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Ry Cooder – I, Flathead

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Sometimes what is most exotic is what you unearth in your own back yard – or at least in your own recent cultural past. After helping put “world music” on the rock’n’roll map with Buena Vista Social Club, Ry Cooder has lately entered the third phase of a career characterised by fascination with pre-rock pop culture: rediscovering America (and Americana) on his most recent albums Chávez Ravine, My Name Is Buddy and now I, Flathead. Leaving Cuba and Timbuktu for the South LA suburbs of Norwalk and South Gate may seem a strange move, but exploring a vanished California seems to have reinvigorated a musician who was always as much archaeologist-anthropologist as singer-writer-guitarist. The historical sweep of Cooder’s SoCal “trilogy” is breathtaking. A short recap for those joining us late. Chávez Ravine examined a shameful episode in LA’s civic history, shining a light on the neglected music of Mex-Angeles. My Name Is Buddy celebrated the political radicalisation of folk and bluegrass. I, Flathead, meanwhile grapples with the blue-collar white California of the ’50s and ’60s by imagining a redneck musician called Kash Buk, and his bar band, The Klowns. “Hot rod cars and country songs,” Cooder notes of the album’s milieu in his press release; “honky tonks and dirty blondes…” There’s plenty of all those here. Kash holds down a residency at the Green Door in Vernon, races dragsters out in the dry desert lakes ’round Ridgecrest and Barstow, and winds up alone on an oxygen tank in an Anaheim trailer. On My Name Is Buddy’s “Three Chords And The Truth”, Cooder revealed that Kash had a fleeting opportunity to join Ray Price’s band; on I, Flathead’s “5000 Country Music Songs” he rues that missed chance but accepts the essential failure of his music and his life. Country’n’western – make that country boogie’n’western swing – sets the essential tone for I, Flathead. Where Buddy hymned Hank Williams, Flathead’s “Johnny Cash” is a brilliant homage to the Man in Black that references his songs (including “Hey Porter”, covered decades ago on Into The Purple Valley) while snaring what they meant to teenage Ry as he dreamed of Big River while gazing out on West Pico Boulevard. “Steel Guitar Heaven” pictures a corner of the afterlife where pedal-steel heroes like Paul Bixby and Joaquin Murphy mellow out with the likes of Spade Cooley against a backdrop of “nylon-pile wall-to-wall carpeting”. Cooley, imprisoned in 1961 for the drunken murder of his second wife, returns later as “Spayed Kooley”, the mutt who keeps Buk company in his dotage. The album is also permeated by the mariachi and ranchero flavours we recall from Chávez. Opener “Drive Like I Never Been Hurt” starts tentatively over a lurching baion beat before cresting in glorious wafts of horns courtesy of Mariachi Los Camperos. “Can I Smoke In Here?” is all loungey guitar and cicada shakers as Kash Buk eases himself onto a barstool and makes overtures to a singularly unimpressed female. The swayingly funky, Latin-infused “Pink-O Boogie”, with Jim Keltner on drums, is a dance that “Republicans just can’t do”. “Fernando Sez” canters along like Lalo Guerrero’s tracks on Chávez, concluding in a long and involved dialogue between a cash-strapped Buk and the song’s eponymous Cadillac dealer. The wistful ranchero of “Filipino Dance Hall Girl” features longtime Cooder mainstay Flaco Jiménez on accordion. With its floating horns and reverbed Fender twang, “Flathead One More Time” recalls Chávez’s spooky “El U.F.O. Cayo” as Kash looks back on his dragster youth and recalls lost pals like “Whiskey Bob down on Thunder Road”. Chávez’s Juliette Commagere makes a reappearance on the coda-like “Little Trona Girl”. The whole album reflects the intermingling of Californian communities, the Los Angeles the world doesn’t know or care to see. These are unique records, mining a fascination with a lost world that few writers save Mike Davis, author of City Of Quartz would even think to look at. They’re dissertations in musical form, ruminations on what’s happened to California and the broader America around it from a man who’s read everyone from Carey McWilliams to Kevin Starr. Yet they’re as mischievously funny, as playfully political, as they are painstakingly scholarly. (Note the slyly sardonic reference to “homeland security” on “Spayed Kooley”.) Plus they sound great: having long disowned the immaculate “Burbank” sound that established him among the Warner Brothers elite in the ’70s, Cooder’s textures now seem to glide and unfurl, his guitars glowing and shimmering through his vintage valve amps. His singing, too, remains infectious: as Kash he sings and indeed speaks in a cod-Southern voice that’s part-Band and part grizzled-country. The accompanying novella is a more than worthy companion-piece to the music. Cooder writes superbly of the strange marginal world of California salt-flat towns like Trona, while the intertwined narratives of Kash Buk, dragster girl Roxanne, and the alien Shakey – not to mention the transcribed interviews with Kash, his stripper ex Donna, and The Klowns’ steel player, Loren “Sonny” Kloer – are absorbing and often sublimely funny. As rivetingly out-of-step with the modern age as Bob Dylan or Tom Waits, Ry Cooder becomes more vital the more he withdraws from the public gaze. Bemused by the dumb celebrity culture we’ve allowed to spread like a plague, he ploughs his own furrow without caring if anyone follows. Along with old Burbank chum Randy Newman, he remains a key presence among the grumpier elder statesmen of West Coast rock. We should salute his irascible talent – and heed his warnings about where our world is headed – while we still can. BARNEY HOSKYNS

Sometimes what is most exotic is what you unearth in your own back yard – or at least in your own recent cultural past. After helping put “world music” on the rock’n’roll map with Buena Vista Social Club, Ry Cooder has lately entered the third phase of a career characterised by fascination with pre-rock pop culture: rediscovering America (and Americana) on his most recent albums Chávez Ravine, My Name Is Buddy and now I, Flathead.

Leaving Cuba and Timbuktu for the South LA suburbs of Norwalk and South Gate may seem a strange move, but exploring a vanished California seems to have reinvigorated a musician who was always as much archaeologist-anthropologist as singer-writer-guitarist. The historical sweep of Cooder’s SoCal “trilogy” is breathtaking.

A short recap for those joining us late. Chávez Ravine examined a shameful episode in LA’s civic history, shining a light on the neglected music of Mex-Angeles. My Name Is Buddy celebrated the political radicalisation of folk and bluegrass. I, Flathead, meanwhile grapples with the blue-collar white California of the ’50s and ’60s by imagining a redneck musician called Kash Buk, and his bar band, The Klowns.

“Hot rod cars and country songs,” Cooder notes of the album’s milieu in his press release; “honky tonks and dirty blondes…” There’s plenty of all those here.

Kash holds down a residency at the Green Door in Vernon, races dragsters out in the dry desert lakes ’round Ridgecrest and Barstow, and winds up alone on an oxygen tank in an Anaheim trailer. On My Name Is Buddy’s “Three Chords And The Truth”, Cooder revealed that Kash had a fleeting opportunity to join Ray Price’s band; on I, Flathead’s “5000 Country Music Songs” he rues that missed chance but accepts the essential failure of his music and his life.

Country’n’western – make that country boogie’n’western swing – sets the essential tone for I, Flathead. Where Buddy hymned Hank Williams, Flathead’s “Johnny Cash” is a brilliant homage to the Man in Black that references his songs (including “Hey Porter”, covered decades ago on Into The Purple Valley) while snaring what they meant to teenage Ry as he dreamed of Big River while gazing out on West Pico Boulevard.

“Steel Guitar Heaven” pictures a corner of the afterlife where pedal-steel heroes like Paul Bixby and Joaquin Murphy mellow out with the likes of Spade Cooley against a backdrop of “nylon-pile wall-to-wall carpeting”. Cooley, imprisoned in 1961 for the drunken murder of his second wife, returns later as “Spayed Kooley”, the mutt who keeps Buk company in his dotage.

The album is also permeated by the mariachi and ranchero flavours we recall from Chávez. Opener “Drive Like I Never Been Hurt” starts tentatively over a lurching baion beat before cresting in glorious wafts of horns courtesy of Mariachi Los Camperos. “Can I Smoke In Here?” is all loungey guitar and cicada shakers as Kash Buk eases himself onto a barstool and makes overtures to a singularly unimpressed female. The swayingly funky, Latin-infused “Pink-O Boogie”, with Jim Keltner on drums, is a dance that “Republicans just can’t do”.

“Fernando Sez” canters along like

Lalo Guerrero’s tracks on Chávez, concluding in a long and involved dialogue between a cash-strapped Buk and the song’s eponymous Cadillac dealer.

The wistful ranchero of “Filipino Dance Hall Girl” features longtime Cooder mainstay Flaco Jiménez on accordion. With its floating horns and reverbed Fender twang, “Flathead One More Time” recalls Chávez’s spooky “El U.F.O. Cayo” as Kash looks back on his dragster youth and recalls lost pals like “Whiskey Bob down on Thunder Road”. Chávez’s Juliette Commagere makes a reappearance on the coda-like “Little Trona Girl”.

The whole album reflects the intermingling of Californian communities, the Los Angeles the world doesn’t know or care to see.

These are unique records, mining a fascination with a lost world that few writers save Mike Davis, author of City Of Quartz would even think to look at. They’re dissertations in musical form, ruminations on what’s happened to California and the broader America around it from a man who’s read everyone from Carey McWilliams to Kevin Starr.

Yet they’re as mischievously funny, as playfully political, as they are painstakingly scholarly. (Note

the slyly sardonic reference to “homeland security” on “Spayed Kooley”.) Plus they sound great: having long disowned the immaculate “Burbank” sound that established him among the Warner Brothers elite in the ’70s, Cooder’s textures now seem to glide and unfurl, his guitars glowing and shimmering through his vintage valve amps. His singing, too, remains infectious: as Kash he sings and indeed speaks in a cod-Southern voice that’s part-Band and part grizzled-country.

The accompanying novella is a more than worthy companion-piece to the music. Cooder writes superbly of the strange marginal world of California salt-flat towns like Trona, while the intertwined narratives of Kash Buk, dragster girl Roxanne, and the alien Shakey – not to mention the transcribed interviews with Kash, his stripper ex Donna, and The Klowns’ steel player, Loren “Sonny” Kloer – are absorbing and often sublimely funny.

As rivetingly out-of-step with the modern age as Bob Dylan or Tom Waits, Ry Cooder becomes more vital the more he withdraws from the public gaze. Bemused by the dumb celebrity culture we’ve allowed to spread like a plague, he ploughs his own furrow without caring if anyone follows. Along with old Burbank chum Randy Newman, he remains a key presence among the grumpier elder statesmen of West Coast rock. We should salute his irascible talent – and heed his warnings about where our world is headed – while we still can.

BARNEY HOSKYNS

Countdown to Latitude: Black Lips

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Ah, the elusive Black Lips; a band I once chased around London in a black cab, trying to catch them live as they moved from one secret venue to another. I never caught up with them, which is why I'll be holding a vigil at the Sunrise stage on Sunday until I get to see the madness for myself. Th...

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Ah, the elusive Black Lips; a band I once chased around London in a black cab, trying to catch them live as they moved from one secret venue to another. I never caught up with them, which is why I’ll be holding a vigil at the Sunrise stage on Sunday until I get to see the madness for myself.

Primal Scream To Play Secret Gig

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Primal Scream will play a secret gig in Glasgow on July 7. The intimate show will be held at an undisclosed venue ahead of their headline show at T in the Park in the King Tut’s tent on Sunday night. The band release their 10th album, ‘Beautiful Future’ on July 21. Tickets for the show will...

Primal Scream will play a secret gig in Glasgow on July 7.

The intimate show will be held at an undisclosed venue ahead of their headline show at T in the Park in the King Tut’s tent on Sunday night.

The band release their 10th album, ‘Beautiful Future’ on July 21.

Tickets for the show will be given out to fans who enter a competition on www.primalscream.net, with the winner announced at the end of the week.

Byrds Legend To Judge International Talent Competition

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The Byrds and Flying Burrito Brothers’ Chris Hillman, Tom Waits, Jerry Lee Lewis and Lorretta Lyn are amongst the extraordinary lineup of musicians chosen to judge the International Songwriting Contest. They join Ray Davies, Robert Smith of The Cure, Chaka Khan, Black Francis, John Mayall and mus...

The Byrds and Flying Burrito Brothers’ Chris Hillman, Tom Waits, Jerry Lee Lewis and Lorretta Lyn are amongst the extraordinary lineup of musicians chosen to judge the International Songwriting Contest.

They join Ray Davies, Robert Smith of The Cure, Chaka Khan, Black Francis, John Mayall and music industry executives to decide who will win the top prize of $25,000.

“Judging the competition was a real pleasure,” said Robert Smith, explaining why he has returned to the judging panel.

“I was astounded at the quality and range of abilities on show – the originality, honesty, and depth of so many of the words, the charm, vivacity, and catchiness of the tunes, and the often staggering energy, skill, and intensity of the performances – the talent left me at times breathless!”

The competition aims to find the best new songwriters from all over the world with categories for Americana, Blues and Folk as well as Dance, Gospel, Jazz and Instrumental.

Entrants can submit as many tracks as they care to in one or more genres.

Depending on the category, submissions are judged on the basis of the following criteria: Creativity, Originality, Lyrics, Melody, and Arrangement.

The deadline for entries is July 15, see http://www.songwritingcompetition.com for details.

Richard Hawley Joins V Festival Bill

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Richard Hawley, Echo And The Bunnymen and Guillemots have all been added to the V Festival line-up. They join headliners Muse and The Verve at the dual-site festival held in Chelmsford and Staffordshire from August 16 - 17. Further additions to the line up include The Young Knives, The Long Blond...

Richard Hawley, Echo And The Bunnymen and Guillemots have all been added to the V Festival line-up.

They join headliners Muse and The Verve at the dual-site festival held in Chelmsford and Staffordshire from August 16 – 17.

Further additions to the line up include The Young Knives, The Long Blondes, Siouxsie Sioux, Roots Manuva, Goldie Lookin Chain and Noah And The Whale.

Young Knives make their return to the festival three years after winning the talent competition, Road to V when they were still an unsigned band in Ashby-de-la-Zouch.

“It was only a couple of years ago that the Young Knives won the ‘Road to V’ competition and now they return high up on the Virgin Mobile Union Stage bill,” said V Festival director Bob Angus.

“We’re thrilled to have them back as an established band.”

They join previously announced acts including Kings Of Leon, Amy Winehouse, Ian Brown, The Zutons, Duffy and Hot Chip.

Tickets for the V Festival, which is now in its 13th year, are still available.

The Best Albums Of 2008: Halftime Report

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It occurred to me this morning, in an anal sort of way, that we should probably talk about the best records of 2008's first six months. To that end, I've just been through my blog archive and come up with my ten favourites of the year up 'til the end of June. Plenty to choose from as usual (there's never such a thing as a bad year for music if you look hard enough, I always think), and I found nearly 40 albums that merit a mention. These, though, are looking to me like the best ten - this morning, at least. Rather pathetically, I haven't managed to put them in anything other than alphabetical order. . . 1.James Blackshaw - Litany Of Ashes (Tompkins Square) 2.Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever Ago (4AD) 3.Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!! (Mute) 4.Endless Boogie - Focus Level (No Quarter) 5.Howlin Rain - Magnificent Fiend (Birdman) 6.Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks - Real Emotional Trash (Domino) 7.Portishead - Third (Island) 8.The Raconteurs - Consolers Of The Lonely (XL) 9.Vampire Weekend - Vampire Weekend (XL) 10.Wild Beasts - Limbo, Panto (Domino) Send me your charts and we'll try and come to some kind of consensus. Remember: January to June only, so all votes for The Hold Steady will be cruelly and summarily discounted.

It occurred to me this morning, in an anal sort of way, that we should probably talk about the best records of 2008’s first six months. To that end, I’ve just been through my blog archive and come up with my ten favourites of the year up ’til the end of June.

The Coral Announce Acoustic London show

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The Coral have announced they will play a special, acoustic show at the London Coliseum, the home of the English National Opera. The intimate gig is rumoured to have some very special guests – keep checking www.uncut.co.uk for more details. Tickets go on sale to the general public at 9.30am on ...

The Coral have announced they will play a special, acoustic show at the London Coliseum, the home of the English National Opera.

The intimate gig is rumoured to have some very special guests – keep checking www.uncut.co.uk for more details.

Tickets go on sale to the general public at 9.30am on Friday (July 4) but The Coral website have provided a link for earlybird tickets, available from 9.30am tomorrow (July 3).

Meanwhile the band have confirmed they plan on releasing new material next year on their forthcoming singles album, which will feature a career-spanning collection of their releases.

The band are also playing a number of UK festival dates including a set in the Uncut arena at this year’s Latitude festival. See the Latitude blog for more lineup details.

The dates are:

Kent Lounge on the Farm Festival (July 3)

Suffolk, Lattitude Festival (17)

Leicester Summer Sundae Festival (August 8)

Argyll Connect Festival (30)

Isle of Wight Bestival (September 5)

Paul McCartney Reveals His Last Moments With George Harrison

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Paul McCartney has spoken about his relationship with George Harrison, describing the last moments they spent together before his death, in an exclusive interview in this month’s Uncut. “I sat with him for a few hours when he was in treatment just outside New York,” said McCartney. “He w...

Paul McCartney has spoken about his relationship with George Harrison, describing the last moments they spent together before his death, in an exclusive interview in this month’s Uncut.

“I sat with him for a few hours when he was in treatment just outside New York,” said McCartney. “He was about 10 days away from his death, as I recall. We joked about things – just amusing, nutty stuff. It was good. It was like we were dreaming. He was my little baby brother, almost, because I’d known him that long.”

“We held hands. It’s funny, even at the height of our friendship – as guys – you would never hold hands. It just wasn’t a Liverpool thing. But it was lovely.”

McCartney also speaks about their early days as students and how Harrison came to be in The Beatles.

“He pulled out his guitar and played ‘Raunchy’, and that was it – he was in the band. He was a bit too young, almost out of the age range for us, a little too baby-faced, but he was just a great player.”

The interview appears in the new August issue of Uncut magazine in an 11-page feature on ‘The Lonely Beatle’ alongside comments from Pattie Boyd, Michael Palin and Ravi Shankar.

BBC Radio 4 broadcast a lost interview with The Beatles today (July 1) after it was discovered in a south London garage. The recording was made for Scottish Television in 1964.

Michael Eavis picks Leonard Cohen as his Glastonbury highlight

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Michael Eavis might have said his goal was to "get the young people back" at this year's Glastonbury Festival – but it was veteran singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen who most impressed the 72-year-old organiser at this year's bash. Speaking to 'The Independent' today (Tuesday July 1), Eavis, who wa...

Michael Eavis might have said his goal was to “get the young people back” at this year’s Glastonbury Festival – but it was veteran singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen who most impressed the 72-year-old organiser at this year’s bash.

Speaking to ‘The Independent’ today (Tuesday July 1), Eavis, who watched Cohen’s Pyramid Stage set from the side of the stage on Sunday June 29, hailed the entire festival as a success, but singled the 73-year-old Canadian legend out for particular praise:

“Leonard Cohen was so polite and such a gentleman. He took his hat off every time he finished a song, and bowed to the audience.”

Predictably, the best-received song in Cohen‘s set was ‘Hallelujah’, the track which originally appeared on his 1984 album Various Positions, and gained a new lease of life when Jeff Buckley covered it on his acclaimed 1994 album ‘Grace’.

Beginning the song just as the sun was setting, Cohen delighted the crowd by changing the lyric, “I told the truth, I didn’t come here to fool ya” to “I told the truth, I didn’t come to Glastonbury to fool ya”. The crowd sang every chorus with Cohen, and gave him a massive ovation at the end.

Cohen’s set-list was:

‘Dance Me To The End Of Love’

‘The Future’

‘Ain’t No Cure For Love’

‘Bird On A Wire’

‘Everybody Knows’

‘Who By Fire’

‘Hey, That’s No Way To Say Goodbye’

‘So Long, Marianne’

‘Tower Of Song’

‘Suzanne’

‘Hallelujah’

‘Democracy’

‘I’m Your Man’

‘Closing Time’

‘Anthem’

‘First We Take Manhattan’

Countdown To Latitude: Martha Wainwright

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One day, I imagine turning up at a festival and being confronted by a dedicated Wainwright/McGarrigle And Related Folk Families stage. There’ll be Rufus and Loudon and Kate & Anna. There’ll be Rufus’ good friend Teddy Thompson, and maybe his mum and dad and sister. There could, ideally, be...

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One day, I imagine turning up at a festival and being confronted by a dedicated Wainwright/McGarrigle And Related Folk Families stage. There’ll be Rufus and Loudon and Kate & Anna. There’ll be Rufus’ good friend Teddy Thompson, and maybe his mum and dad and sister. There could, ideally, be Rufus’ other friend, Lorca Cohen, and her dad, the born-again road animal, Leonard.

Joan As Police Woman – Club Uncut, June 30, 2008

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It is, by most standards, quite an entrance. Joan Wasser arrives onstage at Club Uncut with a mug of tea in one hand, a bouquet of flowers in the other, and a pair of giant plastic sunglasses that appear to have some kind of beaklike noseguard attachment. They’re so preposterous, in fact, that Wasser can’t bring herself to sing in them. For the rest of the long, hot night of this Joan As Police Woman solo show (her bandmates are waiting for her in Florence), they’ll act as an occasional prop to add emphasis to her between-song chats. About Uncut, say, and what she always thinks of first when she hears the magazine’s name. . . Cocks. That’s what the name means to her. There is some discussion with the audience about comparative instances of circumcision on either side of the Atlantic, before Wasser brings the conversation to a close with what seems to be a recurring catchphrase: “DON’T GET INVOLVED WITH ME!” She’s funny, Joan Wasser – something that’s perhaps not immediately apparent from her excellent recent album, “To Survive”. That record - which I blogged about here – was in some aspects a document of how to keep on living after the deaths of loved ones (her boyfriend Jeff Buckley, and more recently, her mother). But live, Wasser manages to deliver emotionally resonant versions of the songs while not appearing conspicuously traumatised in the gaps between them. Watching her play these solemn, intense songs like “You Changed Me” and “To Be Loved”, stood over the piano, then joking about how a new track is “Yet another song that reads a blaring warning sign: ‘DON’T GET INVOLVED WITH ME!’”, I start thinking, perversely, about Amy Winehouse. I didn’t watch much of the Glastonbury coverage over the weekend, due mainly to a grim session on Friday night that involved The Fratellis, Estelle not doing her good songs, and the comic genius of We Are Scientists. I did, though, see Winehouse’s set on Saturday night, large parts of which I thought were excellent and indelibly moving, even though the impetus behind the emotional content was the not-entirely-sympathetic Blake Fielder-Civil. What made me think of this during the Joan As Police Woman show was how, like most performers, Wasser must have become in some ways hardened to the traumas that provoked her songs, thanks to performing them every night. This, really, is how people who revisit their angst as a job can cope, I suppose. And this is one crucial way that Amy Winehouse clearly can’t cope. Critics often – misguidedly, I think – want performers to put themselves through some terrible pain every time they sing a song, which isn’t exactly practical; as Craig Finn puts it in “Slapped Actress”, “Some nights it’s entertainment and some other nights it’s just work.” But when someone does involuntarily put themselves through it, as Winehouse did (while often singing superbly), those same critics are prissily offended by the visceral nature of the spectacle: as the procession of idiots who contribute to a thread on this board prove (the collective thoughts on Jay-Z, if you’re feeling brave, are even more offensive). Sorry, I digress. It bugs me. But anyway, Joan Wasser. I’m glad for her sake she can deal with these songs in a professional way that doesn’t lessen their power. I’m reminded often of Laura Nyro, which I expected. More invidiously, I can’t help thinking of Sin-É era Jeff Buckley when she plays songs like “Christobel”, “Hard White Wall”, “Eternal Flame” and “Holiday”; the way her voice becomes pinched, sobbing, staccato when it hits her upper register, sometimes. She’s at once manic and droll, she has a phenomenally sultry go at Jimi Hendrix’s “Fire”, and although I’ve never seen her play with her full band, I find it hard to imagine that the experience could be as warm, engaging, intimate and compelling as this. Fine show. Thanks for coming. Next up, the mighty White Denim on July 14: can’t wait for that one, either.

It is, by most standards, quite an entrance. Joan Wasser arrives onstage at Club Uncut with a mug of tea in one hand, a bouquet of flowers in the other, and a pair of giant plastic sunglasses that appear to have some kind of beaklike noseguard attachment. They’re so preposterous, in fact, that Wasser can’t bring herself to sing in them. For the rest of the long, hot night of this Joan As Police Woman solo show (her bandmates are waiting for her in Florence), they’ll act as an occasional prop to add emphasis to her between-song chats. About Uncut, say, and what she always thinks of first when she hears the magazine’s name. . .

Joan As Police Woman – Club Uncut, June 30, 2008

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It is, by most standards, quite an entrance. Joan Wasser arrives onstage at Club Uncut with a mug of tea in one hand, a bouquet of flowers in the other, and a pair of giant plastic sunglasses that appear to have some kind of beaklike noseguard attachment. They’re so preposterous, in fact, that Wasser can’t bring herself to sing in them. For the rest of the long, hot night of this Joan As Police Woman solo show (her bandmates are waiting for her in Florence), they’ll act as an occasional prop to add emphasis to her between-song chats. About Uncut, say, and what she always thinks of first when she hears the magazine’s name. . . Read on at Wild Mercury Sound.

It is, by most standards, quite an entrance. Joan Wasser arrives onstage at Club Uncut with a mug of tea in one hand, a bouquet of flowers in the other, and a pair of giant plastic sunglasses that appear to have some kind of beaklike noseguard attachment. They’re so preposterous, in fact, that Wasser can’t bring herself to sing in them. For the rest of the long, hot night of this Joan As Police Woman solo show (her bandmates are waiting for her in Florence), they’ll act as an occasional prop to add emphasis to her between-song chats. About Uncut, say, and what she always thinks of first when she hears the magazine’s name. . .

Lost’ Beatles Interview Broadcast After 30 Years

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A ‘lost’ interview with Paul McCartney and John Lennon from 1964 has been discovered in a south London garage. Originally recorded for Scottish TV, it had lay untouched for 30 years before it was found by Richard Jeffs. The nine-and-a-half-minute interview will be broadcast today (July 1) on BBC Radio 4, and will be available to stream online for the next week. In it Lennon explains how he met McCartney at a village fete near Liverpool and goes into how the pair write songs together: "We write them on an old piano, anything that's lying around," Lennon says. "Normally we just sit down and bash it out," adds McCartney.

A ‘lost’ interview with Paul McCartney and John Lennon from 1964 has been discovered in a south London garage.

Originally recorded for Scottish TV, it had lay untouched for 30 years before it was found by Richard Jeffs.

The nine-and-a-half-minute interview will be broadcast today (July 1) on BBC Radio 4, and will be available to stream online for the next week.

In it Lennon explains how he met McCartney at a village fete near Liverpool and goes into how the pair write songs together:

“We write them on an old piano, anything that’s lying around,” Lennon says. “Normally we just sit down and bash it out,” adds McCartney.

The Verve Giveaway New Song

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The Verve are offering fans a chance to download an exclusive free song over six weeks before the release of their forthcoming album. The track, 'Mover', is available to download from www.vervedownload.com for a few days and will not appear on their new album, Four due for release on August 18. F...

The Verve are offering fans a chance to download an exclusive free song over six weeks before the release of their forthcoming album.

The track, ‘Mover’, is available to download from www.vervedownload.com for a few days and will not appear on their new album, Four due for release on August 18.

Fresh from their headline performance which closed Glastonbury, The Verve will play T in the Park and V festival this summer.

The dates are:

T In The Park Kinross (July 11)

V Festival Weston Park (August 16)

V Festival Hylands Park (17)

Best Beatles’ Song Debate Gets Political

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‘Strawberry Fields’, ‘All My Loving’ and ‘The Long and Winding Road’ have been nominated as the best Beatles' songs by British political leaders. In an interview with the Liverpool Daily Post, Gordon Brown picked ‘All My Loving’: “This was my early favourite because it was the first I learnt to play on the piano when my parents sent me for lessons when I was young.” Leader of the Conservatives David Cameron, a “McCartney fan”, favoured ‘The Long and Winding Road’. “It has a wonderful melody and emotion and pretty much sums up the life of the Leader of the Opposition.” Nick Clegg chose the ‘A Day in the Life’, which “still sounds innovative and radical”. Alistair Darling, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, reminisced on the psychedelic classic ‘Strawberry Fields Forever’. “It reminds me of the 1960s at their best. In the words and music they are describing real life, unlike so many other songs of that time.” The mind boggles.

‘Strawberry Fields’, ‘All My Loving’ and ‘The Long and Winding Road’ have been nominated as the best Beatles‘ songs by British political leaders.

In an interview with the Liverpool Daily Post, Gordon Brown picked ‘All My Loving’: “This was my early favourite because it was the first I learnt to play on the piano when my parents sent me for lessons when I was young.”

Leader of the Conservatives David Cameron, a “McCartney fan”, favoured ‘The Long and Winding Road’. “It has a wonderful melody and emotion and pretty much sums up the life of the Leader of the Opposition.”

Nick Clegg chose the ‘A Day in the Life’, which “still sounds innovative and radical”.

Alistair Darling, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, reminisced on the psychedelic classic ‘Strawberry Fields Forever’. “It reminds me of the 1960s at their best. In the words and music they are describing real life, unlike so many other songs of that time.”

The mind boggles.

Last Shadow Puppets Announce Tour Dates

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The Last Shadow Puppets have announced dates for a full tour including gigs in the UK, Europe and US. Arctic Monkey’s frontman Alex Turner will join Miles Kane to play a series of shows including warm-ups for their multiple appearances at this year’s Reading and Leeds festival. The pair made t...

The Last Shadow Puppets have announced dates for a full tour including gigs in the UK, Europe and US.

Arctic Monkey’s frontman Alex Turner will join Miles Kane to play a series of shows including warm-ups for their multiple appearances at this year’s Reading and Leeds festival.

The pair made their festival debut at Glastonbury (June 28), performing songs from their album The Age Of The Understatement accompanied by a 16-piece orchestra.

Jack White made an unexpected guest appearance, playing on a cover of Billy Fury’s “Wondrous Place.”

Tickets for the UK shows go on sale on Saturday (July 5) at 9.30am (BST).

The Last Shadow Puppets will play:

Portsmouth Guildhall (August 19)

Oxford New Theatre (20)

Paris Olympia (26)

Stockholm Circus (October 15)

Copenhagen Vega Main Hall (16)

Berlin Tempodrome (17)

Brussels Cirque Royale (19)

Amsterdam Paradiso (20)

Glasgow Academy (22)

Sheffield City Hall (23)

London Hammersmith Apollo (26)

New York Grand Ballroom (30)

Los Angeles Mayan Theatre (November 3)

Blondie and Moby Guest on Lee “Scratch”Perry Album

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Blondie’s Chris Stein and Moby are two of the guest stars to appear on Lee “Scratch” Perry’s new album, entitled Repentance. It’s the 54th studio album by Perry who produced “Complete Control” for the Clash in the ’70s. It also feature guest appearances from Bolt's Brian Chippendal...

Blondie’s Chris Stein and Moby are two of the guest stars to appear on Lee “Scratch” Perry’s new album, entitled Repentance.

It’s the 54th studio album by Perry who produced “Complete Control” for the Clash in the ’70s.

It also feature guest appearances from Bolt‘s Brian Chippendale, Gumball‘s Don Fleming, Current 93‘s David Tibet, Matisyahu bassist Josh Werner, and artist/adult entertainer Sasha Grey.

It was co-produced by Andrew WK, who worked on the latest album from art-rock group Sightings for Thurston Moore‘s Ecstatic Peace! label in October 2007.

The record is due for release on CD and limited edition 2xLP from Narnack Records on August 19.

Tracklisting:

“Shine”

“Fire”

“Pum-Pum”

“Reggae Man”

“Baby Sucker”

“Crazy Pimp”

“War Dance”

“God Save His King”

“Santa Claus”

“Heart Doctor”

“Chooga Cane”

“Party Time”

Grace Jones To Release First Album in Two Decades

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Grace Jones has revealed she plans to release an album of new material this October. Entitled 'Hurricane', the record will be the iconic star's first since she released 'Bulletproof Heart' in 1989. It is due for release on October 29. Jones produced the new collection herself, alongside her partne...

Grace Jones has revealed she plans to release an album of new material this October.

Entitled ‘Hurricane’, the record will be the iconic star’s first since she released ‘Bulletproof Heart’ in 1989. It is due for release on October 29.

Jones produced the new collection herself, alongside her partner, Ivor Guest. The record features guest appearances from Brian Eno and Sly And Robbie.

Jones recently (June 19) made a live comeback, playing a critically acclaimed set at Royal Festival Hall as part of the Massive Attack-curated Meltdown Festival.

Iggy & The Stooges Announce Tour Dates

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Iggy & The Stooges have revealed they will play an extensive tour of Europe and North America this summer. The tour begins July 4 at the Skaanevik Blues Festival in Norway and will call at twelves countries including Finland and Prague's HC Sparta Arena. The band have also been confirmed as t...

Iggy & The Stooges have revealed they will play an extensive tour of Europe and North America this summer.

The tour begins July 4 at the Skaanevik Blues Festival in Norway and will call at twelves countries including Finland and Prague’s HC Sparta Arena.

The band have also been confirmed as the first headliner’s for the fifth annual Get Loaded In The Park, their only UK appearance this year.

The band who reformed in 2003 featuring original Stooges Ron and Scott Asheton plus Mike Watt on bass, who has been keeping a tour diary of his time with the legendary band.

The Stooges will close the August Bank Holiday one day event at Clapham Common on Sunday August 24.

The Stooges play:

Skaanevik, Norway – Skaanevik Blues Festival (July 4)

Empuriabrava, Spain – Doctor Loft 05:00 Festival (6)

Rouen, France – La Grande Armada (13)

Angouleme, France – Garden Nef Party Festival (19)

Lahti, Finland – Race and Rock Festival (26)

Camden, NJ – Download Festival (August 2)

Montreal, Quebec – Osheaga Music and Arts Festival (3)

Toronto, Ontario – Massey Hall (6)

New York, NY – Terminal 5 (8)

Baltimore, MD – Virgin Festival (10)

London, England – Get Loaded in the Park (24)

Berlin, Germany – Zitadelle (28)

Konstanz, Germany – Rock am See (30)

St. Nolff, France – St. Nolff Festival (September 13)

Gelsenkirchen, Germany – Amphitheater (16)

Hamburg, Germany – Stadtpark (18)

Prague, Czech Republic – HC Sparta Arena (20)

Saint Petersburg, Russia – Lodovy Dvoryetz (22)

Moscow, Russia – B1 (24)

Cannes, France – Palais des Festivals (27)

Countdown to Latitude: Sigur Rós

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Icelandic for "Victory Rose", the panoramic quartet Sigur Rós are coming to headline Latitude's Saturday night, bringing their ethereal and triumphant sound to the Obelisk Arena as night descends slowly on Henham Park. Musically taking over where last year's headliner's Arcade Fire left off, ...

Icelandic for “Victory Rose”, the panoramic quartet Sigur Rós are coming to headline Latitude‘s Saturday night, bringing their ethereal and triumphant sound to the Obelisk Arena as night descends slowly on Henham Park.