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Alex James Chosen As Real Food Expert

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Former Blur bassist turned cheesemaker Alex James has been chosen as a food expert for the Real Food Festival selection committee. Alex James and co-cheese producer Juliet Harbutt will be helping handpick artisan food makers to attend the festival, which takes place at London's Earl's Court from April 24-27. Alex James has commented, "Finally someone is taking a stance for the little guys….500 of the best artisan producers under one roof, why wouldn’t I be involved. You know where you’ll find me, at the cheese stand!" Others on the commitee include Rose Prince, food writer for The Daily Telegraph, Chris Walton, of Pelham Organic Farm and food writer and author Richard Johnson. More information and tickets to the Real Food Festival are available by clicking here: www.realfoodfestival.co.uk Pic credit: PA Photos

Former Blur bassist turned cheesemaker Alex James has been chosen as a food expert for the Real Food Festival selection committee.

Alex James and co-cheese producer Juliet Harbutt will be helping handpick artisan food makers to attend the festival, which takes place at London’s Earl’s Court from April 24-27.

Alex James has commented, “Finally someone is taking a stance for the little guys….500 of the best artisan producers under one roof, why wouldn’t I be involved. You know where you’ll find me, at the cheese stand!”

Others on the commitee include Rose Prince, food writer for The Daily Telegraph, Chris Walton, of Pelham Organic Farm and food writer and author Richard Johnson.

More information and tickets to the Real Food Festival are available by clicking here: www.realfoodfestival.co.uk

Pic credit: PA Photos

R.E.M Confirm North American Tour

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R.E.M. have confirmed thirteen dates of a North American tour today (January 29). The band whose fourteenth studio album 'Accelerate' is due out on March 31 in the UK and day later, April 1 in the US will go out in support of it from the end of May. For more on the album, including the track listi...

R.E.M. have confirmed thirteen dates of a North American tour today (January 29).

The band whose fourteenth studio album ‘Accelerate’ is due out on March 31 in the UK and day later, April 1 in the US will go out in support of it from the end of May.

For more on the album, including the track listing click here for Uncut’s previous news story.

Modest Mouse and The National have been hand-picked by the band to be the support bands on all of the dates.

Tour dates announced so far 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)

Grant Lee Phillips To Kick Off European Tour In UK

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Grant-Lee Phillips has announced that he will play two solo shows in the UK this April. Starting his European Ballads Tour, Phillips will play Galsgow's King Tut's venue on April 25 and London's The Scala on April 27. Speaking about performing this time without a full band, Phillips says, "I have ...

Grant-Lee Phillips has announced that he will play two solo shows in the UK this April.

Starting his European Ballads Tour, Phillips will play Galsgow’s King Tut’s venue on April 25 and London’s The Scala on April 27.

Speaking about performing this time without a full band, Phillips says, “I have always found my acoustic shows to be rewarding in a unique way. The truth is, regardless of what path an album’s production may eventually take, for me the writing almost always begins with the voice and the guitar. That is my hammer and chisel, the most basic tools. I also love the freedom that simplicity allows. That is a big one for me. A song should be alive, open to new inspiration and interpretation. That is the beauty of going it alone, one man? six strings?”

Phillips’ fifth solo studio album ‘Strangelet’, was released last year, his first new material in seven years.

The full Ballads Tour dates are:

Glasgow, King Tuts (April 25)

London, Scala (27)

Dublin, Whelans (28)

Oslo, Rockefeller Music Hall (30)

Trondheim, Blaest (May 1)

Bergen, Hotel Norge (2)

Stavanger, Folken (3)

More information is available here: www.grantleephillips.com

The Kooks Announce Spring Tour

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The Kooks have today (January 29) announced details of a full UK tour, to promote their forthcoming second album. 'Konk' is the follow-up to their 1.5 million selling debut 'Inside In/Inside Out' and is released through Virgin on April 14. The ten-date tour kicks off in Manchester on April 22. T...

The Kooks have today (January 29) announced details of a full UK tour, to promote their forthcoming second album.

‘Konk’ is the follow-up to their 1.5 million selling debut ‘Inside In/Inside Out’ and is released through Virgin on April 14.

The ten-date tour kicks off in Manchester on April 22.

The Kooks will play the following venues, with tickets onsale from this Friday (February 1) at 10am.

Manchester, Apollo (April 22)

Swindon, Oasis (23)

Newport, Centre (24)

Hull, Arena (25)

Birmingham, Carling Academy (27)

Sheffield, Carling Academy (28)

Edinburgh, Corn Exchange (29)

London, Brixton Academy (May 1/2)

Plymouth, Pavillions (3)

More information is available from the band’s official website, by clicking here: www.thekooks.co.uk

The Fifth Uncut Playlist Of 2008

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Some big new entries on this latest playlist, not least the arrival of REM's much-anticipated "Accelerate". I'll try and write something about the album in the next few days: morbidly suspicious as I am of all the "return to form" hype accumulating around "Accelerate", I'm beginning to think it is, actually, A Return To Form. But anyway. . . Here's what we've been playing. Dead Child, incidentally, are David Pajo and some other Slint affiliates who appear to be living out their teenage fantasies by trying to sound like Iron Maiden. 1. Various Artists - Wayfaring Strangers: Guitar Soli (Numero Group) 2. The Night Marchers - Scene Report (Myspace) 3. Boredoms - Super Roots 9 (Thrill Jockey) 4. REM - Accelerate (Warner Bros) 5. Bob Dylan - Time Out Of Mind (Columbia) 6. Michael Rother - Flammende Herzen (Water) 7. Dead Child - Attack (Quarterstick) 8. Rocket From The Crypt - Circa: Now! (Headhunter) 9. Tim Buckley - Honeyman (Edsel) 10. Various Artists - Imaginational Anthems Vol 3 (Tompkins Square) 11. Discjokke - Staying In (Smalltown Supersound) 12. Vampire Weekend - Vampire Weekend (XL) 13. Smashing Pumpkins - American Gothic EP (Reprise) 14. Nordic Nomadic - Nordic Nomadic (Blue Fog) 15. Excepter - Debt Dept. (Paw Tracks) 16. Fucked Up - Year Of The Pig (Vice)

Some big new entries on this latest playlist, not least the arrival of REM‘s much-anticipated “Accelerate”.

Arctic Monkeys Score Record NME Award Nominations

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Arctic Monkeys have been nominated in seven categories for this years Shockwave NME Awards, due to take place next month. The Sheffield band, who released their second album 'Favourite Worst Nightmare' last year are shorlisted for awards including Best British Band and Best Album. Babyshambles, Mu...

Arctic Monkeys have been nominated in seven categories for this years Shockwave NME Awards, due to take place next month.

The Sheffield band, who released their second album ‘Favourite Worst Nightmare’ last year are shorlisted for awards including Best British Band and Best Album.

Babyshambles, Muse and 2007’s Mercury Music Prize winners Klaxons are up against the Monkeys for the Best British Band prize.

Klaxons are also shorlisted in three other categories including Best Album – with The Enemy, Babyshambles and Radiohead also shortlisted.

The annual Shockwaves NME Award winners are decided by the weekly magazine’s readers, and the ceremony takes place at London’s Indigo O2 on February 28.

You can see the full list of nominees and vote by clicking here: NME.COM/awardsvote

Stephen Malkmus Fourth Album Tracklisting Revealed

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The tracklisting for Stephen Malkmus' fourth album with The Jicks since Pavement went on 'hiatus' in 1999 has been revealed today. 'Real Emotional Trash' is set for release through Domino on March 3 in the UK and March 4 in the US, just prior to a US tour which kicks off on March 19. The new ten-track album features the following songs: ‘Dragonfly Pie’ ‘Hopscotch Willie’ ‘Cold Son’ ‘Real Emotional Trash’ ‘Out of Reaches’ ‘Baltimore’ ‘Gardenia’ ‘Elmo Delmo’ ‘We Can't Help You’ ‘Wicked Wanda’ You can read Uncut's first preview of 'Real Emotional Trash' on John Mulvey's Wild Mercury Sound blog by clicking here now. The tour dates announced so far are: Minneapolis, MN - First Avenue (March 19) Milwaukee, WI - Pabst Theater (20) Chicago, IL - Vic Theatre (21) Indianapolis, IN - Vogue Theater (22) Newport, KY - Southgate House (23) Nashville, TN - Mercy Lounge (25) Atlanta, GA - Variety Playhouse (26) Washington, DC - 9:30 Club (28) Philadelphia, PA – Fillmore (29) New York, NY - Bowery Ballroom (31) Brooklyn, NY - Music Hall of Williamsburg (April 2) Boston, MA - Paradise Rock Club (3) North Adams, MA - MASS MoCA (4)

The tracklisting for Stephen Malkmus‘ fourth album with The Jicks since Pavement went on ‘hiatus’ in 1999 has been revealed today.

‘Real Emotional Trash’ is set for release through Domino on March 3 in the UK and March 4 in the US, just prior to a US tour which kicks off on March 19.

The new ten-track album features the following songs:

‘Dragonfly Pie’

‘Hopscotch Willie’

‘Cold Son’

‘Real Emotional Trash’

‘Out of Reaches’

‘Baltimore’

‘Gardenia’

‘Elmo Delmo’

‘We Can’t Help You’

‘Wicked Wanda’

You can read Uncut’s first preview of ‘Real Emotional Trash’ on John Mulvey’s Wild Mercury Sound blog by clicking here now.

The tour dates announced so far are:

Minneapolis, MN – First Avenue (March 19)

Milwaukee, WI – Pabst Theater (20)

Chicago, IL – Vic Theatre (21)

Indianapolis, IN – Vogue Theater (22)

Newport, KY – Southgate House (23)

Nashville, TN – Mercy Lounge (25)

Atlanta, GA – Variety Playhouse (26)

Washington, DC – 9:30 Club (28)

Philadelphia, PA – Fillmore (29)

New York, NY – Bowery Ballroom (31)

Brooklyn, NY – Music Hall of Williamsburg (April 2)

Boston, MA – Paradise Rock Club (3)

North Adams, MA – MASS MoCA (4)

Juno

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DIR: JASON REITMAN ST: ELLEN PAGE, JASON BATEMAN, MICHAEL CERA, JENNIFER GARNER You know a new generation's taken over American indie comedy when a schoolgirl here ridicules her teacher by making big eyes at him and sarcastically cooing, "Oh me too, I love Woody Allen." 16-year-old Juno (Page) gets knocked up, after one sexual experiment with her rather wet classmate Bleeker (Cera, from Superbad). Pragmatically, she decides to find a perfect couple who'll adopt the baby. Scanning small ads in the local paper she's drawn to Mark and Vanessa Loring (Jason Bateman and Jennifer Garner). At first this affluent suburban pair seem to be too good to be true. They are. Mark graduates from enlightening her as to the magic of Sonic Youth to taking a less wholesome, midlife-crisis-fuelled interest, while Vanessa's a Stepford wife on the verge of a nervous breakdown. "She's really beautiful," muse Juno and her best friend, "but really horrible. Like Diana Ross." Fortunately Juno has hip parents in the shape of JK Simmons and Alison Janney. Their reaction when she breaks the news of her pregnancy is, "Thank God - we thought you were going to say: hard drugs." All is eventually resolved in a vaguely romantic feel-good manner, which is the only false step this wonderfully witty, dark-hearted movie makes. Director Reitman matches the cutting cynicism he showed in Thank You For Smoking. Yet this is Page's triumph, spitting out smart-ass lines like she thought Tina Fey's Mean Girls was soft and Terry Zwigoff's Ghost World held too optimistic a world view. Juno likes The Stooges, The Runaways, gory horror movies and, well, little else. She's a prematurely ultra-sophisticated post-slacker: pregnancy, she drawls, "makes me pee like Seabiscuit". She delivers Diablo Cody's gum-snapping dialogue with precision "Hi," she announces brightly on marching up to the reception desk of a clinic, "I'm calling to procure a hasty abortion." You could argue that it cops out at the end, but that in itself would be a judgment call on a woman's choice. Somewhere between bleak art-house and Judd Apatow farce there's a perfect film to be made around these issues, and this is very nearly it. Despite an indie soundtrack so tragically fey that you're startled when Belle & Sebastian come on, it's whip-smart, cool, and very, very funny. CHRIS ROBERTS

DIR: JASON REITMAN

ST: ELLEN PAGE, JASON BATEMAN, MICHAEL CERA, JENNIFER GARNER

You know a new generation’s taken over American indie comedy when a schoolgirl here ridicules her teacher by making big eyes at him and sarcastically cooing, “Oh me too, I love Woody Allen.”

16-year-old Juno (Page) gets knocked up, after one sexual experiment with her rather wet classmate Bleeker (Cera, from Superbad).

Pragmatically, she decides to find a perfect couple who’ll adopt the baby. Scanning small ads in the local paper she’s drawn to Mark and Vanessa Loring (Jason Bateman and Jennifer Garner). At first this affluent suburban pair seem to be too good to be true. They are. Mark graduates from enlightening her as to the magic of Sonic Youth to taking a less wholesome, midlife-crisis-fuelled interest, while Vanessa’s a Stepford wife on the verge of a nervous breakdown. “She’s really beautiful,” muse Juno and her best friend, “but really horrible. Like Diana Ross.” Fortunately Juno has hip parents in the shape of JK Simmons and Alison Janney. Their reaction when she breaks the news of her pregnancy is, “Thank God – we thought you were going to say: hard drugs.” All is eventually resolved in a vaguely romantic feel-good manner, which is the only false step this wonderfully witty, dark-hearted movie makes.

Director Reitman matches the cutting cynicism he showed in Thank You For Smoking. Yet this is Page’s triumph, spitting out smart-ass lines like she thought Tina Fey’s Mean Girls was soft and Terry Zwigoff’s Ghost World held too optimistic a world view. Juno likes The Stooges, The Runaways, gory horror movies and, well, little else. She’s a prematurely ultra-sophisticated post-slacker: pregnancy, she drawls, “makes me pee like Seabiscuit”. She delivers Diablo Cody’s gum-snapping dialogue with precision “Hi,” she announces brightly on marching up to the reception desk of a clinic, “I’m calling to procure a hasty abortion.”

You could argue that it cops out at the end, but that in itself would be a judgment call on a woman’s choice. Somewhere between bleak art-house and Judd Apatow farce there’s a perfect film to be made around these issues, and this is very nearly it. Despite an indie soundtrack so tragically fey that you’re startled when Belle & Sebastian come on, it’s whip-smart, cool, and very, very funny.

CHRIS ROBERTS

There Will Be Blood

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DIRECTED BY PAUL THOMAS ANDERSON ST: DANIEL DAY LEWIS, PAUL DANO, KEVIN J O'CONNOR Synopsis: Daniel Plainview (Daniel Day Lewis) taps an ocean of oil in Little Boston, California, in 1911. But his moment of glory is marred by a feud with an evangelical preacher, Eli Sunday (Paul Dano), and an accident that deprives his adopted son HW of hearing. Daniel spurns the child, opening up to Henry (Kevin J O'Connor), his long lost brother instead... Paul Thomas Anderson has been an audacious talent from the first. He's one of those rare young American filmmakers not afraid to call himself an artist and claim the privileges bestowed by authorship: final cut, for instance... and the right to fall on your face if you have to. Anyone who values hubris and exuberance has to warm to PTA, but at the same time it's obvious that he hasn't always found a narrative framework to support his sprawling canvases; the profundity to match his precocity. That is, until now. His first film since Punch Drunk Love in 2002, There Will Be Blood is a massive leap forward; a bone fide American epic that seems to have been carved out of the very earth. It's built around a magnificent performance from Daniel Day Lewis - arguably the pinnacle of his career - as Daniel Plainview, a prospector turned oilman in the early days of the twentieth century, a pioneer capitalist and the quintessential self-made man. Spanning the period from 1898 to 1928, but largely set in southern California before WWI, the movie is structured as a slow reveal, beginning with Daniel (in anything but plain view) toiling with a pickaxe in a mineshaft, and ending on an unforgettable image of a man spent, exhausted, empty and alone. It's not much of a spoiler to say things end badly: the ominous tone is set from the first notes of Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood's unsettling score, a discordant orchestral piece influenced by Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki, whose music haunted The Exorcist and The Shining. The violence promised in the title erupts from nature herself. Strikes and gushers lash out in accidents that smack of retribution, claiming several men before we've even heard a word spoken (the first quarter of an hour is entirely speechless). But violence is also bottled up deep in Plainview, a driven, obsessive entrepreneur who calculates his words for maximum profit and keeps a tally in his head. What measure of man is this? Initially we may admire his acumen and zeal. He adopts the orphaned son of a colleague and brings him up as his own. Day-Lewis affects a shewd, eminently respectable demeanour. His voice rich and seasoned (and sounding echoes of John Huston's Noah Cross in Chinatown), Plainview pitches the common good, schools and churches. It's true he seizes opportunity ruthlessly when it comes, but he brings prosperity in his wake. It's only when he takes the Almighty for an enemy (in the person of Paul Dano's evangelical preacher Eli Sunday) that we begin to realise the extent to which he's motivated by rancour and pride. "I have a competition in me," he will admit in a fleeting moment of candor with his brother Henry (Kevin J O'Connor). "I want no one else to succeed... I hate most people." Money and religion: these are grand themes, twin pillars of civilization, and Anderson maps them with a surveyor's meticulous patience and precision. Taking its cue from Upton Sinclair's novel "Oil!" (but soon going its own way), this is a film about the foundation of the American century, the oil boom that would propel the first among nations. Over the course of two and a half hours we learn much about the process by which this vast resource was reaped. Nor is it any coincidence that the climax is reserved for 1928, the very verge of the Crash - any more than it's a coincidence this great, monumental movie should emerge now, as the fag-end of the Oil Age slouches onto the horizon. The breadth of vision is impressive, but the lean, stark filmmaking more so: for all its turbulent, troubling undercurrents, this is also Anderson's most classical movie, a work that seems pinned to a number of illustrious forebears: Giant, certainly, but Citizen Kane more importantly; Chinatown; Eureka and von Stroheim's Greed. To these we might add two more John Huston films: The Treasure of Sierra Madre and Wise Blood. And then there's family, as there always is in Anderson's films, even if blood relatives are regularly supplanted by surrogates. Not that these relationships are any more sustaining in the long run: fathers and father figures invariably fail their sons and daughters, just as children are doomed to disappoint their parents and mentors. Rejection; alienation; anger - this is what fires Anderson, and never more ferociously than here. He unleashes scenes of madness and psychosis, such savage and extreme black comedy - Daniel's baptism - that the movie finally teeters on the edge of disaster. (There must be something of Daniel Plainview in PTA, to be able to get under the skin of such a monster.) God and mammon get such a thorough thrashing, it's practically sadistic. And yet for all the sins we witness in There Will Be Blood - they include blasphemy, theft and murder - the most shocking incident is this one: when Daniel takes the young son who is not his flesh but who he has come to love - the boy loves him, at least - and abandons him to his fortune. It's a wretched betrayal disguised as a kindness, and he acts more than anything out of embarrassment. Perhaps it's at this moment that Daniel starts to hate himself. His fate is sealed. TOM CHARITY

DIRECTED BY PAUL THOMAS ANDERSON

ST: DANIEL DAY LEWIS, PAUL DANO, KEVIN J O’CONNOR

Synopsis:

Daniel Plainview (Daniel Day Lewis) taps an ocean of oil in Little Boston, California, in 1911. But his moment of glory is marred by a feud with an evangelical preacher, Eli Sunday (Paul Dano), and an accident that deprives his adopted son HW of hearing. Daniel spurns the child, opening up to Henry (Kevin J O’Connor), his long lost brother instead…

Paul Thomas Anderson has been an audacious talent from the first. He’s one of those rare young American filmmakers not afraid to call himself an artist and claim the privileges bestowed by authorship: final cut, for instance… and the right to fall on your face if you have to. Anyone who values hubris and exuberance has to warm to PTA, but at the same time it’s obvious that he hasn’t always found a narrative framework to support his sprawling canvases; the profundity to match his precocity. That is, until now.

His first film since Punch Drunk Love in 2002, There Will Be Blood is a massive leap forward; a bone fide American epic that seems to have been carved out of the very earth. It’s built around a magnificent performance from Daniel Day Lewis – arguably the pinnacle of his career – as Daniel Plainview, a prospector turned oilman in the early days of the twentieth century, a pioneer capitalist and the quintessential self-made man.

Spanning the period from 1898 to 1928, but largely set in southern California before WWI, the movie is structured as a slow reveal, beginning with Daniel (in anything but plain view) toiling with a pickaxe in a mineshaft, and ending on an unforgettable image of a man spent, exhausted, empty and alone.

It’s not much of a spoiler to say things end badly: the ominous tone is set from the first notes of Radiohead‘s Jonny Greenwood‘s unsettling score, a discordant orchestral piece influenced by Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki, whose music haunted The Exorcist and The Shining.

The violence promised in the title erupts from nature herself. Strikes and gushers lash out in accidents that smack of retribution, claiming several men before we’ve even heard a word spoken (the first quarter of an hour is entirely speechless). But violence is also bottled up deep in Plainview, a driven, obsessive entrepreneur who calculates his words for maximum profit and keeps a tally in his head.

What measure of man is this? Initially we may admire his acumen and zeal. He adopts the orphaned son of a colleague and brings him up as his own. Day-Lewis affects a shewd, eminently respectable demeanour. His voice rich and seasoned (and sounding echoes of John Huston’s Noah Cross in Chinatown), Plainview pitches the common good, schools and churches. It’s true he seizes opportunity ruthlessly when it comes, but he brings prosperity in his wake.

It’s only when he takes the Almighty for an enemy (in the person of Paul Dano’s evangelical preacher Eli Sunday) that we begin to realise the extent to which he’s motivated by rancour and pride. “I have a competition in me,” he will admit in a fleeting moment of candor with his brother Henry (Kevin J O’Connor). “I want no one else to succeed… I hate most people.”

Money and religion: these are grand themes, twin pillars of civilization, and Anderson maps them with a surveyor’s meticulous patience and precision. Taking its cue from Upton Sinclair’s novel “Oil!” (but soon going its own way), this is a film about the foundation of the American century, the oil boom that would propel the first among nations. Over the course of two and a half hours we learn much about the process by which this vast resource was reaped. Nor is it any coincidence that the climax is reserved for 1928, the very verge of the Crash – any more than it’s a coincidence this great, monumental movie should emerge now, as the fag-end of the Oil Age slouches onto the horizon.

The breadth of vision is impressive, but the lean, stark filmmaking more so: for all its turbulent, troubling undercurrents, this is also Anderson’s most classical movie, a work that seems pinned to a number of illustrious forebears: Giant, certainly, but Citizen Kane more importantly; Chinatown; Eureka and von Stroheim’s Greed. To these we might add two more John Huston films: The Treasure of Sierra Madre and Wise Blood.

And then there’s family, as there always is in Anderson’s films, even if blood relatives are regularly supplanted by surrogates. Not that these relationships are any more sustaining in the long run: fathers and father figures invariably fail their sons and daughters, just as children are doomed to disappoint their parents and mentors.

Rejection; alienation; anger – this is what fires Anderson, and never more ferociously than here. He unleashes scenes of madness and psychosis, such savage and extreme black comedy – Daniel’s baptism – that the movie finally teeters on the edge of disaster. (There must be something of Daniel Plainview in PTA, to be able to get under the skin of such a monster.) God and mammon get such a thorough thrashing, it’s practically sadistic.

And yet for all the sins we witness in There Will Be Blood – they include blasphemy, theft and murder – the most shocking incident is this one: when Daniel takes the young son who is not his flesh but who he has come to love – the boy loves him, at least – and abandons him to his fortune. It’s a wretched betrayal disguised as a kindness, and he acts more than anything out of embarrassment. Perhaps it’s at this moment that Daniel starts to hate himself. His fate is sealed.

TOM CHARITY

Yeasayer To Play Uncut Stage At Brighton’s Great Escape

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Yeasayer are among the first bands booked to play the Uncut stage at this year's Great Escape Festival. Yeasayer [pictured above], the most expansive, eclectic band on the new Brooklyn scene will be joined by Wild Beasts, a compelling mix of Orange Juice jangle and Billy Mackenzie operatics; and No...

Yeasayer are among the first bands booked to play the Uncut stage at this year’s Great Escape Festival.

Yeasayer [pictured above], the most expansive, eclectic band on the new Brooklyn scene will be joined by Wild Beasts, a compelling mix of Orange Juice jangle and Billy Mackenzie operatics; and No Age, a thrilling punk update of My Bloody Valentine, who are revolutionising the LA music scene on the Uncut-sponsored stage.

The Great Escape is an annual three-day festival of the best new music in the world, and this year takes place at venues around Brighton between May 15 and 17.

We’ll be confirming many more bands for our bill over the next few weeks; keep an eye on www.uncut.co.uk.

In the meantime, Early Bird Festival tickets are available for £35, allowing you access to all Great Escape gigs over the festival’s three days (so long as there’s room in each venue when you get there, of course).

Other bands announced thus far include The Young Knives, Joe Lean & The Jing Jang Jong, Lightspeed Champion and Black Mountain.

Tickets, for over-18s only, are available from www.escapegreat.com or by phoning 0870 907 0999.

Meanwhile, Yeasayer are also about to head out on a UK tour, the dates are:

Birmingham, Bar Academy (March 5)

London, ICA (6)

Glasgow, King Tuts (8)

Manchester, Night & Day (9)

London, ICA (10)

Boredoms: “Super Roots 9”

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By some immeasurably strong act of will, I’ve refrained from banging on about the Boredoms round these parts for the best part of three months – ever since, in fact, they played the best show I saw in 2007. Happily, I have a very good excuse to go on about them again. I somehow managed to get through last year without buying a pricey Japanese import of a Boredoms record called “Super Roots 9”, and it transpires my restraint has paid off: the excellent Thrill Jockey operation out of Chicago have signed the band, and are starting the relationship with a UK/US release of this (unsurprisingly) astonishing live album. Regular readers will have picked up some details from my obsession with the band, but I’ll reiterate. After about two decades of radically eclectic music, the Boredoms – or Vooredoms (the double 'o' is an infinity symbol), as they may be called now – are currently a four-piece, comprising Eye on vocals and various other things (mixing, electronics, and so on, though he’s recently added a fence of guitar necks to his armoury) and three drummers. A basic Boredoms gig these days involves something like an hour and a half of ecstatic, relentless music, driving across the terrain of dance music, hardcore, Krautrock and, most reliably, delirious psychedelic freak-out. It’s some of the highest and most uplifting music I’ve ever heard, and it’s improved further by the imaginative ways Eye continues to expand his sound. Last summer, he played with 77 drummers in a New York park. On Christmas Eve 2004, the band hooked up with a 24-piece choir to add massed cosmic ululations to the cascading, euphoric rhythms, whooshes and yelps that generally make up a Boredoms gig, and it’s this show that is captured on “Super Roots 9” – the first addition to their “Super Roots” series in years. Without being precious about this, it’s impossible for even the most vivid recording to capture the relentless peaks of the Boredoms live. That said, “Super Roots 9” does a pretty good job of getting close. It begins with the choir alone, radiant, then kicks off into a 40 minute helter-skelter motorik rave called "LIVWE!!" that’ll be familiar – minus the choir, of course – to anyone who’s experienced the band live in the past few years. The intensity of it is quite incredible, a sense that the full-on blast of the band is almost too much to handle – almost, but not quite. It’s this precarious position, so transcendent, yet so close to being over-saturated, that adds a frantic tension to this uncommonly uplifting music. “Super Roots 9” is exhausting and exhilarating in equal measure, and it also makes me wonder, once again, whether Eye will ever try and capture this music that’s he’s been touring for years on a studio record. Maybe I’ll ask someone at Thrill Jockey and get back to you. . .

By some immeasurably strong act of will, I’ve refrained from banging on about the Boredoms round these parts for the best part of three months – ever since, in fact, they played the best show I saw in 2007.

Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds To Play UK Shows

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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have announced a major European tour, including their first UK dates since the Abattoir Blues/Lyre of Orpheus tour ended in early 2005, starting in Portugal this April. The band's fourteenth studio album 'Dig, Lazurus, Dig!!!' is being released on March 3, preceded by ...

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have announced a major European tour, including their first UK dates since the Abattoir Blues/Lyre of Orpheus tour ended in early 2005, starting in Portugal this April.

The band’s fourteenth studio album ‘Dig, Lazurus, Dig!!!’ is being released on March 3, preceded by a single of the same name on February 18.

Tickets for the shows go on sale this Friday (February 1) at 9am.

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)

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)

Dylan Actor Paid Tribute At Film Awards

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Dylan actor Heath Ledger, who died last Tuesday (January 22), was the subject of a moving tribute at last night's (January 27) Screen Actors Guild Awards by Best Actor winner Daniel Day Lewis. Day Lewis praised Ledger, who played one of six characters based on Bob Dylan in Todd Haynes' I'm Not There, as "unique" and dedicated his award to him. Day Lewis won for his performance as a ruthless oil magnate in Paul Thomas Anderson's There Will Be Blood. The Coen brothers film, No Country For Old Men, won Best Film and Julie Christie won Best Actress for her performance as an Alzheimer's sufferer in Away From Her. The Screen Actor's Guild Awards are seen as a major signifier of how the voting will go at the Oscars, due to be held on February 24. For a list of the main nominations, plus comment from our Associate Editor, Michael Bonner, click here for Uncut's The View From Here blog. Read Uncut's Heath Ledger obituary here.

Dylan actor Heath Ledger, who died last Tuesday (January 22), was the subject of a moving tribute at last night’s (January 27) Screen Actors Guild Awards by Best Actor winner Daniel Day Lewis.

Day Lewis praised Ledger, who played one of six characters based on Bob Dylan in Todd HaynesI’m Not There, as “unique” and dedicated his award to him.

Day Lewis won for his performance as a ruthless oil magnate in Paul Thomas Anderson’s There Will Be Blood.

The Coen brothers film, No Country For Old Men, won Best Film and Julie Christie won Best Actress for her performance as an Alzheimer’s sufferer in Away From Her.

The Screen Actor’s Guild Awards are seen as a major signifier of how the voting will go at the Oscars, due to be held on February 24.

For a list of the main nominations, plus comment from our Associate Editor, Michael Bonner, click here for Uncut’s The View From Here blog.

Read Uncut’s Heath Ledger obituary here.

Eric Clapton To Play First UK Headline Show In A Decade

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Eric Clapton and The Police have been confirmed as headliners for the third annual Hyde Rock Calling event in London's Hyde Park. Legendary guitarist Eric Clapton is to headline a bill which will also include Sheryl Crow and John Mayer on June 28 and The Police will be joined by KT Tunstall and Sta...

Eric Clapton and The Police have been confirmed as headliners for the third annual Hyde Rock Calling event in London’s Hyde Park.

Legendary guitarist Eric Clapton is to headline a bill which will also include Sheryl Crow and John Mayer on June 28 and The Police will be joined by KT Tunstall and Starsailor the day after, June 29.

Previous years of the Hard Rock Cafe and Live Nation organised festival has seen Roger Waters, The Who, Aerosmith and Peter Gabriel headline.

Tickets for Hyde Park Calling will cost £50 for June 28 and £65 for June 29, or £110 for bith days.

Tickets go onsale this Friday (February 1).

More information is available from the events website, by clicking here for hyderockcalling.co.uk.

Razorlight To Headline Loch Ness Festival

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Razorlight and Fat Boy Slim have been announced as headliners for this year's Rock Ness festival. The two day rock and dance festival, now in it's second year, takes place at Dores near Inverness on June 7 and 8 and will also feature Editors, The View, CSS and The Cribs. Simian Mobile Disco and Fe...

Razorlight and Fat Boy Slim have been announced as headliners for this year’s Rock Ness festival.

The two day rock and dance festival, now in it’s second year, takes place at Dores near Inverness on June 7 and 8 and will also feature Editors, The View, CSS and The Cribs.

Simian Mobile Disco and Felix Da Housecat are amongst the dance artists already announced.

More bands and DJs are to be revealed in the coming months.

For tickets and more information, click here for www.rockness.co.uk

Pic credit: Andy Willsher

Led Zeppelin Tour Plans On Hold Until September

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Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page has spoken to reporters in Japan, about the reunited band's possible tour plans. There has been much speculation that the band will tour after the huge success of their one-off reunion show at London's O2 Arena in tribute to late Atlantic records founder Ahmet Erte...

Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page has spoken to reporters in Japan, about the reunited band’s possible tour plans.

There has been much speculation that the band will tour after the huge success of their one-off reunion show at London’s O2 Arena in tribute to late Atlantic records founder Ahmet Ertegun last month.

Page, speaking to reporters in Tokyo, has said that it would be impossible to make any decisions about staging more shows until Led Zeppelin frontman Robert Plant finishes touring with Alison Krauss, for his recent collaborative album ‘Raising Sand’.

Page said: “Robert Plant has a parallel project running and he’s really busy with that project,” he explained. “Certainly until September, so I can’t give you any news.”

However, the guitarist also added, more positively that: “I can assure you the amount of work that we put into the O2, for ourselves rehearsing and the staging of it was probably what you put into a world tour”.

You can catch Plant and Krauss performing ‘Raising Sand’ live at the following venues:

Birmingham, NIA (May 5)

Manchester, Apollo (7)

Cardiff, International Arena (8)

London, Wembley Arena (22)

Dusseldorf, Philipshalle (10)

Brussells, Forest National Club (11)

Paris, Le Grand Rex Theatre (13)

Amsterdam, Heineken Music Hall (14)

Stockholm, Hovet (Ice Hall) (16)

Oslo, Spektrum (18)

Bergen, Bergenshalle (19)

For more information go to: www.robertplantalisonkrauss.com

Pic credit: Getty Images

Win! Tickets To See U2 in 3D!

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Win! The chance to see U2's first ever live in 3D film at an exclusive screening at London's BFI IMAX cinema on February 13, before the film's release nationwide on February 22. www.uncut.co.uk has ten pairs of tickets to giveaway for the movie, which viewers must watch with special glasses to appreciate the 3D effects. The 92 minute film was captured on the band’s South American Vertigo tour in 2005 and 2006. ‘U2 3D’, the first live action film ever shot and produced entirely in 3D, will only be screened in 3D cinemas and is not likely to see a DVD release after its main cinema release on February 22. A special preview screening will also be taking place on February 21st at the BFI Imax London. To be in with a chance of winning a pair of tickets, simply click here for the competition question. This competition closes at 5pm, Friday February 8, and winners will be notified by Monday February 11. For more information and to watch the trailer, click here for www.u23d.co.uk. The songs performed in the film are: "Vertigo" "Beautiful Day" "New Year's Day" "Sometimes You Can't Make It on Your Own" "Love and Peace or Else" "Sunday Bloody Sunday" "Bullet the Blue Sky" "Miss Sarajevo" / Reading of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights "Pride (In the Name of Love)" "Where the Streets Have No Name" "One" "The Fly" "With Or Without You" "Yahweh" See the March issue of UNCUT - on sale January 29 - for the history of U2 on film, from Red Rocks to 3D.

Win! The chance to see U2‘s first ever live in 3D film at an exclusive screening at London’s BFI IMAX cinema on February 13, before the film’s release nationwide on February 22.

www.uncut.co.uk has ten pairs of tickets to giveaway for the movie, which viewers must watch with special glasses to appreciate the 3D effects. The 92 minute film was captured on the band’s South American Vertigo tour in 2005 and 2006.

‘U2 3D’, the first live action film ever shot and produced entirely in 3D, will only be screened in 3D cinemas and is not likely to see a DVD release after its main cinema release on February 22.

A special preview screening will also be taking place on February 21st at the BFI Imax London.

To be in with a chance of winning a pair of tickets, simply click here for the competition question.

This competition closes at 5pm, Friday February 8, and winners will be notified by Monday February 11.

For more information and to watch the trailer, click here for www.u23d.co.uk.

The songs performed in the film are:

“Vertigo”

“Beautiful Day”

“New Year’s Day”

“Sometimes You Can’t Make It on Your Own”

“Love and Peace or Else”

“Sunday Bloody Sunday”

“Bullet the Blue Sky”

“Miss Sarajevo” / Reading of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights

“Pride (In the Name of Love)”

“Where the Streets Have No Name”

“One”

“The Fly”

“With Or Without You”

“Yahweh”

See the March issue of UNCUT – on sale January 29 – for the history of U2 on film, from Red Rocks to 3D.

Radiohead To Play Special BBC ‘In Rainbows ‘Gig

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Radiohead are in the process of organising a special “In Rainbows” concert for the BBC. Bassist Colin Greenwood announced on Stuart Maconie and Mark Radcliffe’s Radio 2 show last night (January 24) that planning had just begun for the event. Greenwood explained: “We only started talking ab...

Radiohead are in the process of organising a special “In Rainbows” concert for the BBC.

Bassist Colin Greenwood announced on Stuart Maconie and Mark Radcliffe’s Radio 2 show last night (January 24) that planning had just begun for the event.

Greenwood explained: “We only started talking about it yesterday in the meeting so we are getting some plans together to play a show and play some songs from the record for the BBC.”

The bassist also told 6Music’s Marc Riley how thrilled the band were with their performance at their tiny, free show at London’s 93 Feet East (January 16), saying: “It was like playing a little club, standing next to each other, we played “The Bends” and seeing my brother Jonny slashing through that song was just brilliant.”

Super Furry Animals To Headline Green Man Festival

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Super Furry Animals are to headline the Saturday night of Wales' Green Man Festival. Held in the picturesque Glanusk Park in the Brecon Beacons, the festival runs from August 15 to 17. 2007’s festival was headlined by Joanna Newsom, Robert Plant and Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, while other a...

Super Furry Animals are to headline the Saturday night of WalesGreen Man Festival.

Held in the picturesque Glanusk Park in the Brecon Beacons, the festival runs from August 15 to 17.

2007’s festival was headlined by Joanna Newsom, Robert Plant and Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, while other artists to have played the festival include Bert Jansch, Calexico, Bat For Lashes and Euros Childs.

2008 will mark the sixth year of Green Man – more headliners are to be announced.

Seasick Steve Joined By Special Guests At London Gig

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Seasick Steve kicked off his UK tour last night at London’s prestigious Astoria. In a rare occurrence, the singer and electric blues guitarist was also joined by collaborators for a number of the songs in the set. Joined by a drummer from his former backing band The Level Devils and his grandson...

Seasick Steve kicked off his UK tour last night at London’s prestigious Astoria.

In a rare occurrence, the singer and electric blues guitarist was also joined by collaborators for a number of the songs in the set.

Joined by a drummer from his former backing band The Level Devils and his grandson on tambourine on some songs, Steve performed tracks including crowd favourites “My Donny” and “Dog House Boogie” alongside a cover of “The Letter”, a 60s hit for Alex Chilton’s first band The Box Tops.

Partway through the set, Steve was joined by KT Tunstall, who contributed guitar and vocals to “Happy Man”.

Seasick Steve performed:

“Yellow Dog”

“Things Go Up”

“My Donny”

“Cut My Wings”

“Happy Man”

“St Louis Slim”

“Working Man”

“The Letter”

“Falling Off A Rock”

“Chiggers”

“Save Me”

“Dog House Boogie”

Check out NME.COM for the full story.