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Countdown to Latitude: Just A Minute

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Previously, Radio 4 has hosted its arts magazine show, Loose Ends, from Latitude. Loose Ends returns this year, to the Radio 4 stage, along with satirical comedy The Now Show, Roger McGough's Poetry Please and current affairs programme, Broadcasting House. But surely the most impressive presence on the Radio 4 bill is the legendary panel game, Just A Minute. Now in its 41st year, the show – where contestants have to talk for a full minute without repetition, deviation or hesitation – will include Phill Jupitus and Ross Noble among the panelists, while the redoubtable Nicholas Parsons will, as ever, be in the chair. Who knows – maybe we’ll also see Parsons out and about at the festival, listening to the beatific harp noodlings of Joanna Newsom, enraptured by the sweaty punk blues of Grinderman or Julian Cope’s psychrock assault..? If you’ll indulge us, we’d even like to see Cope or Nick Cave on the Just A Minute panel. We can but dream…

Previously, Radio 4 has hosted its arts magazine show, Loose Ends, from Latitude. Loose Ends returns this year, to the Radio 4 stage, along with satirical comedy The Now Show, Roger McGough’s Poetry Please and current affairs programme, Broadcasting House. But surely the most impressive presence on the Radio 4 bill is the legendary panel game, Just A Minute.

Black Mountain and Notwist Join Sub Pop Singles Club

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Sub Pop, the Seattle label which signed Nirvana, Soundgarden and Mudhoney in the early ‘90s, have announced the re-launch of their singles club. Limited edition singles by Om, Notwist and Black Mountain will be released every month on special 7" vinyl. Black Lips, Unnatural Helpers, Tyvek, Arthu...

Sub Pop, the Seattle label which signed Nirvana, Soundgarden and Mudhoney in the early ‘90s, have announced the re-launch of their singles club.

Limited edition singles by Om, Notwist and Black Mountain will be released every month on special 7″ vinyl.

Black Lips, Unnatural Helpers, Tyvek, Arthur & Yu, Mika Miko and Blues Control have also been confirmed as fiuture releases.

Subscriptions are restricted to the first 1500 people who sign up and costs $75 within North America and $90 for international members.

See the Sub Pop website for more details

Fans Inspire The New Hold Steady Album

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The Hold Steady have revealed that their older fans were the inspiration behind their new album, Stay Positive. “In talking to them, we have found that no matter their ages, they are so much like us as people, that they seem at times an extension of the music,” said frontman Craig Finn. “A g...

The Hold Steady have revealed that their older fans were the inspiration behind their new album, Stay Positive.

“In talking to them, we have found that no matter their ages, they are so much like us as people, that they seem at times an extension of the music,” said frontman Craig Finn.

“A great American philosopher named D. Boon once said ‘Our band could be your life.’ I think that is true. But ‘Your Life could be Our Band’ is also a true statement.”

Stay Positive gets its UK release on July 14 and the band have a number of headline festival appearances this month.

The live dates are:

London O2 Wireless Festival July 6

Liverpool Summer Pops Festival (8)

Leeds The Irish Centre (10)

Newcastle Carling Academy 2 (11)

Scotland T In The Park Festival (12)

Countdown To Latitude: Simon Armitage

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If there’s anyone appearing on the Latitude bill this year who might legitimately be able to claim that poetry is the new rock’n’roll, then step forward Huddersfield’s finest, Simon Armitage. Anyone who’s read his brilliant memoir, Gig, will remember his often hilarious observations on life as a card-carrying Eighties’ indie fan, from The Wedding Present to The Smiths and beyond. His own, intermittent attempts to kick-start a music career resulted, finally, in launching his teenage fantasy band, The Scaremongers. Hopefully, during his performance in the Literary Arena, Armitage will regale us with some of his shrewd, witty observations on Dylan, Morrissey and – ahem – David Gedge, as well as some of his magnificent poetry. His recently published, earthy translation of Sir Gawain & The Green Knight is recommended, as is his own wry, amiable observational poetry, located somewhere between Morrissey and Alan Bennett.

If there’s anyone appearing on the Latitude bill this year who might legitimately be able to claim that poetry is the new rock’n’roll, then step forward Huddersfield’s finest, Simon Armitage.

Madness Announce One Off Show

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Madness have announced an extra show in Manchester on December 18. The band plan to replicate their recent performances at London's Hackney Empire, where they played their new album 'The Liberty OF Norton Folgate' in its entirety, follwed by a set of their greatest hits. The Hackney shows feature...

Madness have announced an extra show in Manchester on December 18.

The band plan to replicate their recent performances at London’s Hackney Empire, where they played their new album ‘The Liberty OF Norton Folgate’ in its entirety, follwed by a set of their greatest hits.

The Hackney shows featured jugglers, ukelele playing chimney sweeps, pearly Kings and Queens, and had a full orchestra.

Split into 3 acts, Madness performed the major part of forthcoming album ‘The Liberty Of Norton Folgate’, topped off with a 40 minute classic singles set including ‘Baggy Trousers’, ‘Embarrassment’, ‘My Girl’ and ‘House Of Fun’.

The band performed new tracks ‘Bingo’, recent single ‘NW5’ and ‘Sugar and Spice’ during the second part of the show.

Suggs described his duet on ‘Out On The Town’ with guest vocalist Rhoda Dakar of Bodysnatchers, Special AKA, as “A dysfunctional Sonny and Cher.”

Lastly Madness played the 10 minute title track, ‘The Liberty Of Norton Folgate’ a stunning opus, classic Rise And Fall era Madness.

Madness played:

Overture

We Are London

Idiot Child

Bingo

NW5

On The Town

Overture II

MKII

Sugar And Spice

Dust Devil

Clerkenwell Polka

Forever Young

————

The Liberty OF Norton Folgate

————

One Step Beyond

Embarrassment

The Prince

House Of Fun

Baggy Trousers

Madness

Our House

It Must Be Love

My Girl

Night Boat To Cairo

For tickets see www.gigsandtours.com

CSNY Legend Adds Extra Tour Date

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Stephen Stills has announced he will play an extra London date at Shepherds Bush Empire on October 20. Tickets for the additional gig will go onsale July 5. He will now play a total of eight dates, kicking off in Brighton on October 10. Last year Stills released a collection of demo versions from...

Stephen Stills has announced he will play an extra London date at Shepherds Bush Empire on October 20.

Tickets for the additional gig will go onsale July 5.

He will now play a total of eight dates, kicking off in Brighton on October 10.

Last year Stills released a collection of demo versions from a lost tape of a recording he made in 1968 called “Just Roll Tape” and embarked on an extensive US tour.

On his last tour Stills performed songs from throughout his four-decade career, including material from his most recent solo album, 2006’s “Man Alive!” and classics from his time with Crosby, Stills & Nash, CSN&Y, The Buffalo Springfield and Manassas.

The tour dates are:

Brighton Centre (October 10)

London Shepherds Bush Empire (11)

Manchester Apollo (13)

Birmingham Symphony Hall (15)

Newcastle City Hall (16)

Sheffield City Hall (18)

Glasgow Clyde Auditorium (19)

London Bush Empire (20)

Tickets are available from www.bookingsdirect.com or by calling 0870 735 5000.

The 26th Uncut Playlist Of 2008

Thanks for all your half-year Top Tens; some interesting choices there, as well as The Charlatans. Keep them coming, and I’ll do some kind of dark mathematics and rustle up a collective Wild Mercury Sound chart next week. In the meantime, here’s this week’s office playlist. Can I just draw your attention to the Suarasama album, “Fajar Di Atas Awan”, which is quite the best thing I’ve heard this week? It’s a reissue, on Drag City, of a Sumatran record from 1998. I’ll write about it more soon, but maybe a few of you will be tantalised by the references used by the label: “Sandy Bull, John Fahey, the Radha Krsna Temple, the collaborations of Ravi Shankar and Andre Previn, even our own Ghost and Six Organs Of Admittance.” Amazingly beautiful record. And some of these other ones are pretty good, too. . . 1 Homegas – Homegas (Takoma) 2 Plush – Take A Chance (Candlewick Lake) 3 Telepathe – Devil’s Trident (Merok) 4 Derek & The Dominos – Tell The Truth (Polydor) 5 Status Quo – Dog Of Two Head (Pye) 6 Josephine Foster – This Coming Gladness (Bo’Weavil) 7 The Waterboys – Room To Roam (Collector’s Edition) (EMI) 8 Giant Sand _ proVisions (Yep Roc) 9 Helena Espvall & Masaki Batoh - Helena Espvall & Masaki Batoh (Drag City) 10 Suarasama – Fajar Di Atas Awan (Drag City) 11 Various Artists – Calypsoul 70: Caribbean Soul & Calypso Crossover 1969-1979 (Strut) 12 Sic Alps – US Ez (Siltbreeze) 13 James Yorkston – When The Haar Rolls In (Domino) 14 Jim O’Rourke – Tamper (Drag City) 15 David Werner – Whizz Kid (RCA) 16 Ponytail – Ice Cream Spiritual (We Are Free) 17 Eat Skull – Sick To Death (Siltbreeze) 18 Mystery Record Borrowed From NME 19 David Vandervelde – Waiting For The Sunrise (Secretly Canadian) 20 Calexico – Carried To Dust (City Slang)

Thanks for all your half-year Top Tens; some interesting choices there, as well as The Charlatans. Keep them coming, and I’ll do some kind of dark mathematics and rustle up a collective Wild Mercury Sound chart next week.

More Additions to Latitude: Micah P Hinson

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Latitude Festival have announced yet more additions to the amazing lineup, starting with Texan singer-songwriter Micah P. Hinson! These New Puritans and Team Waterpolo will play the main Obelisk stage and Malcom Middleton and The Shortwave Set have been added to the Sunrise Arena. This will be one...

Latitude Festival have announced yet more additions to the amazing lineup, starting with Texan singer-songwriter Micah P. Hinson!

These New Puritans and Team Waterpolo will play the main Obelisk stage and Malcom Middleton and The Shortwave Set have been added to the Sunrise Arena.

This will be one of the first chances to see Hinson premiere songs from his new album The Red Empire Orchestra, the other being Club Uncut on July 14.

Other additions to the Uncut Arena include Beautiful South‘s Paul Heaton, Patrick Watson, Noah And The Whale, Captain and Those Dancing Days.

The announcement comes under two weeks before the festivities kick off at Henham Park, Suffolk on July 17.

Uncut are profiling our favourite artists appearing this year on the Latitude blog. Read our Countdown to Latitude!

For more information and the full lineup see the Latitude festival website.

Music Arena Additions:

Obelisk Arena

These New Puritans

Team Waterpolo

Uncut Arena

Micah P. Hinson

Patrick Watson

Captain

Paul Heaton

Noah And The Whale

Those Dancing Days

Sunrise Arena

Natty

Malcolm Middleton

Punch Brothers

The Shortwave Set

Gary Go

Soko

The Little Ones

Yacht

Countdown to Latitude: British Sea Power

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British Sea Power have a reputation as a band who like to punch above their weight: Rough Trade signed them on the strength of a single gig, their 2003 debut album, The Decline of British Sea Power, shifted 60,000 copies through word of mouth, and they once avoided interviews by issuing journalist...

nullBritish Sea Power have a reputation as a band who like to punch above their weight: Rough Trade signed them on the strength of a single gig, their 2003 debut album, The Decline of British Sea Power, shifted 60,000 copies through word of mouth, and they once avoided interviews by issuing journalists with grid references ‘directing’ them to where they should meet. There will undoubtedly be a contingent of their devoted fans, complete with a sea of waving leafy branches, when they play the main Obelisk stage on Friday at Latitude.

Highway To Hell Tops Funeral Tunes Down Under

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AC/DC's Highway to Hell is becoming one of the most requested funeral tunes in Australia, reports the Daily Telegraph. Leading the funeral chart is Frank Sinatra's classic, My Way followed by Louis Armstrong's version of Wonderful World. Highway to Hell, which includes the line: "Going down, part...

AC/DC‘s Highway to Hell is becoming one of the most requested funeral tunes in Australia, reports the Daily Telegraph.

Leading the funeral chart is Frank Sinatra‘s classic, My Way followed by Louis Armstrong‘s version of Wonderful World.

Highway to Hell, which includes the line: “Going down, party time; My friends are gonna be there too”, is just outside the top ten, with Led Zeppelin‘s Stairway to Heaven.

AC/DC confirmed they have finished recording a new album with producer Brendan O’Brien and audio engineer Mike Fraser are currently mixing it for a late 2008 release.

Jim O’Rourke: “Tamper” and “Mimidokodesuka”

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As I mentioned the other day, there seems to be a covert return to the musical fray from Jim O’Rourke afoot. From being everywhere, not least in Sonic Youth, a few years ago, O’Rourke appeared to “retire” from music two or three years ago. Now, it transpires, the great man has been “wri...

As I mentioned the other day, there seems to be a covert return to the musical fray from Jim O’Rourke afoot. From being everywhere, not least in Sonic Youth, a few years ago, O’Rourke appeared to “retire” from music two or three years ago.

Radiohead, Beta Band and Gorillaz Remix Classical Songs

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Radiohead frontman, Thom Yorke, has joined members from the Beta Band and Gorillaz in contributing original remixes to a ‘nonclassical’ music project, Cortical Songs. The album was conceived by John Matthias, who played violin on Radiohead's album The Bends, and composer Nick Ryan. Due for re...

Radiohead frontman, Thom Yorke, has joined members from the Beta Band and Gorillaz in contributing original remixes to a ‘nonclassical’ music project, Cortical Songs.

The album was conceived by John Matthias, who played violin on Radiohead’s album The Bends, and composer Nick Ryan.

Due for release on 21 July, the album is made up of four movements written specifically for strings, and features Yorke’s avant garde Neuron Trigger remix. You can hear his remix on

Kings Of Leon Announce One-Off Show

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Kings of Leon will play a special one-off show at London’s Brixton Academy on August 14. Tickets for the show go on sale tomorrow (July 4) at 9am. Fans are limited to buying two tickets each, with each one costing £27.50 + booking fee. The band began their summer festival tour with their triump...

Kings of Leon will play a special one-off show at London’s Brixton Academy on August 14.

Tickets for the show go on sale tomorrow (July 4) at 9am. Fans are limited to buying two tickets each, with each one costing £27.50 + booking fee.

The band began their summer festival tour with their triumphant headline set at Glastonbury. They will play at Oxegen, T In The Park, V Festival and throughout Europe over the coming summer months.

Kings of Leon return with the release of their highly anticipated fourth album ‘Only By The Night’ on September 22.

Live dates are as follows:

Denmark Roskilde Festival (July 4)

Belgium Werchter Festival (5)

Paris Le Zenith (8)

Ireland Oxegen Festival (11)

Scotland T In The Park Festival (13)

London Brixton Academy (14)

Madrid Summercase Festival (18)

Barcelona Summercase Festival (19)

V Festival, Weston Park (August 16)

V Festival, Hylands Park (17)

Alice Cooper To Star In Boosh Goth Rock Musical?

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The Mighty Boosh have asked Alice Cooper to star in a goth-rock musical in the latest issue of Uncut magazine. The Boosh's glam rock lover, Noel Fielding appeared in ‘An Audience With' feature in this month's magazine asking: "I absolutely love Alice Cooper, and I wonder if he's ever considered ...

The Mighty Boosh have asked Alice Cooper to star in a goth-rock musical in the latest issue of Uncut magazine.

The Boosh’s glam rock lover, Noel Fielding appeared in ‘An Audience With’ feature in this month’s magazine asking:

“I absolutely love Alice Cooper, and I wonder if he’s ever considered writing an acid rock gothic musical? If we did one, would he co-star?”

If this isn’t bizarre enough rock legend Alice Cooper seems game enough to go ahead. He told Uncut magazine:

“I love those guys! I’m in England a lot, so I’m very aware of Little Britain and The Mighty Boosh. And I’d love to work with them!

“Actually, I do rehearse my performances like a Broadway show. Welcome To My Nightmare is basically about as close to a musical as you can get… so we’re always going to be right on verge of Broadway, just without the horns and the orchestra. Once you introduce an orchestra you’ve killed it. Make it rock! Make it loud!”

Cooper will release his 25th studio album, Along Came A Spider, on July 29.

Beck’s Modern Guilt – Read The Uncut Review!

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

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

All of our reviews feature a ‘submit your own review’ function – we would love to hear about what you’ve heard lately.

These albums are all set for release this week (July 02):

BECK – MODERN GUILT – 4* New label, old sound: Danger Mouse helms dreamy psych-pop on his 10th album

TRICKY – KNOWLE WEST BOY – 4* Nostalgic and accessible return to the Bristol council estate where he grew up

ELTON JOHN – ELTON JOHN/TUMBLEWEED CONNECTION

– 4*/5* Elton and Bernie’s double shot heard ‘round the world

RY COODER – I, FLATHEAD – 4* Final installment of Cooder’s “trilogy”, time-travelling back to ‘40s/’50s California. Complete with 53-page novella!

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

DAVID BOWIE – LIVE IN SANTA MONICA ‘72 – 4* Legendary bootleg finally gets an official release, remastered by the Dame himself

DIRTY PRETTY THINGS – ROMANCE AT SHORT NOTICE – 3* Full tilt second album from ex-Libertine

LITTLE FEAT AND FRIENDS – JOIN THE BAND – 3* All-star jam with the remaining Feat

THE WATSON TWINS – FIRE SONGS – 4* Winning Watsons exploit genetic advantage

SIGUR RÓS – WORKOUT HOLIDAY – 3* New tricks/old fallbacks from divine shoegazers

WHITE DENIM – WORKOUT HOLIDAY – 4* Psych dub garage? Texan mob go wild and weird

WEEZER – WEEZER (AKA ‘THE RED ALBUM’) – 4*Cuomo namechecks Rogaine and Judas Priest on improbably upbeat outing

DENNIS WILSON – PACIFIC BLUE + BAMBU (CARIBOU SESSIONS) – 5* A lost career collected: his solo masterpiece, plus it’s follow-up

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

WILD BEASTS – LIMBO, PANTO – 4* Ravishing stuff from foppish Lake District foursome

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

Beck – Modern Guilt

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Rich and varied though his career has been, of late the element of surprise has deserted Beck Hansen. At 37, he’s coasting comfortably into middle age, his place in the US alt.rock aristocracy assured. With each of his last three albums, however, he has drifted further from relevance and inched towards mediocrity. Admittedly, Beck on a bad day would still run rings around most of the competition, but given the listless nature of Guero and The Information, you get the feeling he’s run out of challenges – or ideas. And at the same time, if you keep giving your audience the same record, they’re going to get bored, too. The recent deluxe edition of 1996’s slacker milestone Odelay, when he seemed genuinely capable of anything, reminded listeners of his untamed brilliance, but also drew attention to the ground he failed to cover more than a decade later. So, a new way of doing things – that could be the main reason for rushing out Modern Guilt, his hugely likeable 10th studio album on which he whips through 10 songs in 34 minutes. Released over here by XL after his deal with Interscope expired, Beck is back on an independent label for the first time since 1993, and you suspect he relishes this freedom. That said, during his tenure on a major, it’s hard to imagine his artistic vision was ever compromised. Beck finished Modern Guilt midway through May after an intensive recording period working with Brian Burton, the hotshot producer best known as Danger Mouse and as the taller, slimmer half of Gnarls Barkley. “It was like trying to fit two years of songwriting into two-and-a-half months,” Beck has said. “I know I did at least 10 weeks with no days off, until four or five in the morning every night.” This workrate was too much even for Burton, one of the busiest men in showbusiness, who would often fade first and leave Beck to toil until the early hours, then hear the results the next day. This spring, new album releases by Gnarls Barkley, indie ensemble The Shortwave Set, blues rockers The Black Keys and trip hop diva Martina Topley-Bird have all been produced by Burton. While each has benefitted in some way from his prevailing obsession with late-’60s British psychedelic pop, Burton’s dalliance with Beck is by far the most fruitful. In spite of the album’s scuffed, fuzzy sheen, Beck’s songwriting is sharp and resourceful, his melodies sweet and economical – the title track canters to its sunny conclusion with lots of “la-la-la”s and strumming. If Nigel Godrich over-egged The Information, here, Burton’s back-to-basics approach has brought out the best in Beck: Modern Guilt mixes the slapdash lo-fi folk of 1994’s One Foot In The Grave with Midnite Vultures’ trippy funk. It may sound knocked-off, hurried even, but to get a record sounding as effortless as this, the pair packed hours of invention into songs like the sugary psych-out of “Profanity Prayers” or “Soul Of A Man”’s ripe Queens Of The Stone Age grind. There has always been a shade of Austin Powers to Beck’s more upbeat efforts – one thinks of “Pay No Mind” and its pastiche video – and on frisky rug-cutter “Gamma Ray” Beck sings of “these ice caps melting down” and the “transistor sound” over Carnaby Street chug and twang, his voice phasing across the track. “Chemtrails” – wait, is he concerned about the environment? – blends plaintive sighing and refrains about “too many people” with the kind of lolloping funk, tumbling drums and driving guitars that Ride mastered on Nowhere. Cat Power [aka Chan Marshall] features on two tracks, opener “Orphans” and the fiddle-laced folk of “Walls”, but her contribution is barely discernible. A good deal of Beck’s boho street jive lyrics are indecipherable, too, but on adventurous numbers such as “Replica”, on which drums flail against a descending piano figure, it’s best to let his dulcet murmur guide you across the track. Affecting closer “Volcano” evokes the quicksilver melancholy of Elliott Smith. “I’ve been drifting on this wave so long, I don’t know if it’s already crashed on the shore”, Beck croaks before the song unfurls into one of the prettiest pieces he’s produced in years. So Beck is finally fun again, and you suspect the person most surprised by how well Modern Guilt turned out is the guy who made it. PIERS MARTIN

Rich and varied though his career has been, of late the element of surprise has deserted Beck Hansen. At 37, he’s coasting comfortably into middle age, his place in the US alt.rock aristocracy assured. With each of his last three albums, however, he has drifted further from relevance and inched towards mediocrity. Admittedly, Beck on a bad day would still run rings around most of the competition, but given the listless nature of Guero and The Information, you get the feeling he’s run out of challenges – or ideas.

And at the same time, if you keep giving your audience the same record, they’re going to get bored, too. The recent deluxe edition of 1996’s slacker milestone Odelay, when he seemed genuinely capable of anything, reminded listeners of his untamed brilliance, but also drew attention to the ground he failed to cover more than a decade later. So, a new way of doing things – that could be the main reason for rushing out Modern Guilt, his hugely likeable 10th studio album on which he whips through 10 songs in 34 minutes.

Released over here by XL after his deal with Interscope expired, Beck is back on an independent label for the first time since 1993, and you suspect he relishes this freedom. That said, during his tenure on a major, it’s hard to imagine his artistic vision was ever compromised.

Beck finished Modern Guilt midway through May after an intensive recording period working with Brian Burton, the hotshot producer best known as Danger Mouse and as the taller, slimmer half of Gnarls Barkley.

“It was like trying to fit two years of songwriting into two-and-a-half months,” Beck has said. “I know I did at least 10 weeks with no days off, until four or five in the morning every night.” This workrate was too much even for Burton, one of the busiest men in showbusiness, who would often fade first and leave Beck to toil until the early hours, then hear the results the next day.

This spring, new album releases by Gnarls Barkley, indie ensemble The Shortwave Set, blues rockers The Black Keys and trip hop diva Martina Topley-Bird have all been produced by Burton. While each has benefitted in some way from his prevailing obsession with late-’60s British psychedelic pop, Burton’s dalliance with Beck is by far the most fruitful.

In spite of the album’s scuffed, fuzzy sheen, Beck’s songwriting is sharp and resourceful, his melodies sweet and economical – the title track canters to its sunny conclusion with lots of “la-la-la”s and strumming. If Nigel Godrich over-egged The Information, here, Burton’s back-to-basics approach has brought out the best in Beck: Modern Guilt mixes the slapdash lo-fi folk of 1994’s One Foot In The Grave with Midnite Vultures’ trippy funk. It may sound knocked-off, hurried even, but to get a record sounding as effortless as this, the pair packed hours of invention into songs like the sugary psych-out of “Profanity Prayers” or “Soul Of A Man”’s ripe Queens Of The Stone Age grind.

There has always been a shade of Austin Powers to Beck’s more upbeat efforts – one thinks of “Pay No Mind” and its pastiche video – and on frisky rug-cutter “Gamma Ray” Beck sings of “these ice caps melting down” and the “transistor sound” over Carnaby Street chug and twang, his voice phasing across the track. “Chemtrails” – wait, is he concerned about the environment? – blends plaintive sighing and refrains about “too many people” with the kind of lolloping funk, tumbling drums and driving guitars that Ride mastered on Nowhere.

Cat Power [aka Chan Marshall] features on two tracks, opener “Orphans” and the fiddle-laced folk of “Walls”, but her contribution is barely discernible. A good deal of Beck’s boho street jive lyrics are indecipherable, too, but on adventurous numbers such as “Replica”, on which drums flail against a descending piano figure, it’s best to let his dulcet murmur guide you across the track.

Affecting closer “Volcano” evokes the quicksilver melancholy of Elliott Smith. “I’ve been drifting on this wave so long, I don’t know if it’s already crashed on the shore”, Beck croaks before the song unfurls into one of the prettiest pieces he’s produced in years.

So Beck is finally fun again, and you suspect the person most surprised by how well Modern Guilt turned out is the guy who made it.

PIERS MARTIN

Ian Curtis Memorial Stolen

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A memorial stone for Ian Curtis has been stolen from his hometown of Macclesfield. The shrine to the Joy Division star, who died in 1980, is visited by thousands of fans every year. Detectives said the stone was taken sometime between Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday morning, and are appealing for witnesses. A police spokesman said: "There is no CCTV in the area and there are no apparent leads as to who is responsible for the theft. "This is a very unusual theft and I am confident that someone locally will have knowledge about who is responsible or where the memorial stone is at present." Control, the Ian Curtis biopic released in 2007, and the documentary film Joy Division show the continued interest in the cult figure. Curtis was 23 when he hanged himself in the kitchen of his Macclesfield home in May 1980, shortly before the band were due to go on tour in the US.

A memorial stone for Ian Curtis has been stolen from his hometown of Macclesfield.

The shrine to the Joy Division star, who died in 1980, is visited by thousands of fans every year.

Detectives said the stone was taken sometime between Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday morning, and are appealing for witnesses.

A police spokesman said: “There is no CCTV in the area and there are no apparent leads as to who is responsible for the theft.

“This is a very unusual theft and I am confident that someone locally will have knowledge about who is responsible or where the memorial stone is at present.”

Control, the Ian Curtis biopic released in 2007, and the documentary film Joy Division show the continued interest in the cult figure.

Curtis was 23 when he hanged himself in the kitchen of his Macclesfield home in May 1980, shortly before the band were due to go on tour in the US.

Tricky – Knowle West Boy

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2008 has been the year that the much-maligned sub-genre of trip hop was reborn, its leading practitioners returning to the public eye, heralded like long-lost war veterans. Massive Attack have taken over London’s South Bank Centre to curate the Meltdown festival; Portishead have released the finest and most uncompromising album of their career; now fellow Bristolian Tricky is back with his best album in at least a decade. The irony is that where Portishead’s Third – with its paranoid sonic barrage of primal drones, arrhythmic bumps and discordant squeals –attracted critical praise, those exact tropes garnered Tricky critical opprobrium a decade ago. His 1998 album Angels With Dirty Faces saw him laying bare his fury, paranoia and night terror, and matching it with a suitably creepy and dislocated musical backing. It alienated fans of Tricky’s solo debut Maxinquaye, and since then his albums have been a messy compromise of mainstream US hip hop, heavy rock and tinkering where even he sounded bored. Five years after the damp squib that was Vulnerable, Tricky returns with Knowle West Boy, a concept album named after the Bristol neighbourhood where he grew up. For the man who has spent more than a decade in New York and then Los Angeles, it’s a strangely nostalgic and fondly remembered account of his “white trash ghetto”. It sees him doing what he’s always done – putting a host of punk, dancehall and hip hop influences through a skunk-addled filter – but this time those influences have been reassembled in a much more coherent way. Gone are the dark, monochordal dirges, to be replaced by proper, well-structured songs – and a much needed splash of sunlight. It’s as if the exiled Tricky is looking upon the signifiers of his childhood – dole queues, council housing, social decay – with a sense of pride and longing. Absence, in this case, clearly makes the art grow fonder. The opening track, “Puppy Toy”, is Tricky taking the piss out of himself, a swaggering, major-key blues shuffle set in a Bristol pub where an obnoxious drunk (played by Tricky in a Barry Adamson-style baritone narration) tries it on with a younger girl (played by Alex Mills), who gives as good as she gets. “C’Mon Baby” is another tale of failed courtship, an Aerosmith-style stomper undercut by Tricky’s self-loathing persona. “School Gates” is a grim (and apparently true) tale of teenage pregnancy, told from the male and female points of view, but even this Ken Loach-style social realism is given an uplifting emotional gravitas by the use of the same 6/8 guitar vamp as John Lennon’s “Working Class Hero”. Best of all is the lead single “Council Estate”, a football terrace chant set to a thrilling digital punk racket. At the end of each chorus, after Tricky wails about the joys of childhood hooliganism (“you can be who you be ’cos you’re not who you are/remember bwoy you’re a superstar”), the wall of distortion drops out to reveal a series of metallic judders and a ghostly, shivering, female voice, the flipside of that anti-social delinquency. The album also revisits Tricky’s golden age. There are strong female voices offering a counterpoint to his dystopian mumbles (particularly on the coma-paced “Past Mistake”, which features the French Moroccan singer Lubua, and on the glam rock stomper “Veronica”, which features the Italian vocalist of the same name); there is a curiously punky take on ragga (witness “Bacative” and “Baligala”, which feature Jamaican New Yorker Rodigan on vocals); there is also a hilariously inappropriate cover version (in this case, Kylie’s “Slow”). But the cover version here betrays a telling change of direction. The man who subverted Public Enemy’s “Cold Steel”, Eric B & Rakim’s “Lyrics Of Fury” and The Cure’s “Love Cats” by getting young women to sing them here does the exact opposite with “Slow”; Tricky plays the rock pig, transforming Kylie’s ethereally sensual lyrics into sleazy boasting. It’s as close as he has ever got to a joke. JOHN LEWIS

2008 has been the year that the much-maligned sub-genre of trip hop was reborn, its leading practitioners returning to the public eye, heralded like long-lost war veterans. Massive Attack have taken over London’s South Bank Centre to curate the Meltdown festival; Portishead have released the finest and most uncompromising album of their career; now fellow Bristolian Tricky is back with his best album in at least a decade.

The irony is that where Portishead’s Third – with its paranoid sonic barrage of primal drones, arrhythmic bumps and discordant squeals –attracted critical praise, those exact tropes garnered Tricky critical opprobrium a decade ago. His 1998 album Angels With Dirty Faces saw him laying bare his fury, paranoia and night terror, and matching it with a suitably creepy and dislocated musical backing. It alienated fans of Tricky’s solo debut Maxinquaye, and since then his albums have been a messy compromise of mainstream US hip hop, heavy rock and tinkering where even he sounded bored.

Five years after the damp squib that was Vulnerable, Tricky returns with Knowle West Boy, a concept album named after the Bristol neighbourhood where he grew up. For the man who has spent more than a decade in New York and then Los Angeles, it’s a strangely nostalgic and fondly remembered account of his “white trash ghetto”. It sees him doing what he’s always done – putting a host of punk, dancehall and hip hop influences through a skunk-addled filter – but this time those influences have been reassembled in a much more coherent way.

Gone are the dark, monochordal dirges, to be replaced by proper, well-structured songs – and a much needed splash of sunlight. It’s as if the exiled Tricky is looking upon the signifiers of his childhood – dole queues, council housing, social decay – with a sense of pride and longing. Absence, in this case, clearly makes the art grow fonder.

The opening track, “Puppy Toy”, is Tricky taking the piss out of himself, a swaggering, major-key blues shuffle set in a Bristol pub where an obnoxious drunk (played by Tricky in a Barry Adamson-style baritone narration) tries it on with a younger girl (played by Alex Mills), who gives as good as she gets. “C’Mon Baby” is another tale of failed courtship, an Aerosmith-style stomper undercut by Tricky’s self-loathing persona. “School Gates” is a grim (and apparently true) tale of teenage pregnancy, told from the male and female points of view, but even this Ken Loach-style social realism is given an uplifting emotional gravitas by the use of the same 6/8 guitar vamp as John Lennon’s “Working Class Hero”.

Best of all is the lead single “Council Estate”, a football terrace chant set to a thrilling digital punk racket. At the end of each chorus, after Tricky wails about the joys of childhood hooliganism (“you can be who you be ’cos you’re not who you are/remember bwoy you’re a superstar”), the wall of distortion drops out to reveal a series of metallic judders and a ghostly, shivering, female voice, the flipside of that anti-social delinquency.

The album also revisits Tricky’s golden age. There are strong female voices offering a counterpoint to his dystopian mumbles (particularly on the coma-paced “Past Mistake”, which features the French Moroccan singer Lubua, and on the glam rock stomper “Veronica”, which features the Italian vocalist of the same name); there is a curiously punky take on ragga (witness “Bacative” and “Baligala”, which feature Jamaican New Yorker Rodigan on vocals); there is also a hilariously inappropriate cover version (in this case, Kylie’s “Slow”). But the cover version here betrays a telling change of direction. The man who subverted Public Enemy’s “Cold Steel”, Eric B & Rakim’s “Lyrics Of Fury” and The Cure’s “Love Cats” by getting young women to sing them here does the exact opposite with “Slow”; Tricky plays the rock pig, transforming Kylie’s ethereally sensual lyrics into sleazy boasting. It’s as close as he has ever got to a joke.

JOHN LEWIS

Nick Cave and Bobby Gillespie On Live Sessions Film

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Nick Cave and Primal Screams’ Bobby Gillespie have collaborated for 4 exclusive videos of live tracks, taken from Grinderman’s debut album Dig! Lazarus! Gig!. 'Honey Bee' is one of four songs recorded for the Treacle Sessions, is available now on their website and their myspace page, which wi...

Nick Cave and Primal ScreamsBobby Gillespie have collaborated for 4 exclusive videos of live tracks, taken from Grinderman’s debut album Dig! Lazarus! Gig!.

‘Honey Bee’ is one of four songs recorded for the Treacle Sessions, is available now on their website and their myspace page, which will then be followed by ‘When My Love Comes Down’ (June 27), ‘Man In The Moon’ (August 1) and ‘No Pussy Blues’ (August 29).

The band have also announced a string of live shows this summer. With only three previous festival dates in the UK, Grinderman will make an appearance at the Uncut sponsored Latitude festival.

Grinderman will play:

Roksdile, Denmark (July 4)

Eurockeennes France (5)

Rock Werchter Belgium (6)

Summercase Barcelona Spain (18)

Summercase Madrid Spain (19)

Latitude UK (20)

Oya Festival Norway (August 6)

Way Out West Sweden (8)

Connect Festival Scotland (30)

Electric Picnic Ireland (31)

Elton John – Elton John/Tumbleweed Connection

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Back in January of 1970, with the ’60s having ended and the ’70s yet to take shape, a generation wondered who would step forward to fill the massive hole in the pop universe where The Beatles had been. At that moment, a bespectacled, portly youngster with a big voice, elevated piano chops and a force-of-nature performing persona was recording the album that would thrust him into that void a few months hence. The key event occurred in August of that year, when 23-year-old Elton John, backed by bassist Dee Murray and drummer Nigel Olsson, played his first US shows at LA’s Troubadour in front of a packed, star-studded and media-saturated crowd. By that time, people were already hailing “Your Song”, which was then getting airplay as an album track on FM radio, as a modern-day standard, so Elton had some momentum. But when the word spread about the by-all-accounts mind-blowing Troubadour performances, his ascent to stardom was nearly instantaneous. And to think, he was contemplating “packing it all in and joining Jeff Beck” just a month before the Troubadour gig. Nonetheless, Elton was a perplexing musical puzzle, with the tunefully sentimental piano balladry of “Your Song” indicating the arrival of a major pop star, the pomp and poetic imagery of “First Episode At Hienton” and “Sixty Years On” putting him alongside Procol Harum in the classical-rock arena, and the careening “Take Me To The Pilot” showing him to be a kick-ass rocker in the style of the Tulsan dynamo Leon Russell. As it turned out, Elton’s talent and ambition, furthered by an inspired supporting cast, enabled him to transcend easy categorisation, evidenced by the fact that Elton John was cut live off the floor – vocals, rhythm tracks orchestrations, the works – in one week. He was on a roll that would continue full throttle through the first half of the ’70s, during which he would write and record no less than nine studio albums, all with Bernie Taupin providing the lyrics and Gus Dudgeon producing. The subsequent Tumbleweed Connection, fortuitously recorded prior to Elton’s commercial explosion and thus dictated only by the artistic impulses of the artist and his creative team – Taupin, Dudgeon and string arranger Paul Buckmaster (who’d teamed with Dudgeon on David Bowie’s “Space Oddity”) – presented a far more unified musical and thematic vision. Not only that, but the LP was created as an album of interlocking songs, with no thought given to radio singles (an utterly pure situation that would be impossible for them to repeat). Inspired by The Band’s Music From Big Pink, Tumbleweed… was born out of Taupin’s fascination with Americana, largely inspired by western movies, as John reacted to the sheaf of lyrics he was given with synergistic flights of musical fancy. More than at any time thereafter, the Taupin-John two-staged creative process resulted in a magnificently cohesive album, from the scene-setting “Ballad Of A Well-Known Gun” through the memorable “Country Comforts” to the stunning three-stage payoff of “Amoreena”, “Talking Old Soldiers” and “Burn Down The Mission”. The fact that neither of the partners had yet set foot in America at the time underscores the material’s vibrancy; indeed, Tumbleweed… is as much a free-flowing fantasia as Bowie’s subsequent Ziggy Stardust, teeming with melodic and narrative connections, along with the psychological underpinning of the relationship between youth and age, particularly fathers and sons, first hinted at on “Sixty Years On” and here examined with delirious obsessiveness. Whether fans will opt to upgrade from the already expanded 2004 reissues of the two LPs depends on their need for a mass of capably performed and recorded piano demos, 12 on Elton…, five on Tumbleweed… or the far more seductive full-band tracks cut live for various BBC sessions – three apiece on both albums’ second discs. The previously unissued performances of “Ballad Of A Well-Known Gun”, “Burn Down The Mission” and “Amoreena” are every bit as riveting as the Mick Ronson-fuelled outtake of “Madman Across The Water”, retained from the previous Tumbleweed… edition. “Ballad…” also gets a delightfully full-on country-rock treatment that sounds like Elton fronting New Riders Of The Purple Sage. Of the two reissues, my guess is this is the one you won’t be able to live without. That’s because the expanded Tumbleweed Connection represents that rare occurrence when perfection itself is improved upon. BUD SCOPPA

Back in January of 1970, with the ’60s having ended and the ’70s yet to take shape, a generation wondered who would step forward to fill the massive hole in the pop universe where The Beatles had been. At that moment, a bespectacled, portly youngster with a big voice, elevated piano chops and a force-of-nature performing persona was recording the album that would thrust him into that void a few months hence.

The key event occurred in August of that year, when 23-year-old Elton John, backed by bassist Dee Murray and drummer Nigel Olsson, played his first US shows at LA’s Troubadour in front of a packed, star-studded and media-saturated crowd. By that time, people were already hailing “Your Song”, which was then getting airplay as an album track on FM radio, as a modern-day standard, so Elton had some momentum. But when the word spread about the by-all-accounts mind-blowing Troubadour performances, his ascent to stardom was nearly instantaneous. And to think, he was contemplating “packing it all in and joining Jeff Beck” just a month before the Troubadour gig.

Nonetheless, Elton was a perplexing musical puzzle, with the tunefully sentimental piano balladry of “Your Song” indicating the arrival of a major pop star, the pomp and poetic imagery of “First Episode At Hienton” and “Sixty Years On” putting him alongside Procol Harum in the classical-rock arena, and the careening “Take Me To The Pilot” showing him to be a kick-ass rocker in the style of the Tulsan dynamo Leon Russell. As it turned out, Elton’s talent and ambition, furthered by an inspired supporting cast, enabled him to transcend easy categorisation, evidenced by the fact that Elton John was cut live off the floor – vocals, rhythm tracks orchestrations, the works – in one week. He was on a roll that would continue full throttle through the first half of the ’70s, during which he would write and record no less than nine studio albums, all with Bernie Taupin providing the lyrics and Gus Dudgeon producing.

The subsequent Tumbleweed Connection, fortuitously recorded prior to Elton’s commercial explosion and thus dictated only by the artistic impulses of the artist and his creative team – Taupin, Dudgeon and string arranger Paul Buckmaster (who’d teamed with Dudgeon on David Bowie’s “Space Oddity”) – presented a far more unified musical and thematic vision. Not only that, but the LP was created as an album of interlocking songs, with no thought given to radio singles (an utterly pure situation that would be impossible for them to repeat).

Inspired by The Band’s Music From Big Pink, Tumbleweed… was born out of Taupin’s fascination with Americana, largely inspired by western movies, as John reacted to the sheaf of lyrics he was given with synergistic flights of musical fancy.

More than at any time thereafter, the Taupin-John two-staged creative process resulted in a magnificently cohesive album, from the scene-setting “Ballad Of A Well-Known Gun” through the memorable “Country Comforts” to the stunning three-stage payoff of “Amoreena”, “Talking Old Soldiers” and “Burn Down The Mission”. The fact that neither of the partners had yet set foot in America at the time underscores the material’s vibrancy; indeed, Tumbleweed… is as much a free-flowing fantasia as Bowie’s subsequent Ziggy Stardust, teeming with melodic and narrative connections, along with the psychological underpinning of the relationship between youth and age, particularly fathers and sons, first hinted at on “Sixty Years On” and here examined with delirious obsessiveness.

Whether fans will opt to upgrade from the already expanded 2004 reissues of the two LPs depends on their need for a mass of capably performed and recorded piano demos, 12 on Elton…, five on Tumbleweed… or the far more seductive full-band tracks cut live for various BBC sessions – three apiece on both albums’ second discs. The previously unissued performances of “Ballad Of A Well-Known Gun”, “Burn Down The Mission” and “Amoreena” are every bit as riveting as the Mick Ronson-fuelled outtake of “Madman Across The Water”, retained from the previous Tumbleweed… edition. “Ballad…” also gets a delightfully full-on country-rock treatment that sounds like Elton fronting New Riders Of The Purple Sage. Of the two reissues, my guess is this is the one you won’t be able to live without. That’s because the expanded Tumbleweed Connection represents that rare occurrence when perfection itself is improved upon.

BUD SCOPPA