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Ronnie Wood plays on Starsailor’s new album

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Rolling Stones’ guitarist, Ronnie Wood has been helping Starsailor with their new album. Wood has been in the studio recording guitar parts for a song called 'All The Plans We Made', which will appear on Starsailor’s fourth album. "We kept asking him if he'd be up for playing some guitar on th...

Rolling Stones’ guitarist, Ronnie Wood has been helping Starsailor with their new album.

Wood has been in the studio recording guitar parts for a song called ‘All The Plans We Made’, which will appear on Starsailor’s fourth album.

“We kept asking him if he’d be up for playing some guitar on the record, and at the time he was busy promoting Shine A Light,” said frontman, James Walsh talking to Billboard.com.

“Then I got a call about half past six one evening from his son Jesse saying, ‘My dad really wants to do this now. Can you be at the studio [at] nine o’clock?’ So from having given up the ghost it all came together out of the blue. It was amazing; he stood there playing the guitar, saying the song reminded him of ‘Maggie May’ – quite high praise, indeed.”

The band finished the new record in May, tentatively titled ‘All The Plans’, and are waiting to finalise a release date.

“It’s definitely frustrating when you’ve got a finished record you want to get out and promote,” added Walsh.

PIC CREDIT: PA PHOTOS

Creedence Clearwater release Best Of

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The Best Of Creedence Clearwater Revival is released this week (June 2) featuring the original frontman, John Fogerty. The new CD features their best known hits, 'Proud Mary', 'Born On The Bayou' and 'Travelin' Band' as well as their cover of Marvin Gaye's 'Heard It Through The Grapevine'. Fogarty...

The Best Of Creedence Clearwater Revival is released this week (June 2) featuring the original frontman, John Fogerty.

The new CD features their best known hits, ‘Proud Mary’, ‘Born On The Bayou’ and ‘Travelin’ Band’ as well as their cover of Marvin Gaye’s ‘Heard It Through The Grapevine’.

Fogarty has also announced he will play two UK shows in June: Manchester’s Apollo venue on June 22 and London’s Royal Albert Hall on June 24.

The London show marks 38 years since he last appeared at the Royal Albert Hall and we’ve got two tickets to see John Fogarty performing at the Royal Albert Hall on June 24, click here for details.

John Lydon charged with beating a woman

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Sex Pistols lead singer John Lydon has been charged for hitting a woman in the face in Los Angeles last year. Roxane Davis, an assistant producer on a reality television show, alleges Lydon attacked her in January 2007, because he didn't like the hotel room he had been put in. The alleged incident...

Sex Pistols lead singer John Lydon has been charged for hitting a woman in the face in Los Angeles last year.

Roxane Davis, an assistant producer on a reality television show, alleges Lydon attacked her in January 2007, because he didn’t like the hotel room he had been put in.

The alleged incident did not lead to criminal charges, but Davis is suing Lydon in a civil court for sexual harassment and assault.

Lydon’s spokesman said the frontman was unavailable for comment.

American Music Club Announce UK tour

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American Music Club have announced that they will be touring the UK in September. The band will be playing tracks from the new album, The Golden Age, alongside tracks from their back catalogue that haven’t been performed for many years. AMC will also make their only UK festival appearance at Dor...

American Music Club have announced that they will be touring the UK in September. The band will be playing tracks from the new album, The Golden Age, alongside tracks from their back catalogue that haven’t been performed for many years.

AMC will also make their only UK festival appearance at Dorset’s End of the Road on September 12.

The dates are:

Belfast Empire (September 2)

Manchester Academy 3 (4)

Glasgow Stereo (5)

Newcastle Cluny (6)

York, Duchess of York (7)

Bristol Thekla (9)

Leicester The Musician (10)

London Bush Hall (11)

Exeter Phoenix (13)

Cambridge The Graduate (15)

Winchester Railway (16)

For ticket information, contact the venue.

PIC CREDIT: MARK HOLTH

Bob Dylan talks!

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Bob Dylan has talked openly about his art, the next instalment of his memoirs and his hope for the future, in an in-depth interview with The Times. “We've got this guy out there now who is redefining the nature of politics from the ground up...Barack Obama. He's redefining what a politician is,...

Bob Dylan has talked openly about his art, the next instalment of his memoirs and his hope for the future, in an in-depth interview with The Times.

“We’ve got this guy out there now who is redefining the nature of politics from the ground up…Barack Obama. He’s redefining what a politician is, so we’ll have to see how things play out. I’m hopeful that things might change,” said Dylan.

He also expressed his distaste for the music industry, saying he preferred his literary dealings: “The music world’s a made-up bunch of hypocritical rubbish. I know from publishing a memoir that the book people are a whole lot saner.”

The interview goes on to cover Dylan’s ‘Drawn Blank Series’, a collection of over 200 pictures completed by the singer, which will open at the Halcyon Gallery in Mayfair on June 14.

Following the success of his first ever art museum exhibition in Germany in October last year, the London show features new intense colour variations based on his drawings and sketches produced between 1989 and 1992 – originally published in a the Random House published book ‘Drawn Blank.’

“There was no predetermined brief. Just deal with the material to hand, whatever that is. And do it however you want. You can be fussy, you can be slam-bang, it doesn’t matter,” he said. And he thought that critics were reading too much into his paintings, saying; “If it pleases the eye of the beholder…There’s no more to it than that, to my mind. Or even if it repels the eye. Either one is fine.”

Talking on his memoirs, he also revealed that he didn’t enjoy aspects of writng his the first part of his autobiography Chronicles Volume One:

“Writing any kind of book is a lonely thing. You cut yourself off from friends and family to find, that necessarily quiet place in your mind. You have to disassociate and detach yourself from just about everything and everybody. I didn’t like that part of it at all.”

Dylan recently spent the seven week lay-off between the end of his last American tour and the start of his European tour working on Chronicles Volume Two. Now seven gigs into the tour, you can catch him live on one of the following dates:

Warsaw, Poland, Stodola (7)

Ostrava, Czech Republic, Cez Arena (9)

Vienna, Austria, Stadhalle (10)

Salzburg, Austria, Arena (11)

Varazdin, Croatia, Radar Festival (13)

Bergamo, Italy, Lazzaretta (16)

Aosta, Italy, Castello Borgia (18)

Grenoble, France, Palais des Sports (19)

Toulouse, France, Zenith (20)

Andorra la Vella, Andorra, Campo de Futbol Muni (22)

Zaragoza, Spain, Feia de Muenstras (24)

Pamplona, Spain, Plaza de Toros (25)

Vigo, Spain, Recinto Ferial (27)

Avilla, Spain, Parque Natural de Gredos (28)

Valencia, Spain, Auditorio Ciudad (July 1)

Cuenca, Spain, tbc (2)

Murcia, Spain, Plaza de Toros (4)

Jaen, Spain, Recinto Ferial (5)

Madrid, Spain, Rock in Rio (6)

Jerez, Spain, Campo de Football Muni (8)

Merida, Spain, Plaza de Toros (10)

Lisbon, Portugal, Optimus Live (11)

Stevie Wonder’s first European tour in a decade

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Stevie Wonder announced details of his first European tour in over a decade. The legend marked the event with an intimate gig at London’s Hard Rock Café, during which he rolled out classics like ‘Masterblaster (Jammin')', 'Superstition' and 'Signed, Sealed, Delivered'. During a question and a...

Stevie Wonder announced details of his first European tour in over a decade.

The legend marked the event with an intimate gig at London’s Hard Rock Café, during which he rolled out classics like ‘Masterblaster (Jammin’)’, ‘Superstition’ and ‘Signed, Sealed, Delivered’.

During a question and answer session Stevie Wonder had words of praise for Barack Obama and Amy Winehouse.

Asked what he thought of Democratic US presidential nominee Obama, Wonder said: “He’s a combination of JFK [John F Kennedy, former US President, assassinated in 1963], and Martin Luther King. With that he can’t lose.”

Later, when asked what he thought about Winehouse, Wonder admitted: “She reminds me of a young Etta James. ‘Rehab’ is a very good song. The CD [‘Back To Black’] was good, my daughter turned me onto it.”

The dates for the forthcoming tour are:

Birmingham NIA (September 8)

Manchester MEN (9)

London O2 Arena (11)

Rotterdam Ahoy (14)

Aalborg Gigantium (17)

Stockholm Globe (19)

Hamar Vikingskipet (20)

Cologne Arena (22)

Mannheim Sap Arena (23)

Munich Olympiahalle (25)

Milan Datchforum (26)

Paris Bercy (28)

Latitude tickets sell out!

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Weekend passes and tickets for Saturday at this years Latitude festival have now completely sold out! With 6 weeks still to go and more top acts being announced today, tickets for Friday are selling fast. The line-up this year boasts the best music, comedy and performance with Franz Ferdinand, Interpol and Sigur Rós on the main stage, and Bill Bailey Omid Djalili and Ross Noble gracing the comedy tents. The latest announcements have added Joanna Newsom and The Coral to the bill, and Radio 1 DJ Huw Stephens’ said today that The Wave Pictures, Errors and Cheeky Cheeky and the Nosebleeds will play on The Lake Stage. Plus all the individual arenas dedicated to film, theatre, poetry, literature and cabaret. For a full line-up see www.latitudefestival.co.uk and keep up to date with announcements on our dedicated Latitude blog. Tickets are selling fast, priced £130 for the weekend tickets are available from the credit card hotline - 0871 231 0821. Or online at www.seetickets.com, www.festivalrepublic.co.uk

Weekend passes and tickets for Saturday at this years Latitude festival have now completely sold out!

With 6 weeks still to go and more top acts being announced today, tickets for Friday are selling fast. The line-up this year boasts the best music, comedy and performance with Franz Ferdinand, Interpol and Sigur Rós on the main stage, and Bill Bailey Omid Djalili and Ross Noble gracing the comedy tents.

The latest announcements have added Joanna Newsom and The Coral to the bill, and Radio 1 DJ Huw Stephens’ said today that The Wave Pictures, Errors and Cheeky Cheeky and the Nosebleeds will play on The Lake Stage. Plus all the individual arenas dedicated to film, theatre, poetry, literature and cabaret.

For a full line-up see www.latitudefestival.co.uk and keep up to date with announcements on our dedicated Latitude blog.

Tickets are selling fast, priced £130 for the weekend tickets are available from the credit card hotline – 0871 231 0821. Or online at www.seetickets.com, www.festivalrepublic.co.uk

Coldplay – Viva La Vida Or Death And All His Friends

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Chris Martin & Co reach for the stars on gently ambitious fourth album When Coldplay’s X&Y was delayed back in 2005, EMI were forced to issue a profits warning. This time round you get the feeling that slightest slip-up on their fourth album could trigger the collapse of the recording industry, if not the entire British economy. Admirably, the band seem more concerned with the state of their critical stock. After brazenly copping to having ripped off Radiohead for their first record, the Bunnymen for their second and themselves for their third, they’ve announced that this is where they step up to the plate of rock history. And so Brian Eno has been recruited, in the hope that he might do for Coldplay what he did for U2. Or as Martin himself cheekily put it: “He helped us realise there’s a lot more stuff out there to steal”. Viva La Vida references Frida Kahlo in its portentous title; gestures at a wider world of tabla rhythms, high-life guitars and flamenco handclaps; and hints at the warp and woof of My Bloody Valentine, the anthemic rush of Arcade Fire and - well, of course - the jittery ambience of Radiohead circa Kid A. But all this gently refreshes the Coldplay brand without severely testing or radically rethinking it. Things start off promisingly with “Life In Technicolour”, a twinkling electro-acoustic instrumental that might have strayed from an Eno solo record. But the limits to the band’s reinvention become apparent once Chris Martin opens his mouth. He aims for the vicinity of Bono, but singing lines about "rivers to cross" and "Jerusalem bells", or lamenting on “Yes” that “For some reason I can’t explain / I know St Peter won’t be calling my name” his thin, wistful voice can’t carry off the would-be Biblical gravitas - no matter how low he croons. When it’s not straining for Significance, though, Viva La Vida… is often rather lovely. “Lovers in Japan/Reign of Love” is genuinely grand rather than grandiose, while “Strawberry Swing” glides along on a gorgeous guitar figure, exclaiming "it’s such a perfect day… I wouldn’t want to change a thing". Beyond all the cosmetic tinkering and wishful profundity, there’s an endearingly cosy conservatism at the heart of Coldplay: the British MOR economy, at least, is still in safe hands. STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

Chris Martin & Co reach for the stars on gently ambitious fourth album

When Coldplay’s X&Y was delayed back in 2005, EMI were forced to issue a profits warning. This time round you get the feeling that slightest slip-up on their fourth album could trigger the collapse of the recording industry, if not the entire British economy.

Admirably, the band seem more concerned with the state of their critical stock. After brazenly copping to having ripped off Radiohead for their first record, the Bunnymen for their second and themselves for their third, they’ve announced that this is where they step up to the plate of rock history. And so Brian Eno has been recruited, in the hope that he might do for Coldplay what he did for U2. Or as Martin himself cheekily put it: “He helped us realise there’s a lot more stuff out there to steal”.

Viva La Vida references Frida Kahlo in its portentous title; gestures at a wider world of tabla rhythms, high-life guitars and flamenco handclaps; and hints at the warp and woof of My Bloody Valentine, the anthemic rush of Arcade Fire and – well, of course – the jittery ambience of Radiohead circa Kid A. But all this gently refreshes the Coldplay brand without severely testing or radically rethinking it.

Things start off promisingly with “Life In Technicolour”, a twinkling electro-acoustic instrumental that might have strayed from an Eno solo record. But the limits to the band’s reinvention become apparent once Chris Martin opens his mouth. He aims for the vicinity of Bono, but singing lines about “rivers to cross” and “Jerusalem bells”, or lamenting on “Yes” that “For some reason I can’t explain / I know St Peter won’t be calling my name” his thin, wistful voice can’t carry off the would-be Biblical gravitas – no matter how low he croons.

When it’s not straining for Significance, though, Viva La Vida… is often rather lovely. “Lovers in Japan/Reign of Love” is genuinely grand rather than grandiose, while “Strawberry Swing” glides along on a gorgeous guitar figure, exclaiming “it’s such a perfect day… I wouldn’t want to change a thing”. Beyond all the cosmetic tinkering and wishful profundity, there’s an endearingly cosy conservatism at the heart of Coldplay: the British MOR economy, at least, is still in safe hands.

STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

Emmylou Harris – All I Intended To Be

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Time is very much on Emmylou Harris’s mind. Now 61, for her follow-up to 2003’s Stumble Into Grace her themes are wasted years, love in vain, loss, death and, extraordinarily, what comes next. You could, as Bob Dylan did when discussing Time Out of Mind, define such concerns as "the dread realities of life". Or you could call it business as usual for a country record. Which, finally, is what All I Intended to Be turns out to be. Not insignificantly, Harris is working for the first time in 25 years with Brian Ahern, the producer behind her first 11 albums (and her ex-husband). Opening with a sound that recalls her recent work’s atmospherics, but then stripping back toward basics, the reunion heightens the sense of Harris looking back, considering the road she’s travelled. Split evenly between covers and originals, the album fuses the mature, potent songwriter who emerged on 2000’s Red Dirt Girl and Stumble… with the famously questing interpreter of other people’s work, shining her silver spotlight on neglected writers like Jack Wesley Routh, whose “Shores of White Sand” and “Beyond the Great Divide” bookend proceedings with an anthem and a spiritual. While Tracy Chapman (“All That You Have Is Your Soul”) and Merle Haggard (“Kern River”) may seem strange bedfellows, it's a collection as coherent as it is eclectic. On “How She Could Sing the Wildwood Flower”, meanwhile, a collaboration with Kate and Anna McGarrigle, she digs through the weeds into the real old, weird stuff. Strangest and most striking of all is another co-composition with the McGarrigles, “Sailing Round the Room," Harris singing out from the moment of death, her spirit lifting from her body, flying out the window to become part of nature. The remarkable thing is, there’s no trace of New-Age dippiness. A plain, mysterious, oddly happy little masterpiece, it’s the standout, but exemplifies the album. Harris is as proud, painful, and plaintive as ever here, dripping with life and dealing in dire certainties. But she never gets heavy about it, and in places sounds lighter than air. DAMIEN LOVE

Time is very much on Emmylou Harris’s mind. Now 61, for her follow-up to 2003’s Stumble Into Grace her themes are wasted years, love in vain, loss, death and, extraordinarily, what comes next.

You could, as Bob Dylan did when discussing Time Out of Mind, define such concerns as “the dread realities of life”. Or you could call it business as usual for a country record. Which, finally, is what All I Intended to Be turns out to be.

Not insignificantly, Harris is working for the first time in 25 years with Brian Ahern, the producer behind her first 11 albums (and her ex-husband).

Opening with a sound that recalls her recent work’s atmospherics, but then stripping back toward basics, the reunion heightens the sense of Harris looking back, considering the road she’s travelled.

Split evenly between covers and originals, the album fuses the mature, potent songwriter who emerged on 2000’s Red Dirt Girl and Stumble… with the famously questing interpreter of other people’s work, shining her silver spotlight on neglected writers like Jack Wesley Routh, whose “Shores of White Sand” and “Beyond the Great Divide” bookend proceedings with an anthem and a spiritual.

While Tracy Chapman (“All That You Have Is Your Soul”) and Merle Haggard (“Kern River”) may seem strange bedfellows, it’s a collection as coherent as it is eclectic. On “How She Could Sing the Wildwood Flower”, meanwhile, a collaboration with Kate and Anna McGarrigle, she digs through the weeds into the real old, weird stuff.

Strangest and most striking of all is another co-composition with the McGarrigles, “Sailing Round the Room,” Harris singing out from the moment of death, her spirit lifting from her body, flying out the window to become part of nature. The remarkable thing is, there’s no trace of New-Age dippiness. A plain, mysterious, oddly happy little masterpiece, it’s the standout, but exemplifies the album. Harris is as proud, painful, and plaintive as ever here, dripping with life and dealing in dire certainties. But she never gets heavy about it, and in places sounds lighter than air.

DAMIEN LOVE

My Morning Jacket – Evil Urges

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Since Band Of Horses and Fleet Foxes gatecrashed their grain silo, source of that imperial reverb, My Morning Jacket have had little option but to move on. If 2005's Z flirted with cautiously with funk synths and a more direct pop sound, Evil Urges makes it a full-blown, messy tryst. The slightly ludicrous Rick Rubinisms of "Highly Suspicious" seem designed largely to unsettle the traditionalists in their audience, but the two-part "Touch Me I'm Going To Scream" is astonishing: slick, simmering and – dammit – sexy, in a way these new cosmic Americana bands rarely are. Sadly, this revelation has also coincided with some of the blandest songwriting of My Morning Jacket's career, the Nashville corn of "Two Halves" and "Librarian"'s soft-focus fantasy being the worst culprits. It whiffs a little of mid-life crisis. SAM RICHARDS

Since Band Of Horses and Fleet Foxes gatecrashed their grain silo, source of that imperial reverb, My Morning Jacket have had little option but to move on. If 2005’s Z flirted with cautiously with funk synths and a more direct pop sound, Evil Urges makes it a full-blown, messy tryst.

The slightly ludicrous Rick Rubinisms of “Highly Suspicious” seem designed largely to unsettle the traditionalists in their audience, but the two-part “Touch Me I’m Going To Scream” is astonishing: slick, simmering and – dammit – sexy, in a way these new cosmic Americana bands rarely are. Sadly, this revelation has also coincided with some of the blandest songwriting of My Morning Jacket’s career, the Nashville corn of “Two Halves” and “Librarian”‘s soft-focus fantasy being the worst culprits. It whiffs a little of mid-life crisis.

SAM RICHARDS

Fleet Foxes – Fleet Foxes

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In the July issue of Uncut magazine, Sam Richards calls the new record by My Morning Jacket, "slick, simmering and – dammit – sexy". For some of us, though, Jim James’ noble experimental spirit is distracting him from the music that he makes best. Listening to “Highly Suspicious”- a needy, Robert Palmer-ish take on funk - it’s hard not to long for the time when My Morning Jacket were merely a cosmic Southern rock band. Of course, the pain of MMJ’s departure from some metaphysical backwoods has been mediated these past couple of years by the emergence of Band Of Horses. And now, even better, along comes the debut album by Fleet Foxes, a commendably hirsute five-piece from Seattle. Fleet Foxes don’t rock much, though the opening “Sun It Rises” does have a clanging guitar line that could well propel them into gutsier territory live. They have an echoing, sepulchral air: anyone who’s fixated on Jim James songs like “Golden” should find plenty of solace in “Ragged Wood” and “Your Protector”, for a start. It’s a highly aestheticised, mud-free treatment of folk, certainly – but then you could probably say the same of Crosby, Stills & Nash. At times, the massed voices that usher in a song like “White Winter Hymnal” are purposefully reminiscent of the Sacred Harp singing tradition that once flourished in white southern churches. But then, on a song like “Quiet Houses”, the pristine harmonies are closer to The Beach Boys: combined with firmly plonked piano, bells and what sounds like a six-string bass, it’s a glorious descendant of “Smile” ephemera like “Fall Breaks And Back To Winter”. Some Americana fans may find Fleet Foxes too precious and evanescent to be treated seriously. But like the equally rapturous “Sun Giant” EP which preceded it, Fleet Foxes’ debut album is a fastidious, sometimes overwhelmingly pretty evocation of the American wilderness; a dreamy companion piece to last month’s superb Bon Iver album. And an escapist fantasy, perhaps, to compare with the very best hymns - never mind My Morning Jacket. JOHN MULVEY Q&A with Robin Pecknold Do you come from a rural background, or are you city boys dreaming of one? We were all living in fairly bad environments during the recording of these things and that may have found its way into the songs, a feeling of wanting to be somewhere else. Are you, or have you ever been religious? Hymns seem to be a big influence on your music... Speaking for myself, I've never been religious. I think hymns and semi-religious music like Judee Sill or Trees Community are amazing in that the devotion of the singer is so powerful when they're addressing some higher power and it's not just a love song. I guess we wanted our singing to have that same spirit. Do you agree that you'll be seen as a godsend by old My Morning Jacket fans? We're not nearly as rock’n'roll as that band. I hope people listen to us for what we are - sorry about the reverb. INTERVIEW: JOHN MULVEY PIC CREDIT: DAVID BELISLE

In the July issue of Uncut magazine, Sam Richards calls the new record by My Morning Jacket, “slick, simmering and – dammit – sexy”. For some of us, though, Jim James’ noble experimental spirit is distracting him from the music that he makes best. Listening to “Highly Suspicious”- a needy, Robert Palmer-ish take on funk – it’s hard not to long for the time when My Morning Jacket were merely a cosmic Southern rock band.

Of course, the pain of MMJ’s departure from some metaphysical backwoods has been mediated these past couple of years by the emergence of Band Of Horses. And now, even better, along comes the debut album by Fleet Foxes, a commendably hirsute five-piece from Seattle. Fleet Foxes don’t rock much, though the opening “Sun It Rises” does have a clanging guitar line that could well propel them into gutsier territory live. They have an echoing, sepulchral air: anyone who’s fixated on Jim James songs like “Golden” should find plenty of solace in “Ragged Wood” and “Your Protector”, for a start.

It’s a highly aestheticised, mud-free treatment of folk, certainly – but then you could probably say the same of Crosby, Stills & Nash. At times, the massed voices that usher in a song like “White Winter Hymnal” are purposefully reminiscent of the Sacred Harp singing tradition that once flourished in white southern churches. But then, on a song like “Quiet Houses”, the pristine harmonies are closer to The Beach Boys: combined with firmly plonked piano, bells and what sounds like a six-string bass, it’s a glorious descendant of “Smile” ephemera like “Fall Breaks And Back To Winter”.

Some Americana fans may find Fleet Foxes too precious and evanescent to be treated seriously. But like the equally rapturous “Sun Giant” EP which preceded it, Fleet Foxes’ debut album is a fastidious, sometimes overwhelmingly pretty evocation of the American wilderness; a dreamy companion piece to last month’s superb Bon Iver album. And an escapist fantasy, perhaps, to compare with the very best hymns – never mind My Morning Jacket.

JOHN MULVEY

Q&A with Robin Pecknold

Do you come from a rural background, or are you city boys dreaming of one?

We were all living in fairly bad environments during the recording of these things and that may have found its way into the songs, a feeling of wanting to be somewhere else.

Are you, or have you ever been religious? Hymns seem to be a big influence on your music…

Speaking for myself, I’ve never been religious. I think hymns and semi-religious music like Judee Sill or Trees Community are amazing in that the devotion of the singer is so powerful when they’re addressing some higher power and it’s not just a love song. I guess we wanted our singing to have that same spirit.

Do you agree that you’ll be seen as a godsend by old My Morning Jacket fans?

We’re not nearly as rock’n’roll as that band. I hope people listen to us for what we are – sorry about the reverb.

INTERVIEW: JOHN MULVEY

PIC CREDIT: DAVID BELISLE

Latitude Update: BBC Introducing stage

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The Wave Pictures, Errors and Cheeky Cheeky and the Nosebleeds will headline the Lake stage at this year’s Latitude festival, which will be curated by Radio 1 DJ Huw Stephens. Also appearing over the weekend will be Johnny Foreigner, Sky Larkin, The CocknBull Kid, Gideon Conn and Lovvers. The La...

The Wave Pictures, Errors and Cheeky Cheeky and the Nosebleeds will headline the Lake stage at this year’s Latitude festival, which will be curated by Radio 1 DJ Huw Stephens.

Also appearing over the weekend will be Johnny Foreigner, Sky Larkin, The CocknBull Kid, Gideon Conn and Lovvers.

The Lake Stage presents BBC Introducing… will host three days of brand spanking new acts who are tipped for great things. Last year’s line-up included Dan Le Sac and Scroobius Pip, Joe Lean and the Jing, Jang, Jong and Scouting for Girls, who went to number one with their debut album.

“Latitude, as well as being in an idyllic location with so many different things going on, has a huge emphasis on quality new music,” said Stephens. “The bands on the Lake Stage are like the first crop of new music, freshly squeezed playing a festival for the first time.”

Headlining this year’s event in the Obelisk Arena, Franz Ferdinand make their only English festival show, the Icelandic post-rock outfit Sigur Rós and New York titans, Interpol close the arena on the Sunday.

Throughout the rest of the weekend will see stunning performances from Nick Cave’s Grinderman, the beautiful poetry of Martha Wainwright, epic musicians The Mars Volta, the charming Death Cab for Cutie, the superb Elbow, legendary alt rockers The Breeders, legendary performer Julian Cope and grime, hip-hop, electro pop queen, MIA.

For all the up-to-date information see our Latitude blog.

Franz Ferdinand announce UK dates

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Franz Ferdinand have announced they will play at seven tiny venues across the UK this month. The low-key tour will include stops at The Point in Cardiff, Thekla in Bristol and the Hull Adelphi, all venues similar in spirit to the band’s tour of the highlands and islands last year. The band will ...

Franz Ferdinand have announced they will play at seven tiny venues across the UK this month.

The low-key tour will include stops at The Point in Cardiff, Thekla in Bristol and the Hull Adelphi, all venues similar in spirit to the band’s tour of the highlands and islands last year.

The band will be previewing songs from their new album, which they are in the process of recording at their hideaway in Glasgow.

The dates are:

York Fibbers (June 21)

Hull Adelphi (22)

Bristol Thekla (24)

Bath Moles (25)

Yeovil The Orange Box (26)

Cardiff The Point (28)

Leeds Faversham (29)

Tickets for the shows are priced at £15 and will be available from the venues on Friday 6th June 2008 at 9am and will be limited to two per person.

More acts for Massive Attack festival

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Tunng, Jim Noir and Fujiya & Muyagi are the latest editions to the line-up of Massive Attack’s Meltdown Festival. They join an amazing line-up that includes Grace Jones, George Clinton & Parliament/Funkadelic, Gang of Four and Uncut favourites, Fleet Foxes. Massive Attack will also be re...

Tunng, Jim Noir and Fujiya & Muyagi are the latest editions to the line-up of Massive Attack’s Meltdown Festival.

They join an amazing line-up that includes Grace Jones, George Clinton & Parliament/Funkadelic, Gang of Four and Uncut favourites, Fleet Foxes.

Massive Attack will also be remixing Vageli’s soundtrack to the cult film Bladerunner with the Heritage Orchestra.

Meltdown runs from June 14 to 22 at London’s Southbank Centre. See www.southbankcentre.co.uk for details.

Radiohead release back catalogue on iTunes

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Radiohead's back catalogue, including classics such as OK Computer and The Bends, has finally become available to download on iTunes. Although their latest album, In Rainbows has been available on the site since its release, the band withheld their past albums because they wanted their albums to b...

Radiohead‘s back catalogue, including classics such as OK Computer and The Bends, has finally become available to download on iTunes.

Although their latest album, In Rainbows has been available on the site since its release, the band withheld their past albums because they wanted their albums to be listened to “as a whole”, rather than as individual tracks.

It is thought the groups move from EMI to new record label, XL prompted the change of heart. Their move means that The Beatles are the last major British band to deny iTunes their back catalogue.

Garth Brooks, who is just behind The Beatles in all-time US record sales, has also refused to let his music become available on iTunes.

Like Radiohead once thought, he believes fans should only be able to download full albums as that is how they were made to be heard.

He explained to BBC News: “There are a number of issues that need to be addressed in the digital downloading world before we introduce our music to it.”

In reference to songs from his 1990 album No Fences, he continued: “Friends in Low Places is not Friends in Low Places without Wolves or Wild Horses. And if people try to make it a money issue, I can get the full album to the consumer for much less than they can get it at 99 cents a song.”

Sir Paul McCartney invites fans to dinner

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Sir Paul McCartney is hosting a ‘virtual dinner party’ in aid of the landmine charity, Adopt-a-Minefield. The online guests will also be able to download an exclusive new song. Fans are being invited to log on to Paulmccartney.com TODAY to register as guests for the event. Those who donate o...

Sir Paul McCartney is hosting a ‘virtual dinner party’ in aid of the landmine charity, Adopt-a-Minefield.

The online guests will also be able to download an exclusive new song.

Fans are being invited to log on to Paulmccartney.com TODAY to register as guests for the event.

Those who donate over $25 (£13) to the Adopt-a-Minefield campaign will be able to download a new song, ‘Lifelong Passion (Sail Away)’.

Recipes by chef Jamie Oliver will be available on the website. The event is being organised to raise money and awareness for the aforementioned Adopt-A-Minefield charity. McCartney became a patron of the charity in 2000 with his then wife, Heather Mills.

The charity clears arable land of minefields in poor countries to allow farmers to use the land for growing food.

Bloc Party announce Canadian tour dates

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Bloc Party have announced a number of tour dates in Canada following on from their appearance at V festival in Toronto. The band will play shows in Edmonton, Calgary and Fredricton before heading for a show in Halifax and then Montreal. In addition to the short US run, they will hit up V Festival ...

Bloc Party have announced a number of tour dates in Canada following on from their appearance at V festival in Toronto.

The band will play shows in Edmonton, Calgary and Fredricton before heading for a show in Halifax and then Montreal.

In addition to the short US run, they will hit up V Festival in Toronto on September 6.

The band are currently working on the follow-up to 2007’s ‘A Weekend In The City’.

Bloc Party’s frontman, Kele Okereke will be answering questions from fans during a live web chat on Friday June 6 at 11am. See the Any Questions Answered website for details.

The tour dates are:

Pomona, CA Glass House (July 28)

Los Angeles, CA Mayan Theatre (29)

San Francisco, CA The Fillmore (30)

Chicago, IL Lollapalooza Festival (August 1)

Philadelphia, PA The Fillmore at TLA (5)

New York, NY Webster Hall (6,7)

V Festival Baltimore (August 9)

Highfield Festival, Hohenfelden (15)

Marlay Park, Dublin (21)

Reading Festival Reading (23)

Leeds Festival Leeds (24)

Toronto, Ontario V Festival (September 6)

Edmonton Events Centre, Edmonton (September 9)

MacEwan Hall, Calgary (10)

Harvest Jazz & Blues Festival, Fredricton (13)

The Marquee Club, Halifax (14)

Metropolis, Montreal (17)

See www.blocparty.com for details.

KISS to record their headline set

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KISS are giving UK fans the chance to take home recordings of their first UK performance in almost a decade. Their live set at the Download festival will be recorded and burned onto CDs, which are available to buy from the merchandise stall straight after the gig. They plan to repeat the stunt at ...

KISS are giving UK fans the chance to take home recordings of their first UK performance in almost a decade.

Their live set at the Download festival will be recorded and burned onto CDs, which are available to buy from the merchandise stall straight after the gig.

They plan to repeat the stunt at other dates on the European tour – CDs will be £15 and also available to order online at www.concertlive.eu.

Spanning nineteen countries, the European KISS Alive/35 Tour marks the first time the band has appeared in Europe since their Psycho Circus Tour in 1999.

The tour dates:

Velodrom, Berlin (June 9)

Download Festival, Donington Park (13)

Arrow Rock Festival. Nijmegen (15)

Bercy, Paris (17)

Graspop Metal Meeting, Dessel (28)

Tindersticks added to End of The Road bill

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Tindersticks will join Calexico as headliners for the last night of the End of the Road festival, it was announced today. Also added to the bill today are Brakes, Pete & the Pirates, Seabear, Hush the Many and The Accidental. Headlining on Friday night is the Bright Eye’s frontman, Coner Ob...

Tindersticks will join Calexico as headliners for the last night of the End of the Road festival, it was announced today.

Also added to the bill today are Brakes, Pete & the Pirates, Seabear, Hush the Many and The Accidental.

Headlining on Friday night is the Bright Eye’s frontman, Coner Oberst & the Mystic Valley Band teamed with the Dirty Three, and Mercury Rev will play Saturday.

The Festival takes place from 12 – 14 September at the Larmer Tree Gardens in North Dorset.

Adult tickets start at £105 see the website for details.

Joanna Newsom added to line-up!

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Joanna Newsom and The Black Lips are the latest artists confirmed to play at this year’s Latitude festival. Meanwhile, we’re pleased to announce that The Coral and Wild Beasts will join The Mars Volta and Guillemots at the Uncut Arena. And there are five more brand-spanking new editions to ...

Joanna Newsom and The Black Lips are the latest artists confirmed to play at this year’s Latitude festival.