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Nick Cave iTunes Session Gets Released

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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds' exclusive iTunes 'Live From London' session is now available as a five-track E.P from the music download website. Recorded on March 2 at London's famous Air Studios, Cave and the Bad Seeds put on an amazing performance showcasing new album Dig Lazurus Dig!!!. The E.P....

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds‘ exclusive iTunes ‘Live From London’ session is now available as a five-track E.P from the music download website.

Recorded on March 2 at London’s famous Air Studios, Cave and the Bad Seeds put on an amazing performance showcasing new album Dig Lazurus Dig!!!. The E.P. features the album title track, “Moonland”, “Midnight Man”, “Lie Down Here (& Be My Girl)” and the live version of forthcoming single “More News From Nowhere”.

For Uncut’s report of the Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds London iTunes session – click here

The new single is out May 12 and will also feature a brand new, non-LP track ‘Fleeting Love’.

The band are about to hit the UK live at the following places:

Dublin Castle (May 3)

Glasgow, Academy (4)

Birmingham, Academy (5)

London, Hammersmith Apollo (7/8/9)

Pic credit: Neil Thomson

Badly Drawn Boy To Join Super Furry Animals At Green Man

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Badly Drawn Boy is one of a host of new artists confirmed to play this year's Green Man Festival at Glanusk Park in the Brecon Beacons. Headliners Super Furry Animals will now be joined by Laura Marling, James Yorkston and new Heavenly records signing and member of the Loose Salute, Pete Greenwood ...

Badly Drawn Boy is one of a host of new artists confirmed to play this year’s Green Man Festival at Glanusk Park in the Brecon Beacons.

Headliners Super Furry Animals will now be joined by Laura Marling, James Yorkston and new Heavenly records signing and member of the Loose Salute, Pete Greenwood at the three day festival which takes place August 15-17.

Friday and Sunday night’s headlining acts are still to be revealed, after Beirut have been forced to cancel their appearance.

Last year’s headliners were Robert Plant and Joanna Newsom.

Previously Uncut-friendly confirmed acts include Black Mountain, Drive By Truckers, Iron & Wine, The National, The Cave Singers and Caribou.

Tickets and more information about Green Man is available from the event’s official website here: www.thegreenmanfestival.co.uk

The Green Man Festival line-up confirmed so far is:

Super Furry Animals (Saturday headline)

Iron & Wine

The National

Richard Thompson

Black Mountain

Drive-By Truckers

The Cave Singers

King Creosote

Caribou

Magik Markers

School of Language

Devon Sproule

Alela Diane

Nina Nastasia

Jennifer Gentle

The Accidental

The Drift Collective

Cath and Phil Tyler

The Moon Music Orchestra

One More Grain

The Yellow Moon Band

Duke Garwood

Threatmantics

Mugstar

Radio Luxemburg

Cymbiant

Beth Jeans Houghton

Brygyn

Laura Marling

Los Campesinos!

Damien Jurado

Truckers of Husk

The Bowerbirds

O’Death

Ox.Eagle.Lion.Man

The Owl Service

Prince Rama of Ayodhya

Cats In Paris

The Saffron Sect

Agnostic Mountain Gospel Choir

Wolf People

Barbarossa

Nic Dawson Kelly

Pete Greenwood

One Little Plane

James Yorkston

Badly Drawn Boy

Heather Jones

John Stammers

Gwyneth Glyn

Very special guests (Friday headline)

Very special Guests (Sunday headline)

Jesus And Mary Chain Brand New Track Released

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The first brand new track from the reformed Jesus & Mary Chain in a decade has been released, featuring on the new Heroes TV show soundtrack. Entitled "All Things Must Pass" the song is the first new material to be released by the band since the release of Munki in 1998. Heroes Original Soundtrack also features a brand new track from Wilco called "Glad It's Over" as well as a host of previously unreleased tracks from My Morning Jacket, Death Cab For Cutie and Imogen Heap. The eclectic soundtrack also features Bob Dylan's "Man In The Long Black Coat" and of course David Bowie's "Heroes". The Heroes Original Soundtrack is available now via iTunes, with a physical release date set for April 28. The second series of the popular sci-fi drama airs on BBC 2 from April 21. The full Heroes soundtrack listing is: 1. Heroes Title - Wendy & Lisa 2. Fire and Regeneration - Wendy & Lisa (*new release) 3. He's Frank - Brighton Port Authority featuring Iggy Pop (*new release) 4. All For Swinging You Around - New Pornographers 5. Glad It's Over - Wilco (*new release) 6. Weightless - Nada Surf (new release) 7. Nine In The Afternoon - Panic! At The Disco (new release) 8. Chills - My Morning Jacket (*Unreleased) 9. Natural Selection - Wendy & Lisa 10. ABoneCroneDrone 3 - Shelia Chandra 11. Not Now But Soon - Imogen Heap (*Unreleased) 12. Jealously Rides With Me - Death Cab For Cutie (*Unreleased) 13. All Things Must Pass - The Jesus and Mary Chain (*Unreleased) 14. Homecoming - Wendy & Lisa 15. Man In The Long Black Coat - Bob Dylan 16. Maya's Theme - Yerba Buena (*Unreleased) 17. Keeping My Composure - The Chemical Brothers featuring Spank Rock (*new release) 18. Heroes - David Bowie

The first brand new track from the reformed Jesus & Mary Chain in a decade has been released, featuring on the new Heroes TV show soundtrack.

Entitled “All Things Must Pass” the song is the first new material to be released by the band since the release of Munki in 1998.

Heroes Original Soundtrack also features a brand new track from Wilco called “Glad It’s Over” as well as a host of previously unreleased tracks from My Morning Jacket, Death Cab For Cutie and Imogen Heap.

The eclectic soundtrack also features Bob Dylan‘s “Man In The Long Black Coat” and of course David Bowie‘s “Heroes”.

The Heroes Original Soundtrack is available now via iTunes, with a physical release date set for April 28.

The second series of the popular sci-fi drama airs on BBC 2 from April 21.

The full Heroes soundtrack listing is:

1. Heroes Title – Wendy & Lisa

2. Fire and Regeneration – Wendy & Lisa (*new release)

3. He’s Frank – Brighton Port Authority featuring Iggy Pop (*new release)

4. All For Swinging You Around – New Pornographers

5. Glad It’s Over – Wilco (*new release)

6. Weightless – Nada Surf (new release)

7. Nine In The Afternoon – Panic! At The Disco (new release)

8. Chills – My Morning Jacket (*Unreleased)

9. Natural Selection – Wendy & Lisa

10. ABoneCroneDrone 3 – Shelia Chandra

11. Not Now But Soon – Imogen Heap (*Unreleased)

12. Jealously Rides With Me – Death Cab For Cutie (*Unreleased)

13. All Things Must Pass – The Jesus and Mary Chain (*Unreleased)

14. Homecoming – Wendy & Lisa

15. Man In The Long Black Coat – Bob Dylan

16. Maya’s Theme – Yerba Buena (*Unreleased)

17. Keeping My Composure – The Chemical Brothers featuring Spank Rock (*new release)

18. Heroes – David Bowie

The Raconteurs Added To Benicassim Festival Bill

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The Raconteurs have today (April 17) been confirmed to play at this year's Benicassim festival which takes place in Spain from July 17 - 20. The band comprising White Stripes Jack White, Brendan Benson, Patrick Keeler and Jack Lawrence recently rush released their second album Consolers of The Lone...

The Raconteurs have today (April 17) been confirmed to play at this year’s Benicassim festival which takes place in Spain from July 17 – 20.

The band comprising White Stripes Jack White, Brendan Benson, Patrick Keeler and Jack Lawrence recently rush released their second album Consolers of The Lonely, with only a month passing between recording the album and it being available in the shops.

Also confirmed for the Spanish festival are New Yorker’s Nada Surf who have also returned with a new album Lucky this year.

Other new additions are Battles and Black Lips and all join previously announced acts including the newly reformed My Bloody Valentine, Babyshambles, American Music Club and Leonard Cohen who is touring the world for the first time in fifteen years.

Click here for more festival information and to buy tickets: tickets.fiberfib.com

Artists confirmed to play Benicassim so far are:

Leonard Cohen

Roisin Murphy

Justice Live

Beirut

David Duriez

Eef Barzelay

Erol Alkan

John Acquaviva

Micah P. Hinson

Moriarty

These New Puritans

Richard Hawley

Supermayer

Tommie Sunshine

American Music Club

José González

Metope

Metronomy

The National

The New Pornographers

Robert Babicz

Siouxsie

Spiritualized

Vive La Fête

My Bloody Valentine

The Rumblestrips

The Raconteurs

Black Lips

Nada Surf

Battles

The Glimmers

Kakovia

The 2007 event saw bands such as Muse, Arctic Monkeys, The B-52s and Iggy and the Stooges perform.

Tom Petty To Release Original Band’s Debut Album

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Tom Petty's original band Mudcrutch have finally completed work on their self-titled debut album, 35 years after they started it. Originally named The Sundowners, the band comprising two Heartbreakers Mike Campbell and Benmont Trench have reunited with original guitarist Tom Leaden and drummer Rand...

Tom Petty‘s original band Mudcrutch have finally completed work on their self-titled debut album, 35 years after they started it.

Originally named The Sundowners, the band comprising two Heartbreakers Mike Campbell and Benmont Trench have reunited with original guitarist Tom Leaden and drummer Randall Marsh.

Explaining why Petty has finally completed work on his orignal band’s album, the singer has said: “I made a commitment at the beginning of this project that I wanted it to be Mudcrutch done as it was back in the day. I really wanted it to be that band.”

He added: “I guess I started thinking that we left some music back there, and it was time to go and get it.”

The first track from the album is to be “Scare Easy”, released on May 12.

The album is out on May 26, on Reprise.

Pic credit: PA Photos

Peter Walker – London Cafe Oto, April 16 2008

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If the internet is to be trusted, the guitarist Peter Walker has not played a gig in the UK since 1962. In the interim, he has befriended Karen Dalton, Sandy Bull and Janis Joplin, provided instrumental accompaniment for Dr Timothy Leary’s early LSD experiments, learned the art of raga from Ravi Shankar in the same class as George Harrison, and spent nearly four decades in a truck in Woodstock, chiefly practising flamenco guitar. The full review's over at Wild Mercury Sound.

If the internet is to be trusted, the guitarist Peter Walker has not played a gig in the UK since 1962. In the interim, he has befriended Karen Dalton, Sandy Bull and Janis Joplin, provided instrumental accompaniment for Dr Timothy Leary’s early LSD experiments, learned the art of raga from Ravi Shankar in the same class as George Harrison, and spent nearly four decades in a truck in Woodstock, chiefly practising flamenco guitar.

Peter Walker Live In London

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If the internet is to be trusted, the guitarist Peter Walker has not played a gig in the UK since 1962. In the interim, he has befriended Karen Dalton, Sandy Bull and Janis Joplin, provided instrumental accompaniment for Dr Timothy Leary’s early LSD experiments, learned the art of raga from Ravi Shankar in the same class as George Harrison, and spent nearly four decades in a truck in Woodstock, chiefly practising flamenco guitar. It’s an appealing story, an authentic case of an artist being so preoccupied with the scholarly aesthetic business of mastering his instrument that releases, or even much in the way of public performance, don’t seem necessary to them. Before Walker retreated, however, he recorded two albums for Vanguard in the ‘60s – “Second Poem To Karmela” and the extraordinary “Rainy Day Raga” – that conflated American folk and Indian devotional music just as effectively as contemporaneous work by John Fahey, Bull, Robbie Basho and all those other American Primitive guitarists that I love so much. In the past couple of years, however, Walker has ambled back into action, touring with an obvious disciple, Jack Rose (whose own lovely new album, “Dr Ragtime And Pals” is something I’ve mystifyingly failed to blog about), contributing to his own tribute album, “A Raga For Peter Walker”, and now preparing a bunch of new records. One is “Echo Of My Soul”, a manifestation of his obsession with flamenco, which is out pretty soon on Tompkins Square, and which is quite excellent. Then, later in the year, Megaphone will be putting out a raga set and an unreleased session from the late ‘60s. First, though, there’s the small matter of this fantastic gig, at a great new venue called Café Oto in Dalston. Walker sits behind a plate of candles, tells stories about the historical congruencies between flamenco and raga, and switches between a nylon string guitar for the Spanish stuff, and a steel-stringed one for the Indian-derived music. Walker’s virtuosity, in both disciplines, is pretty astonishing, but what’s also striking is how those long years of study and practise seem to have resulted in an intuitive understanding of the guitar and its possibilities; that an obsession with technique has created, unusually, a devotional take on traditional forms that is transcendent rather than hamstrung by muso perfectionism. After one fabulously intricate raga, he puts the guitar back into its case and casually notes that he sold the same guitar to Karen Dalton in 1962, then bought it back from her in 1990 for the same price (as a feature in next month’s Uncut reveals, Walker was actually with Dalton when she died). I can’t remember many gigs where I’ve felt so palpably, intimately connected with history. It’s a great night, and the sense of an experimental/mystical musical continuum is enhanced by the two young British support acts. Tom James Scott is a guitarist who my friend Yates described, not unreasonably, as “Reich folk”. Most of Scott’s playing is very spacey and minimal, but he’ll occasionally go into romantic, Bashovian passages, plus some quiet scrabble that reminds me a bit of an unplugged and unprocessed Christian Fennesz. Lavinia Blackwall, meanwhile, alternates between harp (a small one, Celtic I think, rather than the big concert type favoured by Joanna Newsom) and sings very austere and beautiful folk songs pitched somewhere between Shirley Collins (circa “Love, Death And The Lady”) and something more formal, early choral music perhaps. I’d like to see and hear more of both of them. Next up, Club Uncut tonight with Jana Hunter and Phosphorescent at the Borderline. See you there. . .

If the internet is to be trusted, the guitarist Peter Walker has not played a gig in the UK since 1962. In the interim, he has befriended Karen Dalton, Sandy Bull and Janis Joplin, provided instrumental accompaniment for Dr Timothy Leary’s early LSD experiments, learned the art of raga from Ravi Shankar in the same class as George Harrison, and spent nearly four decades in a truck in Woodstock, chiefly practising flamenco guitar.

The Last Shadow Puppets Album Reviewed!

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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 next week (April 21):

The Last Shadow Puppets – The Age of the Understatement – 4* It’s finally here – Arctic Monkeys and Rascals’ Miles Kane’s project is a lush affair. Check out the Uncut review here.

Portishead – Third 5* – Magnificent return, reinvention from the Bristol three + indepth Q&A w/Geoff Barrow.

Third is released on April 28, but is available to stream, free, from Last.Fm from April 21.

Robert Forster – The Evangelist 4*- Go-Between mourns his lost partner Grant McLennan + review include an Uncut Q&A

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

The Breeders – Mountain Battles 4* – The Breeders return with only their fourth album in 18 years but Kim and Kelley Deal remain defiantly nonchalant – check out our review here, includes a Q&A with Kim Deal.

R.E.M. – Accelerate – The band Return To Form? Michael Stipe and co. follow-up 2004’s disappointing Around The Sun — with a little help from U2’s Jacknife Lee. See our in-depth review here — and have your say.

The Rolling Stones – Shine A Light OST – With their Martin Scorsese directed live music film doc premiering in the UK next week, check out what the soundtrack has in store.

Various Artists: Thank You Friends: The Ardent Records Story – Sonic chronicle of the Memphis label that nurtured Big Star; plus Q&A with Jim Ardent, the label’s founder

Elbow – The Seldom Seen Kid – Guy Garvey and band return with great fourth album, featuring a duet with Richard Hawley too.

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

The Last Shadow Puppets – The Age Of The Understatement

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Now it all makes sense. Anyone who wondered where Alex Turner had mislaid his melodic gifts on hearing Favourite Worst Nightmare now has their answer. Subconsciously or not, he was squirrelling them away for his first side-project. Smart move: this way The Monkeys keep their credibility and get to look new drinking buddies QOTSA in the eye, while Turner gets to show off his more expansive side free from any nagging commercial pressures. The sense of a vast weight being lifted from young shoulders is almost tangible. With Rascals songsmith Miles Kane (also twenty-two) acting as a worthy musical foil – the pair’s voices are so intertwined to be almost indistinguishable – Turner revels in the opportunity to explore musical avenues bricked-up during his day job. So we get tumbling baroque pop (“The Chamber”), dreamy Mariachi shuffles (“Standing Next To Me”), and an overwhelming sense that all those hours listening to Scott 4, Forever Changes and Burt Bacharach’s Reach Out haven’t gone to waste. Ambitious, if not downright pretentious stuff, you might think. But with Arcade Fire arranger Owen Pallett draping the songs in sympathetic strings and producer James Ford working overtime on drums, the result is a widescreen epic, full of high fevers and crystal-clear vocal performances. “Before this attraction ferments/Kiss me properly and pull me apart,” croons Turner on the title track, while “The Time Has Come Again” sees him access a tenderness not seen since “Despair In The Departure Lounge”. What The Monkeys cagoule-reliant fanbase will make of a record which sounds more akin to Barry Ryan or The Love Affair than any of their peers is another thing. But free from the responsibility of seeing the world via a fug of Smirnoff Ice, Turner’s lyrics are back to his loquacious best. “It’s the fame which put words in her mouth,” he sighs on “My Mistakes Are Made For You”, with the same sense of yearning which runs through the whole album. All round, it’s simply a plea for a little decorum in an age where hyperbole runs riot. PAUL MOODY

Now it all makes sense. Anyone who wondered where Alex Turner had mislaid his melodic gifts on hearing Favourite Worst Nightmare now has their answer. Subconsciously or not, he was squirrelling them away for his first side-project.

Smart move: this way The Monkeys keep their credibility and get to look new drinking buddies QOTSA in the eye, while Turner gets to show off his more expansive side free from any nagging commercial pressures.

The sense of a vast weight being lifted from young shoulders is almost tangible. With Rascals songsmith Miles Kane (also twenty-two) acting as a worthy musical foil – the pair’s voices are so intertwined to be almost indistinguishable – Turner revels in the opportunity to explore musical avenues bricked-up during his day job. So we get tumbling baroque pop (“The Chamber”), dreamy Mariachi shuffles (“Standing Next To Me”), and an overwhelming sense that all those hours listening to Scott 4, Forever Changes and Burt Bacharach’s Reach Out haven’t gone to waste.

Ambitious, if not downright pretentious stuff, you might think. But with Arcade Fire arranger Owen Pallett draping the songs in sympathetic strings and producer James Ford working overtime on drums, the result is a widescreen epic, full of high fevers and crystal-clear vocal performances.

“Before this attraction ferments/Kiss me properly and pull me apart,” croons Turner on the title track, while “The Time Has Come Again” sees him access a tenderness not seen since “Despair In The Departure Lounge”.

What The Monkeys cagoule-reliant fanbase will make of a record which sounds more akin to Barry Ryan or The Love Affair than any of their peers is another thing. But free from the responsibility of seeing the world via a fug of Smirnoff Ice, Turner’s lyrics are back to his loquacious best.

“It’s the fame which put words in her mouth,” he sighs on “My Mistakes Are Made For You”, with the same sense of yearning which runs through the whole album. All round, it’s simply a plea for a little decorum in an age where hyperbole runs riot.

PAUL MOODY

Portishead – Third

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When Geoff Barrow sparked a minor spat with Mark Ronson last summer, marvelling at the man's ability to “turn decent songs into shit funky supermarket muzak”, it wasn't hard to detect a certain reflexive disgust - a feeling only compounded when you delved further into the Portishead Myspace, and found the observation that “music like Dummy is being used to sell relaxation courses, and that makes me sick to the guts”. You can see Barrow’s point: It's hard to think of any recent musical style that's suffered such a sharp plunge in its critical stock as trip hop - from adventurous British mash of blues and breakbeats to innocuous chill-out compilations in the space of a couple of series of This Life. More galling still, particularly for an old b-boy like Barrow, it was only when the genre reached its most absolutely anodyne – Dido – that it actually fed back into mainstream US hip hop, via Eminem's “Stan”. An alternative, but no less insidious, fate may be the respectability accorded the elder statesman. 2008 is being heralded as the second coming of the Bristol scene, with new albums from Tricky, and fellow travellers Goldfrapp, and Massive Attack curating the Southbank's Meltdown Festival – a sign of that the cultural establishment think you reliable enough not to freak out the patrons of the Royal Festival Hall too much. In a sense, it's the dinner party soundtrack writ large. The first indication that Portishead might elude both fates came with their own Nightmare Before Christmas festival last year. The combination of defiantly bleak venue (a Minehead holiday camp in the dark heart of December) and brilliantly esoteric line-up (from the the pioneering electronica of Silver Apples and the sepulchral folk of Hawk and Hacksaw, to the cosmic metal of Sunn O))), via the sadistic wit of Jerry Sadowitz), proved sufficiently traumatic to send at least one music editor fleeing after a single evening. Barrow has claimed that the bands they invited to play were simply the ones that had inspired them to make Third – and amazingly it's not only true, but it works magnificently. If the first incarnation of Portishead was Lynchian neo-noir, a series of haunted dancehalls and guttering torch songs, now they've evolved into a kind of sci-fi horror. If Third were a movie it would be something like Children Of Men: an all too plausible world of everyday horror, random brutality, burnt-out cities and bleakly creepy countryside. Lead single “Machine Gun”, makes this new mood most vivid. The brutal beat recalls an earlier Bristol sound: the industrial hip hop of Mark Stewart's Mafia and Tackhead – and beyond that, the sci-synth soundtracks of John Carpenter. Barrow also seems to have fallen for the very different grain of the early Fairlight sampler. Yet against this punishing rhythm Beth Gibbons sings the kind of eerily beautiful, desolate song that wouldn't seem out of place on an early Anne Briggs recording. Where once she was a mercurial, shapeshifting frontwoman, slipping in and out of masks of torchsong temptresses, on Third Gibbons mostly sticks to this one voice – beyond pastiche or persona, a bracing clear cold stream of English folk, that she first explored on her sublime 2002 Rustin Man collection. But it never sounds quaint. Indeed something about Third reminds me of Tim Buckley's Starsailor – a lucid dream of a possible future folk, some cosmic deep-song. Just as on Starsailor “Moulin Rouge” is an oddly innocent interlude, Third has “Deep Waters”, a simple ukulele shanty, sung by a shipwrecked soul, backed by what sounds like a Zombie barbershop quartet. But it's a rare moment of light. More characteristic is “Silence”, opening the album with chase-scene urgency (Barrow says it was inspired by the idea of James Brown playing at the Rumble in the Jungle in Zaire, 1974), before Gibbons strikes her keynote of implacable grief: “Empty in our hearts / crying out in silence... / Did you know what I lost? / Did you know what I wanted?”. Adrian Utley proves to be the key player through much of the record. Where once he was the model of session man discretion and style, picking out lines as elegant as Morricone, here his playing is frequently awe-inspiring. “Plastic” is one of a couple of songs that could have appeared on the earlier records, but it's capsized by a huge wail of distorted guitar roaring out of the middle of the track, of the kind that generally appears on Scott Walker's recent records. Throughout Utley seems to have picked up the thrilling discordance that Johnny Greenwood has lately channeled out of Radiohead and into his soundtracks. This howl is tempered by the clunking funk of primitive electronica, a kind of disturbed cousin to Broadcast's radiophonic lullabies. “We Carry On” blatantly borrows from the Silver Apples's “Oscillations”, but in place of their machines of loving grace, the Moogs feel martial as Gibbons sings with halting, hunted urgency: “the pace of time - I can't survive/ It's grinding down the view... / breaking out - which way to choose? / a choice - I can't refuse” . It's awesome and faintly terrifying, like one of Emily Dickinson's more kosmiche moments. The opening moments of the record feature a crackling sample of some character from an old Brazilian film, a speech which translate as advice to “Beware the rule of three”. This could have been a witty, self-deprecating disclaimer, warning of typical third album creative bankruptcy. Instead it provides fair warning that Third is the most stunning, stark and superb Portishead album yet. STEPHEN TROUSSÉ UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL: GEOFF BARROW It’s been ten years since your last LP… We finished the last tour in 1998 fairly broken people. We’re not made for the excesses of the rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle. At that time The Verve had just split up, so were headlining all the European festivals. We were a studio band with fairly strange sound issues playing to 55,000 people. It all went down incredibly well. But there was loads of personal stuff going on behind the scenes, which was just horrible. We had all kinds of divorces and illnesses…Personally I quit music for about four years. Hence the long break… But what it came down to is that there’s never any point in releasing a record if you’ve got nothing to say, and at that point we were running on empty. We had to go out and live a little bit, rebuild our personal lives and get the drive to think we were doing something forward thinking. Adrian and Beth went off and did other things: Beth made her own record, of course, and Adrian did some soundtrack stuff. I escaped. I ran to Australia. In 2001 Adrian and I went to record some Portishead material in Sydney in a mate’s studio for seven weeks – but it just didn’t feel right. It didn’t feel like we were breaking any new ground. So when did things start coming together for the new album? Not until 2003, when I wrote “Magic Doors”. I wrote it, Beth sang on it, and it was the first time we thought “Oh, this is actually all right” you know what I mean? Basically, we have a policy which is one step forward, eight steps back. We’ve never felt any pressure from outside, it’s all internal – there’s a lot of self-doubt in Portishead. In 2006 we had a meeting with our record company, because our A and R guy went to run Virgin. So we thought we’d better go and meet whoever was left. So we went to meet the MD, and we played him seven tracks. We went back a year later and we had six tracks, because we’d dropped one and were just about to drop another three. If we didn’t have to work this way, we wouldn’t, believe me. Where have the new ones come from? Once we get on a roll, it’s OK – we wrote five or six tracks in six months. What happens is we write an idea, say a guitar and vocal, and that could sit on the shelf for three years. It gets pulled down every now and then, and I’ll have a tinker with it, and then get really depressed because I can’t come up with anything, a formula. We have this saying, “It’s all right to have a song. But where does it actually live?” Like, in what atmosphere does it live in? There are a lot of pretty heavy jams on this album. Some krautrocky moments, the Silver Apples… They’re not jams, though…there’s no happy mistakes. I’d love to be the sort of band that goes in, jams the hell out of something and then just chops it up, like Can. But we’re just two people. It’s me and Ade staring at each other, going, “Well, who’s going to be Damo?”. I run a label in Bristol now (Invada), and I’ve been exposed to quite a lot of heavy music over the past few years, like Om. Maybe it’s not apparent that we’re into that kind of stuff on the record, but about two or three years ago I had an experience. I’d been in the music industry since I was 19, but I went to an OM gig, and it was like seeing Public Enemy when I was a teenager. It was that uncompromising kind of sound. Tell me a bit more about the roles in the group. When does Beth Gibbons come into the process? It’s changed a little bit over the years, because these days Beth will come in with a whole song or a guitar riff. Obviously, we’ve worked with Beth for years so it just sounds like Beth – but with this album it sounds like a frustration with society has crept into things this time, rather than personal frustration. The main thing for us was to not repeat ourselves, but still maintain the emotional element to what we do. Your sound has changed quite a lot… The whole kind of…writing a big string thing, and playing a Rhodes piano is just so obvious…if you want that, then listen to the early albums. I’m not saying that there isn’t a sense of beauty on this record, because hopefully there is – but maybe you’ve got to work a little harder to hear it. Your first LP made a huge impact – how do you feel about it now? I’m glad people dug it, and it’s allowed us to be free of a lot of pressure because we sold enough of them to be kind of slightly more…progressive, maybe. It’s allowed us a lot of artistic freedom. It’s all very positive – how it was absorbed into the mainstream was very peculiar. The idea of people having dinner parties with it, meant that the mood of the record was overlooked a bit, really. Because that wasn’t really very nice. It was absorbed – but I’m not going to be a music police and tell people how they should listen to it. Can you see them having dinner parties to this one? No, I doubt it, but it’s not a reaction to that, it’s just where we are. At the time, some people took Dummy back to Woolworths because it had scratches on it – everyone thought that was odd when they first heard it. Hopefully this will be the same. INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

When Geoff Barrow sparked a minor spat with Mark Ronson last summer, marvelling at the man’s ability to “turn decent songs into shit funky supermarket muzak”, it wasn’t hard to detect a certain reflexive disgust – a feeling only compounded when you delved further into the Portishead Myspace, and found the observation that “music like Dummy is being used to sell relaxation courses, and that makes me sick to the guts”.

You can see Barrow’s point: It’s hard to think of any recent musical style that’s suffered such a sharp plunge in its critical stock as trip hop – from adventurous British mash of blues and breakbeats to innocuous chill-out compilations in the space of a couple of series of This Life. More galling still, particularly for an old b-boy like Barrow, it was only when the genre reached its most absolutely anodyne – Dido – that it actually fed back into mainstream US hip hop, via Eminem’s “Stan”.

An alternative, but no less insidious, fate may be the respectability accorded the elder statesman. 2008 is being heralded as the second coming of the Bristol scene, with new albums from Tricky, and fellow travellers Goldfrapp, and Massive Attack curating the Southbank’s Meltdown Festival – a sign of that the cultural establishment think you reliable enough not to freak out the patrons of the Royal Festival Hall too much. In a sense, it’s the dinner party soundtrack writ large.

The first indication that Portishead might elude both fates came with their own Nightmare Before Christmas festival last year. The combination of defiantly bleak venue (a Minehead holiday camp in the dark heart of December) and brilliantly esoteric line-up (from the the pioneering electronica of Silver Apples and the sepulchral folk of Hawk and Hacksaw, to the cosmic metal of Sunn O))), via the sadistic wit of Jerry Sadowitz), proved sufficiently traumatic to send at least one music editor fleeing after a single evening.

Barrow has claimed that the bands they invited to play were simply the ones that had inspired them to make Third – and amazingly it’s not only true, but it works magnificently. If the first incarnation of Portishead was Lynchian neo-noir, a series of haunted dancehalls and guttering torch songs, now they’ve evolved into a kind of sci-fi horror. If Third were a movie it would be something like Children Of Men: an all too plausible world of everyday horror, random brutality, burnt-out cities and bleakly creepy countryside.

Lead single “Machine Gun”, makes this new mood most vivid. The brutal beat recalls an earlier Bristol sound: the industrial hip hop of Mark Stewart’s Mafia and Tackhead – and beyond that, the sci-synth soundtracks of John Carpenter. Barrow also seems to have fallen for the very different grain of the early Fairlight sampler. Yet against this punishing rhythm Beth Gibbons sings the kind of eerily beautiful, desolate song that wouldn’t seem out of place on an early Anne Briggs recording.

Where once she was a mercurial, shapeshifting frontwoman, slipping in and out of masks of torchsong temptresses, on Third Gibbons mostly sticks to this one voice – beyond pastiche or persona, a bracing clear cold stream of English folk, that she first explored on her sublime 2002 Rustin Man collection. But it never sounds quaint. Indeed something about Third reminds me of Tim Buckley‘s Starsailor – a lucid dream of a possible future folk, some cosmic deep-song.

Just as on Starsailor “Moulin Rouge” is an oddly innocent interlude, Third has “Deep Waters”, a simple ukulele shanty, sung by a shipwrecked soul, backed by what sounds like a Zombie barbershop quartet. But it’s a rare moment of light. More characteristic is “Silence”, opening the album with chase-scene urgency (Barrow says it was inspired by the idea of James Brown playing at the Rumble in the Jungle in Zaire, 1974), before Gibbons strikes her keynote of implacable grief: “Empty in our hearts / crying out in silence… / Did you know what I lost? / Did you know what I wanted?”.

Adrian Utley proves to be the key player through much of the record. Where once he was the model of session man discretion and style, picking out lines as elegant as Morricone, here his playing is frequently awe-inspiring. “Plastic” is one of a couple of songs that could have appeared on the earlier records, but it’s capsized by a huge wail of distorted guitar roaring out of the middle of the track, of the kind that generally appears on Scott Walker’s recent records. Throughout Utley seems to have picked up the thrilling discordance that Johnny Greenwood has lately channeled out of Radiohead and into his soundtracks.

This howl is tempered by the clunking funk of primitive electronica, a kind of disturbed cousin to Broadcast’s radiophonic lullabies. “We Carry On” blatantly borrows from the Silver Apples’s “Oscillations”, but in place of their machines of loving grace, the Moogs feel martial as Gibbons sings with halting, hunted urgency: “the pace of time – I can’t survive/ It’s grinding down the view… / breaking out – which way to choose? / a choice – I can’t refuse” . It’s awesome and faintly terrifying, like one of Emily Dickinson’s more kosmiche moments.

The opening moments of the record feature a crackling sample of some character from an old Brazilian film, a speech which translate as advice to “Beware the rule of three”. This could have been a witty, self-deprecating disclaimer, warning of typical third album creative bankruptcy. Instead it provides fair warning that Third is the most stunning, stark and superb Portishead album yet.

STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL: GEOFF BARROW

It’s been ten years since your last LP…

We finished the last tour in 1998 fairly broken people. We’re not made for the excesses of the rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle. At that time The Verve had just split up, so were headlining all the European festivals. We were a studio band with fairly strange sound issues playing to 55,000 people. It all went down incredibly well. But there was loads of personal stuff going on behind the scenes, which was just horrible. We had all kinds of divorces and illnesses…Personally I quit music for about four years.

Hence the long break…

But what it came down to is that there’s never any point in releasing a record if you’ve got nothing to say, and at that point we were running on empty. We had to go out and live a little bit, rebuild our personal lives and get the drive to think we were doing something forward thinking. Adrian and Beth went off and did other things: Beth made her own record, of course, and Adrian did some soundtrack stuff. I escaped. I ran to Australia. In 2001 Adrian and I went to record some Portishead material in Sydney in a mate’s studio for seven weeks – but it just didn’t feel right. It didn’t feel like we were breaking any new ground.

So when did things start coming together for the new album?

Not until 2003, when I wrote “Magic Doors”. I wrote it, Beth sang on it, and it was the first time we thought “Oh, this is actually all right” you know what I mean? Basically, we have a policy which is one step forward, eight steps back. We’ve never felt any pressure from outside, it’s all internal – there’s a lot of self-doubt in Portishead. In 2006 we had a meeting with our record company, because our A and R guy went to run Virgin. So we thought we’d better go and meet whoever was left. So we went to meet the MD, and we played him seven tracks. We went back a year later and we had six tracks, because we’d dropped one and were just about to drop another three. If we didn’t have to work this way, we wouldn’t, believe me.

Where have the new ones come from?

Once we get on a roll, it’s OK – we wrote five or six tracks in six months. What happens is we write an idea, say a guitar and vocal, and that could sit on the shelf for three years. It gets pulled down every now and then, and I’ll have a tinker with it, and then get really depressed because I can’t come up with anything, a formula. We have this saying, “It’s all right to have a song. But where does it actually live?” Like, in what atmosphere does it live in?

There are a lot of pretty heavy jams on this album. Some krautrocky moments, the Silver Apples…

They’re not jams, though…there’s no happy mistakes. I’d love to be the sort of band that goes in, jams the hell out of something and then just chops it up, like Can. But we’re just two people. It’s me and Ade staring at each other, going, “Well, who’s going to be Damo?”. I run a label in Bristol now (Invada), and I’ve been exposed to quite a lot of heavy music over the past few years, like Om. Maybe it’s not apparent that we’re into that kind of stuff on the record, but about two or three years ago I had an experience. I’d been in the music industry since I was 19, but I went to an OM gig, and it was like seeing Public Enemy when I was a teenager. It was that uncompromising kind of sound.

Tell me a bit more about the roles in the group. When does Beth Gibbons come into the process?

It’s changed a little bit over the years, because these days Beth will come in with a whole song or a guitar riff. Obviously, we’ve worked with Beth for years so it just sounds like Beth – but with this album it sounds like a frustration with society has crept into things this time, rather than personal frustration. The main thing for us was to not repeat ourselves, but still maintain the emotional element to what we do.

Your sound has changed quite a lot…

The whole kind of…writing a big string thing, and playing a Rhodes piano is just so obvious…if you want that, then listen to the early albums. I’m not saying that there isn’t a sense of beauty on this record, because hopefully there is – but maybe you’ve got to work a little harder to hear it.

Your first LP made a huge impact – how do you feel about it now?

I’m glad people dug it, and it’s allowed us to be free of a lot of pressure because we sold enough of them to be kind of slightly more…progressive, maybe. It’s allowed us a lot of artistic freedom. It’s all very positive – how it was absorbed into the mainstream was very peculiar. The idea of people having dinner parties with it, meant that the mood of the record was overlooked a bit, really. Because that wasn’t really very nice. It was absorbed – but I’m not going to be a music police and tell people how they should listen to it.

Can you see them having dinner parties to this one?

No, I doubt it, but it’s not a reaction to that, it’s just where we are. At the time, some people took Dummy back to Woolworths because it had scratches on it – everyone thought that was odd when they first heard it. Hopefully this will be the same.

INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

Robert Forster – The Evangelist

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In an essay he wrote after the sudden death of Grant McLennan in 2006, Robert Forster noted that popular opinion about the Go-Betweens was wrong. Forster – usually viewed as the more bohemian of the two – was known by McLennan as “the Strategist”. McLennan – seen as the steady one – was the dreamer. These terms are relative, of course. Forster notes that McLennan lived so much in the moment that he (Forster) could appear visionary merely by thinking about tomorrow. Most likely, the truth is in-between, because over the course of their long partnership Forster and McLennan had influenced each other to the point where their creativity had blurred. The Evangelist isn’t a Go-Betweens album, but it’s more cohesive than any of Forster’s other solo albums, and more moving. Go-Betweens’ bassist Adele Pickvance and drummer Glen Thompson are joined by Audrey Riley, whose string arrangements enlivened Liberty Belle & The Black Diamond Express. With Mark Wallis and Dave Ruffy producing, Forster opts for an acoustic sound, opening with the elegiac If It Rains. The absence of drums makes the song sound like a hymn of defiance. Things do lighten up in the middle – with the skiffly Let Your Light In Babe, and Did She Overtake You; a mysterious lyric about a broken romance - but the heart of the record is located in the songs co-written with, or about, Grant. It Ain’t Easy is a straight tribute to a lost friend, delivered like a train song, but it’s overshadowed by Demon Days. The sweet sadness of the tune and chorus – “something’s not right, something’s gone wrong” – were provided by McLennan, but Forster has extended the song into a fateful remembrance. But save your tears for From Ghost Town, a meditation on loss, suspended on a plaintive piano figure. “He knew more than I knew, and I hated what he hated too, this world,” Forster sings. It’s lovely, and lonely, and utterly heartbreaking. ALASTAIR McKAY UNCUT Q&A: ROBERT FORSTER What was the idea behind the album? ROBERT FORSTER: I didn’t want it to be a cluttered sound. I want people to feel comfortable with the record because there’s sort of a story and the lyrics are important. What is the story? This is my first solo album in 12 years and it’s been brought about by Grant passing away, so that’s reflected. I hope there’s a kind of curve. It starts off quite low and then it goes out and it comes back. It’s not a conventional record that’s out to impress from song one. Did you considered packing it in after Grant died? “No. After he passed away I was completely shaken and stunned, and I was just trying to put my thoughts together, but I knew that I would record. If only to record Grant’s songs, if only to record Demon Days, which I think is one of the best songs he ever wrote.” INTERVIEW: ALASTAIR McKAY

In an essay he wrote after the sudden death of Grant McLennan in 2006, Robert Forster noted that popular opinion about the Go-Betweens was wrong. Forster – usually viewed as the more bohemian of the two – was known by McLennan as “the Strategist”. McLennan – seen as the steady one – was the dreamer.

These terms are relative, of course. Forster notes that McLennan lived so much in the moment that he (Forster) could appear visionary merely by thinking about tomorrow.

Most likely, the truth is in-between, because over the course of their long partnership Forster and McLennan had influenced each other to the point where their creativity had blurred.

The Evangelist isn’t a Go-Betweens album, but it’s more cohesive than any of Forster’s other solo albums, and more moving. Go-Betweens’ bassist Adele Pickvance and drummer Glen Thompson are joined by Audrey Riley, whose string arrangements enlivened Liberty Belle & The Black Diamond Express. With Mark Wallis and Dave Ruffy producing, Forster opts for an acoustic sound, opening with the elegiac If It Rains. The absence of drums makes the song sound like a hymn of defiance.

Things do lighten up in the middle – with the skiffly Let Your Light In Babe, and Did She Overtake You; a mysterious lyric about a broken romance – but the heart of the record is located in the songs co-written with, or about, Grant. It Ain’t Easy is a straight tribute to a lost friend, delivered like a train song, but it’s overshadowed by Demon Days. The sweet sadness of the tune and chorus – “something’s not right, something’s gone wrong” – were provided by McLennan, but Forster has extended the song into a fateful remembrance.

But save your tears for From Ghost Town, a meditation on loss, suspended on a plaintive piano figure. “He knew more than I knew, and I hated what he hated too, this world,” Forster sings. It’s lovely, and lonely, and utterly heartbreaking.

ALASTAIR McKAY

UNCUT Q&A: ROBERT FORSTER

What was the idea behind the album?

ROBERT FORSTER: I didn’t want it to be a cluttered sound. I want people to feel comfortable with the record because there’s sort of a story and the lyrics are important.

What is the story?

This is my first solo album in 12 years and it’s been brought about by Grant passing away, so that’s reflected. I hope there’s a kind of curve. It starts off quite low and then it goes out and it comes back. It’s not a conventional record that’s out to impress from song one.

Did you considered packing it in after Grant died?

“No. After he passed away I was completely shaken and stunned, and I was just trying to put my thoughts together, but I knew that I would record. If only to record Grant’s songs, if only to record Demon Days, which I think is one of the best songs he ever wrote.”

INTERVIEW: ALASTAIR McKAY

The Kooks – Konk

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Amidst the post-Monkeys guitar-glut, The Kooks 2006 debut Inside In/Inside Out was a breath of fresh air– a masterclass in breathless pop composition concerned with late night fumbling and, erm, erectile dysfunction. Two years and two million album sales later- and minus raffish bassist Max Rafferty- their sugar-rush enthusiasm has dissolved almost entirely. “Don’t heap this praise on me/I know I don’t deserve it” groans Luke Pritchard on “Gap”, while a jaded “Love It All” acts as a bittersweet counterpoint to the furious optimism of “See the World”. Tunes will never be a problem-“Sway” and “Shine On” are guaranteed to provide a festival frisson - but hearing Pritchard sigh “ABCDEF and G/That reminds me of when we were free” in a mournful “One Last Time” reminds you that, like Supergrass before them, young bands often have the worst growing pains. PAUL MOODY

Amidst the post-Monkeys guitar-glut, The Kooks 2006 debut Inside In/Inside Out was a breath of fresh air– a masterclass in breathless pop composition concerned with late night fumbling and, erm, erectile dysfunction.

Two years and two million album sales later- and minus raffish bassist Max Rafferty- their sugar-rush enthusiasm has dissolved almost entirely. “Don’t heap this praise on me/I know I don’t deserve it” groans Luke Pritchard on “Gap”, while a jaded “Love It All” acts as a bittersweet counterpoint to the furious optimism of “See the World”.

Tunes will never be a problem-“Sway” and “Shine On” are guaranteed to provide a festival frisson – but hearing Pritchard sigh “ABCDEF and G/That reminds me of when we were free” in a mournful “One Last Time” reminds you that, like Supergrass before them, young bands often have the worst growing pains.

PAUL MOODY

David Bowie Ziggy Stardust Live Bootleg To Be Released

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A recording from David Bowie's North American 'Ziggy Stardust' tour is to be made available as a double album on June 30. The show, recorded at the Los Angeles Santa Monica Civic Auditorium on October 20, 1972 has been a famous bootlegged album from the Ziggy Stardust era Bowie. As it was his first live FM Radio broadcasted concert in the US, hundreds of good quality bootlegs became available. This new double disc and vinyl live album through EMI is the first official release of the Santa Monica show, after an attempt by label Golden Years to issue the bootleg in 1994. The original show was attended by 3, 000 fans, and is said to have captured David Bowie at his peak, and through the radio broadcast broken him to the US market. Speaking to Uncut sister title NME, Bowie said of the recording: "I can tell that I'm totally into being Ziggy by this stage of our touring. It's no longer an act; I am him. He added: "This would be around the tenth American show for us and you can hear that we are all pretty high on ourselves. We train wreck a couple of things, I miss some words and sometimes you wouldn’t know that pianist Mike Garson was onstage with us but overall I really treasure this bootleg. Mick Ronson is at his blistering best." The full tracklist for 'David Bowie, Live Santa Monica '72' is: 'Introduction' 'Hang On To Yourself' 'Ziggy Stardust' 'Changes' 'The Supermen' 'Life On Mars?' 'Five Years' 'Space Oddity' 'Andy Warhol' 'My Death' 'The Width Of A Circle' 'Queen Bitch' 'Moonage Daydream' 'John, I'm Only Dancing' 'I'm Waiting For The Man' 'The Jean Genie' 'Suffragette City' 'Rock 'N' Roll Suicide'

A recording from David Bowie‘s North American ‘Ziggy Stardust’ tour is to be made available as a double album on June 30.

The show, recorded at the Los Angeles Santa Monica Civic Auditorium on October 20, 1972 has been a famous bootlegged album from the Ziggy Stardust era Bowie. As it was his first live FM Radio broadcasted concert in the US, hundreds of good quality bootlegs became available.

This new double disc and vinyl live album through EMI is the first official release of the Santa Monica show, after an attempt by label Golden Years to issue the bootleg in 1994.

The original show was attended by 3, 000 fans, and is said to have captured David Bowie at his peak, and through the radio broadcast broken him to the US market.

Speaking to Uncut sister title NME, Bowie said of the recording: “I can tell that I’m totally into being Ziggy by this stage of our touring. It’s no longer an act; I am him.

He added: “This would be around the tenth American show for us and you can hear that we are all pretty high on ourselves. We train wreck a couple of things, I miss some words and sometimes you wouldn’t know that pianist Mike Garson was onstage with us but overall I really treasure this bootleg. Mick Ronson is at his blistering best.”

The full tracklist for ‘David Bowie, Live Santa Monica ’72’ is:

‘Introduction’

‘Hang On To Yourself’

‘Ziggy Stardust’

‘Changes’

‘The Supermen’

‘Life On Mars?’

‘Five Years’

‘Space Oddity’

‘Andy Warhol’

‘My Death’

‘The Width Of A Circle’

‘Queen Bitch’

‘Moonage Daydream’

‘John, I’m Only Dancing’

‘I’m Waiting For The Man’

‘The Jean Genie’

‘Suffragette City’

‘Rock ‘N’ Roll Suicide’

Clash Legend’s Paintings Go On Show This Week

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Clash legend Paul Simonon is to exhibit a selection of his Spanish themed oil paintings, at his first art show since 2002, from Thursday (April 17). The paintings, which centre around the world of the matador, were studied and sketched in Madrid, at the Las Ventos del Toro bull fighting arena and g...

Clash legend Paul Simonon is to exhibit a selection of his Spanish themed oil paintings, at his first art show since 2002, from Thursday (April 17).

The paintings, which centre around the world of the matador, were studied and sketched in Madrid, at the Las Ventos del Toro bull fighting arena and go on show at Thomas Williams Fine Art gallery in Old Street this week.

The bassist, who now plays with Damon Albarn in The Good, The Bad & The Queen completed the oil paintings from the sketches at his London studio so that he was “no longer a slave to reality and could take liberties” according to the gallery’s description.

Simonon’s last solo art exhibition was of scenes painted of the River Thames, shown in 2002.

The new exhibition runs until May 9. Opening hours are 10 – 6pm.

See Paul Simonon’s new oil paintings by clicking here for the gallery website

Pic credit: PA Photos

Paul Weller Speaks About Collaboration With Oasis

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Paul Weller has commented further about working with Oasis’ Noel Gallagher and former Blur musician Graham Coxon on his new solo album 22 Dreams and has also revealed details of the possible first single. Gallagher appears on “Echoes Round The Sun” alongside fellow Oasis member Gem Archer, an...

Paul Weller has commented further about working with OasisNoel Gallagher and former Blur musician Graham Coxon on his new solo album 22 Dreams and has also revealed details of the possible first single.

Gallagher appears on “Echoes Round The Sun” alongside fellow Oasis member Gem Archer, and the album track is expected to be the first single released on May 26, a double A-side with “Have You Made Your Mind Up”.

Weller who previously helped out on Oasis’ Champagne Supernova told BBC news this week that a new collaboration was a long time coming. He said: “Well me and Noel have been talking about trying to write something for years now. He had the idea for the backing track and I just put the tune and the words on top.”

Weller also adds that Oasis fans could be disappointed that the Gallagher doesn’t sing on the track, saying: “He’s not singing on it, he’s playing a lot of keyboards and some bass which is not necessarily the first thing you’d think of.”

Graham Coxon features on 22 Dreams album track ‘Black River’ and Weller says they “worked on that early last year” adding that “Graham plays drums, backing vocals and guitars.”

Weller also commented on the collaborations in general saying: “I think among most musicians you just get on with it and enjoy it, and it’s fun and just a joy to do.”

For more details on the new studio album and for the full 22 Dreams tracklisting, click here.

For more details on the new studio album and for the full 22 Dreams tracklisting, click here.

Meanwhile, Paul Weller is back on stage. You can see him at the following venues next month:

Victoria Theatre, Halifax (May 5)

Victoria Hall, Stoke (6)

Empress Ballroom, Blackpool (8)

Neil Young Hop Farm Update!

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My Morning Jacket have today been revealed as the fourth act to play at the Neil Young headlined Day At Hop Farm Festival. The alt.rockers MMJ will be taking a break from their US tour, where they are promoting new album Evil Urges to play the one-day event which takes place at Paddock Wood, Tonbri...

My Morning Jacket have today been revealed as the fourth act to play at the Neil Young headlined Day At Hop Farm Festival.

The alt.rockers MMJ will be taking a break from their US tour, where they are promoting new album Evil Urges to play the one-day event which takes place at Paddock Wood, Tonbridge on July 6.

The reverb heavy band from Kentucky join previously announced acts Primal Scream and Supergrass as well of course as Neil Young.

More ‘world class’ acts are still to be revealed for the one-day festival billed as being an ‘unbranded festival for music lovers.’

The Day At Hop Farm is the brainchild of Vince Power, who has previously worked on Reading, Glastonbury and Beniccassim festivals

Announcements will be made throughout April.

The 16th Uncut Playlist Of 2008

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I'm just playing an old record by the great folk/psych/raga guitarist Peter Walker, who has recently returned to action after nearly 40 years of, as far as I can tell from a quick circuit round the internet, practising flamenco guitar. Amazingly, Walker - one of the few survivors of John Fahey's generation of American primitives, and the man who provided musical accompaniment to Timothy Leary's early experiments - is playing just down the road from me in Dalston, North-East London tonight. The venue is a promising new place called Cafe Oto, which has a fantastic list of forthcoming gigs. I'll report back tomorrow, obviously. In the meantime, here's the latest Uncut playlist. The Comus is a highly enjoyable bootleg of their recent reunion gig onboard a Scandinavian ferry at a festival curated by Opeth, bizarrely. It features one of the weirdest of acid-folk bands trying to play "Venus In Furs" while the staggeringly drunk audience bellow along enthusiastically. Must have been fun, if you have sea legs. 1. Peter Walker - Echo Of My Soul (Tompkins Square) 2. The Dodos - Visiter (Wichita) 3. The Fall - Imperial Wax Solvent (Castle) 4. Alexander Tucker - Custom Made EP (ATP Recordings) 5. Herbie Hancock/Thad Jones/Ron Carter/Jerome Richardson/Grady Tate/Jonathan Klein - Hear, O Israel: A Prayer Ceremony In Jazz (Trunk) 6. Larry Jon Wilson - Larry Jon Wilson (1965) 7. Marnie Stern - The Alchemist (Kissing Kin) 8. Comus - Live 2008 (Bootleg) 9. The Owl Service - A Garland Of Song (Southern) 10. Crystal Castles - Crystal Castles (Different) 11. Dennis Wilson - Pacific Ocean Blue/Bambu (Rhino) 12. Peter Walker - Second Poem To Karmela (Or Gypsies Are Important) (Vanguard)

I’m just playing an old record by the great folk/psych/raga guitarist Peter Walker, who has recently returned to action after nearly 40 years of, as far as I can tell from a quick circuit round the internet, practising flamenco guitar. Amazingly, Walker – one of the few survivors of John Fahey‘s generation of American primitives, and the man who provided musical accompaniment to Timothy Leary‘s early experiments – is playing just down the road from me in Dalston, North-East London tonight.

Phosphorescent To Play Club Uncut!

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Phosphorescent aka musician Matthew Houck is set to play Uncut's double headline clubnight at London's Borderline venue this Thursday (April 17). The Brooklyn via Alabama artist who released debut album Pride late last year, joins Jana Hunter at the second monthly Uncut live night -- kicking off th...

Phosphorescent aka musician Matthew Houck is set to play Uncut’s double headline clubnight at London’s Borderline venue this Thursday (April 17).

The Brooklyn via Alabama artist who released debut album Pride late last year, joins Jana Hunter at the second monthly Uncut live night — kicking off the pair’s UK tour (details below).

A few tickets still remain for Club Uncut – available from seetickets.com – the action kicks off at 7pm – we’ll see you there!

Phosphorescent and Jana Hunter will also play these regional dates, the Irish shows will be Matthew Houck solo gigs…

Bristol, The Cube (18)

Coventry, Taylor John’s House (19)

York, Fibbers (20)

Glasgow, Captains Rest (21)

Newcastle, Cumberland Arms (22)

Manchester, Sacred Trinity Chapel (23)

Leeds, The Faversham (24)

Galway, Roisin Dubh – solo (25)

Dublin, Whelans (Upstairs) – solo (26)

Check out the video to second single “A Picture of Our Torn Up Place” from Pride here.

Starring Elaborate Affair, the horse pictured above with Houck.

Watch the video here

The Lemonheads Bring Ray To Truck Festival

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The Lemonheads have been confirmed to headline this year's Truck Festival in Steventon, South Oxfordshire in July. The band's only UK appearance in 2008, will see them perform their classic 1992 (and recently reissued) album It's A Shame About Ray in it's entirety, as well as other hits from their ...

The Lemonheads have been confirmed to headline this year’s Truck Festival in Steventon, South Oxfordshire in July.

The band’s only UK appearance in 2008, will see them perform their classic 1992 (and recently reissued) album It’s A Shame About Ray in it’s entirety, as well as other hits from their catalogue.

The festival is set to take place on July 19 and 20 and tickets for the small but perfectly formed Truck Festival are nearly sold-out.

Now in its 11th year, Truck has gained a following for being rammed with new bands and its wholesome, independent approach.

As well as The Lemonheads, the likes of Small Faces keyboardist, Ian McLagan and The Bump Band, MAPS, These New Puritans, Lovvers, Noah and the Whale, The Television Personalities, Emmy the Great will play across the event’s six stages, with more to be revealed on arrival at the festival.

According to the Truck website: “We will not be making a full line-up announcement.”

“TRUCK is about discovering your new favourite band, and rediscovering those resident eccentrics on the fringes, whilst chewing a burger from the Rotary Club or an ice cream from the Vicar, before buying a few pints from those cross-dressing bar staff!”

Tickets cost £60 and are available from the Truck website.

The Fall: “Imperial Wax Solvent”

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I’ve just finished reading the second bunch of extracts from Mark E Smith’s autobiography in this morning’s Guardian, and I must confess to being a bit disappointed. I guess “Renegade: The Lives And Tales Of Mark E Smith” could have gone two ways: a dense and profoundly untrustworthy surrealist tract that followed on from those vividly impenetrable things he used to write for NME as Roman Totale back in the ‘80s; or a massively extended Smith rant, the contents of which we’ll be generally familiar with after three decades of admittedly entertaining interviews. Foolish as it may be to judge a book by a bunch of extracts – and extracts, at that, which barely touch on the specifics of The Fall – it seems that “Renegade” falls squarely into the latter category, reading like tidied-up saloon bar rambles, with Smith optimistically pitched by the publishers as a kind of pseudo-countercultural Jeremy Clarkson. Among some stuff we already know Smith believes – smoking and speed are quite nice, journalists are “youngish blokes who can’t handle their drink”, band members are expendable, especially guitarists – there’s one insight that caught my attention. Smith claims – exaggerates, perhaps – that he can’t stand clutter and only has “three chairs in the house: one for the wife, one for me and one for a guest.” Interesting, but I’d rather hoped that “Renegade” would be a kind of extension of Smith’s lyrical voice – in the same way, I suppose, that the fluent, elliptical style of “Chronicles” so evidently complemented the music and lyrics of Bob Dylan. Traditional succour, I guess, arrives around the same time as “Renegade” in the shape of “Imperial Wax Solvent”, something like the 27th studio album released by The Fall. The American band who figured on “Reformation Post TLC”, and the psychedelic tang they brought with them, have predictably been given the boot. In their place comes another bunch of mysterious musicians, men whose names even the most devoted fans will struggle to remember. They have, though, become involved in one of the more ambitious albums produced by the latterday Fall. It starts well, with some shambolic jazz and curdled muttering about “James Loaded Brown” on “Alton Towers”, then rolls into the terrific “Wolf Kidult Man”, that could just about pass for something off “Bend Sinister”. As could the thumping bits of Smith’s agitated epic of self-justification, “50 Year Old Man”, though the sprawling collage of this one also takes in some clattery Faustian improv and a spectacularly damaged banjo interlude before resolving itself into at least another two good vintage Fall tunes. Seemingly the only way Smith can work out how to end “50 Year Old Man” is by shouting “Fade out” and after that, as is traditional with Fall records, things get a bit spotty. There’s a capricious cover (The Groundhogs’ “Strange Town”), a lead vocal by Elena Poulou on the chundering, indignant singalong “I’ve Been Duped” and some pound shop acid house (“Taurig”) in the next three tracks. The second half of the album hasn’t captured my attention quite as strongly, though today, as I make a proper effort to concentrate, it definitely sounds better than usual. “Can Can Summer” has an uncharacteristically airy swing to it, beneath the overlapping mutters. “I like to relax with tobacco and sugar,” Smith snarls on “Latch Key Kid”, representative of a particularly unpleasant new, deeper, rancorous voice that he keeps trying out here. There’s a danger, as “Is This New” bats along with unusual clarity, that I might get traditionally carried away and say that “Imperial Wax Solvent” is the best Fall album since, oh, sometime when they had members whose names I could remember. I’m beginning to think it may be better than the last one I really liked, “The Real New Fall LP”, but in truth it’s so long since I played that, it’s impossible to make that judgment. The Von Sudenfed album is the Smith product that I’ve found most enduring in the past decade or so, which possibly suggests that he’d be more consistent working with musicians of a certain, um, pedigree. But then maybe such orthodoxy defeats the point of The Fall, and would make them lose some of the idiosyncracies that I think may be missing from “Renegade”. And maybe later Fall albums aren’t things to treasure forever, but to perpetually renew. That in the same way Smith uses and discards bandmembers, we should do the same with his records. I doubt I’ll ever choose to play “Imperial Wax Solvent” ahead of, say, “This Nation’s Saving Grace”. But for the next fortnight or so, it’ll do just fine.

I’ve just finished reading the second bunch of extracts from Mark E Smith’s autobiography in this morning’s Guardian, and I must confess to being a bit disappointed. I guess “Renegade: The Lives And Tales Of Mark E Smith” could have gone two ways: a dense and profoundly untrustworthy surrealist tract that followed on from those vividly impenetrable things he used to write for NME as Roman Totale back in the ‘80s; or a massively extended Smith rant, the contents of which we’ll be generally familiar with after three decades of admittedly entertaining interviews.