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Cut Of The Day: Rihanna Is Made Over By Biffy Clyro

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Scottish rockers Biffy Clyro have caused a bit of a stir on the world wide web with their cover of Rhianna's global smash 'Umbrella'. Recorded for Radio 1's Live Lounge, the track has started appearing on several sites. Biffy's version is a stripped down acoustic version, and all the better for it. It will get stuck in your head. Check it out here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGkYpxT4f08&rel=1 If you have trouble viewing the embedded video above, click here.

Scottish rockers Biffy Clyro have caused a bit of a stir on the world wide web with their cover of Rhianna‘s global smash ‘Umbrella’.

Recorded for Radio 1’s Live Lounge, the track has started appearing on several sites.

Biffy’s version is a stripped down acoustic version, and all the better for it. It will get stuck in your head.

Check it out here:

If you have trouble viewing the embedded video above, click here.

Cloverfield

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Welcome to Cloverfield, the first blockbuster of 2008, and one of the most anticipated movies of recent years. As with The Blair Witch Project and Snakes On A Plane, the film makers have deployed all manner of viral marketing campaigns to whip fanboys into a froth, launching dummy websites, MySpace profiles, teaser trailers and, most recently, they’ve put on the web five minutes of footage from the film. Chat rooms and magazines (both online and of the dead tree variety) have feverishly attempted to decipher clues about the film: is it a remake of South Korean film The Host or an adaptation of an HP Lovecraft story, even a spin-off from Lost? Or is it, um, just a teens-in-peril monster movie with a gimmicky marketing strategy? Click here for UNCUT's First Look blog from Associate Editor Michael Bonner. The film opens today... Come back and tell what you think of it. www.cloverfieldmovie.com cloverfieldclues.blogspot.com www.cloverfieldnews.com UNCUT recommends the following new films, click on the titles for our reviews: Things We Lost In The Fire - Benicio Del Torro, Halle Berry and David Duchovny star in Sam Mendes produced new flick. Juno - Oscar-nominated comedy about teen pregnancy. There Will Be Blood - Daniel Day-Lewis stars in a monumental work of American gothic about greed, oil and murder. Plus! There are over 1500 archived film reviews in the UNCUT.CO.UK film section! click here for www.uncut.co.uk/film/reviews

Welcome to Cloverfield, the first blockbuster of 2008, and one of the most anticipated movies of recent years.

As with The Blair Witch Project and Snakes On A Plane, the film makers have deployed all manner of viral marketing campaigns to whip fanboys into a froth, launching dummy websites, MySpace profiles, teaser trailers and, most recently, they’ve put on the web five minutes of footage from the film. Chat rooms and magazines (both online and of the dead tree variety) have feverishly attempted to decipher clues about the film: is it a remake of South Korean film The Host or an adaptation of an HP Lovecraft story, even a spin-off from Lost? Or is it, um, just a teens-in-peril monster movie with a gimmicky marketing strategy?

Click here for UNCUT’s First Look blog from Associate Editor Michael Bonner.

The film opens today… Come back and tell what you think of it.

www.cloverfieldmovie.com

cloverfieldclues.blogspot.com

www.cloverfieldnews.com

UNCUT recommends the following new films, click on the titles for our reviews:

Things We Lost In The Fire – Benicio Del Torro, Halle Berry and David Duchovny star in Sam Mendes produced new flick.

Juno – Oscar-nominated comedy about teen pregnancy.

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

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

Iron Maiden Kick Off World Tour Tonight

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Iron Maiden are the first rockers to fly their own aeroplane -- complete with all their crew and equipment -- on a 19 world city tour, with trained commercial pilot, and the band's singer Bruce Dickinson as pilot. The plane, christened 'Ed Force One' by fans, after Iron Maiden's mascot Eddie is a s...

Iron Maiden are the first rockers to fly their own aeroplane — complete with all their crew and equipment — on a 19 world city tour, with trained commercial pilot, and the band’s singer Bruce Dickinson as pilot.

The plane, christened ‘Ed Force One’ by fans, after Iron Maiden’s mascot Eddie is a specially customised Boeing 757 which will transport the band and crew 50,000 miles in the next few months.

Iron Maiden [pictured above at the Mumbai press conference yesterday]will play 45-dates on this world tour, kicking off proceedings tonight (February 1) in Mumbai, India. It’s the second time the longstanding rock band have played the city — after holding the capital’s first ever metal all-dayer concert last year.

Band manager Rod Smallwood loves the speed of the single aeroplane, despite the complications of how to fit everything together. He says “It is pretty complex to do this. You’ve got 12 tons of equipment, you’ve got 60-70 crew and you’ve got the band and their families. But with this plane, we can move quickly. On one leg of the tour we’re doing four major stadium shows in four different countries in one week. You just couldn’t do that the normal way.”

Maiden’s ‘Somewhere Back In Time‘ world tour harks back to the band’s Powerslave days. Dickinson describes the mammoth stage set up saying “We’re bringing a Monster of a show with us – pyramids, cyborgs, special effects and a setlist to blow every Maiden fan’s mind.

The tour arrives in the UK, when Iron Maiden play their first ever stadium show at Twickenham Statium on July 5.

Click here for more details about the tour and for the full list of Iron Maiden tour dates in 2008

Find out how you can fly with Bruce and co. on Ed Force One to selected European tour dates at www.ironmaiden.com

Pic credit: PA Photos

The Beatles To Be Beamed Into Space

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A Beatles' classic 'Across The Universe' is to become the first ever song beamed directly into space next week, as part of US Space Agency NASA's 50th birthday celebrations. The Lennon/McCartney penned track which appears on the 1970 album 'Let It Be' - also celebrating it's 40th anniversary, having been recorded at Abbey Road in 1968 - will be transmitted through the Deep Space Network of antennas aimed at North Star Polaris. Former Beatle Sir Paul McCartney has said in a message to NASA "Well done. Send my love to the aliens" reports BBC news. John Lennon's widow, Yoko Ono, has also commented on the feat, saying: "I see this as the beginning of the new age in which we will communicate with billions of planets across the universe." 'Across The Universe' will be transmitted at midnight GMT this Monday (February 4) and Beatles fans around the world are being asked to mark the occasion by playing the track at the same time.

A Beatles‘ classic ‘Across The Universe’ is to become the first ever song beamed directly into space next week, as part of US Space Agency NASA‘s 50th birthday celebrations.

The Lennon/McCartney penned track which appears on the 1970 album ‘Let It Be’ – also celebrating it’s 40th anniversary, having been recorded at Abbey Road in 1968 – will be transmitted through the Deep Space Network of antennas aimed at North Star Polaris.

Former Beatle Sir Paul McCartney has said in a message to NASA “Well done. Send my love to the aliens” reports BBC news.

John Lennon’s widow, Yoko Ono, has also commented on the feat, saying: “I see this as the beginning of the new age in which we will communicate with billions of planets across the universe.”

‘Across The Universe’ will be transmitted at midnight GMT this Monday (February 4) and Beatles fans around the world are being asked to mark the occasion by playing the track at the same time.

American Music Club Confirmed for Spanish Festival

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American Music Club head the list of the second round of artists added to this year's FIB Heineken Festival bill. Spiritualized and The National will also be joining previously announced performers My Bloody Valentine and Babyshambles at the four day festival which takes place from July 17-20 in Be...

American Music Club head the list of the second round of artists added to this year’s FIB Heineken Festival bill.

Spiritualized and The National will also be joining previously announced performers My Bloody Valentine and Babyshambles at the four day festival which takes place from July 17-20 in Benicassim, Spain.

The full list of new additions to the billing are:

American Music Club

José González

Metope

Metronomy

The National

The New Pornographers

Robert Babicz

Siouxsie

Spiritualized

Vive La Fête

The 2007 event saw bands such as Muse, Arctic Monkeys, The B-52s and Iggy and the Stooges perform.

Click here for more festival information and to buy tickets: tickets.fiberfib.com

For more on American Music Club – read an in-depth interview with Mark Eitzel in the March edition of UNCUT magazine – on sale now.

Pic credit: Sam Jones

REM’s “Accelerate” – Some Questions Answered. . .

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Thanks for all your comments on the REM blog I posted yesterday. I thought it might be useful if I tried to answer a few of your questions – as best as I can, anyway. Comment from: Paul What did you think of “Sing For The Submarine”? Is it that it's a bad song or just that it drags on for too long? It’s OK, Paul, though maybe the second weakest song on the album after “I’m Gonna DJ”. It’d certainly benefit from the sort of ruthless editing that’s been applied to most of the other tunes. But it’s also one of those slightly overblown, slowish tunes which have been so common on the previous two albums. Comment from: Nigel W What were your three good songs on “Around The Sun”, by the way? “Leaving New York” and “Boy In The Well” were the two I singled out for praise at the time. Yeah, those two are good songs, and I also liked “High Speed Train”: it reminds me of some of the more interesting diversions on “Up”- which Daniel rightly praises in a comment at the end of this blog, incidentally. Comment from: Adrian Hi John, What is “Hollow Man” like? A bit of a tease, actually, since it starts like one of those sombre piano songs so beloved of latterday REM, then abruptly kicks off into something faster and guitar-heavy. Comment from: Kirsten Davis Would you say there is a chance it could go down with some of REM's best work? Well, it’s a good record and, as I said, the best since “New Adventures”. I can’t imagine that I’m going to reach for this instead of, say, “Murmur”, in a couple of years’ time. But as I’m sure many of you’ll agree, REM’s very best work is of such a daunting standard that it’s unrealistic to think even a relative return to form could measure up. Comment from: DemonAndrew “’Accelerate’, in fact, sounds like the record REM’s fans wanted them to make, not necessarily the record REM may have wanted to make.” That reminds me of what I think of U2's albums since "Pop", both of which are dire. Big hopes that REM aren't falling into the same trap.” Good point, DemonAndrew, and it definitely feels like REM are trying very hard – and once or twice, like when Stipe starts namedropping old song titles in “Sing To The Submarine”, way too hard – to please the fans. But I actually think “Around The Sun” was that record, since they obviously wanted to tap into the gravitas of “Automatic For The People” on that one. Those U2 albums are consciously in thrall to the most commercially successful records of their career. REM here sound much more interested in recapturing the feel of “These Days” rather than “Everybody Hurts”. Comment from: Another Inevitable Question John: I loved "Staring Down the Barrel of the Middle Distance" from the Dublin gigs. Unfortunately, it looks like it was excluded based upon the tracklisting. Is there any chance that song was reincarnated as either "Hollow Man" or "Sing for the Submarine?" I’ve just had a look at “Staring Down The Barrel” on Youtube, and it doesn’t sound anything like those two. No idea what's happened to that one, I'm afraid.

Thanks for all your comments on the REM blog I posted yesterday. I thought it might be useful if I tried to answer a few of your questions – as best as I can, anyway.

Explosions In The Sky finally complete delayed UK tour, at London’s Astoria. (30-Jan)

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With the Texan flag pinned proudly to their stage amp, post-grunge instrumental four-piece Explosions In The Sky played a solid hour-long set to a rammed London Astoria, to finish up their long delayed UK tour last night... Explosions In The Sky are four albums, two E.Ps and a Hollywood film sou...

With the Texan flag pinned proudly to their stage amp, post-grunge instrumental four-piece Explosions In The Sky played a solid hour-long set to a rammed London Astoria, to finish up their long delayed UK tour last night…

Glastonbury Ticket Registration Begins!

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Glastonbury Festival ticket registration begins at 9am tomorrow (February 1). As last year, hopeful festival goers are required to register their details and supply a photograph, which will be printed onto tickets, to festival organisers ahead of tickets going on general sale on April 6. By regist...

Glastonbury Festival ticket registration begins at 9am tomorrow (February 1).

As last year, hopeful festival goers are required to register their details and supply a photograph, which will be printed onto tickets, to festival organisers ahead of tickets going on general sale on April 6.

By registering for a ticket there is still no guarantee you will be able to buy ticket for the festival. Last year saw 400, 000 applicants chase 177, 000 tickets — however Glastonbury organiser Michael Eavis claims the proceedure did help beat the ticket touts.

Eavis has previously explained, “I want to keep up the momentum we gathered last year by stopping ticket touting altogether – thank you for being so supportive of our registration process, which is after all quite tedious. I appreciate it so much”.

The registration period is live until midnight on March 14.

You can register in the following ways:

By going online at: http://www.glastonburyregistration.co.uk

By collecting a registration form: From branches of Millets nationwide.

Shop locator is available here at www.millets.co.uk.

People picking up forms from Millets will be entered into a prize draw to win a pair of the highly sought-after Glasto tickets.

Neil Diamond is the first artist to be confirmed to play on the Pyramid stage. The legendary American songwriter will play the Sunday evening slot, which Dame Shirley Bassey occupied last year.

As is customary, the full line-up will only be announced after tickets to the music bash have sold-out.

This year’s festival takes place June 27-29.

Pic credit: PA Photos

Jeremy Beadle 1948 – 2008

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Television presenter and comic Jeremy Beadle died yesterday (January 30) after being admitted to hospital with pneumonia on January 25. Prior to Beadle's hugely successful TV career, with credits for prank shows Beadle's About and You've Been Framed, the presenter was also responsible for organising the 1972 Bickershaw Festival, bringing Captain Beefheart and The Magic Band to the UK to play live for the first time. Then a student, Beadle organised several US psych-rock bands to come play a muddy field just outside Wigan. Headlined by The Grateful Dead, other artists on the bill also included The Incredible String Band, The Kinks, New Riders Of The Purple Sage and Donovan. Beadle was also well-known for his charity work, raising an estimated £100 million pounds for different organisations, including Children With Leukaemia and Reach, for children with arm and hand disabiities. The cult TV celebrity was awarded an MBE for his services to charity in 2001. Pic credit: PA Photos

Television presenter and comic Jeremy Beadle died yesterday (January 30) after being admitted to hospital with pneumonia on January 25.

Prior to Beadle’s hugely successful TV career, with credits for prank shows Beadle’s About and You’ve Been Framed, the presenter was also responsible for organising the 1972 Bickershaw Festival, bringing Captain Beefheart and The Magic Band to the UK to play live for the first time.

Then a student, Beadle organised several US psych-rock bands to come play a muddy field just outside Wigan. Headlined by The Grateful Dead, other artists on the bill also included The Incredible String Band, The Kinks, New Riders Of The Purple Sage and Donovan.

Beadle was also well-known for his charity work, raising an estimated £100 million pounds for different organisations, including Children With Leukaemia and Reach, for children with arm and hand disabiities.

The cult TV celebrity was awarded an MBE for his services to charity in 2001.

Pic credit: PA Photos

Explosions In The Sky Curated ATP Weekend Takes Shape

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Animal Collective, De La Soul, Battles and Saul Williams have been added to the Explosions In The Sky - curated All Tomorrow's Parties weekend. They join previously announced bands including And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of The Dead, Silver Jews and Dinosaur Jr at the three day festival which t...

Animal Collective, De La Soul, Battles and Saul Williams have been added to the Explosions In The Sky – curated All Tomorrow’s Parties weekend.

They join previously announced bands including And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of The Dead, Silver Jews and Dinosaur Jr at the three day festival which takes place at Butlins Minehead from May 16 to 18.

Details of ATP weekend one, taking place the preceeding week from May 9 -11 will see bands such as The Hold Steady, Howlin’ Rain and Hot Chip play the Pitchfork media co-curated with ATP event, are available from www.atpfestival.com.

More bands for both weekend’s line-ups will be announced through the coming months.

Tickets, priced at £140 for 3-days incl. accomodation for the All Tomorrow’s Parties can be purchased directly through www.atpfestival.com and are available in blocks of 4,5,6,7 or 8.

Explosions In The Sky are currently on a five month world tour, and played London’s Astoria venue last night (January 30).

For Uncut’s review of the final gig of their rescheduled from last Summer, UK tour, CLICK HERE.

The full list of bands confirmed for the EITS weekend so far are now:

Explosions In The Sky

Animal Collective

Polvo

Broken Social Scene

Iron and Wine

Dinosaur Jr.

Eluvium

Ola Podrida

Lazarus

A Hawk and A Hacksaw

The Paper Chase

Four Tet

Ghostface Killah

Western Keys

Adem

…And You Will Know Us By The Trail of Dead

The Silver Jews

Mono

Jens Lekman

Tony Teardrop

The Drift

The National

Liars

Sunset Rubdown

Lichens

Stars of the Lid

Saul Williams

Battles

De La Soul

New Album Reviews Online Now

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www.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. ...

www.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.

This week’s new reviews for albums released on Monday (February 4) now online include:

Hot Chip – Made In The Dark – the band return with their eagerly awaited third long player.

Vampire Weekend – Vampire Weekend – Hyped New Yorkers deliver strong debut.

Adele – 19 – The new Amy Winehouse? Erm. Possibly not. See why here.

Shelby Lynne – Just A Little Lovin’ – Lynne takes advice from pal Barry Manilow, and takes her lead from Dusty Springfield.

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

Lightspeed Champion – Falling Off The Lavender Bridge – Current NME cover star, Dev Hynes is an inspiration.

Radiohead – In Rainbows Discbox/ USB collection

Magnetic Fields – Distortion

Wu-Tang Clan – 8 Diagrams

Plus reissues worth checking out include:

Van Morrison – Tupelo Honey

Counting Crows – August And Everything After – Reissue

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

REM’s “Accelerate”

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OK, then, I must admit I’ve been sceptical about this one, so disillusioned by “Around The Sun” (three good, if woefully overproduced, songs notwithstanding) that I didn’t even bother to check out any bootlegs of those “live rehearsal” gigs from Dublin last year. . . More fool me, it transpires. If “Around The Sun” was a glossy attempt to update the moods of “Automatic For The People”, “Accelerate” looks further back into REM’s terrific back catalogue for inspiration. The mixture of crunch and jangle from Peter Buck, the generally speedier pace, Michael Stipe stuffing far too many words into each line while Mike Mills gamely tries to keep up with his harmonies, the attractive gothic woodiness of the folk ballads – all this reminds me a lot of how the band sounded circa “Lifes Rich Pageant” and “Document”. It’d be mighty rash to suggest “Accelerate” was the equal of those albums, but it certainly draws on their energies. This is not a perfect record, by any stretch, but it is one that improves with every listen, and which this morning sounds pretty much like the best REM effort since “New Adventures In Hi-Fi” (and I like “Up” and “Reveal” more than most critics, I suspect). The opener, “Living Well’s The Best Revenge” is, I think, the most straightforwardly exciting song they’ve recorded since “So Fast, So Numb”, a breathless hurtle which seems designed to prove they’re still capable of this dynamic, heady, heavily-textured kind of rock. It’s a point which’ll be made ad nauseam in reviews of “Accelerate”, but Buck’s return to electric prominence is both striking and massively welcome. I remember interviews with Stipe and Mills circa “Around The Sun” talked of how Buck busied himself in the studio stocking up their iPods. This time, mercifully, he seems to have contributed a lot more – or contributed a lot more of the sound which REM’s fans generally want from him – to the record. “Accelerate”, in fact, sounds like the record REM’s fans wanted them to make, not necessarily the record REM may have wanted to make. It’s a small complaint, I guess, when professional pragmatism sounds as good as this. I don’t want to write too much on the specific tracks, not least because I’ve got a very long review to file for the mag in the next few days. But it’s just under 35 minutes long, and only one of the 11 tracks (“Sing For The Submarine”) outlasts its welcome. “I’m Gonna DJ” you’ll probably know from recent tours and last year’s live album; it’s the worst song here, I think. Besides “Living Well’s The Best Revenge”, I’m currently taken with “Mansized Wreath” (improbably funky work from Mills), the fuzzed-out raga of “Mr Richards” (shades of “Time After Time” maybe) and another breakneck thriller called “Horse To Water”. If anyone saw the Dublin shows or has listened to the bootlegs, let me know what you think. Judging by "Accelerate", I really should have believed the hype.

OK, then, I must admit I’ve been sceptical about this one, so disillusioned by “Around The Sun” (three good, if woefully overproduced, songs notwithstanding) that I didn’t even bother to check out any bootlegs of those “live rehearsal” gigs from Dublin last year. . . More fool me, it transpires.

Hot Chip – Made In The Dark

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Ever since Hot Chip's second album, 'The Warning', came out in May 2006, they've become a stimulating presence in British pop. A studio collective with a workshop mentality, in that time the five have overseen scores of remixes, wild DJ sets, memorable gigs, a Mercury nomination and an edifyingly funky 'DJ Kicks' set. Nor should it be forgotten that for thousands affected by new rave, Hot Chip were by default the awkward but lovable go-to guys at the indie/dance interface. Now they've stepped up a level. On this rich and touching album they confidently draw upon their diverse influences and individual skill sets in new, often inventive ways without spoiling the delicate nature of their songs. Driven by digital calypso, for example, "One Pure Thought" and "Ready For The Floor" are giddy highlights, as syrupy as Tom Tom Club. On the rare occasion Hot Chip do get carried away by synth squelches and R&B belches, this leads to the record's sloppier moments, "Shake A Fist" and "Bendable Poseable", tracks most groups would kill to have written. On first listen, much of 'Made In The Dark' is a noisy barrage of ideas, but these discreetly reveal themselves over time. Raucous opener "Out At The Pictures" finds Alexis Taylor singing about the delights of Wetherspoons pubs ("It's on every street, it's fucking cheap", he begins). During the exceedlingly danceable electro-house section of "Don't Dance", Taylor chants the title as the chorus, as if to to confound the ravers. If they're comfortable with the humour this time, it's worth noting that the record is also a good deal smoochier than 'Coming On Strong' or 'The Warning'. Taylor, a newlywed, explores his familiar themes of love and intimacy on "We're Looking For A Lot Of Love" and "In The Privacy Of Our Love". The cuddly interplay of his reedy voice and Joe Goddard's anchoring baritone suggests he's as content with his wife as he is his music-making partner. As a listener, it’s equally hard not to feel the love. With Hot Chip, it now feels like the right time to commit. PIERS MARTIN Q&A WITH HOT CHIP'S ALEXIS TAYLOR: UNCUT: Your thoughts on 'Made In The Dark'? TAYLOR: Well, every one of our albums feels like we try and make each song quite stylistically different from the next, but I don't think that's a conscious decision. That's just something me and Joe (Goddard) have always done. This album is more extreme than the last two, more varied and more kind of wobbly and confusing. But having said all of that, we think it works. Have you taken into account what Hot Chip has become? Recently we played in Brazil, we met Bjork, and that was a nice moment. Watching her performance from the side of the stage, I suddenly felt really proud to have reached a position where I was on the side of the stage watching Bjork because I was making music that people wanted to hear in Brazil. So it kind of felt like a long way from Putney. INTERVIEW: PIERS MARTIN

Ever since Hot Chip‘s second album, ‘The Warning’, came out in May 2006, they’ve become a stimulating presence in British pop. A studio collective with a workshop mentality, in that time the five have overseen scores of remixes, wild DJ sets, memorable gigs, a Mercury nomination and an edifyingly funky ‘DJ Kicks’ set. Nor should it be forgotten that for thousands affected by new rave, Hot Chip were by default the awkward but lovable go-to guys at the indie/dance interface. Now they’ve stepped up a level.

On this rich and touching album they confidently draw upon their diverse influences and individual skill sets in new, often inventive ways without spoiling the delicate nature of their songs. Driven by digital calypso, for example, “One Pure Thought” and “Ready For The Floor” are giddy highlights, as syrupy as Tom Tom Club. On the rare occasion Hot Chip do get carried away by synth squelches and R&B belches, this leads to the record’s sloppier moments, “Shake A Fist” and “Bendable Poseable”, tracks most groups would kill to have written.

On first listen, much of ‘Made In The Dark’ is a noisy barrage of ideas, but these discreetly reveal themselves over time. Raucous opener “Out At The Pictures” finds Alexis Taylor singing about the delights of Wetherspoons pubs (“It’s on every street, it’s fucking cheap”, he begins). During the exceedlingly danceable electro-house section of “Don’t Dance”, Taylor chants the title as the chorus, as if to to confound the ravers.

If they’re comfortable with the humour this time, it’s worth noting that the record is also a good deal smoochier than ‘Coming On Strong’ or ‘The Warning’. Taylor, a newlywed, explores his familiar themes of love and intimacy on “We’re Looking For A Lot Of Love” and “In The Privacy Of Our Love”. The cuddly interplay of his reedy voice and Joe Goddard’s anchoring baritone suggests he’s as content with his wife as he is his music-making partner. As a listener, it’s equally hard not to feel the love. With Hot Chip, it now feels like the right time to commit.

PIERS MARTIN

Q&A WITH HOT CHIP’S ALEXIS TAYLOR:

UNCUT: Your thoughts on ‘Made In The Dark’?

TAYLOR: Well, every one of our albums feels like we try and make each song quite stylistically different from the next, but I don’t think that’s a conscious decision. That’s just something me and Joe (Goddard) have always done. This album is more extreme than the last two, more varied and more kind of wobbly and confusing. But having said all of that, we think it works.

Have you taken into account what Hot Chip has become?

Recently we played in Brazil, we met Bjork, and that was a nice moment. Watching her performance from the side of the stage, I suddenly felt really proud to have reached a position where I was on the side of the stage watching Bjork because I was making music that people wanted to hear in Brazil. So it kind of felt like a long way from Putney.

INTERVIEW: PIERS MARTIN

Adele – 19

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Some days it feels like we've gone back to the early '80s, when every other month would produce a new Best White Soul Voice You've Never Heard, a boy or girl who'd in due course turn out to be Just Another Cravenly Ambitious Pop Star. They all got the treatment – Mick Hucknall and Marti Pellow, Alison Moyet and Lisa Stansfield – and nobody gives a toss about 'em today. In the wake of Amy Winehouse – who turned out to be the real thing after all – labels great and small scrambled to find their own mockney-soul diarist-exhibitionists. The biggest hype thus far has been bestowed on 19-year-old Adele Atkins, pride of West Norwood and owner of a larynx whose vocal range uncannily replicates the timbre and catch-in-the-throat hoarseness of the amazing Amy W. Actually, what Atkins sounds like is Winehouse infused with the suburban street smarts of Jamie T, who released the first Adele single ("Hometown Glory") on his own Pacemaker label. Allowed this gnarled rock-scribe veteran a measure of scepticism. Adele can certainly sing, but '19' reeks of some A&R trendhound making it his/her biz to sign The New Amy and not resting till s/he's found the right chick from South London to fit the bill. Where 'Back to Black' sounded emotionally and musically true, almost everything on the covers-all-bases '19' sounds like it was absorbed by osmosis at the BRIT School (where she and Winehouse are alumni). Veering between faux-soul and Hoxton hipness, Adele simply hasn't found her own voice yet. The acoustic tracks that open the LP are awful: "Daydreamer", about a bisexual beau, is ickily trite, "Best For Last" barely fit for a Heather Small cover. New single "Chasing Pavements" is a crisp little pop song that gives equally-tipped British singer Duffy a run for her money in the sub-Dusty stakes, but does no more than that. "Cold Shoulder" is Lisa Stansfield via Winehouse; "Crazy for You" wants to be Patsy Cline via Etta James but isn't. The cover of Dylan's "Make You Feel My Love" is as emotionally vapid as Trisha Yearwood's. Maybe Atkins just needs to live a little longer – or at least find her own Blake Fielder-Civil. It takes more than clubbing with Kate Nash and Jack Penate to be a genuine contender. BARNEY HOSKYNS

Some days it feels like we’ve gone back to the early ’80s, when every other month would produce a new Best White Soul Voice You’ve Never Heard, a boy or girl who’d in due course turn out to be Just Another Cravenly Ambitious Pop Star. They all got the treatment – Mick Hucknall and Marti Pellow, Alison Moyet and Lisa Stansfield – and nobody gives a toss about ’em today.

In the wake of Amy Winehouse – who turned out to be the real thing after all – labels great and small scrambled to find their own mockney-soul diarist-exhibitionists. The biggest hype thus far has been bestowed on 19-year-old Adele Atkins, pride of West Norwood and owner of a larynx whose vocal range uncannily replicates the timbre and catch-in-the-throat hoarseness of the amazing Amy W. Actually, what Atkins sounds like is Winehouse infused with the suburban street smarts of Jamie T, who released the first Adele single (“Hometown Glory”) on his own Pacemaker label.

Allowed this gnarled rock-scribe veteran a measure of scepticism. Adele can certainly sing, but ’19’ reeks of some A&R trendhound making it his/her biz to sign The New Amy and not resting till s/he’s found the right chick from South London to fit the bill. Where ‘Back to Black’ sounded emotionally and musically true, almost everything on the covers-all-bases ’19’ sounds like it was absorbed by osmosis at the BRIT School (where she and Winehouse are alumni).

Veering between faux-soul and Hoxton hipness, Adele simply hasn’t found her own voice yet. The acoustic tracks that open the LP are awful: “Daydreamer”, about a bisexual beau, is ickily trite, “Best For Last” barely fit for a Heather Small cover. New single “Chasing Pavements” is a crisp little pop song that gives equally-tipped British singer Duffy a run for her money in the sub-Dusty stakes, but does no more than that. “Cold Shoulder” is Lisa Stansfield via Winehouse; “Crazy for You” wants to be Patsy Cline via Etta James but isn’t. The cover of Dylan’s “Make You Feel My Love” is as emotionally vapid as Trisha Yearwood’s.

Maybe Atkins just needs to live a little longer – or at least find her own Blake Fielder-Civil. It takes more than clubbing with Kate Nash and Jack Penate to be a genuine contender.

BARNEY HOSKYNS

Vampire Weekend – Vampire Weekend

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It’s almost 'de rigeur' for a debut album to convey anti-authoritarian attitude, and that by Vampire Weekend is no exception. However, rather than The Man, the government, or even the parents, this is a band who save their disdain for the punctuation. “Who gives a fuck about an Oxford comma,” frontman Ezra Koenig declares in "Oxford Comma". "I've seen those English dramas too…" This, self-evidently is not the work of a studiedly cooler-than-thou group. If history has taught us to find the archetypal New York band slouched in an alley, Vampire Weekend seem more likely to be found upstate in the Hamptons, reading novels on a yacht. Refusing to conform to rock archetypes, even styles – like Brooklyn neighbors Dirty Projectors and Yeasayer their debut features African flavours – VW show themselves possessed of great strength of character, unafraid to wear their hearts, or their intelligence on their sleeves. Duly, punctuation is not the only unexplored territory which the Columbia University graduates set out to claim as their own here. From neo-baroque revival architecture ("Mansard Roof") to types of Congolese music ("Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa"), Koenig's songs originate in some decidedly left-field subjects, without Vampire Weekend ever becoming wacky. Though undoubtedly collegiate, this is far superior to what we've come to know as "college rock". Instead, the band play a smart, sometimes shy, but still curiously hip indie, which has steadily gathered heat through 2007. The band have described it as "Upper West Side Soweto", and “A-Punk” nicely shows why. Just as impressive, though are “Campus”, where they come across like a coyer version of The Walkmen, “M79”, a chamber pop classic redolent of The Kinks, or “Walcott”, which could be an affluent Clinic. Throughout, the songs serve a pertinent reminder that Americana can be as much Scott Fitzgerald as Hemingway, and comprise white collar anthems aswell as blue. Cosmopolitan, anglophile, afrobeat – Vampire Weekend are in an Ivy League of their own. JOHN ROBINSON

It’s almost ‘de rigeur’ for a debut album to convey anti-authoritarian attitude, and that by Vampire Weekend is no exception. However, rather than The Man, the government, or even the parents, this is a band who save their disdain for the punctuation. “Who gives a fuck about an Oxford comma,” frontman Ezra Koenig declares in “Oxford Comma”. “I’ve seen those English dramas too…”

This, self-evidently is not the work of a studiedly cooler-than-thou group. If history has taught us to find the archetypal New York band slouched in an alley, Vampire Weekend seem more likely to be found upstate in the Hamptons, reading novels on a yacht. Refusing to conform to rock archetypes, even styles – like Brooklyn neighbors Dirty Projectors and Yeasayer their debut features African flavours – VW show themselves possessed of great strength of character, unafraid to wear their hearts, or their intelligence on their sleeves.

Duly, punctuation is not the only unexplored territory which the Columbia University graduates set out to claim as their own here. From neo-baroque revival architecture (“Mansard Roof”) to types of Congolese music (“Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa”), Koenig’s songs originate in some decidedly left-field subjects, without Vampire Weekend ever becoming wacky. Though undoubtedly collegiate, this is far superior to what we’ve come to know as “college rock”.

Instead, the band play a smart, sometimes shy, but still curiously hip indie, which has steadily gathered heat through 2007. The band have described it as “Upper West Side Soweto”, and “A-Punk” nicely shows why. Just as impressive, though are “Campus”, where they come across like a coyer version of The Walkmen, “M79”, a chamber pop classic redolent of The Kinks, or “Walcott”, which could be an affluent Clinic.

Throughout, the songs serve a pertinent reminder that Americana can be as much Scott Fitzgerald as Hemingway, and comprise white collar anthems aswell as blue. Cosmopolitan, anglophile, afrobeat – Vampire Weekend are in an Ivy League of their own.

JOHN ROBINSON

Shelby Lynne – Just A Little Lovin’

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Having drawn Dusty Springfield comparisons for some time now, it was odds-on that Shelby Lynne would have a record like Just A Little Lovin’ in mind. But the surrounding circumstances were less predictable. Originally suggested by friend and fan Barry Manilow, these nine Springfield-famous covers (and one original, “Pretend”) were Lynne’s solution to Capitol Records’ lack of conviction over last LP 'Suit Yourself'. Everyone loves Dusty, she figured. Which brings its own baggage. Vowing to steer clear of untouchables like “Son Of A Preacher Man”, Lynne’s song selection is key. There’s a case for avoiding “I Only Want To Be With You” and “Anyone Who Had A Heart” too, but the results are remarkably good. In squeezing all the Saturday night/Sunday morning feel from the originals, she refashions them into doleful folk-soul songs. Instead of strings and choirs, producer Phil Ramone relies on piano and spare tones of jazzy guitar. So the title track, for instance, now sounds like a mournful elegy rather than the gospel celebration of its 'Dusty In Memphis' forebear. It might all be too restrained for those craving the robustness of 2000’s breakthrough LP 'I Am Shelby Lynne', but effortless elegance is the order here. There’s added vulnerability too, mindful of lapsing into self-pity. Instead of Memphis Horns and weary euphoria, “Breakfast In Bed” is hushed guitar, piano and Lynne’s torchy lament. And she seems to find new meaning in Tony Joe White’s “Willie & Laura Mae Jones”, which could have been swiped from Bobbie Gentry’s songbook. If there’s something odd about an authentic Southern girl reworking a singer from Ealing who longed to emulate her American heroes, then it’s perhaps best to judge this record on its own merit. Which, as it turns out, is very high indeed. ROB HUGHES

Having drawn Dusty Springfield comparisons for some time now, it was odds-on that Shelby Lynne would have a record like Just A Little Lovin’ in mind. But the surrounding circumstances were less predictable. Originally suggested by friend and fan Barry Manilow, these nine Springfield-famous covers (and one original, “Pretend”) were Lynne’s solution to Capitol Records’ lack of conviction over last LP ‘Suit Yourself’. Everyone loves Dusty, she figured.

Which brings its own baggage. Vowing to steer clear of untouchables like “Son Of A Preacher Man”, Lynne’s song selection is key. There’s a case for avoiding “I Only Want To Be With You” and “Anyone Who Had A Heart” too, but the results are remarkably good. In squeezing all the Saturday night/Sunday morning feel from the originals, she refashions them into doleful folk-soul songs. Instead of strings and choirs, producer Phil Ramone relies on piano and spare tones of jazzy guitar. So the title track, for instance, now sounds like a mournful elegy rather than the gospel celebration of its ‘Dusty In Memphis’ forebear.

It might all be too restrained for those craving the robustness of 2000’s breakthrough LP ‘I Am Shelby Lynne’, but effortless elegance is the order here. There’s added vulnerability too, mindful of lapsing into self-pity. Instead of Memphis Horns and weary euphoria, “Breakfast In Bed” is hushed guitar, piano and Lynne’s torchy lament. And she seems to find new meaning in Tony Joe White’s “Willie & Laura Mae Jones”, which could have been swiped from Bobbie Gentry’s songbook.

If there’s something odd about an authentic Southern girl reworking a singer from Ealing who longed to emulate her American heroes, then it’s perhaps best to judge this record on its own merit. Which, as it turns out, is very high indeed.

ROB HUGHES

My Bloody Valentine Confirmed For Roskilde Festival

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My Bloody Valentine have confirmed their second European festival appearance for this Summer. The recently reformed shoegazers are to play the Roskilde Festival, near Copenhagen which takes place between July 3 and 6. My Bloody Valentine, who will play their first live shows in 16 years this June,...

My Bloody Valentine have confirmed their second European festival appearance for this Summer.

The recently reformed shoegazers are to play the Roskilde Festival, near Copenhagen which takes place between July 3 and 6.

My Bloody Valentine, who will play their first live shows in 16 years this June, starting at London’s Roundhouse on June 20, will join previously announced Roskilde headliner’s Radiohead.

MBV are also set to play Spanish festival FIB Benicassim, which takes place from July 17 to 20.

Other acts so far confirmed for Roskilde are The Chemical Brothers, Yeasayer, and Holy Fuck.

More information about the festival, and to buy tickets, click here for www.roskilde-festival.dk

R.E.M’s Accelerate – Read The First Preview Here!

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As previously reported, R.E.M's fourteenth studio album, produced by U2 and Bloc Party producer Jacknife Lee is due for release on March 31. The album contains eleven tracks, including forthcoming single “Supernatural Superserious” and sees a return to the rockier sound REM abandoned on 2004’s critically panned “Around The Sun” album. The anticipation around this record is high, with much murmurings about whether 'Accelerate' will see a 'return-to-form' for the trio -- to find out what Uncut Deputy Editor John Mulvey thinks - check out his first preview of R.E.M's 'Accelerate' by clicking here for the Wild Mercury Sound blog. R.E.M's North American tour dates recently announced, supported by Modest Mouse and The National are: Vancouver Deer Lake Park (May 23) Los Angeles Hollywood Bowl (29) Berkeley Greek Theatre (31) Denver Red Rocks Ampitheatre (June 3) Chicago United Center (6) Toronto Molson Ampitheatre (8) Raleigh Walnut Creek Amptheatre (10) Washington Merriweather Post Pavilion (11) Boston Tweeter Center (13) Long Island Jones Beach Theater (14) Philadelphia Mann Center (18) New York City venue TBC (19) Atlanta Lakewood Ampitheatre (21)

As previously reported, R.E.M‘s fourteenth studio album, produced by U2 and Bloc Party producer Jacknife Lee is due for release on March 31.

The album contains eleven tracks, including forthcoming single “Supernatural Superserious” and sees a return to the rockier sound REM abandoned on 2004’s critically panned “Around The Sun” album.

The anticipation around this record is high, with much murmurings about whether ‘Accelerate’ will see a ‘return-to-form’ for the trio — to find out what Uncut Deputy Editor John Mulvey thinks – check out his first preview of R.E.M’s ‘Accelerate’ by clicking here for the Wild Mercury Sound blog.

R.E.M’s North American tour dates recently announced, supported by Modest Mouse and The National are:

Vancouver Deer Lake Park (May 23)

Los Angeles Hollywood Bowl (29)

Berkeley Greek Theatre (31)

Denver Red Rocks Ampitheatre (June 3)

Chicago United Center (6)

Toronto Molson Ampitheatre (8)

Raleigh Walnut Creek Amptheatre (10)

Washington Merriweather Post Pavilion (11)

Boston Tweeter Center (13)

Long Island Jones Beach Theater (14)

Philadelphia Mann Center (18)

New York City venue TBC (19)

Atlanta Lakewood Ampitheatre (21)

Rare Led Zep Footage To Be Broadcast In New Classic Rock Series

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Archive TV footage of legendary rock artists such as Led Zeppelin, The Beatles and Jimi Hendrix is to be rescued from obselete Super8 and Betamax formats and cleaned up in a new deal between Rockworld.TV and the Infernal Machine music archive. The Infernal Machine archive boasts unique footage including Beatles appearances on 60s German show Beat Club and Hendrix's two appearances on the Ed Sullivan show. Aerosmith, The Who and The Grateful Dead also feature in the dense archive collection that Rockworld.TV now have access to the contents of. The obselete formats will be transfered, remastered and collated into a new Classic Rock series of programming for broadcast on Rockworld.TV set to be ready later this year. Pete Hadfield, co-founder and Joint CEO of Carnaby Media who own Rockworld.TV has said: "We are getting access to some of the most exciting music footage in existence, a great deal of which has rarely if ever been seen before, which make our broadcast offering even stronger than it is already." More information about what archive footage will be treated will be available in due course, check back to www.uncut.co.uk for more information as we get it. Rockworld.TV currently broadcasts on Sky Channel 368 and online at www.rockworld.TV Pic credit: Rex Features

Archive TV footage of legendary rock artists such as Led Zeppelin, The Beatles and Jimi Hendrix is to be rescued from obselete Super8 and Betamax formats and cleaned up in a new deal between Rockworld.TV and the Infernal Machine music archive.

The Infernal Machine archive boasts unique footage including Beatles appearances on 60s German show Beat Club and Hendrix’s two appearances on the Ed Sullivan show.

Aerosmith, The Who and The Grateful Dead also feature in the dense archive collection that Rockworld.TV now have access to the contents of.

The obselete formats will be transfered, remastered and collated into a new Classic Rock series of programming for broadcast on Rockworld.TV set to be ready later this year.

Pete Hadfield, co-founder and Joint CEO of Carnaby Media who own Rockworld.TV has said: “We are getting access to some of the most exciting music footage in existence, a great deal of which has rarely if ever been seen before, which make our broadcast offering even stronger than it is already.”

More information about what archive footage will be treated will be available in due course, check back to www.uncut.co.uk for more information as we get it.

Rockworld.TV currently broadcasts on Sky Channel 368 and online at www.rockworld.TV

Pic credit: Rex Features

Neil Young Archives – New Format Twist

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Neil Young's long saga with releasing his 'Archives' series has taken another turn, with the singer announcing that the latest delay is due to production issues. Young, speaking to US publication Hollywood Reporter at the premiere of the Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young film 'Deja Vu' at the Sundance...

Neil Young‘s long saga with releasing his ‘Archives’ series has taken another turn, with the singer announcing that the latest delay is due to production issues.

Young, speaking to US publication Hollywood Reporter at the premiere of the Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young film ‘Deja Vu’ at the Sundance Film Festival has said that the first volume will now only be presented on the new Blu-Ray format and DVD.

Young said: “I know it’s in technical production now, but it’s only coming out on Blu-ray and DVD. There won’t be CDs. Technology has caught up to what the concept was in the first place [and] how we’re able to actually present it. But there’s no doubt it will come out this year.'”

The multi-disc Archives is expected to feature previously released live sets including ‘Live At Massey Hall’ and ‘Live At The Fillmore East’ as well as never released studio tracks.

Fans of Neil Young have already been vocalising their opinions about the fact that Archives will not feature on CD format, with some accusing the singer as ‘insane’.

For more information and opinion, check out Neil Young fansite www.thrasherswheat.org by clicking here.

For the full Billboard/ Hollywood Reporter story, click here.