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Metallica And Pearl Jam To Headline Manchester Festival

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Metallica and Pearl Jam have today (February 6) been confirmed as headliners for this year Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival in Tennessee. As previously speculated Robert Plant will be appearing at the festival, but not with bandmates Led Zeppelin. he will be performing with his 'Raising Sand' colla...

Metallica and Pearl Jam have today (February 6) been confirmed as headliners for this year Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival in Tennessee.

As previously speculated Robert Plant will be appearing at the festival, but not with bandmates Led Zeppelin. he will be performing with his ‘Raising Sand’ collaborator Alison Krauss.

The 100 strong line-up also features Kanye West, Willie Nelson, The Raconteurs and Sigur Ros.

The Grateful Dead‘s Phil Lesh will also be appearing, and is listed twice, prompting talk of of a Dead performance. He will also be joined by singer Jackie Greene. They appeared last week with other members of the Dead; Bob Weir and Mickey Hart for a one-off show in San Francisco to support presidential hopeful Barack Obama.

The thirteen stage festival runs from June 12-15 and tickets go on sale on February 13.

More details are available from the festival website here: www.bonnaroo.com

The full line-up announced so far is:

Pearl Jam

Metallica

Jack Johnson

Kanye West

Robert Plant & Alison Krauss

Phil Lesh & Friends

My Morning Jacket

The Allman Brothers Band

The Raconteurs

Willie Nelson

Death Cab for Cutie

B.B. King

Sigur Ros

Levon Helm and the Ramble on the Road

Ben Folds

O.A.R.

The Bluegrass Allstars Feat. Luke Bulla, Sam Bush, Jerry Douglas, Bela Fleck, Edgar Meyer and Bryan Sutton

M.I.A.

Umphrey’s McGee

Iron & Wine

Yonder Mountain String Band

Swell Season

Talib Kweli

Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi’s Soul Stew Revival

Gogol Bordello

Broken Social Scene

Robert Randolph’s Revival

Rilo Kiley

Mastodon

Lupe Fiasco

Against Me!

Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings

Pat Green

Ozomatli

Tegan & Sara

Solomon Burke

Drive-By Truckers

!!!

The Avett Brothers

Israel Vibration

Abigail Washburn & the Sparrow Quartet featuring Bela Fleck

Phil Lesh / Larry Campbell / Jackie Greene

Aimee Mann

Ladytron

The Fiery Furnaces

Orchestra Baobab

Ghostland Observatory

Jose Gonzalez

Dark Star Orchestra

Minus the Bear

Donavon Frankenreiter

Lez Zeppelin

State Radio

Battles

Jakob Dylan

Two Gallants

The Sword

Vampire Weekend

Little Feat

Nicole Atkins

The Felice Brothers

Mason Jennings

MGMT

The Lee Boys

Black Kids

Serena Ryder

Steel Train

Grupo Fantasma

Back Door Slam

Band Of Horses Join Roskilde Festival Bill

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Band of Horses will be bringing their haunting pop-rock to this year's Roskilde festival in July. This week's diverse band confirmations also include hardcore/rave British crossover band Enter Shikari, 70s US rock band Clutch and death-metallers Job For A Cowboy. The new additions join Roskilde he...

Band of Horses will be bringing their haunting pop-rock to this year’s Roskilde festival in July.

This week’s diverse band confirmations also include hardcore/rave British crossover band Enter Shikari, 70s US rock band Clutch and death-metallers Job For A Cowboy.

The new additions join Roskilde headliners Radiohead, who return to play the festival after eleven years.

The festival takes place near Copenhagen from July 3 – 6, with the campsite opening for revellers from June 29.

More line-up and ticket details are available from: www.roskilde-festival.dk

The Beatles’ Guru Maharishi Yogi dies

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Maharishi Yogi, the Indian guru credited with introducing bands like the Beatles to Transcendental Meditation, has passed away, thought to be aged 91. The guru, who retired last month, reportedly saying his work was done, died of natural causes in his sleep yesterday (February 5) at his home in Vlo...

Maharishi Yogi, the Indian guru credited with introducing bands like the Beatles to Transcendental Meditation, has passed away, thought to be aged 91.

The guru, who retired last month, reportedly saying his work was done, died of natural causes in his sleep yesterday (February 5) at his home in Vlodop, in the Netherlands.

The Maharishi is most famed for introducing Transcendental Meditation to the Western world in 1959, aiming for people to discover inner peace and enlightenment.

His spokesman Bob Roth told Associated Press last night: “He had been saying he had done what he set out to do.”

The Maharishi trained as a physicist before devoting himself to spiritual enlightenment, studying under Guru Dev in the Himalayas until the 1950s.

He taught people a 20-minute routine of mental techniques that could be used to reach a ‘state of pure consciousness’ and gain deep rest based on theory and practice of yoga.

His most famous pupils were the Beatles, who first met with him in 1967 [pictured above], the Rolling Stones and Clint Eastwood.

An estimated five million people follow the Maharishi’s teachings. The donations required to be taught his techniques helped fund meditation centres and Peace Palaces across the world.

On his retirement, the Maharishi unveiled plans to harness the power of his group’s meditation to create world peace and end poverty.

Pic credit: PA Photos

The Sixth Uncut Playlist Of 2008

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I found myself in the centre of a mild media hurricane yesterday, thanks to the musical map of Britain published in this month's Uncut becoming something of a hot topic. If you heard me trying to explain the principle of beats per minute on a local radio station, or trying to convince all of Scotland that they only listened to Runrig, I can only apologise. Today, anyway, is the first anniversary of Wild Mercury Sound. Thanks to everyone who's read the blog and left comments over the past year; it feels like it's become a pretty healthy community over the months, apart from that weird period when we were invaded by irate Smashing Pumpkins fans. Enough self-congratulatory business. Here's a list of the records we've played over the past couple of days in the office. Jet Bronx, incidentally, is Lloyd Grossman in his brief New York punk phase. God knows why Phil brought that one in. . . 1. Serge Gainsbourg & Brigitte Bardot - Bonnie & Clyde (Mercury) 2. Fuck Buttons - Street Horrrsing (ATP) 3. Elbow - The Seldom Seen Kid (Fiction) 4. Essie Jain - We Made This Ourselves (Leaf) 5. The Triffids - The Black Swan (Domino) 6. The Black Keys - Attack & Release (V2) 7. Simian Mobile Disco - Clock EP (Wichita) 8. Fucked Up - Year Of The Pig (Vice) 9. Ebony Bones - Don't Fart On My Heart (White Label) 10. Vampire Weekend - Vampire Weekend (XL) 11. Jet Bronx & The Forbidden - Ain't Doin' Nothin' (Lightning) 12. Dueling Banjos - Eric Weissberg & Steve Mandel (Warner Bros) 13. The Accidental - There Were Wolves (Full Time Hobby) 14. Nancy - Keep Cooler (Myspace) 15. Ladyhawk - Shots (Jagjaguwar) 16. Monica Vasconcelos (with Robert Wyatt) - Hih (New Note) 17. Jack Rose - Dr Ragtime And Pals/Self-Titled (Beautiful Happiness) 18. Destroyer - Trouble In Dreams (Rough Trade) 19. Clinic - Do It! (Domino) 20. Pavement - Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain (Domino)

I found myself in the centre of a mild media hurricane yesterday, thanks to the musical map of Britain published in this month’s Uncut becoming something of a hot topic. If you heard me trying to explain the principle of beats per minute on a local radio station, or trying to convince all of Scotland that they only listened to Runrig, I can only apologise.

Tinariwen To Play Larmer Tree Festival

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Tinariwen are amongst the first artists announced to play this July's Larmer Tree Festival, which takes place at Larmer Tree Gardens near Salisbury. Jools Holland, Marc Almond, The Levellers and recent BBC Folk Award winners Bellowhead and Julie Fowlis are also set to appear at the intimate four-da...

Tinariwen are amongst the first artists announced to play this July’s Larmer Tree Festival, which takes place at Larmer Tree Gardens near Salisbury.

Jools Holland, Marc Almond, The Levellers and recent BBC Folk Award winners Bellowhead and Julie Fowlis are also set to appear at the intimate four-day festival from July 16 – 20.

As well as music across six stages, Larmer Tree also hosts over 100 workshops across the five days for adults and children.

More details and tickets are available from: www.larmertreefestival.co.uk

Some Bill Fay News. . .

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Just a quick bit of news to pass on. Bill Fay phoned up an hour or so ago, as he does from time to time, to let us know that he's preparing a new reissue of his two classic albums - this time with a bonus disc of unreleased material. "Bill Fay" and "Time Of The Last Persecution" look like they're going to be released together by David Tibet's estimable Durtro label in the spring, with all profits - at Bill's behest - going to Medecins Sans Frontieres. For those of us who already have those incredible records - and I've alluded to my love for Fay here before, when he played with Wilco in London last year - the bonus disc looks intriguing. According to Bill, his old bandmates have unearthed a bunch of sessions from the same 1971-ish period as "Time Of The Last Persecution", with alternate versions (including a take on one of the stand-outs from Fay's debut album, "The Sun Is Bored") and some previously unreleased songs. The last music we've heard from Bill, "Tomorrow, Tomorrow & Tomorrow", came out in 2005, though it was recorded about 25 years earlier. Now, it seems there'll finally be the opportunity to hear what he's been up to in the interim, since he reckons the bonus disc will also include some home recordings from the past few years. When he sends me some music, I'll let you know. Can't wait, to be honest.

Just a quick bit of news to pass on. Bill Fay phoned up an hour or so ago, as he does from time to time, to let us know that he’s preparing a new reissue of his two classic albums – this time with a bonus disc of unreleased material.

The 1978 Anti-Nazi League Carnival – Were You There?

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The Rock Against Racism manifesto at the time of the second of 1978's major anti-fascist festivals, held in September in Brockwell Park and featuring Elvis Costello and Aswad, called for: "Rebel music, street music. Music that breaks down people's fear of one another. Now music. Music that knows who the real enemy is. Rock against racism. Love music. Hate racism." An estimated 100,000 people answered RAR's bold rallying call. If you were one of them, we are still looking for your memories of the day and there's still time for you to write to me, either here at www.uncut.co.uk, or allan_jones@ipcmedia.com. Meanwhile, you might want to know that a new Rock Against Racism club night opens on February 8 at JAMM in Brixton, with appearances by The Thirst, The Others and The Mentalists. Pete Doherty is expected to guest with The Thirst and Jerry Dammers will be DJ. This will be the first in a number of events organised as part of the build-up to the London GLA elections on May 1, which also includes appearances by Alabama 3, Misty In Roots, Tom Robinson, Tony Benn and "very special guests" at Brixton Academy on April 30 - the 30th anniversary of the RAR Victoria Park Carnival, which famously featured The Clash, TRB and Steel Pulse. Tickets for the RAR Club Night at JAMM aare a very reasonable £8.00 in advance, a tenner on the door. For more details, go to www.brixtonjamm.org. But drop me a line first with your recollections of Brockwell and the evnts surrounding it.

The Rock Against Racism manifesto at the time of the second of 1978’s major anti-fascist festivals, held in September in Brockwell Park and featuring Elvis Costello and Aswad, called for: “Rebel music, street music. Music that breaks down people’s fear of one another. Now music. Music that knows who the real enemy is. Rock against racism. Love music. Hate racism.”

Pete Doherty To Appear At Anti-Racism Gig

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Babyshambles' Pete Doherty is expected to appear at a Brixton nightclub this Friday (February 8) for the launch of a new Rock Against Racism club-night. Doherty will be appearing alongside south London band The Thirst and The Others as they launch the new Rock Against Racism night at the Jamm venue...

Babyshambles’ Pete Doherty is expected to appear at a Brixton nightclub this Friday (February 8) for the launch of a new Rock Against Racism club-night.

Doherty will be appearing alongside south London band The Thirst and The Others as they launch the new Rock Against Racism night at the Jamm venue..

The Specials’ Jerry Dammers is also set to play a DJ set on the night.

A spokesperson for Doherty told NME that the singer/guitarist had many commitments over the next week but would make every effort to attend the event.

For more details about the RAR event, see Uncut Editor Allan Jones’ blog, by clicking here.

Public Enemy To Play Classic Album Live

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Public Enemy have been revealed as one of the first artists to take part in this year's Don't Look Back season of concerts. The now annual shows see artists pick an album from their back catalogue to play in it's entirety. Public Enemy will be performing their hugely influential second album for De...

Public Enemy have been revealed as one of the first artists to take part in this year’s Don’t Look Back season of concerts. The now annual shows see artists pick an album from their back catalogue to play in it’s entirety.

Public Enemy will be performing their hugely influential second album for Def Jam records ‘It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back’, for three UK shows only, starting at London’s Brixton Academy on May 23.

PE will also play at Manchester Academy on May 26 and Glasgow ABC1 on May 27.

Support on all dates will come from Dr Octagon AKA Kool Keith, Kutmasta Kurt, Anti Pop Consortium, Edan, and MC Dagha.

Tickets go on general sale this Friday (February 8) at 9am. However a fans pre-sale will start through www.publicenemy.com on Wednesday (February 6).

Also newly announced for Don’t Look Back is Wu-Tang-Clan member Raekwon – who will perform his 1995 solo record ‘Only Built 4 Cuban Linx’ for one-night only.

Raekwon plays London’s Koko venue on May 19.

For more information about all Don’t Look Back Shows, see www.dontlookbackconcerts.com

Morrissey – Greatest Hits

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Critics are contractually obliged to nitpick the tracklisting of compilations like this, but even by Morrissey’s standards of perversity, Greatest Hits feels like a rum do. Supposedly presenting the finest moments of his solo career, it consists primarily of songs from his last two albums. There’s no room for “November Spawned A Monster”, “Piccadilly Palare” or “Boxers”, while a ropey live version of Patti Smith’s “Redondo Beach” does make the cut. And yet, strictly speaking, commercially, Greatest Hits does almost exactly what it says on the tin: collect all his Top 10 (and thereabouts) singles of the past two decades. Compiled on this basis, you realise, a Smiths greatest hits would barely stretch to an EP. Maybe this is all a way of demonstrating to his new label (Decca: the home of Vera Lynn, Billy Fury, Tony Newley and, lest we forget, Slaughter and the Dogs) that, far from trading on former glories, as he approaches 50, Morrissey is more popular – and even more notorious – than ever. Never mind the fact that the British singles market is now less of a hit parade, more of a car boot sale. In contrast to Jagger, Lydon, Strummer, Weller and Ian Brown, Morrissey has somehow contrived a solo career technically more successful than that of his former band. How on earth has he managed it? His act has never really relied on youth – in some ways, like Piaf or the torch-song Sinatra, his style seems more suited to, and more poignant in, middle age – and yet in its extreme romanticism and amused anguish it continues to speak to new generations of adolescents. And, of course, he was never likely to alienate his existing audience with the sudden desire to make a drum and bass record. By now his steadfast musical conservatism seems almost regal – in the proudly obstinate style of Helen Mirren’s Queen outlasting a succession of prime ministers. Indeed he’s lasted long enough to see the style he practically invented become almost de rigueur 20 years on – popular with everyone from the NME nu-indie kids to David Cameron. So much of British music in the first decade of the 21st century seems caught in a profoundly conflicted relation with the 1980s: just as bands like Coldplay offer a kind of insipid apology for stadium rock, the kind of indie once confined to Peel sessions is the new pop. As a figure both of the 1980s and profoundly opposed to the decade, Morrissey seems to have been a prime beneficiary of this odd mood. When a single like “You Have Killed Me” reaches No 3, you can’t help but feel it’s a kind of hysterical cultural overcompensation for the fact that, once upon a time, “Bigmouth Strikes Again” only reached No 26. It’s hard to know how else to explain this strange indian summer of popularity. It’s not that his singles have markedly improved or indeed even changed very much since the mid-’90s. Quite the opposite. Cannily the Morrissey-chosen tracklisting here doesn’t run chronologically. If it had done so, even the chart placings may not have disguised the feeling that there would have been more wit and panache to be found on the first three tracks than on any of the subsequent singles. “Suedehead”, “Everyday is Like Sunday” and “Last Of The Famous International Playboys” were all co-written with Queen Is Dead producer Stephen Street, providing a natural continuity with The Smiths and suggesting that while Street may not have been Johnny Marr’s equal as a songwriter, he could nevertheless work as a superb arranger, in the style of John Franz with Scott Walker. But something in Morrissey seems to have felt enervated by going solo, and longed to be back in a gang – albeit a gang where he was the boss, and his guitarist was unlikely to leave him alone and in the lurch. Hence Boz Boorer – introduced to Morrissey by Chas Smash of Madness – leading a series of sturdy if unremarkable bands through the 1990s. “The More You Ignore Me, The Closer I Get” is their sole representative here. The more recent singles are not without their success. “Irish Blood, English Heart” was a storming return from seven years’ exile, fired by Alain Whyte’s finest riff, and a lyric cutting to the quick of the liminality at the heart of his art. The infectiously grim “First Of The Gang To Die” meanwhile, was Morrissey’s first real radio crossover hit since “What Difference Does it Make?”. But even the recruitment of new guitarist Jesse Tobias and the extravagance of Tony Visconti’s production on Ringleader Of The Tormentors couldn’t disguise the sense of writerly exhaustion – something not dispelled by the obligatory and almost desultory new single, “That’s How People Grow Up”. The endless tours of the last few years really just confirm that by now Morrissey is deep into his Vegas period. Once upon a time he was the Complete Pop Artist with a neurotically perfectionist focus on every detail. The bland title and ten-year old photo of this new collection feel like the final confirmation that his focus is no longer there. There’s an odd majesty still to Morrissey, in his new eminence – however much he resists acceptance with his enduring talent for controversy and allergy to platitude. But you’re more likely to find it in his performance of the old songs, in the devotion of his audience, in the ritual of the concerts, than on his records any more. STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

Critics are contractually obliged to nitpick the tracklisting of compilations like this, but even by Morrissey’s standards of perversity, Greatest Hits feels like a rum do. Supposedly presenting the finest moments of his solo career, it consists primarily of songs from his last two albums. There’s no room for “November Spawned A Monster”, “Piccadilly Palare” or “Boxers”, while a ropey live version of Patti Smith’s “Redondo Beach” does make the cut. And yet, strictly speaking, commercially, Greatest Hits does almost exactly what it says on the tin: collect all his Top 10 (and thereabouts) singles of the past two decades. Compiled on this basis, you realise, a Smiths greatest hits would barely stretch to an EP.

Maybe this is all a way of demonstrating to his new label (Decca: the home of Vera Lynn, Billy Fury, Tony Newley and, lest we forget, Slaughter and the Dogs) that, far from trading on former glories, as he approaches 50, Morrissey is more popular – and even more notorious – than ever. Never mind the fact that the British singles market is now less of a hit parade, more of a car boot sale. In contrast to Jagger, Lydon, Strummer, Weller and Ian Brown, Morrissey has somehow contrived a solo career technically more successful than that of his former band. How on earth has he managed it?

His act has never really relied on youth – in some ways, like Piaf or the torch-song Sinatra, his style seems more suited to, and more poignant in, middle age – and yet in its extreme romanticism and amused anguish it continues to speak to new generations of adolescents. And, of course, he was never likely to alienate his existing audience with the sudden desire to make a drum and bass record. By now his steadfast musical conservatism seems almost regal – in the proudly obstinate style of Helen Mirren’s Queen outlasting a succession of prime ministers.

Indeed he’s lasted long enough to see the style he practically invented become almost de rigueur 20 years on – popular with everyone from the NME nu-indie kids to David Cameron. So much of British music in the first decade of the 21st century seems caught in a profoundly conflicted relation with the 1980s: just as bands like Coldplay offer a kind of insipid apology for stadium rock, the kind of indie once confined to Peel sessions is the new pop. As a figure both of the 1980s and profoundly opposed to the decade, Morrissey seems to have been a prime beneficiary of this odd mood. When a single like “You Have Killed Me” reaches No 3, you can’t help but feel it’s a kind of hysterical cultural overcompensation for the fact that, once upon a time, “Bigmouth Strikes Again” only reached No 26.

It’s hard to know how else to explain this strange indian summer of popularity. It’s not that his singles have markedly improved or indeed even changed very much since the mid-’90s. Quite the opposite. Cannily the Morrissey-chosen tracklisting here doesn’t run chronologically. If it had done so, even the chart placings may not have disguised the feeling that there would have been more wit and panache to be found on the first three tracks than on any of the subsequent singles.

“Suedehead”, “Everyday is Like Sunday” and “Last Of The Famous International Playboys” were all co-written with Queen Is Dead producer Stephen Street, providing a natural continuity with The Smiths and suggesting that while Street may not have been Johnny Marr’s equal as a songwriter, he could nevertheless work as a superb arranger, in the style of John Franz with Scott Walker.

But something in Morrissey seems to have felt enervated by going solo, and longed to be back in a gang – albeit a gang where he was the boss, and his guitarist was unlikely to leave him alone and in the lurch. Hence Boz Boorer – introduced to Morrissey by Chas Smash of Madness – leading a series of sturdy if unremarkable bands through the 1990s. “The More You Ignore Me, The Closer I Get” is their sole representative here.

The more recent singles are not without their success. “Irish Blood, English Heart” was a storming return from seven years’ exile, fired by Alain Whyte’s finest riff, and a lyric cutting to the quick of the liminality at the heart of his art. The infectiously grim “First Of The Gang To Die” meanwhile, was Morrissey’s first real radio crossover hit since “What Difference Does it Make?”.

But even the recruitment of new guitarist Jesse Tobias and the extravagance of Tony Visconti’s production on Ringleader Of The Tormentors couldn’t disguise the sense of writerly exhaustion – something not dispelled by the obligatory and almost desultory new single, “That’s How People Grow Up”.

The endless tours of the last few years really just confirm that by now Morrissey is deep into his Vegas period. Once upon a time he was the Complete Pop Artist with a neurotically perfectionist focus on every detail. The bland title and ten-year old photo of this new collection feel like the final confirmation that his focus is no longer there. There’s an odd majesty still to Morrissey, in his new eminence – however much he resists acceptance with his enduring talent for controversy and allergy to platitude. But you’re more likely to find it in his performance of the old songs, in the devotion of his audience, in the ritual of the concerts, than on his records any more.

STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

Laura Marling – Alas I Cannot Swim

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You don’t need a beard to make special post-millennial folk music. Reading’s Laura Marling’s debut contains just as much musical pixie dust as any Devendra Banhart effort and, on “Night Terror”, a modern folk song as wonderful as any dusty vinyl offering from the 1960s. Her creamy voice canters over deft fingerpicked guitars and celtic violin throughout the rest of the album, and although the heights of the aforementioned song are barely hinted at elsewhere, Marling’s promise – she’s just 17 years old – is as clear as spring water. JAMIE FULLERTON Pic credit: PA Photos

You don’t need a beard to make special post-millennial folk music. Reading’s Laura Marling’s debut contains just as much musical pixie dust as any Devendra Banhart effort and, on “Night Terror”, a modern folk song as wonderful as any dusty vinyl offering from the 1960s.

Her creamy voice canters over deft fingerpicked guitars and celtic violin throughout the rest of the album, and although the heights of the aforementioned song are barely hinted at elsewhere, Marling’s promise – she’s just 17 years old – is as clear as spring water.

JAMIE FULLERTON

Pic credit: PA Photos

Baby Dee – Safe Inside The Day

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Baby Dee’s first half century on this planet reads like the plot to some fantastical indie movie. Born in Cleveland, Ohio in 1953, Baby Dee studied classical harp, worked as a church verger, changed gender from male to female, and pursued a career busking on the streets of Manhattan: riding a gian...

Baby Dee’s first half century on this planet reads like the plot to some fantastical indie movie. Born in Cleveland, Ohio in 1953, Baby Dee studied classical harp, worked as a church verger, changed gender from male to female, and pursued a career busking on the streets of Manhattan: riding a giant tricycle in a bee suit, playing Shirley Temple songs.

She left music, and retrained as a tree surgeon. This last career was curtailed when a tree that Baby Dee was working on ended up wrecking someone’s house. Tree surgery’s loss, however, has been music’s gain. Baby Dee teamed up with like-minded mavericks like Marc Almond, Antony And The Johnsons, Current 93’s David Tibet, playing her harp in small clubs and singing beautiful, introspective torch songs in a quavering tenor voice.

Her fourth studio album comes as a radical change in direction. Produced by Will Oldham and journeyman multi-instrumentalist Matt Sweeney (Zwan, Johnny Cash, El-P), it sees Baby Dee switching to piano and adding extroversion to her songcraft, backed by a string section and some illustrious musicians (including Andrew WK on bass and drums).

The results prove comforting for fans of canonical rock. “Safe Inside The Day” recalls John Cale; “The Earlie King” suggests Tom Waits; “Teeth Are The Only Bones That Show” has Dr John’s boogie swagger. “Fresh Out Of Candles”, meanwhile, could be off Lou Reed’s Transformer.

But these influences are radically altered in a couple of ways. By Baby Dee’s bald, witty and poetic lyrics (“there’s a harp inside that piano/and a girl inside that boy” she sings on “The Dance Of The Diminishing Possibilities”). And also by her extraordinary voice – a well-enunciated, declamatory style that sounds like a drunken vaudeville performer doing a Brecht opera.

The result demands your attention – it may well be one of the first great albums of 2008.

JOHN LEWIS

Earth – The Bees Made Honey In The Lion’s Skull

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In the past couple of years, the pathologically slothful doom-rock patented by Earth in the early ’90s has become pretty hip, thanks to the work of some diligent disciples like Sunn 0))). Earth’s guitarist Dylan Carlson, though, has contrarily been heading down some dusty backroad towards Americana, of all things. Hence The Bees…, their second full album since Carlson reactivated the brand in 2002, consists mainly of parched, soundtrack-friendly psychedelic blues that should appeal to Calexico fans as well as avant-metalheads. The pace hasn’t picked up much, but there’s a sticky, melodic richness to the heavy twangs and sonorous piano lines of “Engine Of Ruin” and “Omens And Portents I: The Driver” (featuring Bill Frisell, oddly) that belies Carlson’s monolithically grim reputation, without in any way betraying it. JOHN MULVEY For more on the album , see John Mulvey's Wild Mercury Sound blog by clicking here.

In the past couple of years, the pathologically slothful doom-rock patented by Earth in the early ’90s has become pretty hip, thanks to the work of some diligent disciples like Sunn 0))). Earth’s guitarist Dylan Carlson, though, has contrarily been heading down some dusty backroad towards Americana, of all things.

Hence The Bees…, their second full album since Carlson reactivated the brand in 2002, consists mainly of parched, soundtrack-friendly psychedelic blues that should appeal to Calexico fans as well as avant-metalheads. The pace hasn’t picked up much, but there’s a sticky, melodic richness to the heavy twangs and sonorous piano lines of “Engine Of Ruin” and “Omens And Portents I: The Driver” (featuring Bill Frisell, oddly) that belies Carlson’s monolithically grim reputation, without in any way betraying it.

JOHN MULVEY

For more on the album , see John Mulvey’s Wild Mercury Sound blog by clicking here.

Morrissey Greatest Hits 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 (Febraury 11):

Morrissey – Greatest Hits – The former Smiths legend finally releases his best of, see what Moz has personally included on the collection here.

Laura Marling – Alas I Cannot Swim – Stirring folk-pop debut from Reading teenager.

Baby Dee – Safe Inside The Day – Will Oldham transforms Cleveland transgender harpist.

Earth – The Bees Made Honey In The Lions Skull – American experimental drone metal, headed up by Kurt Cobain’s old drugs-and-guns pal Dylan Carlson, now onto their sixth studio album.

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

Hot Chip – Made In The Dark

Adele – ’19’

Vampire Weekend – Vampire Weekend

Lightspeed Champion – Falling Off The Lavender Bridge

Radiohead – In Rainbows Discbox/ USB collection

Wu-Tang Clan – 8 Diagrams

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

Adele To Take Chart Topping Album On The Road

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Adele who this week stormed the top of the UK albums' chart with her debut release '19' - is to play a series of UK tour dates in April. The singer will play the following dates, kicking off in cardiff on April 23: She will play the following shows: Cardiff St David's Hall (April 23) Newcastle ...

Adele who this week stormed the top of the UK albums’ chart with her debut release ’19’ – is to play a series of UK tour dates in April.

The singer will play the following dates, kicking off in cardiff on April 23:

She will play the following shows:

Cardiff St David’s Hall (April 23)

Newcastle Tyne Theatre (24)

Edinburgh Queen Hall (26)

York Opera House (28)

Manchester Lowry (30)

Cambridge Corn Exchange (May 1)

Southampton Guildhall (3)

Birmingham Alexandra Theatre (4)

London Shepherd’s Bush Empire (6)

Check out Uncut’s review of Adele’s ’19’ and over 3000 other albums by checking out our REVIEWS section online here: https://www.uncut.co.uk/music/reviews.

Kiss, The Offspring And Lostprophets For Download Festival

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Kiss, The Offspring and Lostprophets have been today (February 5) confirmed as headlining this year's Download festival. The annual three-day rock bash which takes place at Donington Park will also see Motorhead, Judas Priest and HIM perform. More band announcements to follow. 2007 saw My Chemic...

Kiss, The Offspring and Lostprophets have been today (February 5) confirmed as headlining this year’s Download festival.

The annual three-day rock bash which takes place at Donington Park will also see Motorhead, Judas Priest and HIM perform.

More band announcements to follow.

2007 saw My Chemical Romance, Linkin Park and Iron Maiden headline.

5000 early bird tickets for this year’s event sold-out straight after last years’ festival.

Download 2008 takes place from June 13 -15, tickets go on sale this Friday (February 8).

More information is available from: www.downloadfestival.co.uk

Fuck Buttons, plus more on Vampire Weekend

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I’ve just been reading your comments on yesterday’s Vampire Weekend blog – thanks for those. They helped me crystallise my thoughts about that much-vaunted African influence on the album. What’s interesting, I think, is not that they draw on African sounds, but how they point up the affinities between that spindly, melodically cartwheeling guitar sound and the indie-rock tradition. One of the chief pleasures of “Vampire Weekend” is that the absorption of African influences seems relatively effortless – that it doesn’t clash with the prevailing collegiate aesthetic. There’s occasional flashes of self-consciousness – the title of “Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa” being the most blatant. But unlike, say, Paul Simon’s “Graceland”, which keeps getting wheeled out as a reference point, the African influence seems mainly just a sound they love to throw into the cultural mix, rather than being used to make an explicit cultural point. It’s a minor point of interpretation, I guess, but it might turn out to be a mildly significant one with regard to the way people are introduced to African and African-influenced music; not as African, just as music. And while we’re on the subject, does anyone remember The Red Guitars? I have a couple of albums at home which I can’t have played in 20 years, but I’ve a vague memory that they were doing something slightly similar, albeit in a much less graceful and artful way. Anyway, today’s record is rinsing out our heads right now. It’s called “Street Horrrsing” (nope, don’t know what it means, sorry), and it’s by a duo called Fuck Buttons, which I must admit charms me no end. Fuck Buttons appear to be associates of Mogwai, since John Cummings produced this fantastic debut album. But rather than majestically peaking post-rock, their music seems to be a kind of mellow noise; distorted drone-rock and fractious electronic ambience, with the requisite post-Boredoms addition of tribal drums. It reminds me most of the excellent Growing (who have a good new album out on Social Registry that I’ve shamefully neglected to blog about), and of Black Dice around the time of “Beaches And Canyons”, my favourite album of theirs by some distance. There’s a great sequence on “Street Horrrsing” which runs from “Ribs Out” – pounding drums, clicking bones, the odd yelp – through the clunky ritualistic fuzz-electronica of “Okay, Let’s Talk About Magic”, then climaxes with the sepulchral white noise hum of “Race You To The Bedroom”, built on vast churchy doom chords and what sounds like a indignant black metal vocalist chuntering away deep in the feedback. I guess that’s the Mogwai connection: a way of taking the basic, derided vocabulary of metal and making something avant-garde and, at times, transcendently beautiful out of it.

I’ve just been reading your comments on yesterday’s Vampire Weekend blog – thanks for those. They helped me crystallise my thoughts about that much-vaunted African influence on the album. What’s interesting, I think, is not that they draw on African sounds, but how they point up the affinities between that spindly, melodically cartwheeling guitar sound and the indie-rock tradition.

Eels’ Everett Gets Ad Aired During Super Bowl

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Eels' man Mark 'E' Everett yesterday (February 3) achieved his ambition of getting an advert for his 'Useless Trinkets' collection on TV during the annual Super Bowl programming. Hindered by the huge costs of getting an advert placed during the monumental annual game, on average $100,000 a second, as the game goes out to 140 million people worldwide - Everett decided to make a five second clip -- which eventually was cut to just one second in length. For those of you that blinked during the ad-break, check out the one-second and full version by clicking here. For more information about the two Eels tenth anniversary releases, 'Meet The Eels: Essential Eels Vol 1, 1996-2006' and 'Eels Useless Trinkets: B-Sides, Rarities and Unreleased 1996-2006' - click here. Everett will also be playing a series of shows with the Eels from next month. They are set to play: London, Royal Festival Hall (February 25) Birmingham, Town Hall (26) Manchester, Bridgewater Hall (27) Glasgow, Royal Concert Hall (28) Gateshead, Sage (March 1) Brighton, Dome (2)

Eels’ man Mark ‘E’ Everett yesterday (February 3) achieved his ambition of getting an advert for his ‘Useless Trinkets’ collection on TV during the annual Super Bowl programming.

Hindered by the huge costs of getting an advert placed during the monumental annual game, on average $100,000 a second, as the game goes out to 140 million people worldwide – Everett decided to make a five second clip — which eventually was cut to just one second in length.

For those of you that blinked during the ad-break, check out the one-second and full version by clicking here.

For more information about the two Eels tenth anniversary releases, ‘Meet The Eels: Essential Eels Vol 1, 1996-2006’ and ‘Eels Useless Trinkets: B-Sides, Rarities and Unreleased 1996-2006’ – click here.

Everett will also be playing a series of shows with the Eels from next month. They are set to play:

London, Royal Festival Hall (February 25)

Birmingham, Town Hall (26)

Manchester, Bridgewater Hall (27)

Glasgow, Royal Concert Hall (28)

Gateshead, Sage (March 1)

Brighton, Dome (2)

Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds Add Extra UK Date

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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have added a second UK date, after their London show sold-out within hours. As previously reported, the band are due to play their first live shows since 2005 this May, as part of a European tour. Cave will now play London's Hammersmith Apollo on May 8 as well as alre...

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have added a second UK date, after their London show sold-out within hours.

As previously reported, the band are due to play their first live shows since 2005 this May, as part of a European tour.

Cave will now play London’s Hammersmith Apollo on May 8 as well as already announced May 7.

The band’s first single ‘Dig, Lazarus, Dig!’ is set for release on February 18, preceding the band’s fourteenth studio album of the same name which follows on March 3.

The single will be available on limited edition 7″, CD and as a download.

The B-side features a brand new Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds track ‘Accidents Will Happen’.

The band are also due to appear at New York’s Plug Awards, taking place at Terminal Five. They will perform as a group for the first time since 2005, as well as picking up the Impact Award for Cave’s influence on the independent music community.

You can catch Cave and The Bad Seeds at the following venues:

Lisbon Colliseum (April 21)

Porto Coliseum (22)

San Sebastian Polideportivo (24)

Barcelona Razzmatazz (25)

Marseilles Docks Du Suds (26)

Amsterdam Music Hall (28)

Paris Casino Du Paris (29)

Brussels Forest National (May 1)

Dublin Castle (3)

Glasgow Academy (4)

Birmingham Academy (5)

London Hammersmith Apollo (7/8)

Oslo Spektrum (16)

Stockholm Annexe (17)

Copenhagen KB Halle (19)

Berlin Tempodrom (21)

Prague Sazka Arena (24)

Vienna Gasometer (25)

Zagreb In Music Festival (June 3)

Belgrade Arena (4)

Salonika Moni Lazariston (6)

Athens Lycabetus Theatre (7)

The Mighty Boosh Set For Festival Appearance

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The Mighty Boosh are amongst the first artists announced for this year's Big Chill festival. Legendary DJ Norman Jay and the Thievery Corporation have also been confirmed for the festival which takes place from August 1-3 at Eastnor Castle Deer Park in the Malvern Hills. The ICA, Roundhouse, and t...

The Mighty Boosh are amongst the first artists announced for this year’s Big Chill festival.

Legendary DJ Norman Jay and the Thievery Corporation have also been confirmed for the festival which takes place from August 1-3 at Eastnor Castle Deer Park in the Malvern Hills.

The ICA, Roundhouse, and the British Film Institute are amongst the confirmed partners for this year’s event.

More artists and content to be announced soon.

Information about the Big Chill and tickets are available from: www.bigchill.net/festival.html

Meanwhile, the cast of ‘The Mighty Boosh’ will be signing DVD copies of the third series of the show at HMV Oxford Street next Monday (February 11).

Noel Fielding and Julian Barratt will be at the store from 12.30pm, along with Rich Fulcher (Bob Fossil), Dave Brown (Bollo) and Mike Fielding (Naboo).

Pic credit: Andy Fallon