makes all the difference.

BUD SCOPPA

Interview: Kings of Leon Talk To Uncut About Only By The Night

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UNCUT Q&A with Caleb and Nathan Followill of Kings of Leon: You’ve put an even greater emphasis on atmosphere and texture this time, rather than just letting it rip. What was behind that decision? CALEB FOLLOWILL: Whether or not our fans are ready, we just felt like if we don’t record it ...

UNCUT Q&A with Caleb and Nathan Followill of Kings of Leon:

You’ve put an even greater emphasis on atmosphere and texture this time, rather than just letting it rip. What was behind that decision?

CALEB FOLLOWILL: Whether or not our fans are ready, we just felt like if we don’t record it now, we’re never going to, so let’s go ahead and try it. Then, when we put the new stuff up to the other songs, they fit and it didn’t feel forced. There are a few people getting scared and thinkin’ that our sound is going into something different. I think it always will go into something different from album to album. If people get scared and think that they don’t like something about what we’re doing right now, it’s not like this is gonna to be the way we make music forever.

NATHAN FOLLOWILL: I think on the first listen it just seems like a slower record in the sense that people are used to us comin’ out of the gate and knockin’ your front teeth out. “Boom, here’s the Kings of Leon with a new record. Let’s go fuck shit up.”

This is the first time Ethan Johns hasn’t been in the studio with you. What was behind that decision?

NF: We knew this record was definitely gonna be our bold attempt at trying to make a record that wasn’t necessarily obviously Kings of Leon. And with the first two records with Ethan, as soon as you heard the first note of any song, you could tell it was a definitely Kings of Leon song, just based on the sound that Ethan got. So, going into this record, we knew that we wanted to step away from that sound. We just realized that not very many bands ever get the chance to make the fourth record, so we might as well have fun with this one. And man, we had a blast making the record – got all the sounds we wanted, and the songs were recorded exactly the way we wanted them. So we really feel confident about this record, because it’s the first one we had our hands in beginning to end.

What were you going for here compared to previous albums?

NF: Each record you wanna make not only better than the last but different enough to where it doesn’t feel like people are buying the same record over again. We could have easily picked one great thing about those first three records and made four songs with each of those in mind and basically release a record that we knew would please any fan of Kings of Leon. But Because of the Times pushed us in the direction we were headed as a band.

On “Use Somebody,” it sounds like you’re entering Arcade Fire territory…

CF: I’m glad you said Arcade Fire and not Coldplay [laughs]. The meat of song was written on tour. When I came up with “I could use somebody,” I didn’t know if I was talking about a person or home or God. I felt immediately that it was a big song, and it scared me away. Then, when we were writin’ the record, Matthew kept sayin’, “What’s that song, man?”, and I acted like I didn’t know what he was talking about. Then, finally, I went, “All right, we’ll do it,” and as soon as we started playin’ it, the producers looked up and said, “Whoa, that’s a good song.” I was like, “OK.”

NF: I could hear some Arcade Fire-esque stuff on there, but this is just us spreading our wings. All these new sounds and this new direction that it might feel like we’re going in, this is where we’re going naturally.

“Crawl” is your first overtly political song. Who are you addressing?

CF: I think that just came from us bein’ a band that pretty much grew up in Europe, and we couldn’t really enjoy the success that we had because every time we went to a restaurant, everyone looked at us like we were these people that came from a country that supported war and supported all the terrible, terrible decisions and mistakes that were goin’ on in America. Everyone in fucking country music and Green Day and all these other people were writing songs about America, so we refused to write anything political. But I always knew if I wanted to ever do it, I was going to do it like Rage Against the Machine—it wasn’t going to be some ballad. If you really believe in something, you should be able to scream it from a mountain. But all of my songs are about five different things, usually. It’s just talking about how someone can just come in and fuck everything up and then they’re gone, and everyone else has to deal with the consequences.

What current band impresses you the most?

CF: Definitely Radiohead. They get it right every time, and they do it different every time. That’s something we’ve always tried to do – mix things up a little bit.

How have you grown from album to album?

NF: When we made Youth & Young Manhood, Jared was 15 years old. That was the first music we’d ever made in our lives, and that was the only kind of music we knew how to make. And then, Aha Shake Heartbreak came along and we were a little more comfortable with our instruments and ourselves, so we upped the ante a little bit. Then, with Because of the Times, we had toured with U2 and Pearl Jam and Bob Dylan and got to play in these huge arenas, we started thinkin’, “Man we need to start making music that’s gonna sound good in a sweaty club for 300 kids but will also sound great in Madison Square Garden,” or wherever. That became a factor in the music we were making, and this record is just us not being scared to try anything—any sound, any tempos, any vocal effects. We really felt like if we never make another record, out of the four records we’ve made, this will be the one that either gets the job done or it doesn’t.

INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

Jenny Lewis – Acid Tongue

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There are many worse positions for an artist to be in than burdened with the necessity of following up a classic. Jenny Lewis’s 2006 solo debut, Rabbit Fur Coat, co-credited to backing vocalists The Watson Twins, was just such an artefact, a nigh perfect collection of deceptively diffident, wickedly barbed country songs wondrously illuminated by Lewis’s astonishing voice: an instrument which somehow combines the guileless balladeer’s sincerity of a Linda Ronstadt with the deadpan comic’s timing of a Liz Phair. Delightful though it would be to be able to report that Acid Tongue merits the same deafening applause as the tough act it follows, it would also be dishonest. Though the new album’s flaws are largely due to the always eminently forgiveable fault of over-ambition, Acid Tongue as a whole lacks the keen focus of its predecessor (a similar trajectory, coincidentally, can be detected in Lewis’s other job with Rilo Kiley, from their magnificent 2004 album More Adventurous to last year’s muddled Under The Blacklight). Rabbit Fur Coat had the clear sense that Lewis had a plan – ie, to make a witty, wise, gently sarcastic country record – and had executed same with nerveless efficiency and considerable panache. Acid Tongue feels much more like the result of assembling a bunch of one’s (admittedly, in Lewis’s case, unusually musically distinguished) mates in a studio to see what happens. And some great things do – as is probably inevitable when your supporting cast includes Zooey Deschanel, Black Crowes’ Chris Robinson, Rilo Kiley’s Jason Boesel, Beachwood Sparks’ Dave Scher, Elvis Costello, Johnathan Rice, Paz & Ana Lenchantin, and M Ward, among others. Said great things are a while in arriving, though. The opening tracks, “Black Sand” and “Pretty Bird”, are both slight if attractive enough, introducing a hitherto rarely heard fragility in Lewis’s usually warm vocal, but they’re quickly overwhelmed by an eruption of hubris so monumental that it’s strangely impressive. “The Next Messiah”, which clocks in just short of nine minutes, is a baffling jerry-rigging of four discrete movements, any one of which might have been a decent, if modest tune – especially the introductory episode, which suggests Bobby Gentry warbling something by The White Stripes. In the event, however, the listener who sits through the whole thing is likely to end up feeling rather like a golden retriever being taught backgammon, ie somewhat perplexed. “Bad Man’s World”, which follows, is another sparse, brittle tune, an obvious swing at a classic torch ballad (“It’s a bad man’s world/I’m a bad man’s girl”) which fails to connect only because one can, at this point, reasonably expect more from Lewis as a lyricist. From that point on, fortunately, there’s a perceptible sense of Lewis finding gear. The title track is a rueful reminiscence buoyed by a knelling acoustic guitar and a choir of Lewis’s stellar collaborators on backing vocals, “See Fernando” a gleeful rockabilly thrash with a fantastically unreconstructed guitar solo punctuated by surf-rock drum fills, “Godspeed” managing somehow to be everything the opening two tracks weren’t, quite: it’s a beautiful song, a angry yet affectionate open letter to someone making things unnecessarily difficult, blessed by an impeccably judged string arrangement. Lewis was a key presence on Elvis Costello’s terrific “Momufuku” of earlier this year, and he returns the favour on “Carpetbaggers”, snarling and sneering in fine old-school fettle: the song itself is a playful mid-tempo country thrash, something of a throwback to the duet “The People’s Limousine” that Costello once recorded with T-Bone Burnett under the name The Coward Brothers. The tunes that follow soar to heights all the more startling given that Acid Tongue has taken so long in taking flight. There’s the show-stopping gospel-tinted ballad “Trying My Best To Love You”, slow-building romp “Jack Killed Mom” – which features a guttural monologue from Benji Hughes, and may have invented the Motown country death ballad – and self-consciously grand finale “Sing A Song For Them”, a big-hearted shout-out to the broken and beaten. Acid Tongue is imperfect, but nevertheless slightly more than halfway to astounding. Its trespasses, which at least have the grace to be entertainingly odd, should be forgiven. ANDREW MUELLER JENNY LEWIS Q&A Do you consciously separate your writing for yourself from your writing for Rilo Kiley? “I tend to just write songs regardless of where they’ll end up, then the songs seem to dictate where they belong. But I do enjoy the challenge of writing outside my comfort zone.” Was the cast of backing musicians assembled deliberately with the songs in mind, or did it happen more organically? “We carefully chose the musicians based on the tunes, although we did recut several songs on the record with different band configurations. For example, ‘Pretty Bird’ was an off-the-cuff recut that eventually edged out the original.” How does a (well, nearly) nine-minute song in four movements happen? “Very carefully! The song was originally three different songs that were trimmed and strung together. The transitions were the tricky part – how does one segue from one feeling to another, or into a completely different tempo? We had a lot of fun arranging that song – it was a triumph if we made it through the entire song without stopping. But the truth is that I’ve always wanted to sing a medley, a la Barbra Streisand.” INTERVIEW: ANDREW MUELLER

There are many worse positions for an artist to be in than burdened with the necessity of following up a classic. Jenny Lewis’s 2006 solo debut, Rabbit Fur Coat, co-credited to backing vocalists The Watson Twins, was just such an artefact, a nigh perfect collection of deceptively diffident, wickedly barbed country songs wondrously illuminated by Lewis’s astonishing voice: an instrument which somehow combines the guileless balladeer’s sincerity of a Linda Ronstadt with the deadpan comic’s timing of a Liz Phair.

Delightful though it would be to be able to report that Acid Tongue merits the same deafening applause as the tough act it follows, it would also be dishonest. Though the new album’s flaws are largely due to the always eminently forgiveable fault of over-ambition, Acid Tongue as a whole lacks the keen focus of its predecessor (a similar trajectory, coincidentally, can be detected in Lewis’s other job with Rilo Kiley, from their magnificent 2004 album More Adventurous to last year’s muddled Under The Blacklight). Rabbit Fur Coat had the clear sense that Lewis had a plan – ie, to make a witty, wise, gently sarcastic country record – and had executed same with nerveless efficiency and considerable panache. Acid Tongue feels much more like the result of assembling a bunch of one’s (admittedly, in Lewis’s case, unusually musically distinguished) mates in a studio to see what happens.

And some great things do – as is probably inevitable when your supporting cast includes Zooey Deschanel, Black Crowes’ Chris Robinson, Rilo Kiley’s Jason Boesel, Beachwood Sparks’ Dave Scher, Elvis Costello, Johnathan Rice, Paz & Ana Lenchantin, and M Ward, among others. Said great things are a while in arriving, though. The opening tracks, “Black Sand” and “Pretty Bird”, are both slight if attractive enough, introducing a hitherto rarely heard fragility in Lewis’s usually warm vocal, but they’re quickly overwhelmed by an eruption of hubris so monumental that it’s strangely impressive. “The Next Messiah”, which clocks in just short of nine minutes, is a baffling jerry-rigging of four discrete movements, any one of which might have been a decent, if modest tune – especially the introductory episode, which suggests Bobby Gentry warbling something by The White Stripes. In the event, however, the listener who sits through the whole thing is likely to end up feeling rather like a golden retriever being taught backgammon, ie somewhat perplexed. “Bad Man’s World”, which follows, is another sparse, brittle tune, an obvious swing at a classic torch ballad (“It’s a bad man’s world/I’m a bad man’s girl”) which fails to connect only because one can, at this point, reasonably expect more from Lewis as a lyricist.

From that point on, fortunately, there’s a perceptible sense of Lewis finding gear. The title track is a rueful reminiscence buoyed by a knelling acoustic guitar and a choir of Lewis’s stellar collaborators on backing vocals, “See Fernando” a gleeful rockabilly thrash with a fantastically unreconstructed guitar solo punctuated by surf-rock drum fills, “Godspeed” managing somehow to be everything the opening two tracks weren’t, quite: it’s a beautiful song, a angry yet affectionate open letter to someone making things unnecessarily difficult, blessed by an impeccably judged string arrangement.

Lewis was a key presence on Elvis Costello’s terrific “Momufuku” of earlier this year, and he returns the favour on “Carpetbaggers”, snarling and sneering in fine old-school fettle: the song itself is a playful mid-tempo country thrash, something of a throwback to the duet “The People’s Limousine” that Costello once recorded with T-Bone Burnett under the name The Coward Brothers. The tunes that follow soar to heights all the more startling given that Acid Tongue has taken so long in taking flight. There’s the show-stopping gospel-tinted ballad “Trying My Best To Love You”, slow-building romp “Jack Killed Mom” – which features a guttural monologue from Benji Hughes, and may have invented the Motown country death ballad – and self-consciously grand finale “Sing A Song For Them”, a big-hearted shout-out to the broken and beaten.

Acid Tongue is imperfect, but nevertheless slightly more than halfway to astounding. Its trespasses, which at least have the grace to be entertainingly odd, should be forgiven.

ANDREW MUELLER

JENNY LEWIS Q&A

Do you consciously separate your writing for yourself from your writing for Rilo Kiley?

“I tend to just write songs regardless of where they’ll end up, then the songs seem to dictate where they belong. But I do enjoy the challenge of writing outside my comfort zone.”

Was the cast of backing musicians assembled deliberately with the songs in mind, or did it happen more organically?

“We carefully chose the musicians based on the tunes, although we did recut several songs on the record with different band configurations. For example, ‘Pretty Bird’ was an off-the-cuff recut that eventually edged out the original.”

How does a (well, nearly) nine-minute song in four movements happen?

“Very carefully! The song was originally three different songs that were trimmed and strung together. The transitions were the tricky part – how does one segue from one feeling to another, or into a completely different tempo? We had a lot of fun arranging that song – it was a triumph if we made it through the entire song without stopping. But the truth is that I’ve always wanted to sing a medley, a la Barbra Streisand.”

INTERVIEW: ANDREW MUELLER

TV On The Radio – Dear Science,

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If their 2004 debut Desperate Youth, Blood Thirsty Babes saw this New York quintet pile on the arcane musical textures (honking sax, doowop vocals, gothic strings, squawling guitars) and their 2006 follow up Return To Cookie Mountain saw them concentrate on proper songs, then album number three sees them harnessing both texture and song to powerful effect. Dear Science, (yes, the comma is part of the title) splits between moody digital ballads and Kyp Malone’s funkier tracks. The ballads include “Stork And Owl” (all distorted breakbeats, Joy Division drones and big strings), the drumless “Family Tree” and the gorgeous, Fender Rhodes-driven “Love Dog”. Better still are the funky ones, like the Prince-influenced “Crying”, and the irresistible Afro-funk of “Red Dress” (a nod to Talking Heads). All are very good indeed. JOHN LEWIS

If their 2004 debut Desperate Youth, Blood Thirsty Babes saw this New York quintet pile on the arcane musical textures (honking sax, doowop vocals, gothic strings, squawling guitars) and their 2006 follow up Return To Cookie Mountain saw them concentrate on proper songs, then album number three sees them harnessing both texture and song to powerful effect.

Dear Science, (yes, the comma is part of the title) splits between moody digital ballads and Kyp Malone’s funkier tracks. The ballads include “Stork And Owl” (all distorted breakbeats, Joy Division drones and big strings), the drumless “Family Tree” and the gorgeous, Fender Rhodes-driven “Love Dog”. Better still are the funky ones, like the Prince-influenced “Crying”, and the irresistible Afro-funk of

“Red Dress” (a nod to Talking Heads). All are very good indeed.

JOHN LEWIS

Jackson Browne – Time The Conqueror

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On his two-volume Solo Acoustic series, Browne reminded us of the undiminished eloquence and beauty of the music he made in his 20s. Though a number of his songs from the last three decades have contained echoes of his early greatness, fitting in nicely among the early classics in these solo treatments, Browne has also shown glaring lapses of judgment. Those lapses conspire to sabotage Time The Conqueror – notably the wince-inducing literalness of “The Drums Of War” (“Why is impeachment not on the table?/We better stop them while we are able”) and the bizarre mix of compassion and prurience in “Live Nude Cabaret”. The title song contains some lovely imagery enwrapped in one of Browne’s signature ribbons of melody, while the following “Off Of Wonderland” is a wistful look back on the early days, but both are presented in arrangements so bland it’s shocking they passed muster. Bet they’ll work just fine on Solo Acoustic Vol. 3. BUD SCOPPA

On his two-volume Solo Acoustic series, Browne reminded us of the undiminished eloquence and beauty of the music he made in his 20s. Though a number of his songs from the last three decades have contained echoes of his early greatness, fitting in nicely among the early classics in these solo treatments, Browne has also shown glaring lapses of judgment.

Those lapses conspire to sabotage Time The Conqueror – notably the wince-inducing literalness of “The Drums Of War” (“Why is impeachment not on the table?/We better stop them while we are able”) and the bizarre mix of compassion and prurience in “Live Nude Cabaret”.

The title song contains some lovely imagery enwrapped in one of Browne’s signature ribbons of melody, while the following “Off Of Wonderland” is a wistful look back on the early days, but both are presented in arrangements so bland it’s shocking they passed muster. Bet they’ll work just fine on Solo Acoustic Vol. 3.

BUD SCOPPA

The Killers Confirm New Album and Single Releases

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The Killers have confirmed that their third studio album will be called 'Day And Age' and will be released on November 24 in the UK and November 25 in the US. The Stuart Price produced album will be preceded by a single "Human," taken from the album, and will debut on radio from September 22 prior ...

The Killers have confirmed that their third studio album will be called ‘Day And Age’ and will be released on November 24 in the UK and November 25 in the US.

The Stuart Price produced album will be preceded by a single “Human,” taken from the album, and will debut on radio from September 22 prior to it’s release on the 30th.

The highly anticipated album will include previously performed track “Spaceman” which the Las Vagas four-piece previewed live at their Reading and Leeds Festival headline shows last month.

Day and Age also has the tracks “Losing Touch”, “I Can’t Stay” and “Goodnight, Travel Well” confirmed for the LP, according to sister site NME.com.

The Killers are also rumoured to be releasing a Christmas single “Joseph, Better You Than Me,” a collaboration with Elton John, who has recently performed a stint of shows in Las Vegas.

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Dylan Poems From Forthcoming Book Appear

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Bob Dylan has published two of his poems simply called #17 and #21 , in The New Yorker magazine. The poems are taken from a forthcoming book Hollywood Foto-Rhetoric: The Lost Manuscript; a collaboration from 40 years ago between Dylan and longtime friend/photographer Barry Feinstein, in which 23 po...

Bob Dylan has published two of his poems simply called #17 and #21 , in The New Yorker magazine.

The poems are taken from a forthcoming book Hollywood Foto-Rhetoric: The Lost Manuscript; a collaboration from 40 years ago between Dylan and longtime friend/photographer Barry Feinstein, in which 23 poems accompany classic Hollywood shots of the reclusive singer.

The book is due for release on November 4, 2008 through Simon & Schuster, the same publisher through which his Chronicles Volume 1 was released. The publishers have previously confirmed that Dylan is working on the autobiographical sequel.

Also previously reported, is the forthcoming triple CD of unreleased and rare tracks ‘Tell Tale Signs’; a collection from 1986-2006, part of Bootleg Series 8 which is due for release on October 6.

However, Uncut has already heard the unreleased studio recordings, demos and live tracks and you can find out what they are like by clicking here for the Wild Mercury Sound blog on Dylan.

Click for the full tracklisting for Tell Tale Signs here.

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Pic credit: Barry Feinstein

David Gilmour Pays Tribute To Pink Floyd Bandmate

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David Gilmour has paid tribute to his late Pink Floyd bandmate Richard Wright, whose death from cancer, aged 65, was announced yesterday. Posting on his website, Gilmour who has continued to work and tour with Wright has praised him saying: "In my view, all the greatest Pink Floyd moments are the o...

David Gilmour has paid tribute to his late Pink Floyd bandmate Richard Wright, whose death from cancer, aged 65, was announced yesterday.

Posting on his website, Gilmour who has continued to work and tour with Wright has praised him saying: “In my view, all the greatest Pink Floyd moments are the ones where he is in full flow,” and that he had “never played with anyone quite like” keyboardist.

Gilmour, who joined Pink floyd in 1968, replacing then lead guitarist Syd Barrett also said: “No-one can replace Richard Wright – he was my musical partner and my friend,”

“In the welter of arguments about who or what was Pink Floyd, Rick’s enormous input was frequently forgotten.”

“He was gentle, unassuming and private but his soulful voice and playing were vital, magical components of our most recognised Pink Floyd sound.”

Wright wrote two tracks on the bands’ classic Dark Side Of The Moon, and Gilmour exclaims: “After all, without Us and Them, and The Great Gig in the Sky – both of which he wrote – what would The Dark Side Of The Moon have been?”

To read the Uncut’s full Richard Wright obituary, click here

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