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U2 Sign Up For New Deal With Live Nation

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U2 have signed a new 12-year contract with Madonna's 'record label' Live Nation, for an undisclosed fee. The concert promoters recently signed a ground-breaking touring and recording contract with Madonna, however U2 have not signed away any of their recording rights, which will stay with their long term company Universal. U2's deal with Live Nation will cover exclusive rights to produce the band's tours, manufacture and sell its merchandise, license its image and run its website and fan club. "U2 has created some of the greatest rock music of all time," added Live Nation chairman Michael Cohl. "It has long been our intention to consolidate and extend our relationship." "We've been dating for over 20 years now," singer Bono told BBC News. "It's about time we tied the knot."

U2 have signed a new 12-year contract with Madonna‘s ‘record label’ Live Nation, for an undisclosed fee.

The concert promoters recently signed a ground-breaking touring and recording contract with Madonna, however U2 have not signed away any of their recording rights, which will stay with their long term company Universal.

U2’s deal with Live Nation will cover exclusive rights to produce the band’s tours, manufacture and sell its merchandise, license its image and run its website and fan club.

“U2 has created some of the greatest rock music of all time,” added Live Nation chairman Michael Cohl. “It has long been our intention to consolidate and extend our relationship.”

“We’ve been dating for over 20 years now,” singer Bono told BBC News. “It’s about time we tied the knot.”

The Killers Announced As Reading and Leeds Festival Headliners

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The Killers have been announced as one of this year's Reading and Leeds Festival headliners. The band will play Reading on the Saturday (August 23) and on Sunday (August 24) at the Leeds site. Speaking to UNCUT's sister title NME, Killers' frontman Brandon Flowers has said: "We thought it would b...

The Killers have been announced as one of this year’s Reading and Leeds Festival headliners.

The band will play Reading on the Saturday (August 23) and on Sunday (August 24) at the Leeds site.

Speaking to UNCUT’s sister title NME, Killers’ frontman Brandon Flowers has said: “We thought it would be a good opportunity to come over and play some of our new songs. We haven’t played the new songs off ‘Sawdust’ either. We always love playing in England.”

The Killers last played at the festivals in 2005 and they also headlined the V festival in Chelmsford and Staffordshire last year.

The band are currently in the studio working on their partly self-produced third studio album, expected to be completed later this year. Their first two have now sold over 10 million copies worldwide.

NME.COM will be selling tickets for this year’s Reading and Leeds festival from 7pm (BST) tonight – go to nme.com/gigs for more information.

Eric Clapton Teams Up With Steve Winwood

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Eric Clapton has put in a guest appearance on Steve Winwood’s forthcoming new single "Dirty City". Playing guitar on the track, Clapton met Winwood whilst playing three nights at New York's Madison Square Gardens last Febraury and decided work on the blues track together. The single is taken fro...

Eric Clapton has put in a guest appearance on Steve Winwood’s forthcoming new single “Dirty City”.

Playing guitar on the track, Clapton met Winwood whilst playing three nights at New York’s Madison Square Gardens last Febraury and decided work on the blues track together.

The single is taken from Winwood’s forthcoming studio album 9 Lives and is released on April 28.

The album follows on May 5.

Steve Winwood and his band are also set to be special guests on Tom Petty’s US summer tour.

Estelle and Duffy Both Maintain Poll Position In UK Charts

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Singers Estelle and Duffy have both maintained their places at the top of the UK singles and album charts this week (March 31). Estelle spends a second week at Number one with Kanye West single collaboration "American Boy" whilst Duffy is still top of the album charts with her debut LP Rockferry for the fourth week running. The Raconteurs’ rush-released second album Consolers Of The Lonely has debuted at number eight whilst The Guillemots also scored a Top 10 with their second album Red charting at nine. Other new entries in the album chart include Supergrass' Diamond Hoo Ha at number 19 and Counting Crows at Number 12 with their fifth album ‘Saturday Nights and Sunday Mornings’ -- their highest position in the UK charts for 12 years. The Top Ten UK singles are: 1. Estelle Feat. Kanye West – ‘American Boy 2. Flo Rida Feat. T-Pain – ‘Low’ 3. Duffy – ‘Mercy’ 4. Sam Sparro – ‘Black And Gold’ 5. Madonna Feat. Justin Timberlake – ‘4 Minutes’ 6. Leona Lewis – ‘Better In Time/Footprints In The Sand’ 7. Nickelback – ‘Rockstar’ 8. Chris Brown – ‘With You’ 9. OneRepublic – ‘Stop And Stare’ 10. Alphabeat – ‘Fascination’ The Top Ten UK albums are: 1. Duffy – ‘Rockferry’ 2. Panic At The Disco – ‘Pretty.Odd’ 3. Foals – ‘Antidotes’ 4. Leona Lewis – ‘Spirit’ 5. OneRepublic – ‘Dreaming Out Loud’ 6. Nickelback – ‘All The Right Reasons’ 7. Amy Winehouse – ‘Back To Black: The Deluxe Edition’ 8. The Raconteurs – ‘Consolers Of The Lonely’ 9. Guillemots – ‘Red’ 10. Muse – ‘HAARP’

Singers Estelle and Duffy have both maintained their places at the top of the UK singles and album charts this week (March 31).

Estelle spends a second week at Number one with Kanye West single collaboration “American Boy” whilst Duffy is still top of the album charts with her debut LP Rockferry for the fourth week running.

The Raconteurs’ rush-released second album Consolers Of The Lonely has debuted at number eight whilst The Guillemots also scored a Top 10 with their second album Red charting at nine.

Other new entries in the album chart include SupergrassDiamond Hoo Ha at number 19 and Counting Crows at Number 12 with their fifth album ‘Saturday Nights and Sunday Mornings’ — their highest position in the UK charts for 12 years.

The Top Ten UK singles are:

1. Estelle Feat. Kanye West – ‘American Boy

2. Flo Rida Feat. T-Pain – ‘Low’

3. Duffy – ‘Mercy’

4. Sam Sparro – ‘Black And Gold’

5. Madonna Feat. Justin Timberlake – ‘4 Minutes’

6. Leona Lewis – ‘Better In Time/Footprints In The Sand’

7. Nickelback – ‘Rockstar’

8. Chris Brown – ‘With You’

9. OneRepublic – ‘Stop And Stare’

10. Alphabeat – ‘Fascination’

The Top Ten UK albums are:

1. Duffy – ‘Rockferry’

2. Panic At The Disco – ‘Pretty.Odd’

3. Foals – ‘Antidotes’

4. Leona Lewis – ‘Spirit’

5. OneRepublic – ‘Dreaming Out Loud’

6. Nickelback – ‘All The Right Reasons’

7. Amy Winehouse – ‘Back To Black: The Deluxe Edition’

8. The Raconteurs – ‘Consolers Of The Lonely’

9. Guillemots – ‘Red’

10. Muse – ‘HAARP’

The Beatles, The Who and Eric Clapton Donate Items To Hard Rock

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The Beatles' harpsichord which appeared on the recordings of hit singles “All You Need Is Love” and “Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds” is to join a collection of music memorabilia at London’s Hard Rock Vault. Other new items added to the vault include Keith Moon’s western style shirt, Eric...

The Beatles‘ harpsichord which appeared on the recordings of hit singles “All You Need Is Love” and “Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds” is to join a collection of music memorabilia at London’s Hard Rock Vault.

Other new items added to the vault include Keith Moon’s western style shirt, Eric Clapton’s silver suit from the cover of Cream’s final album “Goodbye Cream” and the costume and guitar used by Guns N’ Roses guitarist, Slash in the video for “November Rain”.

The memorabilia collection which already includes treasures such as Jimi Hendrix’s Flying V and John Lennon’s handwritten lyrics for “Instant Karma” will now also see the addition of Sex Pistol’s bassist Glen Matlock‘s guitar — the one he wrote the chords for “Anarchy in the UK” on as well as pop queen Madonna’s infamous golden cone-shaped bustier.

The Hard Rock collection’s facelift comes in the run up to Hard Rock Calling -a two day music event headlined by Eric Clapton and The Police.

Free tours of the Vault run daily, for more information see www.hardrock.com

Gnarls Barkley Cancel London Show

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Gnarls Barkley have postponed their one-off London show which was due to take place this Thursday (April 4). The duo were scheduled to play the intimate 229 Club in London's West End as part of promoting their second album The Odd Couple which is released today (March 31). The delay is 'due to a f...

Gnarls Barkley have postponed their one-off London show which was due to take place this Thursday (April 4).

The duo were scheduled to play the intimate 229 Club in London’s West End as part of promoting their second album The Odd Couple which is released today (March 31).

The delay is ‘due to a family illness’ and Cee-Lo Green has decided to remain in the US with his family.

Details about whether the sold-out show will be rescheduled will be announced in due course.

http://www.gnarlsbarkley.com

www.myspace.com/gnarlsbarkley

Son of Rambow – Uncut’s Film Of The Month – Reviewed!

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Uncut.co.uk publishes a weekly selection of film reviews. Find out about the best here, by clicking on the titles below. All of our reviews feature a 'submit your own review' function - we would love to hear about what you've seen lately. Our selection of films opening next week (April 4) are: So...

Uncut.co.uk publishes a weekly selection of film reviews. Find out about the best here, by clicking on the titles below.

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

Our selection of films opening next week (April 4) are:

Son Of Rambow – A Sweetly-observed coming-of-age drama; Plus an in-depth director Q&A with GARTH JENNINGS and a trailer link too.

Also out is Michael Haneke‘s remake of his own film Funny Games – The disturbing film remake stars Tim Roth and Naomi Watts.

Coinciding with the release of Funny Games, Uncut has three copies of a Michael Haneke Trilogy DVD Box set to giveaway – click here for details.

Other UNCUT Recommended film releases are as follows: click on the titles for our reviews:

The Orphanage – Masterful Spanish horror movie in the vein of The Others and Devils Backbone.

Drillbit Taylor – Steven Brill film proves that first day at high school is still a bummer, stars Owen Wilson.

Diary of the Dead – George A Romero’s neat reboot of his Zombie franchise

Juno – Won Kar-Wei’s first English language film, stutters a little – stars Norah Jones, Jude Law

The Diving Bell and Butterfly – An intensely beautiful interpretation of the acclaimed book.

Plus! There are over 1500 archived film reviews in the UNCUT.CO.UK film section! click here for www.uncut.co.uk/film/reviews

Son Of Rambow

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DIR: GARTH JENNINGS ST: WILL POULTER, BILL MILLNER TRAILER: Click here SYNOPSIS Raised in the Plymouth Brethren, ten year-old Will has never seen television, heard pop music, or seen a movie. His live changes when he falls under the influence of Carter, the school misfit, who runs a sideline in pirate videos, and is using his video camera to make a film of his own. When Will sees Rambo, his imagination takes flight. Thanks to cheap television shows in which half-celebrities pretend to reminisce about the recent past, the 1980s have already been mythologised as a time of big hair and big phones, Loadsamoney and Wham! Shane Meadows offered a corrective to some of that last year with This Is England, which offered a more measured version of the Thatcher decade: it wasn't all red Porsches in the carport. Son Of Rambow takes a different approach. True, there is a big of visual comedy to do with the clothes of the time: the backcombed bouffants and jumble sale flamboyance of the Thompson Twins are in evidence, and there is a sports car and a brick-sized mobile phone. But, mostly, Garth Jennings' film has the timeless feel of childhood memories. It's not about the fashion. Instead, it celebrates the fearlessness of youth, and the refreshingly un-cynical notion that today, or any day, could be the best day of your life. Jennings and producer Nick Goldsmith made their cinematic debut with The Hitchhikers' Guide To The Galaxy, and their production company Hammer & Tongs made the music videos for Blur's "Coffee And TV" and REM's "Imitation Of Life" (see also the dancing robots for Beck's "Hell Yes"). But Son of Rambow is a personal project, begun before Hitchhiker, drawing on Jennings' over-imaginative childhood on the edge of Epping forest. It focuses on the friendship between Will (Bill Milner), a spindly 10 year-old who has been raised in the Plymouth Brethren, and Carter (Will Poulter), a streetwise kid who runs a sideline in pirate videos from the basement of the local care home. Will's Brethren upbringing means that he has never watched television, and he lives instead in his imagination, drawing flickbooks of plane crashes, and covering the pages of Genesis in his Bible with doodles of malevolent serpents. He is also mourning the death of his father in a lawnmower incident, and is looked after by his mother Mary (Jessica Stevenson) and Joshua (Neil Dudgeon), a David Cameron-like visitor from the Brethren. Carter, meanwhile, is barely supervised by his spivvy older brother, their parents having absconded abroad. Will and Carter meet in the school corridor, and Carter quickly bullies Will into acting in the film he is making for the young filmmakers' competition on the BBC's Screen Test. His first scene is a William Burroughs' affair: Carter shoots a piggy bank from the top of his head with a crossbow. While hiding from Carter's brother, Will catches sight of a pirate video of Rambo: First Blood. It is the first film he has ever seen, and the effect is immediate. He runs home through the wheat fields, past the cooling towers and, with his imagination in overdrive, is confronted by an evil-looking scarecrow. "Who are you?" the scarecrow asks? "I am the son of Rambo," the boy replies, "what have you done with my dad?" As his friendship with Carter deepens, their ambitions grow, and pretty soon Will is being catapulted, hosed, and dropped from trees into rivers, even though he can't swim. It is a sweetly-observed tale of two outsiders, bound together by their inability to fit in. They are joined by Didier Revol (Jules Sitruk) a hilarious Pied Piper-ish French exchange student who fancies himself as the coolest boy in the world, and is prone to saying things like "I am trapped in a world of boredom". Nostalgia-lovers will be comforted by a sequence inside a fantasy Sixth Year common room which is somewhere between Scout camp and Studio 54 - all rollerskates, dancing to Depeche Mode, and cocktails of Space Dust and Coke - and it is alarming how evocative the jingle for the Radio 1 Top 40 can be. That's all good, but Jennings' film has an innocence which transcends wistful reminiscence. It also features Eric Sykes as a senile Rambo, which is a bonus worth savouring. ALASTAIR McKAY Q+A GARTH JENNINGS UNCUT: Was there an autobiographical element to the story? JENNINGS: Before I had any real plot, I had all these notes that I'd made on my own childhood, based around the fact that I used to make these ludicrous home movies, inspired by myself and my friends, who were 11. We saw a pirate copy of First Blood, and it completely baked our noodles. And because we lived on the edge of Epping Forest we were always playing in it anyway, and then here's this guy who can sew up his arm and make traps. We just thought it was brilliant. Of course the whole idea of it being a Vietnam vet was just completely lost on us. We just saw action and muscles. And my next door neighbours were Plymouth Brethren. It's clearly a heightened representation of childhood, but all the little details are based on real people or real characters or real events. Was Screen Test important to your young filmmaking career? I watched that show religiously. It also had the best signature tune of any kids show. I used to love it. I loved watching clips from films. And the Young Filmmakers' competition was great - it was like Tony Hart's gallery [on Vision On], I always aspired to enter something, but never quite got round to it. My favourite entry was this brilliant piece of animation, from this 15 year-old kid from Chelmsford. I Googled him, and it turns out his name's Jan Pinkava. He went on to be the big head honcho at Pixar, and he wrote Ratatouille. So it was quite nice to put him in. How did you approach the copyright of Rambo? Presumably that's a brand name. Rather naively, like the children in the film, I though, it'll be fine: we'll just call it Son Of Rambow, and it's clearly not a film about the character Rambo's real son coming back to avenge his death or anything. We had to spend a long time sitting down with everybody to get a situation where we'd all be happy. But it's come out great. Everybody's happy. And I got to keep the title. Was the W always on the end? Yes. Even before we finished Hitchhikers' Guide To The Galaxy our script had a W on it. Because the kid got it wrong - he spelled it phonetically. Also we thought it was quite good manners. It was a nod towards the people who own this thing saying we're not trying to rip you off. It's an homage rather than a cynical piss-take. as Sylvester Stallone seen it? Yes, and I got this message saying he loved it. He had a question as to "Who was that guy who played me in the dream sequence?" I did want to reply: "Well I did try and get you for that, but you weren't available.'.." Was Bill Forsyth an influence? Did you like Gregory's Girl? That's an amazing film. I had a lot of films buzzing around. Harold And Maude was actually the one that Nick [producer, Nick Goldsmith] and I adored the most, even though that's not about children. It was that odd coupling; very odd characters that became very endearing, strange relationships that become lovely relationships. And we loved Stand By Me. I think that was a great coming-of-age film, because it didn't hide from the fact that children do smoke the odd cigarette unconvincingly. They do swear a bit. They will do things like run in front of a train. My Life As a Dog was a great movie as well. Harold and Maude has a real sense of devotion between the characters. That was a big eye opener for Nick and I. It's not the same kind of relationship. But it's played with the same level of heart, and it's totally personal. It didn't feel like you were watching a generic movie. That's it - not to be afraid to put your heart into it, but at the same time try to find a new way of telling a story about friendship. God, I sound pretentious! Can you strike all that and just say: 'The director didn't know what the fuck he was talking about'? ALASTAIR McKAY

DIR: GARTH JENNINGS

ST: WILL POULTER, BILL MILLNER

TRAILER: Click here

SYNOPSIS

Raised in the Plymouth Brethren, ten year-old Will has never seen television, heard pop music, or seen a movie. His live changes when he falls under the influence of Carter, the school misfit, who runs a sideline in pirate videos, and is using his video camera to make a film of his own. When Will sees Rambo, his imagination takes flight.

Thanks to cheap television shows in which half-celebrities pretend to reminisce about the recent past, the 1980s have already been mythologised as a time of big hair and big phones, Loadsamoney and Wham! Shane Meadows offered a corrective to some of that last year with This Is England, which offered a more measured version of the Thatcher decade: it wasn’t all red Porsches in the carport.

Son Of Rambow takes a different approach. True, there is a big of visual comedy to do with the clothes of the time: the backcombed bouffants and jumble sale flamboyance of the Thompson Twins are in evidence, and there is a sports car and a brick-sized mobile phone. But, mostly, Garth Jennings’ film has the timeless feel of childhood memories. It’s not about the fashion. Instead, it celebrates the fearlessness of youth, and the refreshingly un-cynical notion that today, or any day, could be the best day of your life.

Jennings and producer Nick Goldsmith made their cinematic debut with The Hitchhikers’ Guide To The Galaxy, and their production company Hammer & Tongs made the music videos for Blur’s “Coffee And TV” and REM’s “Imitation Of Life” (see also the dancing robots for Beck’s “Hell Yes”). But Son of Rambow is a personal project, begun before Hitchhiker, drawing on Jennings’ over-imaginative childhood on the edge of Epping forest.

It focuses on the friendship between Will (Bill Milner), a spindly 10 year-old who has been raised in the Plymouth Brethren, and Carter (Will Poulter), a streetwise kid who runs a sideline in pirate videos from the basement of the local care home. Will’s Brethren upbringing means that he has never watched television, and he lives instead in his imagination, drawing flickbooks of plane crashes, and covering the pages of Genesis in his Bible with doodles of malevolent serpents. He is also mourning the death of his father in a lawnmower incident, and is looked after by his mother Mary (Jessica Stevenson) and Joshua (Neil Dudgeon), a David Cameron-like visitor from the Brethren. Carter, meanwhile, is barely supervised by his spivvy older brother, their parents having absconded abroad.

Will and Carter meet in the school corridor, and Carter quickly bullies Will into acting in the film he is making for the young filmmakers’ competition on the BBC’s Screen Test. His first scene is a William Burroughs’ affair: Carter shoots a piggy bank from the top of his head with a crossbow.

While hiding from Carter’s brother, Will catches sight of a pirate video of Rambo: First Blood. It is the first film he has ever seen, and the effect is immediate. He runs home through the wheat fields, past the cooling towers and, with his imagination in overdrive, is confronted by an evil-looking scarecrow. “Who are you?” the scarecrow asks? “I am the son of Rambo,” the boy replies, “what have you done with my dad?” As his friendship with Carter deepens, their ambitions grow, and pretty soon Will is being catapulted, hosed, and dropped from trees into rivers, even though he can’t swim.

It is a sweetly-observed tale of two outsiders, bound together by their inability to fit in. They are joined by Didier Revol (Jules Sitruk) a hilarious Pied Piper-ish French exchange student who fancies himself as the coolest boy in the world, and is prone to saying things like “I am trapped in a world of boredom”.

Nostalgia-lovers will be comforted by a sequence inside a fantasy Sixth Year common room which is somewhere between Scout camp and Studio 54 – all rollerskates, dancing to Depeche Mode, and cocktails of Space Dust and Coke – and it is alarming how evocative the jingle for the Radio 1 Top 40 can be. That’s all good, but Jennings’ film has an innocence which transcends wistful reminiscence.

It also features Eric Sykes as a senile Rambo, which is a bonus worth savouring.

ALASTAIR McKAY

Q+A GARTH JENNINGS

UNCUT: Was there an autobiographical element to the story?

JENNINGS: Before I had any real plot, I had all these notes that I’d made on my own childhood, based around the fact that I used to make these ludicrous home movies, inspired by myself and my friends, who were 11. We saw a pirate copy of First Blood, and it completely baked our noodles. And because we lived on the edge of Epping Forest we were always playing in it anyway, and then here’s this guy who can sew up his arm and make traps. We just thought it was brilliant. Of course the whole idea of it being a Vietnam vet was just completely lost on us. We just saw action and muscles. And my next door neighbours were Plymouth Brethren. It’s clearly a heightened representation of childhood, but all the little details are based on real people or real characters or real events.

Was Screen Test important to your young filmmaking career?

I watched that show religiously. It also had the best signature tune of any kids show. I used to love it. I loved watching clips from films. And the Young Filmmakers’ competition was great – it was like Tony Hart’s gallery [on Vision On], I always aspired to enter something, but never quite got round to it. My favourite entry was this brilliant piece of animation, from this 15 year-old kid from Chelmsford. I Googled him, and it turns out his name’s Jan Pinkava. He went on to be the big head honcho at Pixar, and he wrote Ratatouille. So it was quite nice to put him in.

How did you approach the copyright of Rambo? Presumably that’s a brand name.

Rather naively, like the children in the film, I though, it’ll be fine: we’ll just call it Son Of Rambow, and it’s clearly not a film about the character Rambo’s real son coming back to avenge his death or anything. We had to spend a long time sitting down with everybody to get a situation where we’d all be happy. But it’s come out great. Everybody’s happy. And I got to keep the title.

Was the W always on the end?

Yes. Even before we finished Hitchhikers’ Guide To The Galaxy our script had a W on it. Because the kid got it wrong – he spelled it phonetically. Also we thought it was quite good manners. It was a nod towards the people who own this thing saying we’re not trying to rip you off. It’s an homage rather than a cynical piss-take.

as Sylvester Stallone seen it?

Yes, and I got this message saying he loved it. He had a question as to “Who was that guy who played me in the dream sequence?” I did want to reply: “Well I did try and get you for that, but you weren’t available.’..”

Was Bill Forsyth an influence? Did you like Gregory’s Girl?

That’s an amazing film. I had a lot of films buzzing around. Harold And Maude was actually the one that Nick [producer, Nick Goldsmith] and I adored the most, even though that’s not about children. It was that odd coupling; very odd characters that became very endearing, strange relationships that become lovely relationships. And we loved Stand By Me. I think that was a great coming-of-age film, because it didn’t hide from the fact that children do smoke the odd cigarette unconvincingly. They do swear a bit. They will do things like run in front of a train. My Life As a Dog was a great movie as well.

Harold and Maude has a real sense of devotion between the characters.

That was a big eye opener for Nick and I. It’s not the same kind of relationship. But it’s played with the same level of heart, and it’s totally personal. It didn’t feel like you were watching a generic movie. That’s it – not to be afraid to put your heart into it, but at the same time try to find a new way of telling a story about friendship. God, I sound pretentious! Can you strike all that and just say: ‘The director didn’t know what the fuck he was talking about’?

ALASTAIR McKAY

Funny Games

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DIR: MICHAEL HANEKE ST: NAOMI WATTS, MICHEL PITT, TIM ROTH TRAILER: Windows / Quicktime / Realplayer Anyone who saw Michael Haneke's last film, Hidden (CachŽ), will recognize some familiar tropes here. Both films deal with the middle class under siege; both employ the cinematic language of the thriller and in both, Haneke wrong-foots the audience by rewinding or fast-forwarding footage on screen. Fans of Haneke's wider body of work will, in turn, see how Funny Games continues the Austrian director's ongoing fascination with violence and know, also, that this film is a shot-for-shot English language remake of Haneke's homonymous 1997 picture. Amazingly for a film that takes as its subject torture and murder, Haneke keeps most of the violence off-screen, preferring instead to explore its grim aftermath and, subsequently, question the way audiences traditionally consume violent movies. The impact comes from the unremitting emotional discomfort experienced by the characters, principally Anna and George, a prosperous couple played by Naomi Watts and Tim Roth, who we first meet driving with their son Georgie to a secluded lakeside retreat. On their way, they greet their neighbours, a curiously reserved couple who appear to be playing host to a pair of young men. A short while later, "Peter" (Brady Corbett), one of the young men, arrives at Anna and George's, asking to borrow some eggs. He's soon joined by "Paul" (Michael Pitt). Their behaviour becomes increasingly discourteous and, after Anna tries to throw them out of the house, the first of several jarring acts of violence occurs, placing the couple's lives in the hands of these two sadistic psychopaths. In remaking Funny Games, Haneke is obsessively loyal to the original film; the aim here to bring the film to the wider audience he always felt it deserved. But the casting of Naomi Watts subtly shifts our attention to her character at the expense of Tim Roth's. In the original, George was played by The Lives Of Others' Ulrich Muhe and claimed much more of the audience's sympathy. Muhe's performance was underscored by a melancholy dignity and humanity; Roth's George is weak, almost cowardly, in comparison. Originally conceived as a comment on violence in American cinema, this new version is arguably more effective now that the distance of subtitled dialogue has been removed. What remains unchanged is the brilliant visceral discomfort of the experience. In Haneke's hands we experience the same sense of helplessness as the family. By having Pitt talk to camera, addressing us with the same casual disdain, Haneke smashes down the fourth wall and makes it chillingly clear that we are playing by his rules and his rules alone. WENDY IDE

DIR: MICHAEL HANEKE

ST: NAOMI WATTS, MICHEL PITT, TIM ROTH

TRAILER: Windows / Quicktime / Realplayer

Anyone who saw Michael Haneke‘s last film, Hidden (CachŽ), will recognize some familiar tropes here. Both films deal with the middle class under siege; both employ the cinematic language of the thriller and in both, Haneke wrong-foots the audience by rewinding or fast-forwarding footage on screen. Fans of Haneke’s wider body of work will, in turn, see how Funny Games continues the Austrian director’s ongoing fascination with violence and know, also, that this film is a shot-for-shot English language remake of Haneke’s homonymous 1997 picture.

Amazingly for a film that takes as its subject torture and murder, Haneke keeps most of the violence off-screen, preferring instead to explore its grim aftermath and, subsequently, question the way audiences traditionally consume violent movies. The impact comes from the unremitting emotional discomfort experienced by the characters, principally Anna and George, a prosperous couple played by Naomi Watts and Tim Roth, who we first meet driving with their son Georgie to a secluded lakeside retreat.

On their way, they greet their neighbours, a curiously reserved couple who appear to be playing host to a pair of young men. A short while later, “Peter” (Brady Corbett), one of the young men, arrives at Anna and George’s, asking to borrow some eggs. He’s soon joined by “Paul” (Michael Pitt). Their behaviour becomes increasingly discourteous and, after Anna tries to throw them out of the house, the first of several jarring acts of violence occurs, placing the couple’s lives in the hands of these two sadistic psychopaths.

In remaking Funny Games, Haneke is obsessively loyal to the original film; the aim here to bring the film to the wider audience he always felt it deserved. But the casting of Naomi Watts subtly shifts our attention to her character at the expense of Tim Roth’s. In the original, George was played by The Lives Of Others’ Ulrich Muhe and claimed much more of the audience’s sympathy. Muhe’s performance was underscored by a melancholy dignity and humanity; Roth’s George is weak, almost cowardly, in comparison.

Originally conceived as a comment on violence in American cinema, this new version is arguably more effective now that the distance of subtitled dialogue has been removed. What remains unchanged is the brilliant visceral discomfort of the experience. In Haneke’s hands we experience the same sense of helplessness as the family. By having Pitt talk to camera, addressing us with the same casual disdain, Haneke smashes down the fourth wall and makes it chillingly clear that we are playing by his rules and his rules alone.

WENDY IDE

Four Tet’s “Ringer”

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A few years ago, I spent a good while being evangelical about something that was excruciatingly, and probably briefly, labelled ‘folktronica’. Before a bunch of rather insipid bands like Tunng seemed to take up that banner in earnest, I wrote a lot about the solo work of Kieran Hebden, who as Four Tet had moved through an electronic reconfiguring of ecstatic, cosmic jazz and was (circa 2001) building new music out of his computer and a bunch of arcane folk records. Since then, Hebden has generally steered clear of that world, realising a lot of his jazz ambitions through a series of collaborations with the drummer Steve Reid. For the first Four Tet release in a couple of years, however, he has moved on again. “Ringer” is a half-hour mini-album that touches on a few familiar tricks that have returned again and again in the course of Hebden’s engaging career. “Ringer” itself has the percolating, sloshing quality of some his earliest solo records like “Thirtysixtwentyfive” (when he was still generally preoccupied with his post-rock band, Fridge, and, probably maths), and there’s a sudden, fierce clatter of drums towards the end which reflects Hebden’s ongoing love of rhythm science. But mainly, “Ringer” just sounds like a linear, gilded techno track, as does most of this set. I can’t imagine Hebden ever abandoning his diverse musical interests, but the hybridisation here is much more discreet, if it’s there at all. This is not unrelentingly hard music – “Ribbons”, in particular, is a beautifully subtle construction – but it does seem firmly rooted in an electronic tradition. “Swimmer” has a minimalist, driving pulse and ebbing melancholia to it that recalls a bunch of comps I have from the German Kompakt label, though the scrabbling details definitely align it to Hebden’s back catalogue. “Ringer”, meanwhile, reminds me of something from the mid ‘90s, maybe a little earlier, maybe something that’s long fallen out of fashion like the Future Sound Of London. It’s a mark of Hebden’s confidence as a musician and a listener that, at a time when dilettantes like myself aren’t finding much electronic music to get excited about, he can release something so puritanical and absorbing. I suspect, in fact, that his plan is to try and wilfully subvert fashionable expectations – after all, when he was hoarding those old folk records at the turn of the decade, the whole acid-folk/nu-folk/folktronic frenzy hadn’t really begun. Maybe it’s time for us to dig out those “Artifical Intelligence” comps and start to campaign for the return of – and has there ever been a worse genre name than this one? – Intelligent Dance Music? Here’s hoping – maybe Boards Of Canada might even get round to making another record. Which is, obviously, an excuse to link to one of my favourite music videos, “Dayvan Cowboy”.

A few years ago, I spent a good while being evangelical about something that was excruciatingly, and probably briefly, labelled ‘folktronica’. Before a bunch of rather insipid bands like Tunng seemed to take up that banner in earnest, I wrote a lot about the solo work of Kieran Hebden, who as Four Tet had moved through an electronic reconfiguring of ecstatic, cosmic jazz and was (circa 2001) building new music out of his computer and a bunch of arcane folk records.

T Bone Burnett Would Love To Record Bob Dylan

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Legendary musician and now producer T-Bone Burnett has revealed that he'd like to work with Bob Dylan. Burnett's musical career started when Dylan asked him to play on the Rolling Thunder Revue tour in 1975, and the pair have most recently worked together on song for the film The Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood -- however when asked by Uncut if he would consider producing Dylan, like he has Elvis Costello and Robert Plant -- he replies: "I would if he asked me. I would love to record Bob with a deep, warm sound, like the kind I know he loves." Burnett adds that he'd love to set up recording in the same style as Plant and Krauss' 'Raising Sand' was made. He says: "I would love to be able to just set up a room with mics in it and...leave [laughs]. I'd love to give him the sound for him to play in. But it's complicated, and I don't know if I could produce a record for Bob." For the full interview with Burnett by Bud Scoppa, check out the latest issue of Uncut (May 2008) -- on sale now. Burnett talks about the rumours of converting Dylan to Christianity, breaking up the Attractions and more. The new issue also features brand new indepth interviews with Led Zeppelin's Plant, Page and Paul Jones.

Legendary musician and now producer T-Bone Burnett has revealed that he’d like to work with Bob Dylan.

Burnett’s musical career started when Dylan asked him to play on the Rolling Thunder Revue tour in 1975, and the pair have most recently worked together on song for the film The Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood — however when asked by Uncut if he would consider producing Dylan, like he has Elvis Costello and Robert Plant — he replies: “I would if he asked me. I would love to record Bob with a deep, warm sound, like the kind I know he loves.”

Burnett adds that he’d love to set up recording in the same style as Plant and Krauss’ ‘Raising Sand’ was made. He says: “I would love to be able to just set up a room with mics in it and…leave [laughs]. I’d love to give him the sound for him to play in. But it’s complicated, and I don’t know if I could produce a record for Bob.”

For the full interview with Burnett by Bud Scoppa, check out the latest issue of Uncut (May 2008) — on sale now.

Burnett talks about the rumours of converting Dylan to Christianity, breaking up the Attractions and more.

The new issue also features brand new indepth interviews with Led Zeppelin’s Plant, Page and Paul Jones.

The Killers Announce Outdoor Show

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The Killers have confirmed their first live appearance in 2008. The band, fronted by Brandon Flowers are to return to Ireland to play an outdoor show at Dublin's Marlay Park on August 21. The group missed some Irish gigs on their final 'Sam's Town' tour last year due to illness. The Killers are a...

The Killers have confirmed their first live appearance in 2008.

The band, fronted by Brandon Flowers are to return to Ireland to play an outdoor show at Dublin’s Marlay Park on August 21.

The group missed some Irish gigs on their final ‘Sam’s Town’ tour last year due to illness.

The Killers are also currently working on their partly self-produced third studio album, expected to be completed later this year. The first two have now sold over 10 million copies worldwide.

Tickets for the newly announced show will go on sale on April 4 at 8am.

Robert Plant Confirms ‘Led Zeppelin Could Play Again’

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Led Zeppelin's Robert Plant has said that there is a chance of more one-off live perfomances from the band, if the reasoning was right. Speaking in the new (May 2008) edition of UNCUT magazine, the Zep singer, commenting on the huge success of their December reunion show at London's O2 Arena, said...

Led Zeppelin‘s Robert Plant has said that there is a chance of more one-off live perfomances from the band, if the reasoning was right.

Speaking in the new (May 2008) edition of UNCUT magazine, the Zep singer, commenting on the huge success of their December reunion show at London’s O2 Arena, said: “Hopefully, one day, we could do it again. Our profit is – it’s metaphysical.”

The group’s bassist John Paul Jones added: “We (Jones and Page) spoke afterwards, and we both thought the same – it felt like the first night of a tour. You think, ‘Oh, I could do that a bit better, or change something in that song.’ And we didn’t get a chance to do any more.”

Plant also says the Ahmet Ertegun reunion gig was very different to previous gigs in their heyday. He says he: “sang his nuts off” and says it was weird that the “personality of the audience has changed from those days when everybody was in the same condition as the band. Now it was more like the 68th wonder of the world rather than a gig. So I felt a bit embarrassed.”

See the latest issue (MAY 2008) of Uncut for Plant, Page and Paul Jones’ first in-depth interviews since their reunion for the Ahmet Ertegun reunion at London’s O2 Arena last December.

The issue will also come with a brilliant 15-track CD of the music that shaped the band, featuring Elvis Presley, Robert Johnson, John Lee Hooker and Otis Rush amongst the selections.

X Factor Winner Becomes First Brit Female To Top US Charts In 21 Years

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Leona Lewis has become the first British female to top the US Singles Chart since 1987. Lewis, who won last year's TV talent show X Factor has topped the charts with 'Bleeding Love' which was also a UK number one and last years' top-selling UK single. Last year Lewis signed a £5m record deal in t...

Leona Lewis has become the first British female to top the US Singles Chart since 1987.

Lewis, who won last year’s TV talent show X Factor has topped the charts with ‘Bleeding Love’ which was also a UK number one and last years’ top-selling UK single.

Last year Lewis signed a £5m record deal in the US, and the single was released six weeks ago.

The last British female to achieve a Billboard Hot 100 number one was Kim Wilde in 1987, with her cover of the Supremes “You Keep Me Hangin’ On”.

It is thought that Lewis’ appearance with Simon Cowell on the Ophrah Winfrey TV show last week helped boost sales for the 22-year old.

R.E.M’s Accelerate Reviewed Here!

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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 (March 31):

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.

The Black Keys – Attack and Release – Gorgeous blue-eyed soul and garage blues from the duo.

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

Supergrass – Dimond Hoo Ha – Britpop alumni enter ‘Berlin! period. Almost. Uncut Q&A with frontman Gaz Coombs too.

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.

Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks – Real Emotional Trash – Former Pavement slacker Malkmus returns with second album backed by the Jicks.

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Dig, Lazurus, Dig!!! – “The band has never sounded better, and Cave seems to have relaxed into the hysteria of his vocal style; like Elmer Gantry singing Leonard Cohen at a tent-revival.”

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

R.E.M. – Accelerate

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You join us in the Uncut office, late January, waiting for the 14th R.E.M. album to turn up. There’s a little anticipation, naturally, a mature frisson of excitement. But there’s a lot more scepticism, in spite of a music business whispering campaign which has already anointed Accelerate as that most precious phenomenon, the Return To Form. The pre-release hype in 2004, you may remember, promised Around The Sun would be something similar. Instead, that album was so balefully received - by R.E.M.'s fans, crucially, as well as critics - that even the band grouch about it now. The stories about Accelerate, admittedly, are slightly different. Many of the 11 songs, recorded in Vancouver, Athens and Dublin, were roadtested at last summer’s run of shows in the Irish capital, and were received fairly rapturously by those who heard them live and on YouTube. But the suspicions remain. Might the raw new songs be hygienised by Jacknife Lee, best known for his loud and anodyne productions for Snow Patrol, Editors and U2? And could Accelerate turn out to be the work of a desperate band still trying to compete, anxiously in denial of their diminishing powers? Well, here’s Track One, “Living Well’s The Best Revenge”. Three minutes, 11 seconds. A great fuzzy thicket of guitars suggests, immediately, that Peter Buck is a much more engaged presence this time: judging by some interviews from 2004, his most pressing job during the Around The Sun sessions was to fill up the iPods of his bandmates. There’s a tumble of drums, and then Michael Stipe arrives at breakneck speed, huskily trying to squeeze a few too many words into each line, with Mike Mills leaving a vapour trail of harmonies in his wake. It’s an invigorating, agenda-setting opener. For if Around The Sun sought to rescore the populist gravity of Automatic For The People with massed keyboards, “Living Well’s The Best Revenge” aims squarely for the affections of REM’s hardcore rump, those who treasure the helter-skeltering epiphanies of “So Fast, So Numb”, “Life And How To Live It” and, in particular, “These Days”. And it’s no false dawn. As the 34 minutes of Accelerate pass in a general blur, the closest antecedents are revealed to be 1986’s Lifes Rich Pageant and the following year’s Document; the albums where REM stood on the cusp of mainstream success, negotiating between the elliptical jangle of their early years and a crunchy, poetic twist on stadium rock. So “Mansized Wreath” swaggers in with a feedback-spattered riff, an organ wheezing consumptively, Mike Mills essaying some highly unlikely funk runs, and a vague but satisfying hint of “Exhuming McCarthy”. This is Accelerate Track Two, and, again, it’s exhilarating. Lee’s mix may tend towards his usual deafening flatness, the scrupulously limited dynamic range demanded by radio producers. But the denseness suits R.E.M., reconstructing their trademark intricate hedge of sound, albeit with a very contemporary digital clarity. At times, the eagerness to placate those long-term devotees dismayed by Around The Sun - and, to a lesser extent, by Up and Reveal - is pretty unbecoming. “Sing For The Submarine” is an overlong (4:50!) and bombastic trudge which wouldn’t have sounded out of place on Around The Sun, scarred by some clattery aerobics from the old Ministry drummer, Bill Rieflin. Stipe, though, is a bigger problem, awkwardly weaving a bunch of his old song titles – “Electron Blue”, “Feeling Gravity’s Pull”, “High Speed Train” – into the lyrics. “Supernatural Superstitious”, meanwhile, begins, “Everybody here comes from somewhere,” reminiscent of those arch concert intros that make Stipe resemble a trendy vicar. The song itself, a scuffed and bouncy cousin to “Man On The Moon” and “The Great Beyond”, consequently comes across as one of Accelerate’s more crass moments. Elsewhere, the allusions to R.E.M’s past are more rewarding. The churning raga-rock of “Mr Richards” recalls “Time After Time”, even if Stipe’s vocal would work better buried deep in the feedback, rather than sitting pertly above it. “Horse To Water” is choppy, cascading and very nearly the equal to “Living Well’s The Best Revenge”, with another mildly embarrassing lyric that involves “Friday night, fuck and fight, a pub crawl”. The ballads, too, are mostly impressive. “Hollow Man” begins, coyly, as a piano meditation typical of late-period REM, then blooms into something faster and more euphoric, with a tiny, chiming middle eight that is Buck’s most overt nod to The Byrds in years. “Houston” has melodic affinities with “Try Not To Breathe”, but a creaking, ominous air closer to “King Of Birds”. And while the world-gone-wrong portent of “Until The Day Is Done” marks it as kin to the last album’s “Final Straw”, the solemnities are handled with an elegance that also recalls, more pleasingly, “World Leader Pretend”. Eleven songs, then, and only one outright dud – the giddy, dorky “I’m Gonna DJ”, which hasn’t appreciably improved since its appearance on last year’s R.E.M. Live album. By the end, you’re left with the impression of a very self-conscious band who are in thrall to their fans and the riches of their back catalogue, but who’ve managed to relocate their energy and melodic zeal as well as their signature sound. A nagging doubt remains that this isn’t the music these three men would necessarily choose to make right now, that Accelerate is a lively professional exigency, from the studiously dynamic title onwards. But then “Living Well’s The Best Defence” winds up again, and the deeper motivations of R.E.M. seem irrelevant when they’ve made their most straightforwardly enjoyable album since 1996’s New Adventures In Hi-Fi. Stipe has scolded us often enough for misinterpreting his lyrics as personal revelations. But when, in “Hollow Man”, he ruefully notes, “I took the prize last night for complicatedness,” the temptation is too great. Accelerate is a simple, pragmatic record built on an uncomfortable truth: sometimes, even the best bands have to retrace their steps, if only to remind themselves what they’re really good at. JOHN MULVEY Accelerate - Track By Track 1 Living Well's the Best Revenge 5* 2 Mansized Wreath 4* 3 Supernatural Superserious 3* 4 Hollow Man 3* 5 Houston 3* 6 Accelerate 3* 7 Until the Day Is Done 4* 8 Mr. Richards 4* 9 Sing for the Submarine 3* 10 Horse to Water 4* 11 I'm Gonna DJ 2*

You join us in the Uncut office, late January, waiting for the 14th R.E.M. album to turn up. There’s a little anticipation, naturally, a mature frisson of excitement. But there’s a lot more scepticism, in spite of a music business whispering campaign which has already anointed Accelerate as that most precious phenomenon, the Return To Form.

The pre-release hype in 2004, you may remember, promised Around The Sun would be something similar. Instead, that album was so balefully received – by R.E.M.’s fans, crucially, as well as critics – that even the band grouch about it now. The stories about Accelerate, admittedly, are slightly different. Many of the 11 songs, recorded in Vancouver, Athens and Dublin, were roadtested at last summer’s run of shows in the Irish capital, and were received fairly rapturously by those who heard them live and on YouTube. But the suspicions remain. Might the raw new songs be hygienised by Jacknife Lee, best known for his loud and anodyne productions for Snow Patrol, Editors and U2? And could Accelerate turn out to be the work of a desperate band still trying to compete, anxiously in denial of their diminishing powers?

Well, here’s Track One, “Living Well’s The Best Revenge”. Three minutes, 11 seconds. A great fuzzy thicket of guitars suggests, immediately, that Peter Buck is a much more engaged presence this time: judging by some interviews from 2004, his most pressing job during the Around The Sun sessions was to fill up the iPods of his bandmates. There’s a tumble of drums, and then Michael Stipe arrives at breakneck speed, huskily trying to squeeze a few too many words into each line, with Mike Mills leaving a vapour trail of harmonies in his wake.

It’s an invigorating, agenda-setting opener. For if Around The Sun sought to rescore the populist gravity of Automatic For The People with massed keyboards, “Living Well’s The Best Revenge” aims squarely for the affections of REM’s hardcore rump, those who treasure the helter-skeltering epiphanies of “So Fast, So Numb”, “Life And How To Live It” and, in particular, “These Days”.

And it’s no false dawn. As the 34 minutes of Accelerate pass in a general blur, the closest antecedents are revealed to be 1986’s Lifes Rich Pageant and the following year’s Document; the albums where REM stood on the cusp of mainstream success, negotiating between the elliptical jangle of their early years and a crunchy, poetic twist on stadium rock.

So “Mansized Wreath” swaggers in with a feedback-spattered riff, an organ wheezing consumptively, Mike Mills essaying some highly unlikely funk runs, and a vague but satisfying hint of “Exhuming McCarthy”. This is Accelerate Track Two, and, again, it’s exhilarating. Lee’s mix may tend towards his usual deafening flatness, the scrupulously limited dynamic range demanded by radio producers. But the denseness suits R.E.M., reconstructing their trademark intricate hedge of sound, albeit with a very contemporary digital clarity.

At times, the eagerness to placate those long-term devotees dismayed by Around The Sun – and, to a lesser extent, by Up and Reveal – is pretty unbecoming. “Sing For The Submarine” is an overlong (4:50!) and bombastic trudge which wouldn’t have sounded out of place on Around The Sun, scarred by some clattery aerobics from the old Ministry drummer, Bill Rieflin. Stipe, though, is a bigger problem, awkwardly weaving a bunch of his old song titles – “Electron Blue”, “Feeling Gravity’s Pull”, “High Speed Train” – into the lyrics. “Supernatural Superstitious”, meanwhile, begins, “Everybody here comes from somewhere,” reminiscent of those arch concert intros that make Stipe resemble a trendy vicar. The song itself, a scuffed and bouncy cousin to “Man On The Moon” and “The Great Beyond”, consequently comes across as one of Accelerate’s more crass moments.

Elsewhere, the allusions to R.E.M’s past are more rewarding. The churning raga-rock of “Mr Richards” recalls “Time After Time”, even if Stipe’s vocal would work better buried deep in the feedback, rather than sitting pertly above it. “Horse To Water” is choppy, cascading and very nearly the equal to “Living Well’s The Best Revenge”, with another mildly embarrassing lyric that involves “Friday night, fuck and fight, a pub crawl”.

The ballads, too, are mostly impressive. “Hollow Man” begins, coyly, as a piano meditation typical of late-period REM, then blooms into something faster and more euphoric, with a tiny, chiming middle eight that is Buck’s most overt nod to The Byrds in years. “Houston” has melodic affinities with “Try Not To Breathe”, but a creaking, ominous air closer to “King Of Birds”. And while the world-gone-wrong portent of “Until The Day Is Done” marks it as kin to the last album’s “Final Straw”, the solemnities are handled with an elegance that also recalls, more pleasingly, “World Leader Pretend”.

Eleven songs, then, and only one outright dud – the giddy, dorky “I’m Gonna DJ”, which hasn’t appreciably improved since its appearance on last year’s R.E.M. Live album. By the end, you’re left with the impression of a very self-conscious band who are in thrall to their fans and the riches of their back catalogue, but who’ve managed to relocate their energy and melodic zeal as well as their signature sound.

A nagging doubt remains that this isn’t the music these three men would necessarily choose to make right now, that Accelerate is a lively professional exigency, from the studiously dynamic title onwards. But then “Living Well’s The Best Defence” winds up again, and the deeper motivations of R.E.M. seem irrelevant when they’ve made their most straightforwardly enjoyable album since 1996’s New Adventures In Hi-Fi.

Stipe has scolded us often enough for misinterpreting his lyrics as personal revelations. But when, in “Hollow Man”, he ruefully notes, “I took the prize last night for complicatedness,” the temptation is too great. Accelerate is a simple, pragmatic record built on an uncomfortable truth: sometimes, even the best bands have to retrace their steps, if only to remind themselves what they’re really good at.

JOHN MULVEY

Accelerate – Track By Track

1 Living Well’s the Best Revenge 5*

2 Mansized Wreath 4*

3 Supernatural Superserious 3*

4 Hollow Man 3*

5 Houston 3*

6 Accelerate 3*

7 Until the Day Is Done 4*

8 Mr. Richards 4*

9 Sing for the Submarine 3*

10 Horse to Water 4*

11 I’m Gonna DJ 2*

Gnarls Barkley – The Odd Couple

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Brian “Danger Mouse” Burton and Thomas “Cee-Lo” Callaway have been promiscuous collaborators since the history-making download chart-topper “Crazy” earned them overnight stardom two years back. Their 2006 debut St Elsewhere was a pretty solid collection, but a little overshadowed by the anthem that went on to become that year’s biggest-selling single. The Odd Couple is a much stronger album, with almost every track sounding like a potential hit. Gnarls Barkley thrive in the space between Burton’s art-pop futurism and Callaway’s gospel-blues populism. The producer, an Anglophile New Yorker who has mashed up everyone from The Beatles to Gorillaz, fills the sonic canvas with arch references and electro-noise asides. The singer, an Atlanta-raised soul shouter and hip-hopper with a sideline penning polished chart-pop for the likes of Pussycat Dolls, provides soaring emotions and a warm, guttural voice. The Odd Couple is stacked with tunes that manage to sound like funky church sermons and cool avant-pop experiments simultaneously. Several tracks, from the deceptively jaunty fuzz-pop of “Charity Case” to the bouncy retro-strum of “Surprise”, call to mind OutKast’s knowing, nostalgic “Hey Ya” taken to the next level. With their penchant for pop hooks and fancy dress, Gnarls never forget their mission is to entertain. But there is darkness here, too, an imploring tone in Calloway’s voice that reaches right back to the blues. The dissonant, oppressive, psycho-voiced slow jam “Would Be Killer” is nocturnal noir; “Who’s Gonna Save My Soul” an exquisite gospel confessional. Most of these tracks combine a seductive, upbeat surface with unsettling sonic textures beneath. It’s a dream-team formula: imagine Prince jamming with Radiohead. The result is a milestone in modern psychedelic soul. STEPHEN DALTON UNCUT: You were semi-underground when you made St Elsewhere, but you recorded The Odd Couple as pop stars... DANGER MOUSE: I wouldn’t say we went into it as pop stars, but I know what you mean. We weren’t really that deliberate about St Elsewhere, and it was kind of the same for this record. We just wanted to make sure we really liked it. There seem to be many more vintage soul influences this time... Our whole thing is more about the spirit of it, the feeling, than anything else. Psychedelic music, we draw a lot from that – music back then drew from a lot of different places, it just did it really naturally. Are you the brains and Cee-Lo the heart? We definitely complement each other. Whether it’s heart or brain or whatever, if he finds something in the music, it will all make sense. INTERVIEW: STEPHEN DALTON

Brian “Danger Mouse” Burton and Thomas “Cee-Lo” Callaway have been promiscuous collaborators since the history-making download chart-topper “Crazy” earned them overnight stardom two years back. Their 2006 debut St Elsewhere was a pretty solid collection, but a little overshadowed by the anthem that went on to become that year’s biggest-selling single. The Odd Couple is a much stronger album, with almost every track sounding like a potential hit.

Gnarls Barkley thrive in the space between Burton’s art-pop futurism and Callaway’s gospel-blues populism. The producer, an Anglophile New Yorker who has mashed up everyone from The Beatles to Gorillaz, fills the sonic canvas with arch references and electro-noise asides. The singer, an Atlanta-raised soul shouter and hip-hopper with a sideline penning polished chart-pop for the likes of Pussycat Dolls, provides soaring emotions and a warm, guttural voice.

The Odd Couple is stacked with tunes that manage to sound like funky church sermons and cool avant-pop experiments simultaneously. Several tracks, from the deceptively jaunty fuzz-pop of “Charity Case” to the bouncy retro-strum of “Surprise”, call to mind OutKast’s knowing, nostalgic “Hey Ya” taken to the next level.

With their penchant for pop hooks and fancy dress, Gnarls never forget their mission is to entertain. But there is darkness here, too, an imploring tone in Calloway’s voice that reaches right back to the blues. The dissonant, oppressive, psycho-voiced slow jam “Would Be Killer” is nocturnal noir; “Who’s Gonna Save My Soul” an exquisite gospel confessional.

Most of these tracks combine a seductive, upbeat surface with unsettling sonic textures beneath. It’s a dream-team formula: imagine Prince jamming with Radiohead. The result is a milestone in modern psychedelic soul.

STEPHEN DALTON

UNCUT: You were semi-underground when you made St Elsewhere, but you recorded The Odd Couple as pop stars…

DANGER MOUSE: I wouldn’t say we went into it as pop stars, but I know what you mean. We weren’t really that deliberate about St Elsewhere, and it was kind of the same for this record. We just wanted to make sure we really liked it.

There seem to be many more vintage soul influences this time…

Our whole thing is more about the spirit of it, the feeling, than anything else. Psychedelic music, we draw a lot from that – music back then drew from a lot of different places, it just did it really naturally.

Are you the brains and Cee-Lo the heart?

We definitely complement each other. Whether it’s heart or brain or whatever, if he finds something in the music, it will all make sense.

INTERVIEW: STEPHEN DALTON

The Rolling Stones – Shine A Light OST

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Listening to The Rolling Stones live is like eavesdropping on a circus. You may surmise that the crowd is being tantalised by Mick’s clown pouts, but what you get is the sensation of being stuck outside the tent. On the plus side, you don’t have to watch Christina Aguilera defibrillating Live With Me. Not that the Stones are bad, but the murkiness of the sound, with guitars sinking in a mud of horns, does them no favours. As Tears Go By is as sweet as Some Girls is unappealing, and while it’s admirable that “Buddy motherfucking Guy” guests on Champagne and Reefer, his playing has never been known for its economy. Less is more, and the Stones are at their best on the spoof country of Faraway Eyes; and Richards’ attack on You Got The Silver, with Ronnie Wood picking holes in an acoustic slide guitar. ALASTAIR McKAY

Listening to The Rolling Stones live is like eavesdropping on a circus. You may surmise that the crowd is being tantalised by Mick’s clown pouts, but what you get is the sensation of being stuck outside the tent. On the plus side, you don’t have to watch Christina Aguilera defibrillating Live With Me.

Not that the Stones are bad, but the murkiness of the sound, with guitars sinking in a mud of horns, does them no favours. As Tears Go By is as sweet as Some Girls is unappealing, and while it’s admirable that “Buddy motherfucking Guy” guests on Champagne and Reefer, his playing has never been known for its economy.

Less is more, and the Stones are at their best on the spoof country of Faraway Eyes; and Richards’ attack on You Got The Silver, with Ronnie Wood picking holes in an acoustic slide guitar.

ALASTAIR McKAY

R.E.M.’s Michael Stipe Speaks About The Making Of Accelerate

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UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL: MICHAEL STIPE UNCUT: Can you tell me a little about how an R.E.M. LP comes to be made? MICHAEL STIPE: It’s always a bit different for us – over the last 28 years of making records, we’ve kind of built up a set of rules, which we then realise are a little outdated or outmoded, and then we discard them and begin over again. And that was certainly the case for Accelerate. What did you have to change? Mostly the way that we communicate with each other. Or rather how we did communicate with each other – it kind of forced our hand. The last record we made (i)Around The Sun(i), I think was a great group of songs, but I think the band kind of lost focus in the studio while we recording them. And the period of time between recording the songs and getting them mixed took way too long. So with this one we decided to turbo-charge the process, and we made a record faster than we probably have done in 20 years. How did you sort out your communication problems? It was on tour, after Around the Sun, the three of us looked at each other and said, “That was no fun, and we’re none of us very happy with the record and we have no-one to blame for that but ourselves.” We needed to really pick up the pieces and figure it out again, and that’s what we’ve done. When you’d done that; what happened next? The guys write a bunch of songs, put them down on tape and throw them to me, and I try to come up with melodies and words. And the big difference with this time was that I went into the first day of recording with completely written songs – which rarely happens. It’s always taken me a lot longer to do my work than it has Peter and Mike. What was behind the decision to go with Jacknife Lee as a producer? I had had several conversations with The Edge as it happens, and he thought Jacknife would be a great compliment to REM. I was super-impressed by what he’d done. He’s very inspired and very inspiring, so I kind of instantly liked him. We had an idea of what kind of record we wanted to make before we even met him, so that decision was a little bit fuelled by that knowledge: here’s what we want to do, let’s find a producer that can help us achieve that. The only minor change along the way has been that, all through making this record I had said “I don’t care how good this record is – I’m not going to tour it. But by the time we’d finished the thing, I thought “This is really good”, and changed my mind. I sat the guys down, and said “Fuck it, I’m gonna do it. Let’s tour…Let’s hit the road with this one”. And you feel that your communication problems are over, now? I don’t want to be a fucking bore, but a large part of what we do is that we have to be able to communicate on some level. There are stories in music history of musical partnerships being held together by lawyers. We were nowhere near that, but I was like, “I don’t want to be that”. None of us want to be that. And it’s not like we hated each other or anything, but we had all gone off into our own little worlds and in our own little directions and overlooked the possibility of making ourselves a whole lot better. I’m not saying we achieved that, but I’m thrilled with this record. For a band like yours a tour that isn’t working must be particularly annoying… When you’re flogging out around the world for a year and a half, that can get a little tiring. But that’s not the kind of tour that we’re talking about this time. The thing with touring is that you always never want to do it until you’re doing it, and then you never want it to stop. From a distance it seems impossible and exhausting but when you’re in the middle of it, it’s really fun. In terms of sound, Accelerate seems to be a cousin of records like Life’s Rich Pageant and Document. Was that conscious? No, not at all. I’m really bad at looking backwards, and I’ve stated that a thousand times before. Even thematically I had no idea where the direction the record would go. I try not to think, or over think what I’m writing about and let it come through me and be in some more unconscious voice. Thematically, I didn’t know 'til halfway through how the record was shaping up, and the different emotions that are touched on and the different scenarios that are played out in the record. “Mansized Wreath” is a great track. You seem to be engaging with political propaganda in it – is that along the right lines? Very much so. The germ of the idea which was the inspiration for that song came on Martin Luther King Day, which is a holiday here in the United States. It was basically a photo-op in Atlanta by our current administration, where protestors were held at bay using buses - of all things - with sharp shooters on top of them. A line of buses: that visual was such a slap in the face to civil rights. You perhaps have high hopes for the end of the Bush administration. Does that account for the energised feel of Accelerate? I honestly didn’t think of it in that way. I’ll be happy to see a new administration step in for sure, but I’m afraid the ripple effect of the damage that’s been done in the past seven years will be with us for our lifetimes… INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL: MICHAEL STIPE

UNCUT: Can you tell me a little about how an R.E.M. LP comes to be made?

MICHAEL STIPE: It’s always a bit different for us – over the last 28 years of making records, we’ve kind of built up a set of rules, which we then realise are a little outdated or outmoded, and then we discard them and begin over again. And that was certainly the case for Accelerate.

What did you have to change?

Mostly the way that we communicate with each other. Or rather how we did communicate with each other – it kind of forced our hand. The last record we made (i)Around The Sun(i), I think was a great group of songs, but I think the band kind of lost focus in the studio while we recording them. And the period of time between recording the songs and getting them mixed took way too long. So with this one we decided to turbo-charge the process, and we made a record faster than we probably have done in 20 years.

How did you sort out your communication problems?

It was on tour, after Around the Sun, the three of us looked at each other and said, “That was no fun, and we’re none of us very happy with the record and we have no-one to blame for that but ourselves.” We needed to really pick up the pieces and figure it out again, and that’s what we’ve done.

When you’d done that; what happened next?

The guys write a bunch of songs, put them down on tape and throw them to me, and I try to come up with melodies and words. And the big difference with this time was that I went into the first day of recording with completely written songs – which rarely happens. It’s always taken me a lot longer to do my work than it has Peter and Mike.

What was behind the decision to go with Jacknife Lee as a producer?

I had had several conversations with The Edge as it happens, and he thought Jacknife would be a great compliment to REM. I was super-impressed by what he’d done. He’s very inspired and very inspiring, so I kind of instantly liked him. We had an idea of what kind of record we wanted to make before we even met him, so that decision was a little bit fuelled by that knowledge: here’s what we want to do, let’s find a producer that can help us achieve that. The only minor change along the way has been that, all through making this record I had said “I don’t care how good this record is – I’m not going to tour it. But by the time we’d finished the thing, I thought “This is really good”, and changed my mind. I sat the guys down, and said “Fuck it, I’m gonna do it. Let’s tour…Let’s hit the road with this one”.

And you feel that your communication problems are over, now?

I don’t want to be a fucking bore, but a large part of what we do is that we have to be able to communicate on some level. There are stories in music history of musical partnerships being held together by lawyers. We were nowhere near that, but I was like, “I don’t want to be that”. None of us want to be that. And it’s not like we hated each other or anything, but we had all gone off into our own little worlds and in our own little directions and overlooked the possibility of making ourselves a whole lot better. I’m not saying we achieved that, but I’m thrilled with this record.

For a band like yours a tour that isn’t working must be particularly annoying…

When you’re flogging out around the world for a year and a half, that can get a little tiring. But that’s not the kind of tour that we’re talking about this time. The thing with touring is that you always never want to do it until you’re doing it, and then you never want it to stop. From a distance it seems impossible and exhausting but when you’re in the middle of it, it’s really fun.

In terms of sound, Accelerate seems to be a cousin of records like Life’s Rich Pageant and Document. Was that conscious?

No, not at all. I’m really bad at looking backwards, and I’ve stated that a thousand times before. Even thematically I had no idea where the direction the record would go. I try not to think, or over think what I’m writing about and let it come through me and be in some more unconscious voice. Thematically, I didn’t know ’til halfway through how the record was shaping up, and the different emotions that are touched on and the different scenarios that are played out in the record.

“Mansized Wreath” is a great track. You seem to be engaging with political propaganda in it – is that along the right lines?

Very much so. The germ of the idea which was the inspiration for that song came on Martin Luther King Day, which is a holiday here in the United States. It was basically a photo-op in Atlanta by our current administration, where protestors were held at bay using buses – of all things – with sharp shooters on top of them. A line of buses: that visual was such a slap in the face to civil rights.

You perhaps have high hopes for the end of the Bush administration. Does that account for the energised feel of Accelerate?

I honestly didn’t think of it in that way. I’ll be happy to see a new administration step in for sure, but I’m afraid the ripple effect of the damage that’s been done in the past seven years will be with us for our lifetimes…

INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

The Black Keys – Attack And Release

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The Black Keys are on the cusp of greatness – “Attack and Release”, produced by Danger Mouse, takes them one step closer, but not quite over the edge. We’ve always known they can do the two-piece blues-rock caveman shuffle as well as almost anyone (“I Got Mine” and the Zep-channelling ...

The Black Keys are on the cusp of greatness – “Attack and Release”, produced by Danger Mouse, takes them one step closer, but not quite over the edge.

We’ve always known they can do the two-piece blues-rock caveman shuffle as well as almost anyone (“I Got Mine” and the Zep-channelling “Same Old Thing” stand out this time), but here the hand claps go to a trio of blue-eyed soul and R&B numbers that rival Steve Marriott (some songs were originally written for Ike Turner).

“Lies” is Motown-aping bliss, while “Things Ain’t What They Used To Be” is a bone fide classic.

PETER SHEPHERD