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Dawn Landes live at Club Uncut

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I didn’t plan to blog today, fancying a computer-free Easter weekend and all, but this morning I felt compelled to write about Dawn Landes’ show at our first Club Uncut last night. A few days ago, I think I described her as being some kind of cross between Chan Marshall and Laura Veirs. Well, I got that completely wrong. Landes’ recent album, “Fireproofâ€, seemed pretty enough to me, if a little prim. But her live show is something else. In the current pantheon of vaguely rootsy, vaguely alternative female singers, I guess the best comparison would be with Jenny Lewis, or, at a push, Neko Case: Landes certainly works in this bracket, with an exuberance and forthright tone rather than po-faced discretion. Consequently, there’s never a hint of the preciousness or earnestness that can sometimes afflict alt-country, and a real swing that really comes to the fore when she swaps her acoustic for an electric. Landes is accompanied by a drummer with a threatening beard and, occasionally, a harmonica and music box, and the combination of his hearty thump with her fuzzy, racing guitar often reminds me of something like The Black Keys: the best song from “Fireproofâ€, “Bodyguardâ€, is now a faintly bluesy prowl rather than a pensive groove. It’s a fantastic transformation, and the heaviness is so well deployed that it never smothers the songs or overwhelms Landes’ notably powerful voice. At one point, there’s even a vague affinity with Neil Young circa “Tonight’s The Nightâ€, with that strangely vivid, ragged plod. Oh, and she does neat covers of Tom Waits and Taj Mahal, and skips the whimsical bluegrass cover of Peter, Bjorn & John’s “Young Folks†which initially made her name. Got to say, I didn’t miss it. Thanks to everyone who came down to the Borderline, anyway – it was a pretty busy night, and Liz Green played a nice set, too. And while I don’t want to change the blog into some kind of Club Uncut advertorial, I have a really interesting night lined up for April – more news about that next week, I promise.

I didn’t plan to blog today, fancying a computer-free Easter weekend and all, but this morning I felt compelled to write about Dawn Landes’ show at our first Club Uncut last night. A few days ago, I think I described her as being some kind of cross between Chan Marshall and Laura Veirs. Well, I got that completely wrong.

Drillbit Taylor

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DIR: STEVEN BRILL ST: OWEN WILSON, ALEX FROST, CASEY BOERSMA Written by Beavis And Butthead graduate Kristofor Brown and Superbad writer Seth Rogen from an idea by John Hughes, Drillbit Taylor is an oddly asinine teen comedy, almost - but not quite - saved by the intervention of Owen Wilson as a homeless bum who offers protection to three boys after convincing them that he's a black ops specialist who just happens to live in a bush. There's a fat one (Troy Gentile), a thin one (Nate Hartley) and a mini-geek in a Cats t-shirt (David Dorfman), whose response to the taunting of the school bully (Alex Frost) is, obviously, a small ad in Soldier of Fortune. This revenge of the nerds is complicated slightly by their budget bodyguard's fear of violence ("I was discharged," he explains, "unauthorised heroism,") and a subplot in which, by wearing a cardigan and changing his name to Dr Illbit, he becomes romantically involved with a pretty lady teacher. Meanwhile, Drillbit's bum chums are encouraging him to exploit the goodwill of his young charges by robbing their homes and fleeing to a new life in Canada. Wilson, as ever, is a charmingly vague presence, and allows his oddly-shaped nose to take a lot of punches. The kids are never less than alright, but the brand-stretching of the Judd Apatow empire is surely approaching snapping-point. Good trailer, mind. ALASTAIR McKAY

DIR: STEVEN BRILL

ST: OWEN WILSON, ALEX FROST, CASEY BOERSMA

Written by Beavis And Butthead graduate Kristofor Brown and Superbad writer Seth Rogen from an idea by John Hughes, Drillbit Taylor is an oddly asinine teen comedy, almost – but not quite – saved by the intervention of Owen Wilson as a homeless bum who offers protection to three boys after convincing them that he’s a black ops specialist who just happens to live in a bush. There’s a fat one (Troy Gentile), a thin one (Nate Hartley) and a mini-geek in a Cats t-shirt (David Dorfman), whose response to the taunting of the school bully (Alex Frost) is, obviously, a small ad in Soldier of Fortune.

This revenge of the nerds is complicated slightly by their budget bodyguard’s fear of violence (“I was discharged,” he explains, “unauthorised heroism,”) and a subplot in which, by wearing a cardigan and changing his name to Dr Illbit, he becomes romantically involved with a pretty lady teacher. Meanwhile, Drillbit’s bum chums are encouraging him to exploit the goodwill of his young charges by robbing their homes and fleeing to a new life in Canada.

Wilson, as ever, is a charmingly vague presence, and allows his oddly-shaped nose to take a lot of punches. The kids are never less than alright, but the brand-stretching of the Judd Apatow empire is surely approaching snapping-point.

Good trailer, mind.

ALASTAIR McKAY

The Orphanage

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DIR Juan Antonino Bayona ST Belen Rueda, Fernando Cayo, Roger Princep You may have cause to wonder what's happened to horror movies these days. From a genre once capable of giving us singularly inventive shocks, from Night Of The Living Dead to The Exorcist, The Tenant, Rabid and Alien, it's now characterised by lazy, reductive film-making, high-concept franchises and churned-out slasher pics, the Polanskis, Cronenbergs of this world the exceptions, clearly, rather than the rule. Spain, though, has recently become the go-to location for audiences searching for something a little more satisfying from their horror movies, with directors like Alejandro Amenabar (The Others) and Guillermo Del Toro (The Devil's Backbone) making elegant and artful films, driven by characters rather than buckets of gore. As you might expect, then, The Orphanage - produced by Del Toro - delivers much more than the sum of its parts. It is, ostensibly, a haunted house movie, featuring many familiar tropes - imaginary friends, creepy old ladies and nursery rhymes - but debuting director Bayona adds to the mix infanticide, the Peter Pan story and a moving coda exploring the bond between mothers and sons that gives The Orphanage its emotional heft. Laura (Rueda) returns to the Good Shepherd orphanage on Spain's rainy northern coast where she grew up. She's with her husband Carlo (Cayo) and son Simon (Princep), intending to establish a care home for disabled children. Laura and Carlo have their own secrets, while Simon has two imaginary friends, whose number suddenly rise by six, including a boy called Tomas. At a party to mark the re-opening of the orphanage, Simon goes missing. Months pass and the police investigation yields nothing, so a distraught Laura calls in a medium who reveals some grim truths about both the orphanage's history and the identity of Simon's imaginary friends. Bayona taps into one of our most primal fears here, the disappearance of children. But he seems more interested in exploring Laura's emotional arc as she struggles to find answers behind Simon's disappearance, with Belen Rueda's performance full of loss and remorse. There's effective moments of horror, of course. An innocent game of Statues played at the start is chillingly restaged later, there is a sudden, horrifying death, and the sight of a child wearing a sack mask walking slowly down one of the orphanage's many long, shadowy corridors acts as the film's most ball-tightening moment. The theme of Peter Pan is returned to several times, and you can argue that The Orphanage is JM Barrie's story seen from the point of view of Mrs Darling, driven to distraction by her children's absence. By the time we reach the third act, this is less a horror film but a psychological study of a protagonist on the brink of emotional collapse. MICHAEL BONNER

DIR Juan Antonino Bayona

ST Belen Rueda, Fernando Cayo, Roger Princep

You may have cause to wonder what’s happened to horror movies these days. From a genre once capable of giving us singularly inventive shocks, from Night Of The Living Dead to The Exorcist, The Tenant, Rabid and Alien, it’s now characterised by lazy, reductive film-making, high-concept franchises and churned-out slasher pics, the Polanskis, Cronenbergs of this world the exceptions, clearly, rather than the rule.

Spain, though, has recently become the go-to location for audiences searching for something a little more satisfying from their horror movies, with directors like Alejandro Amenabar (The Others) and Guillermo Del Toro (The Devil’s Backbone) making elegant and artful films, driven by characters rather than buckets of gore. As you might expect, then, The Orphanage – produced by Del Toro – delivers much more than the sum of its parts. It is, ostensibly, a haunted house movie, featuring many familiar tropes – imaginary friends, creepy old ladies and nursery rhymes – but debuting director Bayona adds to the mix infanticide, the Peter Pan story and a moving coda exploring the bond between mothers and sons that gives The Orphanage its emotional heft.

Laura (Rueda) returns to the Good Shepherd orphanage on Spain’s rainy northern coast where she grew up. She’s with her husband Carlo (Cayo) and son Simon (Princep), intending to establish a care home for disabled children. Laura and Carlo have their own secrets, while Simon has two imaginary friends, whose number suddenly rise by six, including a boy called Tomas. At a party to mark the re-opening of the orphanage, Simon goes missing. Months pass and the police investigation yields nothing, so a distraught Laura calls in a medium who reveals some grim truths about both the orphanage’s history and the identity of Simon’s imaginary friends. Bayona taps into one of our most primal fears here, the disappearance of children. But he seems more interested in exploring Laura’s emotional arc as she struggles to find answers behind Simon’s disappearance, with Belen Rueda’s performance full of loss and remorse.

There’s effective moments of horror, of course. An innocent game of Statues played at the start is chillingly restaged later, there is a sudden, horrifying death, and the sight of a child wearing a sack mask walking slowly down one of the orphanage’s many long, shadowy corridors acts as the film’s most ball-tightening moment.

The theme of Peter Pan is returned to several times, and you can argue that The Orphanage is JM Barrie’s story seen from the point of view of Mrs Darling, driven to distraction by her children’s absence. By the time we reach the third act, this is less a horror film but a psychological study of a protagonist on the brink of emotional collapse.

MICHAEL BONNER

Lightspeed Champion To Headline New Music Festival

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Lightspeed Champion has been confirmed to headline the new Redfest festival at Redhill starting July 4. The independently run two-day event hopes to bring the fun back into festivals. “It’s all about the music,†says promotor Matt Nichols. “In today’s crowded festival market, there arenâ€...

Lightspeed Champion has been confirmed to headline the new Redfest festival at Redhill starting July 4.

The independently run two-day event hopes to bring the fun back into festivals. “It’s all about the music,†says promotor Matt Nichols. “In today’s crowded festival market, there aren’t that many independently run festivals who are putting on events without jumping into bed with the big corporations.â€

The aim, he says, is to give today’s youth the same experience and the generation that preceded it, “an event with purely music in mind.“

Other bands to feature are Reading based Does It Offend You, Yeah?, and Pete and the Pirates.

The festival, runs over the weekend of July 4 and 5, is £63 and includes camping and parking, and Redfest goers are allowed to stay onsite till July 6.

More information and tickets for Redfest are on sale now and will be available through the festival’s website here: www.redfest.co.uk

Club Uncut Launches Tonight With Dawn Landes

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Come and join us as New York-based singer-songwriter and sometime sound engineer for Ryan Adams and Phillip Glass - Dawn Landes headlines the first Uncut Live club night taking place tonight (March 20)! Our new monthly gig nights in the capital launch with Landes at the Borderline venue -- with support coming from hotly-tipped Swedish folk singer Peter Von Poehl and last year's Glastonbury festival new talent winner, singer Liz Green. Uncut Live will be bringing you our favourite new artists, once a month at London's intimate Borderline -- artists for next month's gig will be announced soon. Check back to www.uncut.co.uk for info. A few tickets are still available on the door for the first Uncut Live night. For more information on the artists, and to hear audio clips, check: www.myspace.com/dawnlandes www.myspace.com/petervonpoehl http://www.myspace.com/lizgreenmusic

Come and join us as New York-based singer-songwriter and sometime sound engineer for Ryan Adams and Phillip GlassDawn Landes headlines the first Uncut Live club night taking place tonight (March 20)!

Our new monthly gig nights in the capital launch with Landes at the Borderline venue — with support coming from hotly-tipped Swedish folk singer Peter Von Poehl and last year’s Glastonbury festival new talent winner, singer Liz Green.

Uncut Live will be bringing you our favourite new artists, once a month at London’s intimate Borderline — artists for next month’s gig will be announced soon.

Check back to www.uncut.co.uk for info.

A few tickets are still available on the door for the first Uncut Live night.

For more information on the artists, and to hear audio clips, check:

www.myspace.com/dawnlandes

www.myspace.com/petervonpoehl

http://www.myspace.com/lizgreenmusic

Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds Confirm New Single

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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have confirmed details of their brand single, the second from their critically acclaimed album ‘Dig, Lazarus, Dig!’. The track, ‘More News From Nowhere’ is set for release on May 12 and will feature an exclusive new track “Fleeting Love†on the B-side. The...

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have confirmed details of their brand single, the second from their critically acclaimed album ‘Dig, Lazarus, Dig!’.

The track, ‘More News From Nowhere’ is set for release on May 12 and

will feature an exclusive new track “Fleeting Love†on the B-side. The single’s cover art has been designed by renowned artists Time Noble and Sue Webster.

‘More News From Nowhere’ will be available on CD, 7†and download.

In a statement from the band Cave say the song has “nothing to do with the classic work of utopian fiction (1890) by William Morris. What interests me most about ‘More News From Nowhere’ is that quite possible, although I can’t be completely sure, the central character is dead and his story is just a kind of posthumous bad-trip, a death-trip, so to speak.â€

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds are about to embark on their first UK tour since 2005, the tour dates are as follows:

Dublin, Castle (May 3)

Glasgow, Academy (4) Sold out

Birmingham, Academy (5) Sold out

London, Hammersmith Apollo (7/8) Sold out

London, Hammersmith Apollo (9)

Beck’s Odelay Revisited! Plus New Supergrass Album Reviewed

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Uncut.co.uk publishes a weekly selection of music reviews; including new, reissued and compilation albums. Find out about the best here, by clicking on the album titles below. All of our reviews feature a 'submit your own review' function - we would love to hear about what you've heard lately. The...

Uncut.co.uk publishes a weekly selection of music reviews; including new, reissued and compilation albums. Find out about the best here, by clicking on the album titles below.

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

These albums are all set for release next week (March 24):

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.

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

Foals – Antidote – Precocious Oxford quintet’s daringly different debut earns four-star review. Check it out here.

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

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.

Various Artists – Theme Time Radio Hour With Your Host Bob Dylan – A fully authorised two-CD collection of Bob Dylans cool radio show has finally been collated.

The Black Crowes – Warpaint The Black Crowes return after a seven year silence, with an album that “operates comfortably inside parameters defined by The Rolling Stones, The Band, The Faces and Creedence Clearwater Revival”.

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.

Beck – Odelay: Deluxe Edition

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In the summer of 1994 following the death of Kurt Cobain, an enterprising exec might have put together a compilation LP celebrating the rise and fall of post-grunge alternative rock. All the 120 Minutes one-hit whiners could be there: Temple of the Dog, L7, Gin Blossoms, Soul Asylum, 4 Non-Blondes, Blind Melon, maybe that limey band that did “Creepâ€, and to top it all off with just the right twist of Gen-X irony, “Loser†by Beck. Ker-ching!, as they said back then. At the time it was easy to see “Loser†as a delta-blues breakbeat update of Rod McKuen's 1959 Beatsploitaton number “The Beat Generation†(“some people say I'm lazy, and my life's a wreck / but that stuff don't phase me, I get unemployment chequesâ€). But who could have predicted this boho bozo would wind up creating one of the definitive albums of the decade? A 90s cultural landmark, now newly remastered and extended with b-sides, doodles and novelty goof-offs, Odelay could have easily turned out a very different record. A dismal experience on the 95 Lollapollooza tour and, in particular, the deaths of friends and family (including his grandfather and cut-and-paste inspiration, Al Hansen), had all sent Beck into a deep funk. Initial recordings in 1995 with Bong Load producers Tom Rothrock and Rob Schnapf had tended to sweetly despondent Neil Young-style laments. Maybe it was his horror of cliché, the sheer predictability of making a record - let's call it The Bends - about the sudden rush to celebrity and showbiz torpor, that made him think twice, but only “Ramshackle†would survive from these sessions to the final record (two more, the stunning elegy “Brother†and “Feather In Your Cap†now appear on the additional disc). Instead Beck hooked up with the Dust Brothers – Mike Simpson and John King, visionary architects of The Beastie Boys' magnificent flop Paul's Boutique - and set about making Odelay. From its title on down (a studio corruption of “Oraleâ€, the chicano equivalent of “Hell yeah!â€) the trio conspired to make a defiantly, dementedly affirmative party record, something to send the Lollapaloozers wild. If the debut Mellow Gold had been, in Beck's words, “a satanic K-Tel record found in a dumpsterâ€, then Odelay was some acid-fried Folkways sampler, a set of American field recordings, as sampled by stoned enthnomusicollagists with a sick sense of humour. Harry Smith would surely have applauded. Beck liked to claim that sessions had been recorded in a studio between The Muppets and Black Sabbath – and the America the album dreams up is bordered by idiot glee and dread. “Devil's Haircut†kicks it off, powered by a souped-up fuzz-riff thieved from Them's “I Can Only Give You Everythingâ€, with some arcane old bluesman “coming to town with the briefcase bluesâ€. A devil's haircut, you could interpret as a sweetly succinct symbol for post-Cobain pop, the world of grunge couture, where rage and despair have become just another fashion accessory. You could see the following record, then, as a desparate escape from that rotting oasis, a Huck Finnish lighting out for the territories, a roadtrip on a Novacane Express, down the Alamo lanes, through the flypaper towns, to find out where, if anywhere, it's really at. “Hotwax†is what you might hear on your jalopy's shortwave on the way, a roadrunner soundtrack as you drive by “karaoke weekends at the suicide shackâ€, the “Western Unions of the country westerns†and, best of all, the “Silver foxes, looking for romance, in their chainsmoke Kansas flashdance ass-pants†(Beck's freakfolk freestyle yields some solid gold nuggets amongst the jive). The chicano chorus translates as “I'm a broken record with bubblegum in my brain†- a neat enough summation of Odelay's modus operandi. But the gonzo gusto is haunted by the ghost of the record Beck almost made, and some of the sweetest cuts track the lonesome wanderings of this post modern boho: the rippled weariness of “Jack-Assâ€, the Tom Waits gamelan of “Derelictâ€, and the closing “Ramshackleâ€. Of course nothing seems quite so out-of-date as the fashions of about 12 years ago, not yet ripe for nostalgia, but not fresh in the memory. Listening to some of the bonus tracks compiled on the extra disc – specifically the Aphex offcut “Richard's Haircut†or the 12-minute blunted-beat remix courtesy of trip-hop conceptualists UNKLE – not everything has aged so well. And maybe it's taken a decade and for Gomez to slide away, to hear just what a remarkable record Odelay really was. But I wonder if what really makes Odelay sound so strange (and strong) today isn’t its optimism, “Where It's At'â€s faith in the “destination, a little up the road past the destinations and the towns we know†- a vision of some stoned soul picnic where the record’s myriad ingredients bubble up and mingle freely. Which is to say that Odelay now sounds like a time capsule telegram from the high noon of Clintonian possibility - when, for a moment or two, the mythic promise of America didn't seem like such a busted flush. By the end of the year, we'll find out whether that spirit is gone for good. STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

In the summer of 1994 following the death of Kurt Cobain, an enterprising exec might have put together a compilation LP celebrating the rise and fall of post-grunge alternative rock. All the 120 Minutes one-hit whiners could be there: Temple of the Dog, L7, Gin Blossoms, Soul Asylum, 4 Non-Blondes, Blind Melon, maybe that limey band that did “Creepâ€, and to top it all off with just the right twist of Gen-X irony, “Loser†by Beck. Ker-ching!, as they said back then.

At the time it was easy to see “Loser†as a delta-blues breakbeat update of Rod McKuen’s 1959 Beatsploitaton number “The Beat Generation†(“some people say I’m lazy, and my life’s a wreck / but that stuff don’t phase me, I get unemployment chequesâ€). But who could have predicted this boho bozo would wind up creating one of the definitive albums of the decade?

A 90s cultural landmark, now newly remastered and extended with b-sides, doodles and novelty goof-offs, Odelay could have easily turned out a very different record. A dismal experience on the 95 Lollapollooza tour and, in particular, the deaths of friends and family (including his grandfather and cut-and-paste inspiration, Al Hansen), had all sent Beck into a deep funk. Initial recordings in 1995 with Bong Load producers Tom Rothrock and Rob Schnapf had tended to sweetly despondent Neil Young-style laments.

Maybe it was his horror of cliché, the sheer predictability of making a record – let’s call it The Bends – about the sudden rush to celebrity and showbiz torpor, that made him think twice, but only “Ramshackle†would survive from these sessions to the final record (two more, the stunning elegy “Brother†and “Feather In Your Cap†now appear on the additional disc). Instead Beck hooked up with the Dust Brothers – Mike Simpson and John King, visionary architects of The Beastie Boys’ magnificent flop Paul’s Boutique – and set about making Odelay.

From its title on down (a studio corruption of “Oraleâ€, the chicano equivalent of “Hell yeah!â€) the trio conspired to make a defiantly, dementedly affirmative party record, something to send the Lollapaloozers wild. If the debut Mellow Gold had been, in Beck’s words, “a satanic K-Tel record found in a dumpsterâ€, then Odelay was some acid-fried Folkways sampler, a set of American field recordings, as sampled by stoned enthnomusicollagists with a sick sense of humour. Harry Smith would surely have applauded.

Beck liked to claim that sessions had been recorded in a studio between The Muppets and Black Sabbath – and the America the album dreams up is bordered by idiot glee and dread. “Devil’s Haircut†kicks it off, powered by a souped-up fuzz-riff thieved from Them’s “I Can Only Give You Everythingâ€, with some arcane old bluesman “coming to town with the briefcase bluesâ€. A devil’s haircut, you could interpret as a sweetly succinct symbol for post-Cobain pop, the world of grunge couture, where rage and despair have become just another fashion accessory. You could see the following record, then, as a desparate escape from that rotting oasis, a Huck Finnish lighting out for the territories, a roadtrip on a Novacane Express, down the Alamo lanes, through the flypaper towns, to find out where, if anywhere, it’s really at.

“Hotwax†is what you might hear on your jalopy’s shortwave on the way, a roadrunner soundtrack as you drive by “karaoke weekends at the suicide shackâ€, the “Western Unions of the country westerns†and, best of all, the “Silver foxes, looking for romance, in their chainsmoke Kansas flashdance ass-pants†(Beck’s freakfolk freestyle yields some solid gold nuggets amongst the jive). The chicano chorus translates as “I’m a broken record with bubblegum in my brain†– a neat enough summation of Odelay’s modus operandi.

But the gonzo gusto is haunted by the ghost of the record Beck almost made, and some of the sweetest cuts track the lonesome wanderings of this post modern boho: the rippled weariness of “Jack-Assâ€, the Tom Waits gamelan of “Derelictâ€, and the closing “Ramshackleâ€.

Of course nothing seems quite so out-of-date as the fashions of about 12 years ago, not yet ripe for nostalgia, but not fresh in the memory. Listening to some of the bonus tracks compiled on the extra disc – specifically the Aphex offcut “Richard’s Haircut†or the 12-minute blunted-beat remix courtesy of trip-hop conceptualists UNKLE – not everything has aged so well. And maybe it’s taken a decade and for Gomez to slide away, to hear just what a remarkable record Odelay really was.

But I wonder if what really makes Odelay sound so strange (and strong) today isn’t its optimism, “Where It’s At’â€s faith in the “destination, a little up the road past the destinations and the towns we know†– a vision of some stoned soul picnic where the record’s myriad ingredients bubble up and mingle freely. Which is to say that Odelay now sounds like a time capsule telegram from the high noon of Clintonian possibility – when, for a moment or two, the mythic promise of America didn’t seem like such a busted flush. By the end of the year, we’ll find out whether that spirit is gone for good.

STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

Supergrass – Diamond Hoo Ha

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Can it really be nearly fifteen years since Supergrass hitched a ride to the Britpop party? With all their peers, save a depleted Blur and Oasis, now safely in the rear mirror, five top ten albums in the trunk and a new generation of admirers – most notably The Arctic Monkeys – urging them on, they could be forgiven for cruising nostalgically towards middle-age. But beneath that easy-going exterior lurks a fearsome inner drive. When bassist Mick Quinn sleepwalked through a first floor window and sustained serious injuries last September, most bands would have taken it as an excuse for a year off. Instead, Gaz Coombes and Danny Goffey embarked on a club tour as White Stripes spoof The Diamond Hoo Haa Men, while Quinn made the kind of miraculous recovery normally reserved for David Banner. Such strength of purpose reverberates through Diamond Hoo Ha. Perhaps it’s the thrill of recording at the legendary Hansa studios in Berlin (once home to David Bowie and Japan) which led them to the “Heroesâ€-esque ambience of “Rebel In You†or the swirling Krautrock rumble of “Rough Knucklesâ€. All this mesmeric swagger is, however, still matched by a rapier lyrical guile. JJ Cale-esque lament “Ghost In You†sees Gaz bemoaning the loss of a friend to the party set, seething: “There’s always a circus in town/ Vultures, peacocks and hounds†while “Whisky & Green Tea†sees them encountering Chinese dragons, middle-aged schoolgirls and “being chased by William Burroughs†amidst runaway drums and squealing sax. Not quite “We keep our teeth nice and cleanâ€, then. More clues to the demons which forced Danny Goffey to “wander off†during sessions for 2005’s brooding Road To Rouen appear on “When I Needed You†.“In the middle of a shady bar/Broken bottles flying through the air/That’s when I needed you†sighs Gaz, music as ever, a salve for their disrupted friendship. Heavy stuff. But apply megawatt tunes and career-best performances and you’ve got an album to top even 2002’s criminally neglected Life On Other Planets. Twenty-four carat stuff, guaranteed. PAUL MOODY UNCUT Q&A WITH GAZ COOMBES UNCUT: Thisis quite a departure from 2005’s Road To Rouen... GAZ COOMBES: “We’ve all been through the mill in the last couple of years. My mum died, and Mick and Danny both had a few personal issues going on. But we started doing demo’s in my basement and all the songs came out sounding really mental, noisy and brilliant. Playing together in a room helped to get us all close again. Did recording at Hansa inspire you? All the songs were written before we went, but Berlin definitely inspired the feel of the album. We went to some crazy bars, and had a ball. Hence the title-the whole experience was magical -a diamond hoo haa! Does it feel odd to be elder statesmen at thirty? Well, we are getting older, we have to face facts. But most sportsmen reach their best during their late twenties and early thirties, so that’s how I see it. We’re at our peak! INTERVIEW: PAUL MOODY

Can it really be nearly fifteen years since Supergrass hitched a ride to the Britpop party? With all their peers, save a depleted Blur and Oasis, now safely in the rear mirror, five top ten albums in the trunk and a new generation of admirers – most notably The Arctic Monkeys – urging them on, they could be forgiven for cruising nostalgically towards middle-age.

But beneath that easy-going exterior lurks a fearsome inner drive. When bassist Mick Quinn sleepwalked through a first floor window and sustained serious injuries last September, most bands would have taken it as an excuse for a year off. Instead, Gaz Coombes and Danny Goffey embarked on a club tour as White Stripes spoof The Diamond Hoo Haa Men, while Quinn made the kind of miraculous recovery normally reserved for David Banner.

Such strength of purpose reverberates through Diamond Hoo Ha. Perhaps it’s the thrill of recording at the legendary Hansa studios in Berlin (once home to David Bowie and Japan) which led them to the “Heroesâ€-esque ambience of “Rebel In You†or the swirling Krautrock rumble of “Rough Knucklesâ€. All this mesmeric swagger is, however, still matched by a rapier lyrical guile.

JJ Cale-esque lament “Ghost In You†sees Gaz bemoaning the loss of a friend to the party set, seething: “There’s always a circus in town/ Vultures, peacocks and hounds†while “Whisky & Green Tea†sees them encountering Chinese dragons, middle-aged schoolgirls and “being chased by William Burroughs†amidst runaway drums and squealing sax. Not quite “We keep our teeth nice and cleanâ€, then.

More clues to the demons which forced Danny Goffey to “wander off†during sessions for 2005’s brooding Road To Rouen appear on “When I Needed You†.“In the middle of a shady bar/Broken bottles flying through the air/That’s when I needed you†sighs Gaz, music as ever, a salve for their disrupted friendship.

Heavy stuff. But apply megawatt tunes and career-best performances and you’ve got an album to top even 2002’s criminally neglected Life On Other Planets. Twenty-four carat stuff, guaranteed.

PAUL MOODY

UNCUT Q&A WITH GAZ COOMBES

UNCUT: Thisis quite a departure from 2005’s Road To Rouen

GAZ COOMBES: “We’ve all been through the mill in the last couple of years. My mum died, and Mick and Danny both had a few personal issues going on. But we started doing demo’s in my basement and all the songs came out sounding really mental, noisy and brilliant. Playing together in a room helped to get us all close again.

Did recording at Hansa inspire you?

All the songs were written before we went, but Berlin definitely inspired the feel of the album. We went to some crazy bars, and had a ball. Hence the title-the whole experience was magical -a diamond hoo haa!

Does it feel odd to be elder statesmen at thirty?

Well, we are getting older, we have to face facts. But most sportsmen reach their best during their late twenties and early thirties, so that’s how I see it. We’re at our peak!

INTERVIEW: PAUL MOODY

Foals – Antidotes

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Shoehorned by hype merchants into all the right places, over the past few months you're more likely to have read about Foals, or winced at their haircuts, than heard their wired, wiry music. If only it were possible to ignore the cheerleading, because the ideal way to approach Antidotes would be to have no knowledge of the people who made it. Then you'd really be surprised. Of no fixed style, this boyish, disciplined five-piece would appear to want to position themselves between Battles and Bloc Party – like Kele Okereke, frontman Yannis Philippakis is a yelper. Are Foals punching above their weight? Perhaps, but this formidable album proves they've already an appetite for invention and an aptitude for composition equal to those acts. Rarer still, not only are Foals comfortable referencing hip New Yorkers of yesteryear like Steve Reich, Arthur Russell and Glenn Branca, they tend to practice what they preach. Feedback, scuffed and muted, ripples across the album. Like a prized out-take from some mid-'80s Russell session, "Like Swimming"'s chirping highlife figures cascade over humming hardware and handclaps. This unorthodox attitude, a desire to do things differently, galvanises Foals. Having recorded the album with TV On The Radio's David Sitek in New York last summer, for example, the band discarded much of his work and decided to produce it themselves back home. Whichever way you dice it, they've ended up with a set of terrific songs. True, "Cassius" could've fallen off Silent Alarm, and "The French Open", with its lurching tempo and oafish Franglais, is not an attractive opener. More impressive are "Red Sock Pugie", "Olympic Airways" and "Electric Bloom", handsome indie numbers with goosebump choruses garnished with exotic rhythms and otherworldly effects. "Big Big Love (Fig.2)", (i)Antidotes(i)' emotional centrepiece, evokes a disco Mogwai, and it's great fun listening to Foals tie themselves in knots on the final "Tron (Is A Great Film!)". They're an ambitious young band. This is an exciting debut. Now the real challenges can begin. PIERS MARTIN

Shoehorned by hype merchants into all the right places, over the past few months you’re more likely to have read about Foals, or winced at their haircuts, than heard their wired, wiry music. If only it were possible to ignore the cheerleading, because the ideal way to approach Antidotes would be to have no knowledge of the people who made it. Then you’d really be surprised.

Of no fixed style, this boyish, disciplined five-piece would appear to want to position themselves between Battles and Bloc Party – like Kele Okereke, frontman Yannis Philippakis is a yelper. Are Foals punching above their weight? Perhaps, but this formidable album proves they’ve already an appetite for invention and an aptitude for composition equal to those acts.

Rarer still, not only are Foals comfortable referencing hip New Yorkers of yesteryear like Steve Reich, Arthur Russell and Glenn Branca, they tend to practice what they preach. Feedback, scuffed and muted, ripples across the album. Like a prized out-take from some mid-’80s Russell session, “Like Swimming”‘s chirping highlife figures cascade over humming hardware and handclaps.

This unorthodox attitude, a desire to do things differently, galvanises Foals. Having recorded the album with TV On The Radio‘s David Sitek in New York last summer, for example, the band discarded much of his work and decided to produce it themselves back home. Whichever way you dice it, they’ve ended up with a set of terrific songs. True, “Cassius” could’ve fallen off Silent Alarm, and “The French Open”, with its lurching tempo and oafish Franglais, is not an attractive opener. More impressive are “Red Sock Pugie”, “Olympic Airways” and “Electric Bloom”, handsome indie numbers with goosebump choruses garnished with exotic rhythms and otherworldly effects. “Big Big Love (Fig.2)”, (i)Antidotes(i)’ emotional centrepiece, evokes a disco Mogwai, and it’s great fun listening to Foals tie themselves in knots on the final “Tron (Is A Great Film!)”.

They’re an ambitious young band. This is an exciting debut. Now the real challenges can begin.

PIERS MARTIN

Guillemots – Red

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Guillemots’ gloriously unhinged, Mercury-nominated debut Through The Window Pain hinted at a startling blend of post-punk exploration and Brian Wilson-ish orchestral nous. Unfortunately, something’s gone seriously wrong with album number two, which sees Fyfe Dangerfield’s quartet bluster throu...

Guillemots’ gloriously unhinged, Mercury-nominated debut Through The Window Pain hinted at a startling blend of post-punk exploration and Brian Wilson-ish orchestral nous. Unfortunately, something’s gone seriously wrong with album number two, which sees Fyfe Dangerfield’s quartet bluster through a ghastly take on 1980s style power pop (think It Bites, think Johnny Hates Jazz).

Amid the thumpy rave drums and those oriental string stabs that the Chemical Brothers used on “Galvanizeâ€, only two songs are halfway memorable: “Falling Out Of Reach†(which might make a nice Leo Sayer ballad) and “Take Me Home†(which lifts the first seven notes of Barry Manilow’s “Mandyâ€). A huge disappointment.

JOHN LEWIS

The Night Marchers: “See You In Magic”

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A small recurring theme here these past few weeks has been the work of John ‘Speedo’ Reis, with the release of Rocket From The Crypt’s posthumous live album, “RIP†and the appearance of a new band called The Night Marchers on Myspace. Now, the Night Marchers album has arrived, and I reckon it may be the poppiest thing Reis has ever been involved with. For fans of his gnarlier last band, Hot Snakes, I guess that may sound a little disappointing. But The Night Marchers are basically Hot Snakes minus frontman Rick Froberg, so their juddering, rumbustious energy is still there on “See You In Magicâ€, just deployed in the service of more immediately accessible, less artpunkish tunes. This is very much Reis’ project: it’s his voice and the clean attack of his guitar right upfront throughout, from the chundering, gleefully malicious psychobilly of “Closed For Inventory†onwards. One new twist on his schtick this time is a bonier kind of rock’n’roll, akin to the stuff Reis has produced for his protégé Dan Sartain. The likes of “Open Your Legs†and “Brandedâ€, all rattling train rhythms, cardboard box drums and crisp Sun Studios ambience, are testimony to this. Another departure is an occasional mellowness: “You Got Nerve†is a terribly mature, startlingly restrained song without, as far as I can remember, an obvious precedent in Reis’ capacious back catalogue. There’s a sense here that, this time, Reis has decided to strip back the heavy throb a little, the better to reveal his vivid songwriting gifts, to privilege his vague affinities with Elvis Costello. “Panther In Crime†reminds me, a little, of Bruce Springsteen as well as Costello – in the same way that Rocket’s “Lipstick†did, if memory serves. The pre-punk reference points keep coming. “And I Keep Holding Onâ€, has a looming clangorousness that, initially, calls to mind “Paint It Blackâ€, if never sounding much like The Rolling Stones. “Jump In The Fireâ€, meanwhile, begins with a fulsome jangle in the best Byrds tradition – not something I’d ever expect to hear on a record involving Reis. The thing is, Reis incorporates this kind of rock classicism into his routine with the easy, unflinching confidence that has always made all his bands so appealing. And a bunch of the songs on “See You In Magic†– “Total Bloodbathâ€, “In Dead Sleep (I Snore ZZZZ)â€, “I Wanna Deadbeat You†– are right up there with his best; vital, dynamic, rumbustious rock'n'roll. And God, I bet they’re amazing live.

A small recurring theme here these past few weeks has been the work of John ‘Speedo’ Reis, with the release of Rocket From The Crypt’s posthumous live album, “RIP†and the appearance of a new band called The Night Marchers on Myspace. Now, the Night Marchers album has arrived, and I reckon it may be the poppiest thing Reis has ever been involved with.

Sigur Ros And Interpol Join Franz Ferdinand At Latitude Festival

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This year's bash takes shape -- tickets are on sale now! Find out more about the Uncut-sponsored bash here... Sigur Ros and Interpol have been revealed as the two headliners who will join previously announced Franz Ferdinand at this year's Latitude Festival. Icelandic post-rock experimental grou...

This year’s bash takes shape — tickets are on sale now! Find out more about the Uncut-sponsored bash here…

Sigur Ros And Interpol Join Franz Ferdinand At Latitude Festival

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Sigur Ros and Interpol have been revealed as the two headliners who will join previously announced Franz Ferdinand at this year's Latitude Festival. Icelandic post-rock experimental group Sigur Ros are currently finishing up their fifth studio album with Smashing Pumpkins' producer Flood in Reykjav...

Sigur Ros and Interpol have been revealed as the two headliners who will join previously announced Franz Ferdinand at this year’s Latitude Festival.

Icelandic post-rock experimental group Sigur Ros are currently finishing up their fifth studio album with Smashing Pumpkins‘ producer Flood in Reykjavík and haven’t played an outdoor show in the UK since 2006.

Returning to the UK after two sell out shows at London’s Alexandra Palace late last year, Interpol, the New Yorkers who released their third album ‘Our Love To Admire’ last year will also top the bill at Latitude this year. Closing the festival on Sunday night (July 20), this will be Interpol’s only UK festival appearance in 2008.

Other artists confirmed so far for Latitude are The Breeders, Elbow, Death Cab For Cutie, M.I.A and Amadou and Mariam.

This year’s Latitude Festival will also see UNCUT hosting our own stage, for the third year running.

Last year saw some of the festival’s biggest crowdpleasers take place in the UNCUT arena, including Rodrigo Y Gabriela, Seasick Steve, Tinariwen and Rickie Lee Jones.

We’ll reveal who’s playing this year’s Uncut Arena in due course. Keep checking www.uncut.co.uk for details.

Of course, Latitude Festival is not just about music, but will also be putting on the best in comedy, films, books, theatre, poetry and cabaret over the three days.

The Pimm’s Comedy Arena has so far already confirmed great acts such as Bill Bailey, Ross Noble, Simon Amstell, Tim Minchin, Phill Jupitus and Marcus Brigstocke and his Early Edition.

The Music and Film Club Arena will see performances from the Buzzcocks and Barry Adamson as well as involving BAFTA again organising film Q&A’s with directors and special film screenings.

Iain Banks, Hanif Kureishi, Irvine Welsh, Mike Gayle, John Burnside, Simon Armitage and even New Order’s Peter Hook will all be performing in the Literary Arena. Hook will be reading from his How Not To Run A Club, while Iain Banks will be dipping into The Steep Approach To Garbadale.

There’s theatre, too, from the Royal Court Theatre, Paines Plough Theatre and the Nabokov new writers theatre company, plus 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover, a series of plays from the Bush Theatre based on the personal experiences of Latitude festivalgoers and UNCUT readers.

Tickets for this year’s event are £130 for the four day event, with day tickets costing £55.

Information and tickets are available from the official Latitude Festival website here: www.latitudefestival.co.uk.

Latitude Festival takes place July 17-20 at Henham Park Estate, Southwold, Suffolk.

We’ll see you there!

Queen Complete First New Album In 13 Years

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Queen have recorded their first new studio album, bearing the 'Queen' name in thirteen years, and it is due for release on September 1. Brian May and Roger Taylor have recorded the new as-yet-untitled album with Paul Rodgers, the singer/musician who joined them for their 2005/6 world tour. The alb...

Queen have recorded their first new studio album, bearing the ‘Queen’ name in thirteen years, and it is due for release on September 1.

Brian May and Roger Taylor have recorded the new as-yet-untitled album with Paul Rodgers, the singer/musician who joined them for their 2005/6 world tour.

The album, which has been jointly written and produced between the three of them, features the previously released ‘Say it’s Not True’ — the band’s benefit song for Nelson Mandela’s 46664 HIV AIDS charity last World AIDs Day.

The new album is also set to feature Queen’s first ever ‘cover version’.

Queen + Paul Rodgers will head out on a 28-date arena tour two weeks after the album is released, visiting fourteen countries.

Six dates in the UK kick off at Nottingham Arena on October 10. The band will also play Glasgow, London, Cardiff, Birmingham and Liverpool.

Tickets for all UK dates will go on sale at venue box offices and usual ticket agents from Saturday April 5.

Pre-registration for tickets will be available from Wednesday April 2 at www.queenonline.com

Queen + Paul Rodgers will play the following dates:

Moscow SCO Olympic Arena RUSSIA (September 16/17)

Gdansk Shipyard POLAND (20)

Berlin Velodrom GERMANY (21)

Antwerp Sportspaleis BELGIUM (23)

Paris Bercy FRANCE (24)

Rome Palalottomatica ITALY (26)

Verona Arena ITALY (28)

Zurich Hallenstadion SWITZERLAND (29)

Munich Olympiahalle GERMANY (October 1)

Mannheim SAP Arena GERMANY (2)

Hannover TUI Arena GERMANY (4)

Hamburg Color Line Arena GERMANY (5)

Rotterdam Ahoy NETHERLANDS (7)

Nottingham Arena (10)

Glasgow SE&CC (11)

London 02 (13)

Cardiff Arena (14)

Birmingham NIA (16)

Liverpool Arena (18)

Barcelona Palau Sant Jordi SPAIN (22)

Murcia Estadio Municipal SPAIN (24)

Madrid Palacio de Deportes SPAIN (25)

Budapest Sportarena, HUNGARY (28)

Belgrade Arena SERBIA (29)

Prague 02 Arena CZECH REPUBLIC (31)

Vienna Stadthalle AUSTRIA (November 1)

Drive By Truckers Added To Green Man Festival

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This year's Green Man Festival which takes place in Wales in August has had 20 plus new additions to the event billing -- and there's plenty of Uncut loved artists set to play. Joining previously confirmed acts Super Furry Animals, Beirut and Black Mountain include Drive By Truckers, Iron & Wine, The National, The Cave Singers and Caribou. The three day festival takes place at Glanusk Park in the Brecon Beacons from August 15-17. More bands are still to be confirmed, including Sunday night's headliner. Tickets and more information about Green Man is available from the event's official website here: www.thegreenmanfestival.co.uk The Green Man Festival line-up confirmed so far is: Super Furry Animals (Saturday headline) Beirut (Friday headline) Iron & Wine The National Richard Thompson Black Mountain Drive-By Truckers The Cave Singers King Creosote Caribou Magik Markers School of Language Devon Sproule Alela Diane Nina Nastasia Jennifer Gentle The Accidental The Drift Collective Cath and Phil Tyler The Moon Music Orchestra One More Grain The Yellow Moon Band Duke Garwood Threatmantics Mugstar Radio Luxemburg Cymbiant Beth Jeans Houghton Brygyn Very Special Guests (Sunday headline)

This year’s Green Man Festival which takes place in Wales in August has had 20 plus new additions to the event billing — and there’s plenty of Uncut loved artists set to play.

Joining previously confirmed acts Super Furry Animals, Beirut and Black Mountain include Drive By Truckers, Iron & Wine, The National, The Cave Singers and Caribou.

The three day festival takes place at Glanusk Park in the Brecon Beacons from August 15-17.

More bands are still to be confirmed, including Sunday night’s headliner.

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

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

Super Furry Animals (Saturday headline)

Beirut (Friday headline)

Iron & Wine

The National

Richard Thompson

Black Mountain

Drive-By Truckers

The Cave Singers

King Creosote

Caribou

Magik Markers

School of Language

Devon Sproule

Alela Diane

Nina Nastasia

Jennifer Gentle

The Accidental

The Drift Collective

Cath and Phil Tyler

The Moon Music Orchestra

One More Grain

The Yellow Moon Band

Duke Garwood

Threatmantics

Mugstar

Radio Luxemburg

Cymbiant

Beth Jeans Houghton

Brygyn

Very Special Guests (Sunday headline)

Coldplay Go Spanish In Naming Fourth Album

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Coldplay have confirmed that their new album is to be named 'Vida la Vida' -- after the inscription meaning long live life that frontman Chris Martin saw on a Frida Kahlo painting. The band's follow-up album to 2005's 'X&Y' has been completed and will be released on June 16. Speaking to Rollin...

Coldplay have confirmed that their new album is to be named ‘Vida la Vida’ — after the inscription meaning long live life that frontman Chris Martin saw on a Frida Kahlo painting.

The band’s follow-up album to 2005’s ‘X&Y’ has been completed and will be released on June 16.

Speaking to Rolling Stone magazine, Martin explains that the Mexican artist’s painting was inspiring. He said: “She went through a lot of shit, of course, and then she started a big painting in her house that said ‘Viva la Vida’. I just loved the boldness of it.â€

Martin also admits that other connations are apparant with his choice of title, especially that of Ricky Martin’s Living La Vida Loca global hit . He said: “Everyone thinks it comes from Ricky Martin, which is fine. I have absolute respect. I’ve been through this before, naming something or someone and everyone saying that ‘That’s a terrible name’.”

Adding: “But then saying, ‘Well, fuck you, that’s what it’s called, and I’ll be proved to be right eventually’. So when ‘Viva la Vida’ came along, I was kind of annoyed because I’m going to have to try and convince everybody of this, but it just felt right.â€

The tracklisting for the album is yet to be confirmed, but Rolling Stone reports that two tracks that could be included are ‘Lovers In Japan’ and ‘Strawberry Swing’.

First headliner for Latitude Festival is revealed!

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The first headline act set to play this year's Latitude Festival at Henham Park, Suffolk has been revealed. The Scottish rockers fronted by Alex Kapranos will take over the main stage with a mixture of familiar Top five hits such as "Take Me Out" and "Do You Want To" as well as new material from their forthcoming third album. This headline slot is the Franz Ferdinand's first big UK since playing a sold-out four night run at London's Alexandra Palace at the end of 2005. Of course, Latitude is not just about music, but will also be putting on the best in comedy, films, books, theatre, poetry and cabaret over the three days. More details about who else will be headlining and what else will be occuring in Southwold this July will be unveiled with the BIG LAUNCH ANNOUNCEMENT which takes place this evening in central London. Tune back in to www.uncut.co.uk from 7pm tonight (March 19) when we will have all the details about who will play and how you can get a ticket. More information about location, tickets etc will be available from the official Latitude website from tonight too: www.latitudefestival.co.uk Latitude Festival takes place from July 17 - 20.

The first headline act set to play this year’s Latitude Festival at Henham Park, Suffolk has been revealed.

Franz Ferdinand To Headline Latitude Festival

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Franz Ferdinand have been revealed as the first headline act set to play this year's Latitude Festival at Henham Park, Suffolk. The Scottish rockers fronted by Alex Kapranos will take over the main stage with a mixture of familiar Top five hits such as "Take Me Out" and "Do You Want To" as well as ...

Franz Ferdinand have been revealed as the first headline act set to play this year’s Latitude Festival at Henham Park, Suffolk.

The Scottish rockers fronted by Alex Kapranos will take over the main stage with a mixture of familiar Top five hits such as “Take Me Out” and “Do You Want To” as well as new material from their forthcoming third album, which they are currently recording in Glasgow.

This headline slot is Franz Ferdinand’s first big UK gig since playing a sold-out four night run at London’s Alexandra Palace at the end of 2005 and headlining the Carling Weekend in the Summer of 2006 — and will be their only UK festival appearance in 2008.

Of course, Latitude is not just about music, but will also be putting on the best in comedy, films, books, theatre, poetry and cabaret over the three days.

More details about who else will be headlining and what else will be occuring in Southwold this July will be unveiled with the BIG LAUNCH ANNOUNCEMENT which takes place this evening in central London.

Tune back in to www.uncut.co.uk from 7pm tonight (March 19) when we will have all the details about who will play and how you can get a ticket.

More information about location, tickets etc will be available from the official Latitude website from tonight too: www.latitudefestival.co.uk

Latitude Festival takes place from July 17 – 20.

Verve To Headline Eden Sessions

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The Verve have been confirmed to headline a mammo6th outdoor show at Cornwall's Eden Project Sessions series on June 27. They are the first band to be announced to play this year's seventh annual Eden Sessions at the iconic Biomes in Cornwall. The band's reputation for explosive live shows marks ...

The Verve have been confirmed to headline a mammo6th outdoor show at Cornwall’s Eden Project Sessions series on June 27.

They are the first band to be announced to play this year’s seventh annual Eden Sessions at the iconic Biomes in Cornwall.

The band’s reputation for explosive live shows marks the return of rockier, guitar-based music that the Eden Sessions were renowned for.

Peter Hampel, Eden’s Creative Director, said “This is arguably the biggest coup yet for the Sessions and marks a welcome return to our heartland of great guitar bands. The Verve will kick the season off in spectacular style, and with other top names in the pipeline it really looks set to be one of our best ever.”

Previous Eden Sessions have seen performances from Muse and former Beach Boy Brian Wilson.

Tickets for The Verve’s Eden gig will go on sale at 6.30pm on March 27 and will be available through: www.edenbookings.com

Pic credit: Dean Chalkley