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Duffy – Rockferry

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Stevie Wonder had Syreeta; Phil Spector had Ronnie; James Brown had Lynn Collins and Marva Whitney, while Prince and Serge Gainsbourg had a couple of dozen between them. Now Bernard Butler – the journeyman guitarist from Suede – has been gifted his own protégé in the form of Aimee Anne Duffy, the hotly tipped 22-year-old soul chanteuse from North Wales. If it’s slightly unfair to regard Duffy as ingénue – she writes all her own lyrics – Butler’s sonic fingerprints are certainly all over her debut album, and his presence gives Rockferry a maturity that’s lacking from the slew of wannabe Amy Winehouses. The production is littered with knowing references for soul aficionados. “Stepping Stone”’ borrows the guitar vamp from Dionne Warwick’s “Walk On By”; “Warwick Avenue” references the pentatonic bassline of Smokey Robinson’s “My Girl”; “Distant Dreamer” is pure Walker Brothers; “Syrup And Honey” could come from one of Candi Staton’s country-got-soul sessions; “Delayed Devotion” sounds like something that Ashford and Simpson might have knocked off for Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell. The USP, however, is Duffy’s vocal chops. The title track is a great calling card, where she starts low and husky before suddenly leaping a whole octave to belt out the second chorus. But, Duffy’s croaky, Lulu-ish holler never quite elicits goosepimples. The four tracks co-written with Butler have the same hamfisted grandeur of McAlmont & Butler’s “Yes” – all soaring strings and clumpy drums – but you are left wondering how much better some of this might sound were it fronted by David McAlmont’s haunted tenor and thrilling falsetto. The other weakness is Duffy’s schematic lyrics. Whereas Amy Winehouse sings with a potty-mouthed, 21st century swagger, Duffy sounds like she’s been rearranging a set of fridge-magnet poetry culled from classic soul songs. Phrases like “keepin’ me hanging’ on”, “beggin’ for mercy” and “sweet lurve” recur, alongside other predictable soul buzzwords (“baby”, “honey”, “heartache”, “devotion”, etc). Rockferry is almost a very good album, but, for all the classic soul hallmarks, there’s little insight into the actual soul of Duffy herself. JOHN LEWIS UNCUT Q&A: Duffy UNCUT:How did you hook up with Bernard Butler? DUFFY: Through my manager. The first time I met Bernard I was a bit cheeky. But he’s been absolutely brilliant. He’s been giving over years of his life for this record, even when there’s never been any guarantee that he’d get paid for it. What’s this about the crash course in classic soul? It wasn’t as obvious as being handed a pile of Betty Swann albums as homework! It was just hanging around the Rough Trade offices, which must be like Motown in 1965. I’d be soaking up everything. Amy Winehouse. Discuss… Ha! We actually started this project four years ago, and most of this album had been written before Amy’s second album as released. So it was a complete coincidence that they had something in common. I don’t like the word “retro”. That suggests pastiche. “Nostalgia” is fine, though. INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS

Stevie Wonder had Syreeta; Phil Spector had Ronnie; James Brown had Lynn Collins and Marva Whitney, while Prince and Serge Gainsbourg had a couple of dozen between them. Now Bernard Butler – the journeyman guitarist from Suede – has been gifted his own protégé in the form of Aimee Anne Duffy, the hotly tipped 22-year-old soul chanteuse from North Wales. If it’s slightly unfair to regard Duffy as ingénue – she writes all her own lyrics – Butler’s sonic fingerprints are certainly all over her debut album, and his presence gives Rockferry a maturity that’s lacking from the slew of wannabe Amy Winehouses.

The production is littered with knowing references for soul aficionados. “Stepping Stone”’ borrows the guitar vamp from Dionne Warwick’s “Walk On By”; “Warwick Avenue” references the pentatonic bassline of Smokey Robinson’s “My Girl”; “Distant Dreamer” is pure Walker Brothers; “Syrup And Honey” could come from one of Candi Staton’s country-got-soul sessions; “Delayed Devotion” sounds like something that Ashford and Simpson might have knocked off for Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell.

The USP, however, is Duffy’s vocal chops. The title track is a great calling card, where she starts low and husky before suddenly leaping a whole octave to belt out the second chorus. But, Duffy’s croaky, Lulu-ish holler never quite elicits goosepimples. The four tracks co-written with Butler have the same hamfisted grandeur of McAlmont & Butler’s “Yes” – all soaring strings and clumpy drums – but you are left wondering how much better some of this might sound were it fronted by David McAlmont’s haunted tenor and thrilling falsetto.

The other weakness is Duffy’s schematic lyrics. Whereas Amy Winehouse sings with a potty-mouthed, 21st century swagger, Duffy sounds like she’s been rearranging a set of fridge-magnet poetry culled from classic soul songs. Phrases like “keepin’ me hanging’ on”, “beggin’ for mercy” and “sweet lurve” recur, alongside other predictable soul buzzwords (“baby”, “honey”, “heartache”, “devotion”, etc). Rockferry is almost a very good album, but, for all the classic soul hallmarks, there’s little insight into the actual soul of Duffy herself.

JOHN LEWIS

UNCUT Q&A: Duffy

UNCUT:How did you hook up with Bernard Butler?

DUFFY: Through my manager. The first time I met Bernard I was a bit cheeky. But he’s been absolutely brilliant. He’s been giving over years of his life for this record, even when there’s never been any guarantee that he’d get paid for it.

What’s this about the crash course in classic soul?

It wasn’t as obvious as being handed a pile of Betty Swann albums as homework! It was just hanging around the Rough Trade offices, which must be like Motown in 1965. I’d be soaking up everything.

Amy Winehouse. Discuss…

Ha! We actually started this project four years ago, and most of this album had been written before Amy’s second album as released. So it was a complete coincidence that they had something in common. I don’t like the word “retro”. That suggests pastiche. “Nostalgia” is fine, though.

INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS

Neon Neon – Stainless Style

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If anyone was going to make a concept album based on the life story of John Z DeLorean – the "playboy engineer" who invented the first muscle car, romanced Ursula Andress, hustled $97m out of the British government and was almost brought down by the FBI in a coke-smuggling scam – your money would be on Jay-Z. In fact, it’s an unlikely duo. Super Furry Animals' Gruff Rhys and Bryan 'Boom Bip' Hollon first collaborated on "Do's & Don'ts", a spectral sermon from the latter's 2005 album Blue Eyed In The Red Room. As Neon Neon they have dumped the baggage of their regular guises, in the same way that Damon Albarn was able to emancipate his muse via Gorillaz. Here, with tinted aviators acting as a mask, Rhys and Hollon have mainlined the soundtrack of '80s boomtime – yacht rock, Italo-disco, Prince – with their combined songwriting prowess preventing the affair from descending into pastiche. Sunset drivetime anthems "Dream Cars" and "I Told Her On Alderaan" live the dream while acknowledging the fantasy. Vince Clarke in his prime would have been proud of "Raquel" (an ode to Ms Welsh, another DeLorean conquest) while the presence of rappers Spank Rock and Yo Majesty provides contemporary steel and sauce. Throughout the album, it's a thrill to hear Rhys' mellifluous voice juxtaposed with the music's synthetic thrust. It means there's a soulful core to songs like "Belfast", which recounts the episode when the wheels finally fell off the DeLorean bandwagon: he was forced to close his Irish car plant and flee from his celebrity creditors when the overpriced DMC-12 – the iconic gullwing-doored car that sent Marty McFly back to the future – failed to sell. As an exercise in sleek, nostalgic pop fantasy, Stainless Style is a lot of fun – and probably a cooler epitaph than a corporate conman like DeLorean really deserves. SAM RICHARDS UNCUT Q&A: Gruff Rhys UNCUT: How did the Neon Neon partnership come about? RHYS: We've been touring and recording together occasionally for around six years. Early in 2006 Boom Bip contacted me about coming to LA to make a bonkers disco record. I was on the next flight. What fascinated you about John DeLorean? His life story was endlessly inspiring for songwriting: cars, girls and the pitfalls of celebrity culture and the American dream. What does Neon Neon offer you that your regular recording guises don't? This record is a chance to make music outside our set ideas of taste. As the producer, Boom Bip put down ground rules from the start, that this record should be unconnected to any of our previous work. It's definitely a party record, with elements of library music, lost 1980s power pop and Bret Easton Ellis. Is the concept album largely a lost art? It probably is – just as well we made a rock opera! INTERVIEW: SAM RICHARDS

If anyone was going to make a concept album based on the life story of John Z DeLorean – the “playboy engineer” who invented the first muscle car, romanced Ursula Andress, hustled $97m out of the British government and was almost brought down by the FBI in a coke-smuggling scam – your money would be on Jay-Z. In fact, it’s an unlikely duo.

Super Furry Animals’ Gruff Rhys and Bryan ‘Boom Bip’ Hollon first collaborated on “Do’s & Don’ts”, a spectral sermon from the latter’s 2005 album Blue Eyed In The Red Room. As Neon Neon they have dumped the baggage of their regular guises, in the same way that Damon Albarn was able to emancipate his muse via Gorillaz. Here, with tinted aviators acting as a mask, Rhys and Hollon have mainlined the soundtrack of ’80s boomtime – yacht rock, Italo-disco, Prince – with their combined songwriting prowess preventing the affair from descending into pastiche.

Sunset drivetime anthems “Dream Cars” and “I Told Her On Alderaan” live the dream while acknowledging the fantasy. Vince Clarke in his prime would have been proud of “Raquel” (an ode to Ms Welsh, another DeLorean conquest) while the presence of rappers Spank Rock and Yo Majesty provides contemporary steel and sauce.

Throughout the album, it’s a thrill to hear Rhys’ mellifluous voice juxtaposed with the music’s synthetic thrust. It means there’s a soulful core to songs like “Belfast”, which recounts the episode when the wheels finally fell off the DeLorean bandwagon: he was forced to close his Irish car plant and flee from his celebrity creditors when the overpriced DMC-12 – the iconic gullwing-doored car that sent Marty McFly back to the future – failed to sell. As an exercise in sleek, nostalgic pop fantasy, Stainless Style is a lot of fun – and probably a cooler epitaph than a corporate conman like DeLorean really deserves.

SAM RICHARDS

UNCUT Q&A: Gruff Rhys

UNCUT: How did the Neon Neon partnership come about?

RHYS: We’ve been touring and recording together occasionally for around six years. Early in 2006 Boom Bip contacted me about coming to LA to make a bonkers disco record. I was on the next flight.

What fascinated you about John DeLorean?

His life story was endlessly inspiring for songwriting: cars, girls and the pitfalls of celebrity culture and the American dream.

What does Neon Neon offer you that your regular recording guises don’t?

This record is a chance to make music outside our set ideas of taste. As the producer, Boom Bip put down ground rules from the start, that this record should be unconnected to any of our previous work. It’s definitely a party record, with elements of library music, lost 1980s power pop and Bret Easton Ellis.

Is the concept album largely a lost art?

It probably is – just as well we made a rock opera!

INTERVIEW: SAM RICHARDS

Roger Waters To Bring Dark Side To Life For Final UK Shows

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Roger Waters is to perform two final shows of 'Dark Side Of The Moon' in the UK this year. The show, which former Pink Floyd co-founder has toured throughout the world in 2007, is split in two halves. One half consisting of a full-scale version of 1973's The Dark Side Of The Moon album in it's enti...

Roger Waters is to perform two final shows of ‘Dark Side Of The Moon’ in the UK this year.

The show, which former Pink Floyd co-founder has toured throughout the world in 2007, is split in two halves. One half consisting of a full-scale version of 1973’s The Dark Side Of The Moon album in it’s entirety. The other featuring classic tracks from Pink Floyd’s history as well as his own solo tracks.

Waters will perform the show for the very last time in the UK at Liverpool’s Echo Arena on May 15 and in London’s O2 Arena on May 18.

As previously reported, Waters will also be performing the full Dark Side show at this year’s Coachella Festival in California, performing on April 27.

Tickets for the UK shows go on sale this Friday (February 29) at 9am.

Tickets are available from: www.livenation.co.uk or 24hr cc hotline 0844 576 5483 (all tickets subject to a booking fee)

The Last Shadow Puppets: “The Age Of The Understatement”

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Yesterday, I watched a DVD of “Love Story”, a documentary about Love and Arthur Lee. It’s not the most elegant piece of film-making I’ve ever seen, but the research and the storytelling of Lee, Johnny Echols, Bryan Maclaine, Jac Holzman (who should have a film devoted to him and Elektra, I think) and many others make it compelling. One of my favourite parts sees Lee ruefully exploring the Castle, a sprawling and ornate LA mansion that Love somehow came to occupy for a while in the mid ‘60s. Needless to say, the standards of hygiene and interior design weren’t quite as high during their period of residence. Nevertheless, it’s evident that the place had an atmosphere of baroque importance; perhaps, eventually, it contributed to the way Love’s music sounded. I mention all this because, over the past few days, I’ve been listening to the debut album by Alex Turner and Miles Kane’s new project, The Last Shadow Puppets, and there are one or two tracks on there (“Standing Next To Me”, especially) that remind me of Love; not just in the lavish orchestrations, but in a nebulous sense of grandeur. Consequently, “The Age Of The Understatement” doesn’t superficially sound much like the Arctic Monkeys, nor – perhaps mercifully – like the little I’ve heard from Kane’s day job, The Rascals. Besides those echoes of Love, the much-vaunted references to Scott Walker (well, the first four solo albums, I should say) prove correct, though yesterday we were also talking about Barry Ryan and “The Days Of Pearly Spencer”. Owen Pallett’s fulsome string arrangements are the most obvious throwback to that era, but it’s also evident in the galloping pace – think “Jacky” - set by the drumming of producer James Ford. That said, if you were to strip back all this musical extravagance, I suspect you’d find that the essence of Turner’s songwriting remains much the same as it always has been. I think there’s a comparison to be made between the sort of elaborate sentences he favours – not least for bandnames and album titles – and his melodic sense; the way tunes wander quixotically around, sometimes seeming to head off tangentially on a whim. So “The Age Of The Understatement” itself flies off at a frantic, bombastic pace – very studious allusions to Morricone here, too - but there’s a definite similarity between the opening orchestral flurry and the crashing riff that begins “Brianstorm”. The breakneck clip-clop of “Only The Truth”, the languid stutter of “Chamber”; with a few tweaks, these could comfortably work as Monkeys songs. The buzzing “I Don’t Like You Anymore”, frankly, wouldn’t need much work on it at all. Turner might be able to change the packaging, but he isn’t yet quite capable of changing the essence of his art. Only the sashaying, Bacharach-esque “The Meeting Place” really breaks the mould. Looking for genetic traces here, you could feasibly spot something of Kane’s Liverpudlian forebears The Pale Fountains in this one (Mick Head not being averse to a bit of Love himself in his time, of course). Two points to make about all this, I suppose. One: it’s probably no bad thing that Turner’s melodic idiosyncracies survive the transition, when he’s still coming up with songs as swaggeringly excellent as “Calm Like You”. Considering the standard of so much over-reaching indie that’s aspired to precisely reconstruct those Scott albums in the past, we should be grateful. Two: I figure we shouldn’t ascribe all of this to Turner and consequently underestimate the input of Kane. There’s a distinct parallel between The Last Shadow Puppets and The Raconteurs, not least in the way Turner and Kane swap vocals and, at times, are virtually indistinguishable from one another. If there’s one more major difference between this and the Arctic Monkeys, though, it’s that, for all its paciness and supposed poppiness, “The Age Of The Understatement” is nowhere near as immediately striking as much of those Monkeys albums. On first listen, it struck me as a meticulous, gilded object, blessed with some lovely music (the brooding orchestral coda to “Black Plant”, say), but lacking truly great songs. Half-a-dozen listens on, though, I’m won over. These songs are baroque, bejewelled puzzles that reveal their charms slowly, a little like some of the denser stuff at the rear end of “Favourite Worst Nightmares”. It’d be easy to presume that Turner (oh, and Kane) had over-extended himself here; tried to grow up too quickly, perhaps. Surely, he couldn’t be critically involved in another set of strong songs so soon? Well, he has. A fine record.

Yesterday, I watched a DVD of “Love Story”, a documentary about Love and Arthur Lee. It’s not the most elegant piece of film-making I’ve ever seen, but the research and the storytelling of Lee, Johnny Echols, Bryan Maclaine, Jac Holzman (who should have a film devoted to him and Elektra, I think) and many others make it compelling.

The Last Shadow Puppets Album – Read Uncut’s Preview Here!

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Arctic Monkey frontman Alex Turner's collaboration with his friend Miles Kane from The Rascals is now complete and set for release through XL records on April 28. The album project The Age Of The Understatement sees Turner and Kane sharing vocal, guitar and bass duties with Simian Mobile Disco prod...

Arctic Monkey frontman Alex Turner’s collaboration with his friend Miles Kane from The Rascals is now complete and set for release through XL records on April 28.

The album project The Age Of The Understatement sees Turner and Kane sharing vocal, guitar and bass duties with Simian Mobile Disco producer James Ford producing and playing drums.

Orchestral and string arranger for the Arcade Fire, Owen Pallet has also contributed to the forthcoming Last of The Shadow Puppets album.

You can get a sneak preview of what the album sounds like by checking out Uncut’s John Mulvey’s blog by clicking here.

Vampire Weekend Announce Full UK Tour

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Vampire Weekend have announced full UK tour, fresh from finishing up playing an eventful Shockwaves NME Awards show last week (February 21). The hotly-tipped New Yorkers faced a half-hour delay to their show at London's ULU as the fire alarm was activated and the crowd evacuated. You can click here...

Vampire Weekend have announced full UK tour, fresh from finishing up playing an eventful Shockwaves NME Awards show last week (February 21).

The hotly-tipped New Yorkers faced a half-hour delay to their show at London’s ULU as the fire alarm was activated and the crowd evacuated. You can click here to read a review from the band’s biggest UK show to date.

The band who’s self-titled debut album is out now, will return to play a full UK tour this May.

Vampire Weekend will play:

Bristol Bierkeller (May 1)

Birmingham Academy 2 (2)

Edinburgh Liquid Rooms (3)

Glasgow Oran Mor (4)

Newcastle Northumbria University (6)

Leeds Cockpit (7)

Manchester Academy 2 (8)

Portsmouth Wedgewood Rooms (12)

London Electric Ballroom (13)

Rolling Stones Premiere Tickets Giveaway

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Coinciding with the forthcoming April issue of UNCUT - out on Thursday (February 28) -- featuring a great interview with the Rolling Stones' Mick and Keith -- www.uncut.co.uk will be offering a lucky reader and a friend the chance to attend the UK premiere of their new Martin Scorsese directed film 'Shine A Light'! The competition includes two tickets to the premiere of the film, which the band will be attending, on April 2, plus an overnight stay at the Rathbone Hotel in London's West End. Grab an issue to read the interview with Mick and Keith, where they discuss their lifelong friendship -- then check back towww.uncut.co.uk from Thursday to enter and be in with a chance of winning this fabulous prize! Elsewhere in the issue, former Monkee Michael Nesmith is the featured artist in our ongoing Pioneers Of Country Rock series, Miami Steve Van Zandt answers your questions in an Audience With . . .Thin Lizzy’s “The Boys are Back In Town” is the subject of this month’s Making Of . . . Super Furry Animals talk us through their back catalogue highlights in Album By Album and The Beatles appear in a Snapshot special.

Coinciding with the forthcoming April issue of UNCUT – out on Thursday (February 28) — featuring a great interview with the Rolling Stones’ Mick and Keith — www.uncut.co.uk will be offering a lucky reader and a friend the chance to attend the UK premiere of their new Martin Scorsese directed film ‘Shine A Light’!

The competition includes two tickets to the premiere of the film, which the band will be attending, on April 2, plus an overnight stay at the Rathbone Hotel in London’s West End.

Grab an issue to read the interview with Mick and Keith, where they discuss their lifelong friendship — then check back towww.uncut.co.uk from Thursday to enter and be in with a chance of winning this fabulous prize!

Elsewhere in the issue, former Monkee Michael Nesmith is the featured artist in our ongoing Pioneers Of Country Rock series, Miami Steve Van Zandt answers your questions in an Audience With . . .Thin Lizzy’s “The Boys are Back In Town” is the subject of this month’s Making Of . . . Super Furry Animals talk us through their back catalogue highlights in Album By Album and The Beatles appear in a Snapshot special.

Jack White Speaks About Dylan Project

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White Stripes star Jack White has spoken about working with Bob Dylan on the project, co-ordinated by Dylan, to complete a series of songs left unfinished by country legend Hank Williams at the time of his death in 1953. White has been one of a number of musicians approached by Dylan to work on completed lyrics and music for the songs, with other artists involved now revealed to include Lucinda Williams and Willie Nelson. White has now recorded a now ‘finished’ version of the incomplete Williams song “You Know That I Know” at Nashville’s Blackbird Studios, with engineer Joe Chiccarelli. Speaking to MTV News, White stated: "[Bob] came upon, somehow, 20-25 unfinished songs by Hank Williams, just the lyrics, no music, and he started to ask people if they would finish these songs. “He did one, asked Willie Nelson to do one, asked me to do one, and I think Lucinda Williams and Alan Jackson are on it too. I think it might come out this year. It's a cool record.” As previously reported, Jack White appeared with Dylan last September, when Bob played a two-night stint at Nashville’s Ryman Theatre. On the first night they performed together on the first ever live version of “Meet Me In The Morning” from Blood On The Tracks. The following night, they gave a first live outing to “Outlaw Blues” and duetted on “One More Cup Of Coffee” from Desire, getting its first live airing since 1993. You can see Bob Dylan and Jack White perform together at the Ryman Theatre by clicking here.

White Stripes star Jack White has spoken about working with Bob Dylan on the project, co-ordinated by Dylan, to complete a series of songs left unfinished by country legend Hank Williams at the time of his death in 1953.

White has been one of a number of musicians approached by Dylan to work on completed lyrics and music for the songs, with other artists involved now revealed to include Lucinda Williams and Willie Nelson.

White has now recorded a now ‘finished’ version of the incomplete Williams song “You Know That I Know” at Nashville’s Blackbird Studios, with engineer Joe Chiccarelli.

Speaking to MTV News, White stated: “[Bob] came upon, somehow, 20-25 unfinished songs by Hank Williams, just the lyrics, no music, and he started to ask people if they would finish these songs.

“He did one, asked Willie Nelson to do one, asked me to do one, and I think Lucinda Williams and Alan Jackson are on it too. I think it might come out this year. It’s a cool record.”

As previously reported, Jack White appeared with Dylan last September, when Bob played a two-night stint at Nashville’s Ryman Theatre. On the first night they performed together on the first ever live version of “Meet Me In The Morning” from Blood On The Tracks.

The following night, they gave a first live outing to “Outlaw Blues” and duetted on “One More Cup Of Coffee” from Desire, getting its first live airing since 1993.

You can see Bob Dylan and Jack White perform together at the Ryman Theatre by clicking here.

John Cooper Clarke To Answer Your Questions!

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John Cooper Clarke is to answer your questions for an upcoming UNCUT 'Audience With' feature... And we would like to hear your questions! So, is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask Manchester’s legendary punk poet? Perhaps things along the lines of... What was it like opening for the...

John Cooper Clarke is to answer your questions for an upcoming UNCUT ‘Audience With’ feature…

And we would like to hear your questions!

So, is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask Manchester’s legendary punk poet?

Perhaps things along the lines of…

What was it like opening for the Sex Pistols? Does he have a favourite Mark E Smith story? And how on earth did he end up making Sugar Puffs commercials with the Honey Monster?

Send your questions to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com by Thursday February 28.

The best questions and Cooper Clarke’s answers will be published in future edition of UNCUT.

Happy Mondays Top Bill At New Festival

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The Happy Mondays are to top the bill at a brand new festival taking place in Cumbria this May. The inaugural Forgotten Valley weekend will also see The Enemy, Reverend and the Makers, Pendulum, The Wombats, New Young Pony Club, Joe Lean and the Jing Jang Jong also all play over the May Bank Holida...

The Happy Mondays are to top the bill at a brand new festival taking place in Cumbria this May.

The inaugural Forgotten Valley weekend will also see The Enemy, Reverend and the Makers, Pendulum, The Wombats, New Young Pony Club, Joe Lean and the Jing Jang Jong also all play over the May Bank Holiday weekend, 23-25th.

More information about the new three day indie and dance festival are available from the event’s website.

www.forgottenvalley.com / www.myspace.com/forgottenvalley

Black Mountain on Youtube, White Denim on Myspace

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A couple of quick things for your delectation today. One is a clip of Black Mountain sleepily invading the mainstream by playing “Stormy High” live on the Conan O’Brien show. Look at all that beautiful hair and how they avoid looking at the cameras at all costs. Mighty impressive. Second up is a neat new band from, I believe, Austin, called White Denim. If you’ve got five minutes, take a trip over to their Myspace site and listen to “Let’s Talk About It”. It reminds me variously of Devo, The MC5, maybe some far-flung corners of “Nuggets”. Most of all, though, I’m struck by the similarities to one of my favourite neglected bands, Love As Laughter (hopefully, you heard one of their old tunes on the bar band CD that came free with the last issue of Uncut). White Denim have the same kind of rickety energy, a punchy method of reinventing classic rock’n’roll and a penchant for letting songs roll on and then deconstruct in an impressively free way. I have another great track – not, sadly, on Myspace at the moment – called “Mess Your Hair Up”, which disintegrates brilliantly until there’s little left but a few dissolute handclaps. Some good new things coming through at the moment, I think, and this is right up with Fleet Foxes, Bon Iver and No Age; I must get round to blogging about their new album, “Nouns”, soon, though the watermarked CD behaves rather moodily on our admittedly troublesome stereo. Not your problem, obviously – I’ll try and sort it out in the next few days, and also post something about Alex Turner and Miles Kane’s The Last Shadow Puppets, which I’m slowly beginning to get my head around.

A couple of quick things for your delectation today. One is a clip of Black Mountain sleepily invading the mainstream by playing “Stormy High” live on the Conan O’Brien show. Look at all that beautiful hair and how they avoid looking at the cameras at all costs. Mighty impressive.

Richard Thompson To Play One-Off Show

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Folk-rock guitarist Richard Thompson has announced he will play a special one-off solo show in London in May. The former Fairport Convention member will play London's Royal Festival Hall on May 24. Special guest at the concert will be singer Mary Gauthier. Thompson will be drawing on material from his most recent album Sweet Warrior as well as his extensive back catalogue. Tickets and more details about the event are available from: www.southbankcentre.co.uk

Folk-rock guitarist Richard Thompson has announced he will play a special one-off solo show in London in May.

The former Fairport Convention member will play London’s Royal Festival Hall on May 24.

Special guest at the concert will be singer Mary Gauthier.

Thompson will be drawing on material from his most recent album Sweet Warrior as well as his extensive back catalogue.

Tickets and more details about the event are available from: www.southbankcentre.co.uk

Iron Maiden Head to US

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Heavy metal legends Iron Maiden have just confirmed some dates for the American leg of their 'Somewhere Back In Time' world tour. The shows which kicked on in Mumbai, India on February 1, also uniquely boasts singer Bruce Dickinson flying the band, crew and equipment to all shows in a specially commissioned Boeing 757. Maiden's recent EMI DVD release of their classic 'Live After Death' video recently topped the music DVD charts in ten countries including the UK and Australia, and going top three in several other countries including Portgal and Norway. The US dates are as follows: East Rutherford, NJ Izod Centre (March 14) Toronto, Ontario Air Canada Centre (16) Selma, TX Verizon Wireless Amphitheater (May 21) The Woodlands, TX CW Mitchell Pavilion (22) Albuquerque, NM Journal Pavilion (25) Phoenix, AZ Cricket Pavilion (26) Concord, CA Sleep Train Pavilion (28) Irvine, CA Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre (30, 31) Auburn, WA White River Amphitheater (June 2) Maiden will play only one show in the UK this year, at Twickenham Stadium on July 5.

Heavy metal legends Iron Maiden have just confirmed some dates for the American leg of their ‘Somewhere Back In Time’ world tour.

The shows which kicked on in Mumbai, India on February 1, also uniquely boasts singer Bruce Dickinson flying the band, crew and equipment to all shows in a specially commissioned Boeing 757.

Maiden’s recent EMI DVD release of their classic ‘Live After Death’ video recently topped the music DVD charts in ten countries including the UK and Australia, and going top three in several other countries including Portgal and Norway.

The US dates are as follows:

East Rutherford, NJ Izod Centre (March 14)

Toronto, Ontario Air Canada Centre (16)

Selma, TX Verizon Wireless Amphitheater (May 21)

The Woodlands, TX CW Mitchell Pavilion (22)

Albuquerque, NM Journal Pavilion (25)

Phoenix, AZ Cricket Pavilion (26)

Concord, CA Sleep Train Pavilion (28)

Irvine, CA Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre (30, 31)

Auburn, WA White River Amphitheater (June 2)

Maiden will play only one show in the UK this year, at Twickenham Stadium on July 5.

R.E.M. Announce UK Stadium Tour!

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R.E.M. have announced that they will play four stadium shows in the UK this August. The British dates from August 24 to 30th come as part of the Atlanta rock band's mammoth European tour which starts in Amsterdam on July 2. The band are about to release their fourteenth studio album 'Accelerate' a...

R.E.M. have announced that they will play four stadium shows in the UK this August.

The British dates from August 24 to 30th come as part of the Atlanta rock band’s mammoth European tour which starts in Amsterdam on July 2.

The band are about to release their fourteenth studio album ‘Accelerate’ and as previously announced, the band will also play a special ICA anniversary show at London’s Royal Albert Hall on March 24 and are also headlining this year’s T In The Park festival in July.

Tickets for the newly announced UK shows go onsale this Friday (February 29).

R.E.M.’s full European tour dates are as follows:

AMSTERDAM, Westerpark (July 2)

BELGIUM, Werchter Festival (3)

SPAIN, Doctor Loft 05.00 Festival (6)

FRANCE, Le Nuits de Fourvieres (8)

FRANCE, Theatre de Verdure, Nice (9)

IRELAND, Oxegen festival, Dublin (12)

UK, T In The Park, Glasgow (13)

GERMANY, Elbufer, Dresden (15)

GERMANY, Waldbuhne, Berlin (16)

SWITZERLAND, Locarno City Square (18)

ITALY, Parco Santa Giuliana, Perugia (20)

ITALY, Arena Verona (21)

ITALY, Mostra D’oltremare, Naples (23)

ITALY, Villa Manin, Udine (24)

ITALY, Arena, Milan (26)

HUNGARY, Sziget Festival, Budapest (August 16)

CZECH, Slavia Stadium, Prague (17)

GERMANY, Ehrenhof, Stuttgart (19)

GERMANY, Lorelei, Rhine Area (20)

GERMANY, Wurzburg, Marienfest (22)

UK, Manchester, Lccc (24)

UK, Cardiff, Millennium Stadium (25)

UK, Southampton, The Rose Bowl (27)

UK, Twickenham, Stadium (30)

NORWAY, Ullevaal Stadium, Oslo (September 3)

NORWAY, Koengen Stadium, Bergen (4)

DENMARK, Parken Stadium, Copenhagen (6)

SWEDEN, Stockholm Stadium (7)

FINLAND, Finnair Stadium, Helsinki (9)

Oscar Glory For Coen Brothers Flick

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Bookies favourites the Coen brothers and Daniel Day Lewis walked away last night (Sunday 24) with the Oscars for Best Director and Best Actor, while the Coens’ adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s novel No Country For Old Men won Best Picture. After 17 previous awards wins for his role as oil magnate Daniel Planview in There Will Be Blood, Day Lewis’ victory seemed an inevitability; as did the Coens, whose film has also been a darling on the awards circuit, garnering a mammoth 76 wins in a number of categories. Javier Bardem also concluded an impressive awards run winning Best Supporting Actor for his role of killer Anton Chigurh in the Coens film, becoming the first Spanish actor to win. There were some surprises, too. Julie Christie, widely tipped to win Best Actress for Away From Her, conceded the award to French actress Marion Cotillard, who’d previously won a BAFTA for her portrayal of Edith Piaf in the biopic La Vie En Rose. Cate Blanchett, meanwhile, was beaten in the Best Supporting Actress category by Tilda Swinton. The Coens film won the most awards, rounding off their wins in three main categories with a Best Adapted Screenplay. Picking up the Oscar, Joel Coen said that the pair had been making films their whole lives, saying: "What we do now doesn't feel that much different from what we were doing then. We're very thankful to all of you out there for continuing to let us play in our corner of the sandbox." Depite seven nominations, the Ian McEwan-adapted novel Atonement only won one award, for Best Score. The main winners at the 80th Academy Awards were: BEST FILM NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN BEST DIRECTOR JOEL AND ETHAN COEN (NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN) BEST ACTOR DANIEL DAY LEWIS (THERE WILL BE BLOOD) BEST ACTRESS MARION COTILLARD (LA VIE EN ROSE) BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS TILDA SWINTON (MICHAEL CLAYTON) BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR JAVIER BARDEM (NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN) BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM THE COUNTERFEITERS BEST ANIMATED FEATURE RATATOUILLE BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY JUNO BEST DOCUMENTARY TAXI TO THE DARK SIDE

Bookies favourites the Coen brothers and Daniel Day Lewis walked away last night (Sunday 24) with the Oscars for Best Director and Best Actor, while the Coens’ adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s novel No Country For Old Men won Best Picture.

After 17 previous awards wins for his role as oil magnate Daniel Planview in There Will Be Blood, Day Lewis’ victory seemed an inevitability; as did the Coens, whose film has also been a darling on the awards circuit, garnering a mammoth 76 wins in a number of categories.

Javier Bardem also concluded an impressive awards run winning Best Supporting Actor for his role of killer Anton Chigurh in the Coens film, becoming the first Spanish actor to win.

There were some surprises, too. Julie Christie, widely tipped to win Best Actress for Away From Her, conceded the award to French actress Marion Cotillard, who’d previously won a BAFTA for her portrayal of Edith Piaf in the biopic La Vie En Rose.

Cate Blanchett, meanwhile, was beaten in the Best Supporting Actress category by Tilda Swinton.

The Coens film won the most awards, rounding off their wins in three main categories with a Best Adapted Screenplay.

Picking up the Oscar, Joel Coen said that the pair had been making films their whole lives, saying: “What we do now doesn’t feel that much different from what we were doing then. We’re very thankful to all of you out there for continuing to let us play in our corner of the sandbox.”

Depite seven nominations, the Ian McEwan-adapted novel Atonement only won one award, for Best Score.

The main winners at the 80th Academy Awards were:

BEST FILM

NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN

BEST DIRECTOR

JOEL AND ETHAN COEN (NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN)

BEST ACTOR

DANIEL DAY LEWIS (THERE WILL BE BLOOD)

BEST ACTRESS

MARION COTILLARD (LA VIE EN ROSE)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

TILDA SWINTON (MICHAEL CLAYTON)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

JAVIER BARDEM (NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN)

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

THE COUNTERFEITERS

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE

RATATOUILLE

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

JUNO

BEST DOCUMENTARY

TAXI TO THE DARK SIDE

Stanley Kubrick: Warner Home Video Directors Series

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It's unfortunate for the reputation of Stanley Kubrick that his last film was Eyes Wide Shut, a beautifully-choreographed act of cruelty against Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman. EWS felt like a film made by a man who had spent too long in creative isolation and in the end, Kubrick's strength - his command of the visual image - was overpowered by his weakness; a lack of concern for narrative. EWS is a clinical film about the absence of passion, which is a roundabout way of saying that if you're going to host a masked orgy, the last thing you should do is invite Tom Cruise. It's possible that EWS will improve over time. Alongside the other films from the second half of Kubrick's career (not including Barry Lyndon), it doesn't seem wildly out of step. All of these films are about alienation, whether it's the growing psychosis of Jack Nicholson's Jack Torrance in The Shining, or Malcolm McDowell's Alex in A Clockwork Orange. The anti-hero of 2001: A Space Odyssey is HAL, a computer programmed to mimic human responses. Ultimately, this means that cold logic is infected by paranoia, and the computer becomes a Machiavellian bully whose attempts to cajole and manipulate its human masters are oddly reminiscent of the way Kubrick treated his actors. "Show up, know your lines, don't bump into the furniture," was Kubrick's implicit instruction to his talent, according to Vincent D'Onofrio. The actor witnessed the director's authoritarian streak in the human form of Full Metal Jacket's brutal Gunnery Sergeant Hartman (brilliantly played by ex-marine Lee Ermey), who spends the first 37 minutes of the film dehumanising his new recruits to the point where they instinctively understand their fate: "Remember this. Marines die. That's what we're here for." Viewed together, there's a bleakness behind the grandiosity of the later work, which crystallises into pomposity with EWS. But the boldness of his vision remains, from the psychedelic weirdness of 2001, to the way he pushes Nicholson and McDowell beyond charisma into something almost demonic in The Shining and A Clockwork Orange. His use of music is uncommonly powerful, whether it's "Surfin' Bird" as a soundtrack to combat in Vietnam or Strauss's "Also Sprach Zarathustra" in 2001 (appropriated by Elvis, who knew a whacked-out creation fable when he saw one). It's a strange place, planet Kubrick, full of messed-up psychology and men who are lonely and bad. Thrilling to visit, but you might not want to stay, for fear of turning into David Lynch. EXTRAS: 4* Bonus documentary A Life in Pictures; bonus discs for all the films apart from Full Metal Jacket. The Special Editions are also available separately. ALASTAIR McKAY

It’s unfortunate for the reputation of Stanley Kubrick that his last film was Eyes Wide Shut, a beautifully-choreographed act of cruelty against Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman. EWS felt like a film made by a man who had spent too long in creative isolation and in the end, Kubrick’s strength – his command of the visual image – was overpowered by his weakness; a lack of concern for narrative. EWS is a clinical film about the absence of passion, which is a roundabout way of saying that if you’re going to host a masked orgy, the last thing you should do is invite Tom Cruise.

It’s possible that EWS will improve over time. Alongside the other films from the second half of Kubrick’s career (not including Barry Lyndon), it doesn’t seem wildly out of step. All of these films are about alienation, whether it’s the growing psychosis of Jack Nicholson‘s Jack Torrance in The Shining, or Malcolm McDowell’s Alex in A Clockwork Orange. The anti-hero of 2001: A Space Odyssey is HAL, a computer programmed to mimic human responses. Ultimately, this means that cold logic is infected by paranoia, and the computer becomes a Machiavellian bully whose attempts to cajole and manipulate its human masters are oddly reminiscent of the way Kubrick treated his actors.

“Show up, know your lines, don’t bump into the furniture,” was Kubrick’s implicit instruction to his talent, according to Vincent D’Onofrio. The actor witnessed the director’s authoritarian streak in the human form of Full Metal Jacket’s brutal Gunnery Sergeant Hartman (brilliantly played by ex-marine Lee Ermey), who spends the first 37 minutes of the film dehumanising his new recruits to the point where they instinctively understand their fate: “Remember this. Marines die. That’s what we’re here for.”

Viewed together, there’s a bleakness behind the grandiosity of the later work, which crystallises into pomposity with EWS. But the boldness of his vision remains, from the psychedelic weirdness of 2001, to the way he pushes Nicholson and McDowell beyond charisma into something almost demonic in The Shining and A Clockwork Orange. His use of music is uncommonly powerful, whether it’s “Surfin’ Bird” as a soundtrack to combat in Vietnam or Strauss’s “Also Sprach Zarathustra” in 2001 (appropriated by Elvis, who knew a whacked-out creation fable when he saw one). It’s a strange place, planet Kubrick, full of messed-up psychology and men who are lonely and bad. Thrilling to visit, but you might not want to stay, for fear of turning into David Lynch.

EXTRAS: 4*

Bonus documentary A Life in Pictures; bonus discs for all the films apart from Full Metal Jacket. The Special Editions are also available separately.

ALASTAIR McKAY

Spiritualized Regroup For Tour!

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Spiritualized have announced a short UK shows to take place this May, around the release of the long-awaited new studio album 'Songs In A & E'. As reported yesterday, the follow-up to 2003's Amazing Grace faetures 18 tracks, six of which are interspersed 'Harmonies'. For the full tracklisting,...

Spiritualized have announced a short UK shows to take place this May, around the release of the long-awaited new studio album ‘Songs In A & E’.

As reported yesterday, the follow-up to 2003’s Amazing Grace faetures 18 tracks, six of which are interspersed ‘Harmonies’.

For the full tracklisting, click here.

The album release through Universal o9n May 19 will be preceded by a single ‘Soul On Fire’ taken from the album.

The album will be preceded by the single, ‘SOUL ON FIRE’, which will be available digitally as well as on CD format.

Jason Pierce‘s ‘Acoustic Mainlines’ show of acoustic versions of old and new material will finish up with a handful of shows in the US and a recording session as part of the iTunes Live in London festival before the full line-up once again regroup for Spiritualized shows.

Already booked for summer festivals including Benicassim and Japan’s Summer Sonic, the band will now play:

Cambridge Junction (May 18)

Sheffield Plug (19)

London, Koko (20)

Bristol, Dot to Dot Festival (24)

Nottingham, Dot to Dot Festival (25)

UNCUT’s Oscar predictions

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I’ve just got off the phone with BBC Radio Kent who, in the preamble to this Sunday’s Academy Awards, were asking me, among other things, for my thoughts on who might win in the Best Song category. That’s something, I’m afraid, I don’t feel particularly qualified to answer, having not much on an informed opinion on the work of Gavin Hansard and The Frames (for Once), the three nominations awarded to Disney’s Enchanted, or even the Robin Williams-Jonathan Rhys Myers movie, August Rush, which I confess completely passed me by. I guess I’m on far safer ground pontificating on the big four categories – Best Actress, Best Actor, Best Film and Best Director. Thought I should point out I’m fully expecting to eat humble pie come Sunday night/Monday morning, when none of my predictions came true. That said, I’ve been bang on the money picking the heat winners on this year’s Masterchef… Anyway. Here’s what’s what. You can read the full nominations here, along with my initial thoughts. BEST ACTRESS Julie Christie for Away From Her OK, I’d really like to see Ellen Paige win for Juno – she has real freshness and spark – but Juno’s just too small a film, I think, to make the jump from nomination to win. The Academy tends to favour human tragedy, and Christie’s portrayal of an Alzheimer’s sufferer is a great example of an excellent actress handling her character’s situation with considerable elegance and sensitivity. BEST ACTOR. Daniel Day Lewis for There Will Be Blood Watching Day Lewis’ acceptance speech at the BAFTAs the other week, you were reminded that, in real life, he’s a shy, softly spoken man, a league away from the ferocious, formidable presence we see on screen. It is a massive performance, that far outweighs the other candidates. And that he’s now won 17 gongs on the road to the Oscars seems pretty conclusive proof that he’s going to win, if you ask me. BEST FILM & BEST DIRECTOR No Country For Old Men, by Joel and Ethan Coen Here’s the logic. It’s fairly typical to find Best Film going hand in hand with Best Director. Out of the Best Film nominations, only There Will Be Blood stands out as strongly as No Country For Old Men – but I think Day Lewis’ performance is so all-consuming, for want of a better phrase, that is actually overshadows the film itself. Also, I genuinely think No Country is a superb film, a convincing return to form for the Coen brothers, who’ve thankfully appeared to pull themselves out of their recent creative slump. Elswehere, I think Cate Blanchett will pick up the Best Supporting Actress for I’m Not There while Javier Bardem and his impressively baroque wig will continue their run of Best Supporting Actor awards for No Country For Old Men. Anyway, I’ll see you Monday morning, knife and fork ready for the humble pie, should it come to that.

I’ve just got off the phone with BBC Radio Kent who, in the preamble to this Sunday’s Academy Awards, were asking me, among other things, for my thoughts on who might win in the Best Song category.

Kate Nash To Open Glastonbury Festival

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South London singer Kate Nash is to be this year's Glastonbury opening act on the Pyramid stage. Nash, who picked up a BRIT for Best British Female earlier this week beating off contenders KT Tunstall, Leona Lewis and PJ Harvey, will play the festival on Friday June 27. The singer joins the likes of Kings of Leon, The Verve, and Jay-Z on this year's bill. Other artists that will play this year's festival at Worthy Farm include Hot Chip, CSS, British Sea Power, Leonard Cohen and Neil Diamond. Tickets for this year's three day festival will go on sale on April 6. Fans wanting to go, must register their details and supply a passport sized photograph between now and March 14. You can find full Glastonbury festival ticket registration details by CLICKING HERE. Glastonbury festival takes place from June 27 to 29.

South London singer Kate Nash is to be this year’s Glastonbury opening act on the Pyramid stage.

Nash, who picked up a BRIT for Best British Female earlier this week beating off contenders KT Tunstall, Leona Lewis and PJ Harvey, will play the festival on Friday June 27.

The singer joins the likes of Kings of Leon, The Verve, and Jay-Z on this year’s bill.

Other artists that will play this year’s festival at Worthy Farm include Hot Chip, CSS, British Sea Power, Leonard Cohen and Neil Diamond.

Tickets for this year’s three day festival will go on sale on April 6.

Fans wanting to go, must register their details and supply a passport sized photograph between now and March 14.

You can find full Glastonbury festival ticket registration details by CLICKING HERE.

Glastonbury festival takes place from June 27 to 29.

Rambo Opens Today

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After Cloverfield, the latest major-studio-effort blockbuster is to hit our screens in the form of Rambo, the fourth. Another revisting addition to the originally classic trilogy, Stallone leaps and bounds his way around Asia, whilst clocking up a brutally high body count. Much in the way Rocky was revisited by Stallone last year, has he gone one franchise/ mid-life crisis too far? Let us know what you think! Click here for UNCUT's review from Associate Editor Michael Bonner. Check out the Rambo trailers here: www.sonypictures.co.uk/movies/rambo/index.html www.youtube.com/watch?v=8M1KiXWWTxg www.apple.com/trailers/lions_gate/rambo PLUS! UNCUT has also checked out the following latest releases, click on the titles for our reviews: There Will Be Blood - Daniel Day-Lewis stars in a monumental work of American gothic about greed, oil and murder. Be Kind Rewind - Jack Black and Mos Def star in Michael Gondry's latest surreal offereing. Juno - Won Kar-Wei's first English language film, stutters a little - stars Norah Jones, Jude Law There Will Be Blood - Daniel Day-Lewis stars in a monumental work of American gothic about greed, oil and murder. 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

After Cloverfield, the latest major-studio-effort blockbuster is to hit our screens in the form of Rambo, the fourth.

Another revisting addition to the originally classic trilogy, Stallone leaps and bounds his way around Asia, whilst clocking up a brutally high body count.

Much in the way Rocky was revisited by Stallone last year, has he gone one franchise/ mid-life crisis too far?

Let us know what you think!

Click here for UNCUT’s review from Associate Editor Michael Bonner.

Check out the Rambo trailers here:

www.sonypictures.co.uk/movies/rambo/index.html

www.youtube.com/watch?v=8M1KiXWWTxg

www.apple.com/trailers/lions_gate/rambo

PLUS! UNCUT has also checked out the following latest releases, click on the titles for our reviews:

There Will Be Blood – Daniel Day-Lewis stars in a monumental work of American gothic about greed, oil and murder.

Be Kind Rewind – Jack Black and Mos Def star in Michael Gondry’s latest surreal offereing.

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

There Will Be Blood – Daniel Day-Lewis stars in a monumental work of American gothic about greed, oil and murder.

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