Home Blog Page 899

B52s Announce UK Tour Dates

0
The B-52s have announced that they will play a short UK tour this July, in support of their first album release in 16 years. The band will play four shows starting in Glasgow on July 21, showcasing songs from their forthcoming Steve Osborne (New Order, Doves) produced studio album Funplex. The ban...

The B-52s have announced that they will play a short UK tour this July, in support of their first album release in 16 years.

The band will play four shows starting in Glasgow on July 21, showcasing songs from their forthcoming Steve Osborne (New Order, Doves) produced studio album Funplex.

The band are shortly due to announce more European show dates.

Glasgow, Academy (July 21)

Manchester, Academy (22)

Birmingham, Academy (23)

London, The Roundhouse (24)

www.myspace.com/theb52s

www.theb52s.com

Pic credit: Guy Eppel

First Support Act Confirmed For Neil Young’s Day On Hop Farm

0
Primal Scream are the first support act confirmed to play the Neil Young-headlined Hop Farm Festival this July. The festival is set to take place at The Hop Farm in Paddock Wood, Tonbridge on July 6 and is billed as being an unbranded festival for music lovers. The festival is the brainchild of V...

Primal Scream are the first support act confirmed to play the Neil Young-headlined Hop Farm Festival this July.

The festival is set to take place at The Hop Farm in Paddock Wood, Tonbridge on July 6 and is billed as being an unbranded festival for music lovers.

The festival is the brainchild of Vince Power, who has previously worked on Reading, Glastonbury and Beniccassim festivals says of the line-up announced for Hop Farm so far: With an already first class act headlining this year’s festival, I am thrilled that we have also secured one of the UK’s most talented bands. This great day will put the music lover at the centre of the event itself and will see a renaissance in the festival going experience.”

Further acts for the one-day festival will be announced throughout April.

The Rolling Stones To Attend UK Film Premiere

0
The Rolling Stones are in London tonight (April 2) to attend the UK premiere of their new Martin Scorsese directed live documentary film, Shine A Light. The music flick documents the band's 46-year history with footage from a gig they played at New York's Beacon Theatre in 2006. Speaking at the Be...

The Rolling Stones are in London tonight (April 2) to attend the UK premiere of their new Martin Scorsese directed live documentary film, Shine A Light.

The music flick documents the band’s 46-year history with footage from a gig they played at New York’s Beacon Theatre in 2006.

Speaking at the Berlin premiere of Shine A Light, Oscar-winning director Scorsese said he’s always been a huge fan of the Stones. He said: “Whenever I saw the show I’d get excited – I wanted to get a camera up there. We tried to get as close as possible to the energy of a live concert.

He added he has always loved their music commenting “Their music was tougher and had an edge; beautiful and honest and brutal at times and powerful. It’s always stayed with me.”

As well as the Stones and Scorsese attending on the red carpet, other artists expected to attend the Leicester Square premiere are Oasis, Kasabian, Klaxons, Maximo Park and the Mighty Boosh‘s Noel Fielding.

Last month www.uncut.co.uk ran a competition to win a pair of tickets to the Shine A Light UK premiere plus an overnight stay at the swish Rathbone Hotel

We asked ‘What is the name of Keith Richard’s Russian dog?’ The answer was Rasputin. The lucky winner is Matthew Bentham from London.

You can read Uncut’s first review of Shine A Light by clicking here.

Shine A Light opens nationwide on April 11.

Radiohead Best Of Tracklisting Revealed

0

A Radiohead two-disc 'Best of' is due to be released by their former longterm record company Parlophone on June 2. The first ever retrospective collection will contain 29 songs from the band's first twelve years. The 'Best of', featuring singles, key album tracks and live favourites will be relaesed as a two CD set and a four vinyl LP set. The full tracklisting for Parlophone's Radiohead Best of is: CD1: Just Paranoid Android Karma Police Creep No Surprises High and Dry My Iron Lung There There Lucky Fake Plastic Trees Idioteque 2+2 = 5 The Bends Pyramid Song Street Spirit (Fade Out) Everything In Its Right Place CD2: Airbag I Might Be Wrong Go To Sleep Let Down Planet Telex Exit Music (For A Film) The National Anthem Knives Out Talk Show Host You Anyone Can Play Guitar How To Disappear Completely True Love Waits

A Radiohead two-disc ‘Best of’ is due to be released by their former longterm record company Parlophone on June 2.

The first ever retrospective collection will contain 29 songs from the band’s first twelve years.

The ‘Best of’, featuring singles, key album tracks and live favourites will be relaesed as a two CD set and a four vinyl LP set.

The full tracklisting for Parlophone’s Radiohead Best of is:

CD1:

Just

Paranoid Android

Karma Police

Creep

No Surprises

High and Dry

My Iron Lung

There There

Lucky

Fake Plastic Trees

Idioteque

2+2 = 5

The Bends

Pyramid Song

Street Spirit (Fade Out)

Everything In Its Right Place

CD2:

Airbag

I Might Be Wrong

Go To Sleep

Let Down

Planet Telex

Exit Music (For A Film)

The National Anthem

Knives Out

Talk Show Host

You

Anyone Can Play Guitar

How To Disappear Completely

True Love Waits

Weezer Album Nearly Complete

0
Weezer's Rivers Cuomo has said that the band's new studio is near to completion. Posting on the band's website weezer.com, Cuomo reports that they "have one song left to mix and then it’s on to mastering. We should be all done very soon. Then we chill for a minute." He adds that "the album is me...

Weezer‘s Rivers Cuomo has said that the band’s new studio is near to completion.

Posting on the band’s website weezer.com, Cuomo reports that they “have one song left to mix and then it’s on to mastering. We should be all done very soon. Then we chill for a minute.”

He adds that “the album is meaty, crunchy and melodic like a good Weezer album should be.”

Cumo also teases fans with what the first single from the album will be called. He says “It’s one word, starts with a T, ends with an R and contains twelve letters. You should be able to figure it out because you’re smart li’l Weezer fans.”

The new studio album is due for release this June.

Paul Simon Added To Summer Pops Festival

0
Paul Simon is the latest headliner to be confirmed for this year's Summer Pops festival in Liverpool this Summer. The singer, celebrating 40 years in music, returns to Summer Pops on July 6, after playing the event back in 2002. Commenting on his last headline appearance, Simon says: "Liverpool w...

Paul Simon is the latest headliner to be confirmed for this year’s Summer Pops festival in Liverpool this Summer.

The singer, celebrating 40 years in music, returns to Summer Pops on July 6, after playing the event back in 2002.

Commenting on his last headline appearance, Simon says: “Liverpool was the very best concert on my European tour and the audience were also the best. I really enjoyed the show. What an audience, the reaction was really fabulous. I can’t wait to come back.”

Twelve time Grammy winning artists Simon is famed for classics such as “Bridge Over Troubled Waters”, “Homeward Bound” and “Mrs Robinson”.

He was also awarded a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2003 for his work as half of Simon and Garfunkel.

Tickets for Paul Simon’s show are on sale today (April 2).

More artists for the Liverpool music festival are still to be announced.

Mick Hucknall (July 1)

The Australian Pink Floyd Show (July 4)

Paul Simon (6)

Counting Crows (8)

Crowded House (9)

Deacon Blue (11)

Diana Ross (12)

Def Leppard, Whitesnake, Thunder (15)

Michael Bublé (20)

The Stranglers, Blondie (22)

The Australian Pink Floyd Show (26)

Tickets and more line-up info is available by clicking here for www.accliverpool.com

Leonard Cohen on America’s Got Talent, Amy Winehouse on Dr Who. It must be April Fools!

0

It’s April Fools Day (April 1) and the prank stories have been doing the rounds. Here at UNCUT we posted a news story that ‘Laughing’ Leonard Cohen was due to take over from David Hasselhoff as the third judge on America’s Got Talent. We’d like to point out that it was completely fictitious. Obviously. Meanwhile our sister publication, NME published a story that Amy Winehouse would appear in the next series of Doctor Who as an evil alien overlord and Gigwise claimed she was about to launch her own beehive hairdo dubbed the “Wino”. A story of Liam Gallgher streaking in the USA, complete with a fake video, was posted on the unofficial Oasis blog http://stopcryingyourheartoutnews.blogspot.com. In non music-related japes, The Guardian claimed that Carla Bruni-Sarkozy was asked by Gordon Brown to spearhead a government initiative aimed at "injecting more style and glamour into British national life".

It’s April Fools Day (April 1) and the prank stories have been doing the rounds.

Here at UNCUT we posted a news story that ‘Laughing’ Leonard Cohen was due to take over from David Hasselhoff as the third judge on America’s Got Talent. We’d like to point out that it was completely fictitious. Obviously.

Meanwhile our sister publication, NME published a story that Amy Winehouse would appear in the next series of Doctor Who as an evil alien overlord and Gigwise claimed she was about to launch her own beehive hairdo dubbed the “Wino”.

A story of Liam Gallgher streaking in the USA, complete with a fake video, was posted on the unofficial Oasis blog http://stopcryingyourheartoutnews.blogspot.com.

In non music-related japes, The Guardian claimed that Carla Bruni-Sarkozy was asked by Gordon Brown to spearhead a government initiative aimed at “injecting more style and glamour into British national life”.

The Who Play Rare Acoustic Set

0
The Who will play a rare acoustic set at the Royal Albert Hall on April 13 to close a week of benefit gigs in aid of the Teenage Cancer Trust. Marking the 8th year of Teenage Cancer Trust gigs at the Royal Albert Hall, The Who will join Noel Fielding, Paul Weller with Steve Cradock and Duffy, The F...

The Who will play a rare acoustic set at the Royal Albert Hall on April 13 to close a week of benefit gigs in aid of the Teenage Cancer Trust.

Marking the 8th year of Teenage Cancer Trust gigs at the Royal Albert Hall, The Who will join Noel Fielding, Paul Weller with Steve Cradock and Duffy, The Fratellis, Muse, Joan Armatrading, David Gray, Newton Faulkner and Amy Macdonald.

Roger Daltrey, patron of the TCT, said: “I was really thrilled when Pete called up and offered to do this. It’s a great way of closing another fantastic week of shows for Teenage Cancer Trust.”

Further information is available at www.teenagecancertrust.org

Pic credit: Redferns

The Breeders’ Moutain Battles Album Reviewed!

0
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 7):

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.

Lemonheads – It’s A Shame About RayEvan Dando’s deceptively sunny breakthrough, plus demos and DVD and Q&A

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.

The Courteeners – St Jude – The Mancunian Candidates: tipped indie scallywags debut.

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

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.

Gnarls Barkley – The Odd Couple – The ‘Crazy’ duo return with a kaleidoscopic, funkadelic second album + Q&A with Danger Mouse.

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.

Beck – Odelay Deluxe Edition – 90s slack hop opus, remastered and extended with remixes, B-sides and two unreleased tracks has stood up to the test of time — Stephen Trousse revists Beck’s genius.

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 Breeders – Mountain Battles

0
Breeders albums are like country buses: you wait a really, long time for one, and when it does finally turn up, the vehicle is so battered, and the driver so laid-back, you wonder how it ever got there at all. It took the Deal twins nine years to follow grunge-pop classic Last Splash with the sweet...

Breeders albums are like country buses: you wait a really, long time for one, and when it does finally turn up, the vehicle is so battered, and the driver so laid-back, you wonder how it ever got there at all. It took the Deal twins nine years to follow grunge-pop classic Last Splash with the sweet but flimsy Title TK. Now they’ve frittered away another six summers on Mountain Battles.

At least they’ve got better excuses this time. Kim spent two years on tour with the reformed Pixies, penning their only new song “Bam Thwok”. Kelley has long since swapped heroin needles for knitting needles, and has a book of rock-themed knitting patterns coming out later this year.

They certainly haven’t spent time auditioning string players or mastering Pro Tools. Mountain Battles is marginally more polished than Title TK but it still sounds as if it was recorded in one take in Steve Albini’s toilet. A good thing, as it turns out. The intimacy of is what makes it precious.

Electrifying reverb-drenched opener “Overglazed” is a red herring. What follows is a miscellany of pithy, lo-fi curios: one song in German (the lurching, riffy “German Studies”), another in Spanish (“Regalame Esta Noche”, an old Latin bolero, sung beautifully by Kelley), and several which are barely there at all. “Istanbul” is built from swampy, Arabesque organ loops, a glowering bassline, eerie vocal chants and an ominous rhythm, like someone rattling twigs against the bars of a cage. It’s bizarre and brilliant.

As always, the sweetly menacing harmonies of the Deal twins pull everything together. They’re mesmerising on “Night Of Joy”, whose fairytale fragility is a quality more commonly associated with their former Breeders cohort Tanya Donnelly. Even better is the drowsy 6/8 waltz “We’re Gonna Rise” where Kim sings “”. It’s the credo that’s been guiding the Deals for 46 years, and there’s no reason for them to abandon it now.

SAM RICHARDS

UNCUT Q&A WITH: KIM DEAL

The album feels very sparing and intimate. Is that the intention?

A lot of people have said that the album is minimal, but I don’t agree. There are four people in the band, all playing at once. I think it’s because people are used to the fake denseness of digital music.

How did you come to cover Regalame Esta Noche?

I head it on the jukebox in a bar called El Capiro. It’s the one place in East LA where you can still smoke because it’s directly across the street from the Sheriff’s Department. All the detectives are in there smoking. I got Mando Lopez, our bass player, to translate the song for me. “” – that bit’s really nice, but then there’s lots of metaphors that don’t translate well, so we kept it in Spanish.

You do a song in German too. Can you speak three languages now?

No, I can’t speak shit!

INTERVIEW: SAM RICHARDS

Lemonheads – It’s A Shame About Ray

0

It’s not always easy to remember these things: in 1992, did It’s A Shame About Ray sound quite so poignant, so tender, so presciently damaged? If memory serves, we all jumped on this, Evan Dando’s fifth Lemonheads album, as a sort of exuberant and charming riposte to grunge. Dando had gradually steered his brattish Boston punk band into becoming a rough-edged powerpop outfit. Compared with, say, Alice In Chains, the Lemonheads certainly sounded fun, if not quite the lightweights they were portrayed as in the wake of that ill-advised dash through “Mrs Robinson”. But listening to It’s A Shame About Ray now, what’s most striking is an emotional frailty at the heart of these swift and memorable little songs, a vivid intimation of the mess that Evan Dando would soon become. After his fourth album, Lovey, had underperformed, Dando escaped to Sydney and fell in with a bunch of indie musicians, centred around a cute band called Smudge and a lively label called Half A Cow. Smudge’s frontman, Tom Morgan, and Half A Cow’s owner, Nic Dalton, became Dando’s new musical accomplices: Dalton would soon join the Lemonheads full-time as their bassist. Morgan and Dalton certainly encouraged Dando’s warm melodic gifts, his goofier side – as did The Robb Brothers, who produced Ray at their studio in LA. But amongst all the “butterscotch streetlamps” and so on, the singer’s insecurities were already pronounced. On “My Drug Buddy”, a gorgeous, countryish lope that briefly posited Dando and Juliana Hatfield as a ‘90s Gram and Emmylou, he notes sorrowfully, “I’m too much with myself, I wanna be someone else.” “Rudderless”, meanwhile, is saturated with regret: “Walked back home to my place (tired of getting high), Guess I don’t wanna die.” This, remember, is purportedly Dando’s age of innocence. In fact, he had been seriously experimenting with drugs for years. It’s A Shame About Ray, in its 2008 incarnation, is still a great album, but a palpably darker one. The original 29 minutes remain a compact pop thrill. “Mrs Robinson” remains a trouble-making aberration (and one left off initial pressings of the album). There’s a sweet b-side, “Shaky Ground”, and then nine solo demos that provide a rueful new coda. Beneath the fresh bubblegum zing, they reveal the truth about Evan Dando: long before fame got to him, he was exquisitely well-prepared to self-destruct. JOHN MULVEY UNCUT Q&A WITH EVAN DANDO: Do you still hate your cover version of “Mrs Robinson”? I’m not so bothered by it now, it was the song that turned a lot of people on to the band. But we never liked it, we never played it live apart from a couple of times on TV shows. I tried to keep it off the reissue. The reason I wanted the reissue to come out was that I found this cassette of demos that I really liked. What are you up to at the moment? I have a cold and I need to get a decongestant or something. But I’m working on a covers album with Gibby Haynes of the Butthole Surfers. We’re doing some obscure psychedelic stuff, then some more obvious stuff like Tim Hardin, Townes Van Zandt, a Dan Penn song called “Zero Will Power”. INTERVIEW: JOHN MULVEY

It’s not always easy to remember these things: in 1992, did It’s A Shame About Ray sound quite so poignant, so tender, so presciently damaged? If memory serves, we all jumped on this, Evan Dando’s fifth Lemonheads album, as a sort of exuberant and charming riposte to grunge. Dando had gradually steered his brattish Boston punk band into becoming a rough-edged powerpop outfit. Compared with, say, Alice In Chains, the Lemonheads certainly sounded fun, if not quite the lightweights they were portrayed as in the wake of that ill-advised dash through “Mrs Robinson”.

But listening to It’s A Shame About Ray now, what’s most striking is an emotional frailty at the heart of these swift and memorable little songs, a vivid intimation of the mess that Evan Dando would soon become. After his fourth album, Lovey, had underperformed, Dando escaped to Sydney and fell in with a bunch of indie musicians, centred around a cute band called Smudge and a lively label called Half A Cow. Smudge’s frontman, Tom Morgan, and Half A Cow’s owner, Nic Dalton, became Dando’s new musical accomplices: Dalton would soon join the Lemonheads full-time as their bassist.

Morgan and Dalton certainly encouraged Dando’s warm melodic gifts, his goofier side – as did The Robb Brothers, who produced Ray at their studio in LA. But amongst all the “butterscotch streetlamps” and so on, the singer’s insecurities were already pronounced. On “My Drug Buddy”, a gorgeous, countryish lope that briefly posited Dando and Juliana Hatfield as a ‘90s Gram and Emmylou, he notes sorrowfully, “I’m too much with myself, I wanna be someone else.” “Rudderless”, meanwhile, is saturated with regret: “Walked back home to my place (tired of getting high), Guess I don’t wanna die.” This, remember, is purportedly Dando’s age of innocence. In fact, he had been seriously experimenting with drugs for years.

It’s A Shame About Ray, in its 2008 incarnation, is still a great album, but a palpably darker one. The original 29 minutes remain a compact pop thrill. “Mrs Robinson” remains a trouble-making aberration (and one left off initial pressings of the album). There’s a sweet b-side, “Shaky Ground”, and then nine solo demos that provide a rueful new coda. Beneath the fresh bubblegum zing, they reveal the truth about Evan Dando: long before fame got to him, he was exquisitely well-prepared to self-destruct.

JOHN MULVEY

UNCUT Q&A WITH EVAN DANDO:

Do you still hate your cover version of “Mrs Robinson”?

I’m not so bothered by it now, it was the song that turned a lot of people on to the band. But we never liked it, we never played it live apart from a couple of times on TV shows. I tried to keep it off the reissue. The reason I wanted the reissue to come out was that I found this cassette of demos that I really liked.

What are you up to at the moment?

I have a cold and I need to get a decongestant or something. But I’m working on a covers album with Gibby Haynes of the Butthole Surfers. We’re doing some obscure psychedelic stuff, then some more obvious stuff like Tim Hardin, Townes Van Zandt, a Dan Penn song called “Zero Will Power”.

INTERVIEW: JOHN MULVEY

Various: Thank You Friends: The Ardent Records Story

0

Remember those days in 1991-2 when Teenage Fanclub’s Bandwagonesque was a ubiquitous hit and everyone paid homage to Alex Chilton and Big Star (pictured above)? I interviewed Chilton at Maxwell’s in Hoboken during that period. He probably wished he had a pound for every time the word “influential” came up in conversation. Battle-scarred, pale as chalk, he dismissed my Big Star eulogies as absurd. Chilton was a veteran of the British Invasion, a purist. In his world, music died in 1967. I looked into his eyes, his disappointed eyes, and he meant it. A degree of hard-nosed Anglophilia, coupled with a bittersweet sense of what might have been, are the prevailing themes of Thank You Friends: The Ardent Records Story. A two-CD anthology of the small Memphis label that put out Big Star’s first two albums (#1 Record, 1972; Radio City, 1974), it’s a poignant tale to immerse oneself in, not least because a key protagonist, Big Star’s co-founder Chris Bell, was sent into a mortal depression by his band’s commercial failure and lost his life in a car-crash at the age of 27. It’s a story of valiant endeavour and broken hearts. As Ardent’s founder John Fry said to me recently: “So much optimism – and then, boy, downhill.” Thank You Friends… celebrates three distinct eras of the Ardent label, which has released local Memphis product, on and off, for nearly 50 years. Our first glimpse of Ardent comes in 1961. It is run from Fry’s parents’ house, and is knocking out quirky, and completely obscure, tunes such as “Geraldine” by The Ole Miss Downbeats. A rugby club’s idea of a Bo Diddley rumble, with a heavily featured duck-call, “Geraldine” is like a cry from a lost civilisation. By 1966, garage-rock was sweeping the States and Ardent was a proper professional studio. Maverick producer Jim Dickinson oversaw a series of blistering sessions at Ardent involving bands like The Bitter Ind, The 1st Century and The Wallabies. Although these productions, in hindsight, are the equal of anything on Nuggets, many went unissued at the time because America wasn’t looking to Memphis for new developments in garage or psychedelia. A real pity, but we can certainly appreciate Dickinson’s ingenuity now. The Wallabies’ “White Doors” is a delicious marriage of Lewis Carroll and twisted Merseybeat. And on The Bitter Ind’s “Hands Are Only To See”, the producer creates a hallucinogenic soundworld by juxtaposing fuzz bass, ghostly harmonies (“Walls are lost when you think you’ve found them”) and an erratically plucked viola. With Dickinson gone by 1969, and the pop-minded Terry Manning installed as house producer, a change in approach is discernible in the latter half of the anthology’s first disc. Compiler Alec Palao’s informative sleevenotes paint a vivid account of young middle-class Memphis music-makers, still enchanted by The Beatles and The Yardbirds, aesthetically disengaging themselves from Memphis’s R&B and soul traditions in search of their own identity. Out of time, out of the cultural loop, this coterie of hip teenagers enjoyed free use of Ardent Studios, where John Fry encouraged Chris Bell and like-minded friends to experiment at their leisure on top-of-the-range recording equipment. Imagine Abbey Road throwing open its doors to unknown kids from north London. Thus began the evolution of Big Star. Long-lost or rare tracks by Christmas Future, The Badgers and Rock City – all featuring Chris Bell – show us how the quintessential Big Star style was carefully assembled, even before Alex Chilton returned to Memphis from his whirlwind spell with The Box Tops. Rock City’s “Lovely Lady” is (itals)almost(itals) the finished article: palpably influenced by Badfinger, it has that marvellous chunk-and-jangle sound that would grace #1 Record. The second disc of Thank You Friends… is dominated by Big Star. Illustrating how significant they were to Ardent’s push for national recognition in 1972–4, Big Star account for 15 of these 24 tracks, most of them demos or alternate mixes. “Mod Lang”, for example, was recorded at a late-night session directed by an audibly gin-soaked Chilton, during a time when Big Star had briefly split up. Later cleaned up for inclusion on Radio City, this version has Chilton adding “… Just like John Mitchell” after the line “I wanna witness, I want to testify”. The remark leaps out of the speakers. It’s bizarre to think of Big Star existing in the same time-frame as the former Attorney General’s Watergate grand jury testimony. Having started on a high note with Big Star’s early promise and a fantastic power-pop single by Cargoe (“Feel Alright”), disc two descends into abject disillusion with the collapse of Ardent’s distribution deal with Stax in 1975. The notorious Chilton/Dickinson sessions for Big Star’s third album, full of desolate thought patterns and unhinged arrangements, wrench us out of a Rickenbacker pop dream and lower us into a grim, pinprick-eyeballed abyss. The most haunting line of all, perhaps, in this ultimately sad story of dashed hopes and missed opportunities is left to Chris Bell. “Plans fail every day,” he sings in a cracked voice on his solo tune “You And Your Sister”. The bright, clean acoustic guitars of Big Star’s “Thirteen” have been bent out of shape by terrible luck. Meanwhile, as a recording facility, Ardent continues to have a worldwide reputation, and has attracted artists as diverse as Isaac Hayes, ZZ Top, Cat Power and The White Stripes. DAVID CAVANAGH UNCUT Q&A WITH: JOHN FRY (Founder, Ardent Records and Studios), TERRY MANNING, JIM DICKINSON AND JODY STEPHENS: FRY: “I started a studio in my parents’ house around 1959, recording 45s and trying to release them locally. Ardent Records is not a continuous thing, it’s been an off-and-on thing. If you look through the timeline, there are these hiatuses for several years.” TERRY MANNING(producer/musician): “John was still running the studio from his house when I came along. I was in a band called Bobby & The Originals, later called Lawson & Four More, later called The Goatdancers.” FRY: “In 1966 we rented a commercial building and put in a proper studio. The national profile of Memphis was always Elvis and Sun Studios; then there was a shift in the ’60s when Stax started to gain prominence with soul music. But we were Beatles fans and Anglophiles. We were out of step with Memphis.” MANNING: “The studio started doing well. We took on a lot of Stax’s business, and Hi Records’, and people would come up from New Orleans. Anything non-country, that was our domain.” FRY: “Jim Dickinson was introduced to me as a producer who could create a vibe, make things happen. Our idea was to find groups and make records which we would place with labels that could sell and promote them nationally.” JIM DICKINSON (producer/musician): “We were doing very un-Memphis-like music. I was trying to be Glyn Johns. He was the big name I kept reading in New Musical Express. About half the material I produced at Ardent was never released. That’s one of the problems with Memphis over the years – it’s hard to find the door out.” FRY: “Most of the bands we recorded were kids that Jim knew. The Wallabies had a guy who went around speaking in an Australian accent. I think he was from Mississippi.” MANNING: “Nobody was taking these deals, nobody was leasing our bands. We were isolated. We were obviously influenced by the British Invasion more than R&B. Finally we got a couple of bands – Cargoe and Big Star – and decided to start up Ardent Records again.” FRY: “Everything was optimistic. The studio was going great guns, we had property, we had plans, we had a new building under construction. Stax was offering us a distribution deal for Ardent Records.” JODY STEPHENS (drummer, Big Star): “Stax was like Mount Olympus. Musically in Memphis, Stax was the highest peak you could aspire to.” FRY: “Stax was primarily a soul label and people were not expecting products like #1 Record from them. I thought it was going to be great, but then Stax moved their distribution to Clive Davis at Columbia. The Columbia deal never worked for Ardent or Stax. It came into effect in 1973 and by ’75 Stax were bankrupt.” MANNING: “Stax were almost no help in the pop genre. Cargoe’s ‘Feel Alright’, we promoted in-house. It got into the Top 100, and we had a make-it-or-break-it week where we needed a certain number of radio adds to get a star or a bullet. Our last hope was a station in Waterloo, Iowa, and we were hitting them, calling them, ‘please add Cargoe in heavy rotation, we need this, we need this’. And they wouldn’t do it.” FRY: “Big Star got great press and some airplay, but they never got on Columbia’s radar. When Radio City came out, I went to a Columbia sales conference in Nashville and they had a presentation, where the new albums are projected on a screen and a song from them is played. Radio City came on the screen, and “September Gurls” kicked off. Everybody under twentysomething in the room cheered and hollered. The rest of them looked around and said: ‘Are we distributing this crap?’” JIM DICKINSON (producer, Sister Lovers): “I had known Chris Bell since he was a little kid and I found it hard to take Big Star seriously. East Memphis rich kids, y’know, I wasn’t interested. But Alex [Chilton] remembered me as someone who had shown interest in his musical vision.” FRY: “When we made Sister Lovers, there were dark clouds. We didn’t have anybody to distribute our records. I got really depressed and almost left the music business to go into aviation. And Alex was having a dark time, as is reflected in those songs.” DICKINSON: “Alex was resentful because he hadn’t made any money from Big Star, and he’d already been badly exploited with The Box Tops. The third Big Star album was a series of recordings that was never finished. We just kept on recording while Stax went out of business.” FRY: “I didn’t know what to make of it. Even songs that sounded happy and upbeat had a twist. Where’s he coming from? Is he sincere or is it sarcasm?” DICKINSON: “Fry made the mistake of telling Alex he liked the demo of ‘Downs’. Alex totally destroyed the song after that. We used a basketball for a snare drum. That’s because Fry said the demo sounded like The Kinks and he could imagine hearing it on the radio.” FRY: “The reason the album didn’t come out was, we went around literally every major company in the country and nobody would touch it.” DICKINSON: “I went to New York and LA and played it for people who now worship it. Jerry Wexler told me: ‘This music makes me feel very uncomfortable.’ Lenny Waronker said: ‘I don’t have to listen to it again, do I?’” MANNING: “The label was already over by the time of Chris Bell’s death [in 1978]. His death was the great tragedy of the whole thing.” FRY “We cranked Ardent up again in the ’90s and started releasing contemporary Christian music. During the ’60s and ’70s, I’d been one of the most dedicated pagans you could meet. I came to my faith at the end of 1978, after Chris died. Ardent is not a Christian company, and you don’t have to be one to work here, but we’ve probably issued more Christian music, now, than any other kind.” INTERVIEWS: DAVID CAVANAGH

Remember those days in 1991-2 when Teenage Fanclub’s Bandwagonesque was a ubiquitous hit and everyone paid homage to Alex Chilton and Big Star (pictured above)? I interviewed Chilton at Maxwell’s in Hoboken during that period. He probably wished he had a pound for every time the word “influential” came up in conversation. Battle-scarred, pale as chalk, he dismissed my Big Star eulogies as absurd. Chilton was a veteran of the British Invasion, a purist. In his world, music died in 1967. I looked into his eyes, his disappointed eyes, and he meant it.

A degree of hard-nosed Anglophilia, coupled with a bittersweet sense of what might have been, are the prevailing themes of Thank You Friends: The Ardent Records Story. A two-CD anthology of the small Memphis label that put out Big Star’s first two albums (#1 Record, 1972; Radio City, 1974), it’s a poignant tale to immerse oneself in, not least because a key protagonist, Big Star’s co-founder Chris Bell, was sent into a mortal depression by his band’s commercial failure and lost his life in a car-crash at the age of 27. It’s a story of valiant endeavour and broken hearts. As Ardent’s founder John Fry said to me recently: “So much optimism – and then, boy, downhill.”

Thank You Friends… celebrates three distinct eras of the Ardent label, which has released local Memphis product, on and off, for nearly 50 years. Our first glimpse of Ardent comes in 1961. It is run from Fry’s parents’ house, and is knocking out quirky, and completely obscure, tunes such as “Geraldine” by The Ole Miss Downbeats. A rugby club’s idea of a Bo Diddley rumble, with a heavily featured duck-call, “Geraldine” is like a cry from a lost civilisation.

By 1966, garage-rock was sweeping the States and Ardent was a proper professional studio. Maverick producer Jim Dickinson oversaw a series of blistering sessions at Ardent involving bands like The Bitter Ind, The 1st Century and The Wallabies. Although these productions, in hindsight, are the equal of anything on Nuggets, many went unissued at the time because America wasn’t looking to Memphis for new developments in garage or psychedelia. A real pity, but we can certainly appreciate Dickinson’s ingenuity now. The Wallabies’ “White Doors” is a delicious marriage of Lewis Carroll and twisted Merseybeat. And on The Bitter Ind’s “Hands Are Only To See”, the producer creates a hallucinogenic soundworld by juxtaposing fuzz bass, ghostly harmonies (“Walls are lost when you think you’ve found them”) and an erratically plucked viola.

With Dickinson gone by 1969, and the pop-minded Terry Manning installed as house producer, a change in approach is discernible in the latter half of the anthology’s first disc. Compiler Alec Palao’s informative sleevenotes paint a vivid account of young middle-class Memphis music-makers, still enchanted by The Beatles and The Yardbirds, aesthetically disengaging themselves from Memphis’s R&B and soul traditions in search of their own identity. Out of time, out of the cultural loop, this coterie of hip teenagers enjoyed free use of Ardent Studios, where John Fry encouraged Chris Bell and like-minded friends to experiment at their leisure on top-of-the-range recording equipment. Imagine Abbey Road throwing open its doors to unknown kids from north London.

Thus began the evolution of Big Star. Long-lost or rare tracks by Christmas Future, The Badgers and Rock City – all featuring Chris Bell – show us how the quintessential Big Star style was carefully assembled, even before Alex Chilton returned to Memphis from his whirlwind spell with The Box Tops. Rock City’s “Lovely Lady” is (itals)almost(itals) the finished article: palpably influenced by Badfinger, it has that marvellous chunk-and-jangle sound that would grace #1 Record.

The second disc of Thank You Friends… is dominated by Big Star. Illustrating how significant they were to Ardent’s push for national recognition in 1972–4, Big Star account for 15 of these 24 tracks, most of them demos or alternate mixes. “Mod Lang”, for example, was recorded at a late-night session directed by an audibly gin-soaked Chilton, during a time when Big Star had briefly split up. Later cleaned up for inclusion on Radio City, this version has Chilton adding “… Just like John Mitchell” after the line “I wanna witness, I want to testify”. The remark leaps out of the speakers. It’s bizarre to think of Big Star existing in the same time-frame as the former Attorney General’s Watergate grand jury testimony.

Having started on a high note with Big Star’s early promise and a fantastic power-pop single by Cargoe (“Feel Alright”), disc two descends into abject disillusion with the collapse of Ardent’s distribution deal with Stax in 1975. The notorious Chilton/Dickinson sessions for Big Star’s third album, full of desolate thought patterns and unhinged arrangements, wrench us out of a Rickenbacker pop dream and lower us into a grim, pinprick-eyeballed abyss. The most haunting line of all, perhaps, in this ultimately sad story of dashed hopes and missed opportunities is left to Chris Bell. “Plans fail every day,” he sings in a cracked voice on his solo tune “You And Your Sister”. The bright, clean acoustic guitars of Big Star’s “Thirteen” have been bent out of shape by terrible luck.

Meanwhile, as a recording facility, Ardent continues to have a worldwide reputation, and has attracted artists as diverse as Isaac Hayes, ZZ Top, Cat Power and The White Stripes.

DAVID CAVANAGH

UNCUT Q&A WITH: JOHN FRY (Founder, Ardent Records and Studios), TERRY MANNING, JIM DICKINSON AND JODY STEPHENS:

FRY: “I started a studio in my parents’ house around 1959, recording 45s and trying to release them locally. Ardent Records is not a continuous thing, it’s been an off-and-on thing. If you look through the timeline, there are these hiatuses for several years.”

TERRY MANNING(producer/musician): “John was still running the studio from his house when I came along. I was in a band called Bobby & The Originals, later called Lawson & Four More, later called The Goatdancers.”

FRY: “In 1966 we rented a commercial building and put in a proper studio. The national profile of Memphis was always Elvis and Sun Studios; then there was a shift in the ’60s when Stax started to gain prominence with soul music. But we were Beatles fans and Anglophiles. We were out of step with Memphis.”

MANNING: “The studio started doing well. We took on a lot of Stax’s business, and Hi Records’, and people would come up from New Orleans. Anything non-country, that was our domain.”

FRY: “Jim Dickinson was introduced to me as a producer who could create a vibe, make things happen. Our idea was to find groups and make records which we would place with labels that could sell and promote them nationally.”

JIM DICKINSON (producer/musician): “We were doing very un-Memphis-like music. I was trying to be Glyn Johns. He was the big name I kept reading in New Musical Express. About half the material I produced at Ardent was never released. That’s one of the problems with Memphis over the years – it’s hard to find the door out.”

FRY: “Most of the bands we recorded were kids that Jim knew. The Wallabies had a guy who went around speaking in an Australian accent. I think he was from Mississippi.”

MANNING: “Nobody was taking these deals, nobody was leasing our bands. We were isolated. We were obviously influenced by the British Invasion more than R&B. Finally we got a couple of bands – Cargoe and Big Star – and decided to start up Ardent Records again.”

FRY: “Everything was optimistic. The studio was going great guns, we had property, we had plans, we had a new building under construction. Stax was offering us a distribution deal for Ardent Records.”

JODY STEPHENS (drummer, Big Star): “Stax was like Mount Olympus. Musically in Memphis, Stax was the highest peak you could aspire to.”

FRY: “Stax was primarily a soul label and people were not expecting products like #1 Record from them. I thought it was going to be great, but then Stax moved their distribution to Clive Davis at Columbia. The Columbia deal never worked for Ardent or Stax. It came into effect in 1973 and by ’75 Stax were bankrupt.”

MANNING: “Stax were almost no help in the pop genre. Cargoe’s ‘Feel Alright’, we promoted in-house. It got into the Top 100, and we had a make-it-or-break-it week where we needed a certain number of radio adds to get a star or a bullet. Our last hope was a station in Waterloo, Iowa, and we were hitting them, calling them, ‘please add Cargoe in heavy rotation, we need this, we need this’. And they wouldn’t do it.”

FRY: “Big Star got great press and some airplay, but they never got on Columbia’s radar. When Radio City came out, I went to a Columbia sales conference in Nashville and they had a presentation, where the new albums are projected on a screen and a song from them is played. Radio City came on the screen, and “September Gurls” kicked off. Everybody under twentysomething in the room cheered and hollered. The rest of them looked around and said: ‘Are we distributing this crap?’”

JIM DICKINSON (producer, Sister Lovers): “I had known Chris Bell since he was a little kid and I found it hard to take Big Star seriously. East Memphis rich kids, y’know, I wasn’t interested. But Alex [Chilton] remembered me as someone who had shown interest in his musical vision.”

FRY: “When we made Sister Lovers, there were dark clouds. We didn’t have anybody to distribute our records. I got really depressed and almost left the music business to go into aviation. And Alex was having a dark time, as is reflected in those songs.”

DICKINSON: “Alex was resentful because he hadn’t made any money from Big Star, and he’d already been badly exploited with The Box Tops. The third Big Star album was a series of recordings that was never finished. We just kept on recording while Stax went out of business.”

FRY: “I didn’t know what to make of it. Even songs that sounded happy and upbeat had a twist. Where’s he coming from? Is he sincere or is it sarcasm?”

DICKINSON: “Fry made the mistake of telling Alex he liked the demo of ‘Downs’. Alex totally destroyed the song after that. We used a basketball for a snare drum. That’s because Fry said the demo sounded like The Kinks and he could imagine hearing it on the radio.”

FRY: “The reason the album didn’t come out was, we went around literally every major company in the country and nobody would touch it.”

DICKINSON: “I went to New York and LA and played it for people who now worship it. Jerry Wexler told me: ‘This music makes me feel very uncomfortable.’ Lenny Waronker said: ‘I don’t have to listen to it again, do I?’”

MANNING: “The label was already over by the time of Chris Bell’s death [in 1978]. His death was the great tragedy of the whole thing.”

FRY “We cranked Ardent up again in the ’90s and started releasing contemporary Christian music. During the ’60s and ’70s, I’d been one of the most dedicated pagans you could meet. I came to my faith at the end of 1978, after Chris died. Ardent is not a Christian company, and you don’t have to be one to work here, but we’ve probably issued more Christian music, now, than any other kind.”

INTERVIEWS: DAVID CAVANAGH

Radiohead Invite Fans To Remix New Single

0
Radiohead are giving fans a chance to remix their new single, “Nude”, released this week (March 31). Using specially released component tracks, or “stems”, fans can add their own instrumentation and effects, and upload their version to the Radiohead Remix website. The stems- vocals, guitar...

Radiohead are giving fans a chance to remix their new single, “Nude”, released this week (March 31).

Using specially released component tracks, or “stems”, fans can add their own instrumentation and effects, and upload their version to the Radiohead Remix website.

The stems- vocals, guitar, bass, drums and strings- are available to buy as individual downloads on iTunes, which can be downloaded and edited with a number of programmes including garageband, iTunes Plus and Logic.

Public votes for the final mixes will determine the winner. Voting closes on May 1.

Pic credit: PA Photos

The 14th Uncut Playlist Of 2008

One of those professional obligation sessions in the Uncut office right now: we’re on Track Eight of the Panic At The Disco album, “Pretty. Odd”. Interest piqued by some frothing and slightly dubious suggestions that “Pretty. Odd” is a landmark of WEIRD! and AMBITIOUS! rock music, imagine our surprise when it seems to sound a bit like The Feeling and those shabby Beatles pastiches that Tears For Fears came up with in the ‘80s. We do, however, have new records by Paul Weller, Peter Walker and James Blackshaw. Weller’s “22 Dreams” is interesting because it seems he’s finally stopped talking about various jazz musicians and started trying to incorporate their influences in his music. Hence “Song For Alice”, a creditable and commendably transparent stab at Alice Coltrane. I’m really not qualified to talk about this, but to an unbeliever like me, it’s nice to see Weller having a go at something a bit weirder – weirder even than Panic At The Disco, if you can countenance such a thing. The Blackshaw album is a new solo record and, as an obsessive fan, I think it might be the best thing he’s ever done. But I’ll deal with that properly in a few days. Oh, and after the blog on Sun Kil Moon yesterday, Mark Kozelek got in touch to say he’s publishing a book of his lyrics, which sounds good. Anyway, today’s playlist. As your comments suggest, the Raconteurs album gets better and better, I think. . . 1. The Raconteurs – Consolers Of The Lonely (XL) 2. Joan As Police Woman – To Survive (Reveal) 3. James Blackshaw – Litany Of Echoes (Tompkins Square) 4. Sun Kil Moon – April (Caldo Verde) 5. Fleet Foxes – Sun Giant (Bella Union) 6. White Denim – Let’s Talk About It (Full Time Hobby) 7. Paul Weller – 22 Dreams (Island) 8. Mellow Candle – Swaddling Songs (Esoteric) 9. Animal Collective – Water Curses (Domino) 10. John Fahey – John Fahey Visits Washington (Ace) 11. Various Artists – Nigeria Rock Special: Pyschedelic Afro-Rock And Fuzz Funk In 1970s Nigeria (Soundway) 12. Peter Walker – Echo Of My Soul (Tompkins Square) 13. Panic At The Disco – Pretty. Odd (Decaydance/ Fuelled By Ramen)

One of those professional obligation sessions in the Uncut office right now: we’re on Track Eight of the Panic At The Disco album, “Pretty. Odd”. Interest piqued by some frothing and slightly dubious suggestions that “Pretty. Odd” is a landmark of WEIRD! and AMBITIOUS! rock music, imagine our surprise when it seems to sound a bit like The Feeling and those shabby Beatles pastiches that Tears For Fears came up with in the ‘80s. We do, however, have new records by Paul Weller, Peter Walker and James Blackshaw.

The Courteeners – St Jude

0

An over-hyped Manchester guitar band with a gobby singer called Liam? Something tells me we’ve been here before. However, St Jude proves that there is much more to The Courteeners than first meets to the eye. “Bide Your Time” is a clinical dissection of modern mores along the lines of The Arctic Monkeys’ “A Certain Romance” while “Not Nineteen Forever” shares the same tuneful self-awareness which made The Kaiser Chiefs into a stadium concern. “I’m like a Morrissey with some strings” sings Liam Fray, tongue firmly in cheek, in “What Took You So Long?’. Whatever, he’s one to watch. PAUL MOODY

An over-hyped Manchester guitar band with a gobby singer called Liam? Something tells me we’ve been here before. However, St Jude proves that there is much more to The Courteeners than first meets to the eye. “Bide Your Time” is a clinical dissection of modern mores along the lines of The Arctic Monkeys’ “A Certain Romance” while “Not Nineteen Forever” shares the same tuneful self-awareness which made The Kaiser Chiefs into a stadium concern. “I’m like a Morrissey with some strings” sings Liam Fray, tongue firmly in cheek, in “What Took You So Long?’. Whatever, he’s one to watch.

PAUL MOODY

Echo and the Bunnymen To Play 30th Birthday Show

0
Echo & The Bunnymen have just announced they are to play a special 30th Anniversary show with in Liverpool this November. Playing with a full orchestra, the Bunnymen will reprise the entire of their Ocean Rain album as well as showcasing songs from their forthcoming new album. The show takes p...

Echo & The Bunnymen have just announced they are to play a special 30th Anniversary show with in Liverpool this November.

Playing with a full orchestra, the Bunnymen will reprise the entire of their Ocean Rain album as well as showcasing songs from their forthcoming new album.

The show takes place in their hometown at Liverpool’s Echo Arena on November 27, marking 30 years to the day from when they played their debut gig at the city’s Erics venue.

Bunnymen frontman Ian McCulloch explains “Because of the overwhelming response to our Royal Albert Hall ‘Ocean Rain’ show in September – which sold out – I decided that we should take it around the world – New York, Los Angeles, Sao Paulo, Moscow amongst other cities. Obviously, my home city, the place I love and live in had to be there.”

Tickets will go on sale this Friday (April 4) at 9am.

Leonard Cohen To Replace Hasselhoff On America’s Got Talent

0
Leonard Cohen is set to replace David Hasselhoff as the new judge on the third season of NBC's talent show, America's Got Talent. Cohen will join Sharon Osbourne and Piers Morgan as judges of the US version of the "Opportunity Knocks" style show. Hasselhoff was unable to return for a third series ...

Leonard Cohen is set to replace David Hasselhoff as the new judge on the third season of NBC’s talent show, America’s Got Talent.

Cohen will join Sharon Osbourne and Piers Morgan as judges of the US version of the “Opportunity Knocks” style show.

Hasselhoff was unable to return for a third series due to ongoing health problems.

A source close to the singer said Cohen was hoping to bring “gravitas and sense of perspective” back to light entertainment.

The Grammy winner and member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, best known for his hits “Chelsea Hotel” and “Avalanche”, is due to start his world tour on June 6.

For a full list of Leonard Cohen’s world tour dates click here.

Pic credit: PA Photos

Creedence Clearwater’s John Fogerty To Play UK Shows

0
John Fogerty has announced that he will play two shows in the UK this June. The former Creedence Clearwater Revival singer will play at Manchester's Apollo venue on June 22 and London's Royal Albert Hall on June 24. Fogerty's show in London marks 38 years since he last appeared at the Royal Albert...

John Fogerty has announced that he will play two shows in the UK this June.

The former Creedence Clearwater Revival singer will play at Manchester’s Apollo venue on June 22 and London’s Royal Albert Hall on June 24.

Fogerty’s show in London marks 38 years since he last appeared at the Royal Albert Hall. He previously performed there in April 1970.

With his return to the venue, Fogerty will celebrate last year’s studio album release Revival with his show’s repertoire featuring his solo and CCR hits.

Neil Young To Release More From His Archives?

0
Neil Young has today (April 1) posted news on his website NY Times that he is to release a new Crazy Horse album from his archive called 'Toast'. The previously unreleased album is named after a defunct recording studio in San Francisco and the posting claims that 'Toast' is "a dark Crazy Horse cla...

Neil Young has today (April 1) posted news on his website NY Times that he is to release a new Crazy Horse album from his archive called ‘Toast’.

The previously unreleased album is named after a defunct recording studio in San Francisco and the posting claims that ‘Toast’ is “a dark Crazy Horse classic for the ages. This first NYA “Special Edition” is the beginning of a new series of unreleased albums”.

Maybe we are being paranoid about the date, but as far as April Fools Day jokes go, this seems fairly plausible.

The article mentions that John Hanlon, “the original co-producer with Neil, is at work mixing all of the Toast material”. A quick google search

to recordproduction.com on the internet does seem to corroborate that Hanlon is indeed “is currently producing Neil Young’s next album”.

Young’s article explains that “The band recorded there for months and came up with very little. Nothing, other than one song, “Goin’ Home” was ever finished. But a lot was started. Several of the songs written at Toast showed up on the “Are You Passionate” album with Booker T. and the MGs. But that album met with mixed reaction”.

He goes on to say that the tracks that are being worked on now “share a bluesy, jazz-tinged vibe as a common thread. Three solid rockers are interspersed in the mix. Other songs are long with extensive explorations between verses, a Crazy Horse trademark, kind of like a down-played Tonight’s the Night, except these songs deal directly with love and loss, not drugs.”

Read the full NY Times news posting here.

Stay tuned to www.uncut.co.uk for further details of a release date for ‘Toast’, if any!

Hard-Fi Latest Confirmed To Play Love Music Hate Racism

0

Staines rockers, Hard-Fi have been announced as the latest addition to the free Love Music Hate Racism carnival at Victoria Park on April 27. Organised to coincide with the 30th anniversary of the original Rock Against Racism, the event will have performances from some of the original line-up including Poly Styrene, lead singer with the early punk-pioneers, X-Ray Spex, Jerry Dammers of The Specials. “It’s hard to believe its actually happening in your neighbourhood. I think people sometimes try to just brush aside racism and hope it will go away,” said Hard-Fi front man, Richard Archer. “You need to get your voice heard.” Other artists confirmed include original reggae punk, Don Letts, Patrick Wolf, Roll Deep, Jay Sean and The Paddingtons. Love Music Hate Racism was set up in 2002 in response to rising levels of racism and electoral successes for the British National Party (BNP). It runs the tradition of the Rock Against Racism gigs, which were organised with the Anti-Nazi League (ANL) in 1978. For more information see www.lovemusichateracism.com

Staines rockers, Hard-Fi have been announced as the latest addition to the free Love Music Hate Racism carnival at Victoria Park on April 27.

Organised to coincide with the 30th anniversary of the original Rock Against Racism, the event will have performances from some of the original line-up including Poly Styrene, lead singer with the early punk-pioneers, X-Ray Spex, Jerry Dammers of The Specials.

“It’s hard to believe its actually happening in your neighbourhood. I think people sometimes try to just brush aside racism and hope it will go away,” said Hard-Fi front man, Richard Archer. “You need to get your voice heard.”

Other artists confirmed include original reggae punk, Don Letts, Patrick Wolf, Roll Deep, Jay Sean and The Paddingtons.

Love Music Hate Racism was set up in 2002 in response to rising levels of racism and electoral successes for the British National Party (BNP). It runs the tradition of the Rock Against Racism gigs, which were organised with the Anti-Nazi League (ANL) in 1978.

For more information see www.lovemusichateracism.com