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Liverpool Music Week Ticket Giveaway

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www.uncut.co.uk teamed up with Liverpool Music Week last month to giveway three pairs of tickets for shows at this year's event. Liverpool Music Week runs for ten days, with 270 bands playing between November 29 and December 9. For a chance of winning we asked: 'Which of these bands is not from Li...

www.uncut.co.uk teamed up with Liverpool Music Week last month to giveway three pairs of tickets for shows at this year’s event.

Liverpool Music Week runs for ten days, with 270 bands playing between November 29 and December 9.

For a chance of winning we asked: ‘Which of these bands is not from Liverpool?’

a)Teardrop Explodes

b)The Zutons

c)The Twang

The answer was: The Twang.

The winner of a pair of tickets for Hard-Fi at Liverpool University on December 7 (see rescheduled date for details) is: K. Morley, Bath, Somerset.

The winner of a pair of tickets for triple BRIT Award-winning five piece Kaiser Chiefs who headline the Aintree Pavillion on December 7 is: S. Holton, Northants.

And the winner of a pair of tickets to see Madness at the Aintree Pavillion on December 8 is: A. Chapman, Staffs.

Congratulations! Your tickets are on their way to you.

More information about the shows or to buy tickets go to:www.liverpoolmusicweek.co.uk

To see the original competition, click here.

To win more great prizes, keep checking www.www.uncut.co.uk/music/special_features.

Hard Fi Change Festival Headline Show

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Hard-Fi have announced that their forthcoming Liverpool Music Week show is to take place a day later than originally scheduled, at a different venue in the city. The band were due to play the Aintree Pavillion on December 6, but will now play Liverpool University on December 7. The new venue is Mountford Hall at the Liverpool Guild of Students. All tickets already sold will be valid for the rescheduled date. Support on the night will come from Rebecca and The Rumble Strips. Liverpool Music Week runs for ten days, with 270 bands playing from November 29 to December 9. More information about the shows or to buy tickets go to: http://www.liverpoolmusicweek.co.uk.

Hard-Fi have announced that their forthcoming Liverpool Music Week show is to take place a day later than originally scheduled, at a different venue in the city.

The band were due to play the Aintree Pavillion on December 6, but will now play Liverpool University on December 7.

The new venue is Mountford Hall at the Liverpool Guild of Students.

All tickets already sold will be valid for the rescheduled date.

Support on the night will come from Rebecca and The Rumble Strips.

Liverpool Music Week runs for ten days, with 270 bands playing from November 29 to December 9.

More information about the shows or to buy tickets go to:

http://www.liverpoolmusicweek.co.uk.

John Lennon To Get Digital Video Album Release

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John Lennon's promotional videos are to be released as a digital collection exclusively in the US next month. The 'John Lennon Video Album' features 21 videos, including 'Give Peace A Chance', 'Working Class Hero' and 'Imagine' - some being made available as a digital format for the very first time. The digital video compilation will only be available via US iTunes from December 4. Meanwhile, for more on Lennon, see the January issue of Uncut, out on Thursday (November 29) for a poll of John Lennon's greatest songs, as chosen by 30 famous fans, including Paul Weller, Roger Daltrey, Alex Turner and Yoko Ono. The new issue also comes with a 15-track CD 'Give Peace A Chance' - anti- war and protest classics dedicated to the late Beatle. Artists featured include Robert Plant, Richard Thompson and Steve Earle. Plus! Come back to www.uncut.co.uk from Thursday, where more of Lennon's celebrity admirers will talk exclusively about their favourite Lennon songs. The full 'John Lennon Video Album' track listing is: 'Imagine' 'Woman' 'Watching The Wheels' 'Mind Games' 'Happy Xmas (War Is Over)' 'Whatever Gets You Thru The Night' '(Just Like) Starting Over' '#9 Dream' 'Give Peace A Chance' 'Beautiful Boy' 'Jealous Guy' 'Nobody Told Me' 'Cold Turkey' 'Power To The People' 'Working Class Hero' 'Working Class Hero' 'Love' 'Mother' 'Borrowed Time' 'Slippin' And Slidin' 'Stand By Me' Pic credit: Rex Features

John Lennon‘s promotional videos are to be released as a digital collection exclusively in the US next month.

The ‘John Lennon Video Album’ features 21 videos, including ‘Give Peace A Chance’, ‘Working Class Hero’ and ‘Imagine’ – some being made available as a digital format for the very first time.

The digital video compilation will only be available via US iTunes from December 4.

Meanwhile, for more on Lennon, see the January issue of Uncut, out on Thursday (November 29) for a poll of John Lennon’s greatest songs, as chosen by 30 famous fans, including Paul Weller, Roger Daltrey, Alex Turner and Yoko Ono.

The new issue also comes with a 15-track CD ‘Give Peace A Chance’ – anti- war and protest classics dedicated to the late Beatle. Artists featured include Robert Plant, Richard Thompson and Steve Earle.

Plus! Come back to www.uncut.co.uk from Thursday, where more of Lennon’s celebrity admirers will talk exclusively about their favourite Lennon songs.

The full ‘John Lennon Video Album’ track listing is:

‘Imagine’

‘Woman’

‘Watching The Wheels’

‘Mind Games’

‘Happy Xmas (War Is Over)’

‘Whatever Gets You Thru The Night’

‘(Just Like) Starting Over’

‘#9 Dream’

‘Give Peace A Chance’

‘Beautiful Boy’

‘Jealous Guy’

‘Nobody Told Me’

‘Cold Turkey’

‘Power To The People’

‘Working Class Hero’

‘Working Class Hero’

‘Love’

‘Mother’

‘Borrowed Time’

‘Slippin’ And Slidin’

‘Stand By Me’

Pic credit: Rex Features

Queens Of The Stone Age Pay Tribute To Amy Winehouse

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Queens Of The Stone Age paid a humourous tribute to troubled singer Amy Winehouse at their London show last night (November 26). Before the climax of live favourite 'Feel Good Hit Of The Summer', front man Josh Homme paused and started to parody Winehouse's hit single 'Rehab' to the sell-out crowd which included Primal Scream's Bobby Gillespie and recent US tour support Arctic Monkeys. Homme squeakily spoke into the microphone, saying: "They tried to make me go to rehab, and I said 'no, no, no'... because that's the kind of guy I am, baby. Rehab? We could hang out on the Thursday, but I'm so busy. I'm so busy with with... nicotine, valium, vicodin, marijuana, ecstasy and alcohol. We could hang out on Friday, but then there's the..." "C-c-c-c-c-cocaine!" The show, only the band's third in London this year, came just days after Winehouse's shambolic headline performance at the same venue on Friday (November 23). QOTSA played several tracks from their fifth studio album 'Era Vulgaris' including an amazing version of new single 'Make It Wit Chu'. They also played a handful of tracks each from their whole catalogue, Songs For The Deaf, Lullabies To Paralyze, Rated R, and their self-titled '98 debut. Queens Of The Stone Age played the following, in a blistering 90 minute set: 'Sick, Sick, Sick' 'Do It Again' 'Avon' 'Burn The Witch' 'Battery Acid' 'Little Sister' 'Infinity' 'No-One Knows' '3s and 7s' 'In The Fade' 'Turning On The Screw' 'Hanging Tree' 'Make It Witchu' 'Misfit Love' 'Tangled Up In Plaid' 'If Only' 'Feel Good Hit Of The Summer' ~ 'Regular John' 'Go With The Flow' 'A Song For The Dead' The band's current ten-date UK tour continues in Glasgow tomorrow (November 28) and then continues to the following venues. All dates are sold-out. Newcastle Carling Academy (29) Bristol Carling Academy (December 1) Manchester Apollo (2) Birmingham Carling Academy (3) Reading Rivermead (4) Pic credit: Phil Wallis

Queens Of The Stone Age paid a humourous tribute to troubled singer Amy Winehouse at their London show last night (November 26).

Before the climax of live favourite ‘Feel Good Hit Of The Summer’, front man Josh Homme paused and started to parody Winehouse’s hit single ‘Rehab’ to the sell-out crowd which included Primal Scream‘s Bobby Gillespie and recent US tour support Arctic Monkeys.

Homme squeakily spoke into the microphone, saying: “They tried to make me go to rehab, and I said ‘no, no, no’… because that’s the kind of guy I am, baby. Rehab? We could hang out on the Thursday, but I’m so busy. I’m so busy with with… nicotine, valium, vicodin, marijuana, ecstasy and alcohol. We could hang out on Friday, but then there’s the…”

“C-c-c-c-c-cocaine!”

The show, only the band’s third in London this year, came just days after Winehouse’s shambolic headline performance at the same venue on Friday (November 23).

QOTSA played several tracks from their fifth studio album ‘Era Vulgaris’ including an amazing version of new single ‘Make It Wit Chu’.

They also played a handful of tracks each from their whole catalogue, Songs For The Deaf, Lullabies To Paralyze, Rated R, and their self-titled ’98 debut.

Queens Of The Stone Age played the following, in a blistering 90 minute set:

‘Sick, Sick, Sick’

‘Do It Again’

‘Avon’

‘Burn The Witch’

‘Battery Acid’

‘Little Sister’

‘Infinity’

‘No-One Knows’

‘3s and 7s’

‘In The Fade’

‘Turning On The Screw’

‘Hanging Tree’

‘Make It Witchu’

‘Misfit Love’

‘Tangled Up In Plaid’

‘If Only’

‘Feel Good Hit Of The Summer’

~

‘Regular John’

‘Go With The Flow’

‘A Song For The Dead’

The band’s current ten-date UK tour continues in Glasgow tomorrow (November 28) and then continues to the following venues. All dates are sold-out.

Newcastle Carling Academy (29)

Bristol Carling Academy (December 1)

Manchester Apollo (2)

Birmingham Carling Academy (3)

Reading Rivermead (4)

Pic credit: Phil Wallis

Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy: “Ask Forgiveness”

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I guess it’s still fairly early in the morning, but I’m struggling right now to think of many players around at the moment who are as slippery and compelling as Will Oldham. He’s had, by his standards, a relatively quiet year. But the other day, a new mini-album turned up unexpectedly, a few days after it had actually arrived in the shops. Like a big American urban star or Radiohead, clearly Oldham has abandoned the niceties of advance releases for hacks. Which is fair enough, if a bit frustrating. Anyway, the mentions of American R&B and Radiohead are vaguely apposite. “Ask Forgiveness” is a covers album, and amongst the songs he tackles are R Kelly’s “The World’s Greatest” and the old Bjork/Thom Yorke duet from “Dancer In The Dark”, “I’ve Seen It All”. The latter is a parched, mildly unnerving backwoods meditation, with Meg Baird providing the harmonies. Baird and her team-mate from Espers, Greg Weeks, provide the musical backdrops on the whole album, since Oldham’s restless musical perambulations seem to have taken him into their camp in Philadelphia. It’s interesting, though, that they predominantly play his game: the vibes remain more Appalachian than lustrous folk-psych, even though Espers are adept at providing the softer reveries which Oldham operates in more comfortably these days (last year’s gorgeous “The Letting Go” being a case in point). Anyway, R Kelly. It’s one of Oldham’s great gifts that he can seem at once unfathomably contrary, yet can carry off his quixotic decisions with such quiet integrity that you rapidly forget their strangeness. “The World’s Greatest” is not done ironically, or self-consciously: rather, it sees Oldham finding the song’s still, engaging heart and claiming it as his own. Tonally, he treats it no differently to more notionally “tasteful” selections: Mickey Newbury’s “I Came To Hear The Music”; Phil Ochs’ “My Life”; Merle Haggard’s “The Way I Am”. To long-term Oldham watchers, none of this will come as a surprise. I just remembered the first Palace Brothers gig in London some 15-odd years ago I guess, where he did a Whitney Houston song, maybe “I Will Always Love You”, beautifully. There’s also the covers set with Tortoise from last year, “The Brave And The Bold”, though a better analogue for this in Oldham’s labyrinthine catalogue would be 2000’s “More Revery” (thanks to the fastidious Royal Stable site for reminding me what that one was called). “Ask Forgiveness” is a terrific record all round, and its highlight is probably a sepulchral version of Danzig’s “Am I Demon?”, which endows doom with a plausibly human dread in a series of nuanced gestures. There’s a new song by Oldham I should mention, too, buried amidst all this excellence. It’s called “I’m Loving The Street” (though you won’t find that out from the sleeve, which doesn’t trouble itself with anything so useful as song titles) and is, inscrutably, one of the jauntiest Oldham songs I can remember. But typically, Oldham makes this and every other unexpected twist in his brilliant career seem coherent and vividly logical. Where next, I wonder?

I guess it’s still fairly early in the morning, but I’m struggling right now to think of many players around at the moment who are as slippery and compelling as Will Oldham. He’s had, by his standards, a relatively quiet year. But the other day, a new mini-album turned up unexpectedly, a few days after it had actually arrived in the shops. Like a big American urban star or Radiohead, clearly Oldham has abandoned the niceties of advance releases for hacks. Which is fair enough, if a bit frustrating.

The Verve Release Singles Compilation

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The Verve are reissuing their 'This Is Music: The Singles 92-98' compilation early next month. The compilation which was originally released in 2004, will now come with a bonus DVD - featuring all of The Verve's promotional videos. The band, who launched their comeback with live shows last month, play the following sold-out venues next month: Nottingham Arena (December 11) London O2 Arena (12) Glasgow SECC (15) Belfast Odyssey (17) Manchester Central (20/21) The album is released on December 3. The CD track listing is: 'This Is Music' 'Slide Away' 'Lucky Man' 'History' 'She's A Superstar' 'On Your Own' 'Blue' 'Sonnet' 'All In The Mind' 'The Drugs Don't Work' 'Gravity Grave' 'Bitter Sweet Symphony' 'This Could Be My Moment' 'Monte Carlo' DVD track listing is: 'This Is Music' 'Slide Away' 'Lucky Man' 'History' 'She's A Superstar' 'On Your Own' 'Blue' 'Sonnet' 'All In The Mind' 'The Drugs Don't Work' 'Gravity Grave' 'Bitter Sweet Symphony' 'Lucky Man (US Version)' 'This Could Be My Moment' 'Monte Carlo' Pic credit: Dean Chalkley

The Verve are reissuing their ‘This Is Music: The Singles 92-98’ compilation early next month.

The compilation which was originally released in 2004, will now come with a bonus DVD – featuring all of The Verve’s promotional videos.

The band, who launched their comeback with live shows last month, play the following sold-out venues next month:

Nottingham Arena (December 11)

London O2 Arena (12)

Glasgow SECC (15)

Belfast Odyssey (17)

Manchester Central (20/21)

The album is released on December 3.

The CD track listing is:

‘This Is Music’

‘Slide Away’

‘Lucky Man’

‘History’

‘She’s A Superstar’

‘On Your Own’

‘Blue’

‘Sonnet’

‘All In The Mind’

‘The Drugs Don’t Work’

‘Gravity Grave’

‘Bitter Sweet Symphony’

‘This Could Be My Moment’

‘Monte Carlo’

DVD track listing is:

‘This Is Music’

‘Slide Away’

‘Lucky Man’

‘History’

‘She’s A Superstar’

‘On Your Own’

‘Blue’

‘Sonnet’

‘All In The Mind’

‘The Drugs Don’t Work’

‘Gravity Grave’

‘Bitter Sweet Symphony’

‘Lucky Man (US Version)’

‘This Could Be My Moment’

‘Monte Carlo’

Pic credit: Dean Chalkley

Sparks Release Live DVD

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Sparks this week are releasing a new live DVD, filmed in London in September 2006. Entitled 'Dee Vee Dee' - the recorded show is divided up into two sections, starting with 'Hello Young Lovers', the second half being a greatest hits collection. Extras include a shortfilm filmed by Sparks whilst they were in Japan in October 2006 and Ron Mael's 'sketchbook' - showing ideas for the band's visual shows from their incarnation. As previously reported, Sparks are to play a mammoth series of 21 shows in London next May and June - playing a different album from their back catalogue every night. Details about the shows will be officially released to Sparks fan club members at the end of this week (November 30). Check the Sparks official website for more details here: allsparks.com.

Sparks this week are releasing a new live DVD, filmed in London in September 2006.

Entitled ‘Dee Vee Dee’ – the recorded show is divided up into two sections, starting with ‘Hello Young Lovers’, the second half being a greatest hits collection.

Extras include a shortfilm filmed by Sparks whilst they were in Japan in October 2006 and Ron Mael’s ‘sketchbook’ – showing ideas for the band’s visual shows from their incarnation.

As previously reported, Sparks are to play a mammoth series of 21 shows in London next May and June – playing a different album from their back catalogue every night.

Details about the shows will be officially released to Sparks fan club members at the end of this week (November 30).

Check the Sparks official website for more details here: allsparks.com.

British Independent Film Awards Competition

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The 10th anniversary British Independent Film Awards (BIFA) awards ceremony is taking place this Wednesday (November 28) at London's Roundhouse. Hosted by James Nesbitt, the annual awards ceremony is this year dominated by Anton Corbijn's hit film about Joy Division, 'Control', with nominations for ten awards, including Best Actor for Sam Riley, Best Supporting Actress for Samantha Morton, Best Director for Anton Corbijn and Best Film. Uncut.co.uk ran a competition last month to win a pair of tickets to the BIFA Awards' aftershow party. To see the original competition, and a fuill list of the BIFA Awards nominees click here. We asked: 'Anton Corbijn directed which Nirvana video?' The answer is of course 'Heart-Shaped Box' The winner of a pair of tickets to the BIFA aftershow party is: Chris Garbutt from Colchester. Congratulations! To win more great prizes, keep checking www.www.uncut.co.uk/music/special_features.

The 10th anniversary British Independent Film Awards (BIFA) awards ceremony is taking place this Wednesday (November 28) at London’s Roundhouse.

Hosted by James Nesbitt, the annual awards ceremony is this year dominated by Anton Corbijn’s hit film about Joy Division, ‘Control’, with nominations for ten awards, including Best Actor for Sam Riley, Best Supporting Actress for Samantha Morton, Best Director for Anton Corbijn and Best Film.

Uncut.co.uk ran a competition last month to win a pair of tickets to the BIFA Awards’ aftershow party.

To see the original competition, and a fuill list of the BIFA Awards nominees click here.

We asked: ‘Anton Corbijn directed which Nirvana video?’

The answer is of course ‘Heart-Shaped Box’

The winner of a pair of tickets to the BIFA aftershow party is:

Chris Garbutt from Colchester.

Congratulations!

To win more great prizes, keep checking www.www.uncut.co.uk/music/special_features.

Squeeze Tempted Into UK Tour

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Squeeze's first proper UK tour in nearly a decade kicks off in Norwich tonight (November 26). After a triumphant set at Guilfest this summer, the reconfigured line-up - fronted by Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook - have been revisiting their classic songs in various places a long way from Deptford. You can hear what they've been up to on "Five Live – On Tour In America", a live set recorded during their summer, now available on Squeeze's own Love label. Here are the tour dates, anyway: Nov 26 Norwich, UEA Nov 27 Southampton, Guildhall Nov 29 Glasgow, Carling Academy Nov 30 Newcastle, City Hall Dec 01 Wolverhampton, Civic Hall Dec 03 Bristol, Colston Hall Dec 04 London, Hammersmith Apollo (sold out) Dec 05 London, Hammersmith Apollo Dec 07 Manchester, Apollo Dec 08 Liverpool, Philharmonic (sold out) Dec 10 Belfast, Waterfront Dec 11 Dublin, Olympia Theatre Dec 13 Isle of Man, Villa Marina, Royal Hall

Squeeze’s first proper UK tour in nearly a decade kicks off in Norwich tonight (November 26).

After a triumphant set at Guilfest this summer, the reconfigured line-up – fronted by Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook – have been revisiting their classic songs in various places a long way from Deptford.

You can hear what they’ve been up to on “Five Live – On Tour In America”, a live set recorded during their summer, now available on Squeeze’s own Love label.

Here are the tour dates, anyway:

Nov 26 Norwich, UEA

Nov 27 Southampton, Guildhall

Nov 29 Glasgow, Carling Academy

Nov 30 Newcastle, City Hall

Dec 01 Wolverhampton, Civic Hall

Dec 03 Bristol, Colston Hall

Dec 04 London, Hammersmith Apollo (sold out)

Dec 05 London, Hammersmith Apollo

Dec 07 Manchester, Apollo

Dec 08 Liverpool, Philharmonic (sold out)

Dec 10 Belfast, Waterfront

Dec 11 Dublin, Olympia Theatre

Dec 13 Isle of Man, Villa Marina, Royal Hall

The Police To Headline Isle Of Wight Festival

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The Police have been announced as next year's closing headliners for the Isle Of Wight Festival. The three-day event, now in it's seventh year, is to take place at Newport's Seaclose Park from June 13 - 15. The Police, who are currently on a worldwide 30th anniversary tour, reunited in January this year, and have so far played to over 1.5 million fans. The band fronted by Sting, have been named as the top-grossing worldwide tour of the year by US magazine Billboard. More dates on the mammoth tour are scheduled for next year, with the band performong in New Zealand, Australia and Japan before returning to Europe in June. The trio's headline performance at the festival will, however, be the group's only show in the UK in 2008. Festival organiser John Giddings said:"It's a coup to get The Police for the festival. We're very happy to have the biggest tour of the last two years stopping by the Isle of Wight." Last year's Isle Of Wight Festival saw 55, 000 music fans flock to Newport, where The Rolling Stones were the festival's closing act. Isle Of Wight Festival tickets will go on general sale on December 10 at 9am.

The Police have been announced as next year’s closing headliners for the Isle Of Wight Festival.

The three-day event, now in it’s seventh year, is to take place at Newport’s Seaclose Park from June 13 – 15.

The Police, who are currently on a worldwide 30th anniversary tour, reunited in January this year, and have so far played to over 1.5 million fans.

The band fronted by Sting, have been named as the top-grossing worldwide tour of the year by US magazine Billboard.

More dates on the mammoth tour are scheduled for next year, with the band performong in New Zealand, Australia and Japan before returning to Europe in June.

The trio’s headline performance at the festival will, however, be the group’s only show in the UK in 2008.

Festival organiser John Giddings said:”It’s a coup to get The Police for the festival. We’re very happy to have the biggest tour of the last two years stopping by the Isle of Wight.”

Last year’s Isle Of Wight Festival saw 55, 000 music fans flock to Newport, where The Rolling Stones were the festival’s closing act.

Isle Of Wight Festival tickets will go on general sale on December 10 at 9am.

Howlin Rain, Damon & Naomi, Sunburned Hand Of The Man live!

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There is a man in a flat cap standing in the middle of the stage, looking pensively at some large twigs while his bandmates work up ten minutes of bleary musique concrete. Eventually he picks up a bass and the six of them lumber into a passage of magisterial, martial psych. It mutates into waterlogged beatnik blues, then a kind of splenetic krautpunk. One of the guitarists, incidentally, now has a cardboard box on his head. There’s a mannequin’s head on top of the box. After a while, he conscientiously ties a scarf round its neck. This, of course, is Sunburned Hand Of The Man, beginning an exceptional Sunday night of psychedelic music at the Scala. I wish it hadn’t been at the Scala, mind, since these three bands – notably terrific as they are – are nowhere near big enough to fill this place, and consequently the crackling energy which they generate gets a bit lost in here. Not that this seems to concern the bands overly much. Sunburned are on driven, extremely focused form tonight. Unlike the recent “Fire Escape” album, the heavy-booted funk is generally left on the shelf, in favour of an unusually rocking set. It’s probably because I’ve been playing their records so much of late, but parts of it remind me rather of the Flower Travelling Band; that ceremonial, intricate sort of blues-rock, blessed with a patterned formality that’s very different from their characteristic wacked-out improv. The pagan performance art is still there, though, and the set ends with the ritual waving of some branches draped in lights. Damon And Naomi, up next, are a gentler pleasure; sometimes, in fact, their sketchy little songs can veer a little too close to indie tweeness for my taste. At their best, though, they conjure up an ineffably fragile brand of psych, beautifully augmented by Bhob Rainey on textural soprano sax and the very great Japanese guitarist Michio Kurihara, whose work – notably with Ghost – I’ve banged on about plenty in the past. Kurihara is an incredibly discreet virtuoso, and he hovers at the back of the stage adding phased, impressionistic depth to Damon And Naomi’s filigree compositions. It’s significant, though, that the strongest piece they play is only half theirs: “Araca Azul/The Earth Is Blue” is part-cover of a fine old Caetano Veloso song, part nuanced response to it. No such delicacies from Howlin Rain, finally making their British debut after we’ve droned on about them in Uncut for the best part of two years. If you’ve managed to avoid all my hype thus far, they’re the latest project of Santa Cruz’ Ethan Miller, now taking precedence since he wound up the activities of Comets On Fire at this same venue a few months back. For anyone put off by the tempestuous psych roar of Comets, Howlin Rain might be a more accessible proposition; the cacophonous Echoplex which underpinned most Comets music has been parked, and in its place the Southern rock classicism which first surfaced on Comets’ mighty “Avatar” is now way in focus. Miller is now flanked by a guitarist who dutifully locks into twin harmony leads (unlike the raging genius of old foil Ben Chasny, who’s crazy in the front row here, incidentally), and by a keyboardist who looks, appositely, a bit like Keith Godchaux. I’ve been sat on their wonderful second album, “Magnificent Fiend”, for months now, and the latest rumour is that they’ve been signed by Rick Rubin, who may think he’s got his hands on the new Black Crowes. He hasn’t: perhaps mercifully, Miller is much too wayward and ragged a performer to choogle quite so slickly. He’s a compelling frontman, though, bawling his way around his own serpentine melodies, constantly leading his band on spluttering new trajectories, punctuating everything with ecstatic, eruptive solos. Anyway, Howlin Rain played a load of great songs whose titles I still don’t know, though in the unlikely event “Magnificent Fiend” ever actually gets released, Tracks Two and Three were great, and I was mildly gutted that they didn’t play the Allmans/gospel/Yes rave-up about God and thunder and stuff that is Track Four. Great night, still. Anyone else make it down?

There is a man in a flat cap standing in the middle of the stage, looking pensively at some large twigs while his bandmates work up ten minutes of bleary musique concrete. Eventually he picks up a bass and the six of them lumber into a passage of magisterial, martial psych. It mutates into waterlogged beatnik blues, then a kind of splenetic krautpunk. One of the guitarists, incidentally, now has a cardboard box on his head. There’s a mannequin’s head on top of the box. After a while, he conscientiously ties a scarf round its neck.

Josh Ritter conquers London

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It must have been an unusually quiet day, because we are not usually out and about when we should be working, nose to grindstone, shackled to the pleasurable daily graft of putting together Uncut. Anyway, the young American singer-songwriter Josh Ritter, whose first two albums – The Golden Age Of Radio and Hello Starling - I had by then become somewhat besotted with, was playing an afternoon showcase at the Social to coincide with the release of his terrific new album, The Animal Years, and I dragged Michael along with me to see him. The Social was barely full, maybe a couple of dozen people milling around, drinks in hand, with Josh and his guitar on the small stage. He was instantly mesmerising, in the manner, a few years earlier, I had always found Ryan Adams to be. They had much in common – a talent for literate, evocative songwriting, an apparent mastery of whatever musical style they found most appropriate for any given song, buckets of easy charm, a winning way with anecdotal on-stage conversation, a great deal of humour, voices that rung with handsome confidence. The one big difference between them, of course, is that Josh is Ryan without the attendant traumas, tantrums, self-destructive stroppiness, narcotic dependencies, tendency towards unnecessary showboating, generally tousled waywardness and haughty self-regard that at one point threatened to wholly derail Ryan’s career, and from which behaviour that career has never entirely recovered, a lot of former fans too exasperated by his petulant excesses to persevere with him, even when he returned to some kind of form with last year’s trio of mostly fine albums. Ritter as a result of his relatively low-profile and absence of headline-grabbing antics hasn’t has nearly the attention devoted over the last several years top Adams, but on the evidence of the turn-out last week for his show at the Shepherd’s Bush Empire has accumulated no less a fanatical fan base. You couldn’t have got more people into the venue at gunpoint, and there’s a growing hum of anticipation when the stage lights go down and a teasing wait ensues before a spruce Ritter, clean-shaven and sharply suited, appears to great cheers. From where I’m pinned to the bar – well, you have to stand somewhere – what immediately follows is somewhat underpowered, the “London Calling” guitar intro to “Mind’s Eye”, all but lost in a muffled, bass-heavy sound. Things get reasonably quickly sorted, however, and the tongue-twisting rollicking Dylanesque romp of “To The Dogs Or Whoever” – the opening track from the new The Historical Conquests Of Josh Ritter, which provides nearly half of tonight’s set list – is expertly dispatched by a band whose only deficiency is a lack of obvious charisma. The surging “Good Man” is another early highlight, as the band and Ritter lock into what by now is a seamless groove, great tunes from all four albums jostling for attention, the simmering shuffle of “Monster Ballads” and, later, the Springsteen wallop of “Wolves” from The Animal Years, particularly striking. There are terrific moments when the band drop away and Ritter takes a ore or less solo spotlight on songs like the recent “The Temptation Of Adam” and the earlier “Harrisburg” and “Lawrence, KS”, both from The Golden Age Of Radio (there is, sadly, no “Me And Jiggs”, with its rousing namecheck for Townes Van Zandt). The audience is in full, passionate voice for the inevitable singalong that “Kathleen” has become, but respectfully hushed for the haunting “Girl In The War”. They are roaring again, however, on “Snow Is Gone”, but wisely leave it to Josh for most of the closing “Lillian, Egypt”, though a lot of them can’t help joining in on the song’s irrepressible chorus, which is genuinely heart-lifting. Ritter exits, finally, chased by cheers, a smile on his face as big as the arenas that if he keeps on going like this he’ll very soon be filling. Josh Ritter Set List Shepherd’s Bush Empire November 22, 2007 Naked As A Window Mind’s Eye To The Dogs Or Whoever Good Man Open Doors Here At The Right Time Monster Ballads Harrisburg The Temptation Of Adam Rumors Still Beating Real Long Distance Right Moves Wildfires Wolves Empty Hearts Lawrence KS Kathleen Encores Girl In The War Snow Is Gone Lillian, Egypt

It must have been an unusually quiet day, because we are not usually out and about when we should be working, nose to grindstone, shackled to the pleasurable daily graft of putting together Uncut.

Josh Ritter conquers London

0

It must have been an unusually quiet day, because we are not usually out and about when we should be working, nose to grindstone, shackled to the pleasurable daily graft of putting together Uncut. Anyway, the young American singer-songwriter Josh Ritter, whose first two albums – The Golden Age Of Radio and Hello Starling - I had by then become somewhat besotted with, was playing an afternoon showcase at the Social to coincide with the release of his terrific new album, The Animal Years, and I dragged Michael along with me to see him. The Social was barely full, maybe a couple of dozen people milling around, drinks in hand, with Josh and his guitar on the small stage. He was instantly mesmerising, in the manner, a few years earlier, I had always found Ryan Adams to be. They had much in common – a talent for literate, evocative songwriting, an apparent mastery of whatever musical style they found most appropriate for any given song, buckets of easy charm, a winning way with anecdotal on-stage conversation, a great deal of humour, voices that rung with handsome confidence. The one big difference between them, of course, is that Josh is Ryan without the attendant traumas, tantrums, self-destructive stroppiness, narcotic dependencies, tendency towards unnecessary showboating, generally tousled waywardness and haughty self-regard that at one point threatened to wholly derail Ryan’s career, and from which behaviour that career has never entirely recovered, a lot of former fans too exasperated by his petulant excesses to persevere with him, even when he returned to some kind of form with last year’s trio of mostly fine albums. Ritter as a result of his relatively low-profile and absence of headline-grabbing antics hasn’t has nearly the attention devoted over the last several years top Adams, but on the evidence of the turn-out last week for his show at the Shepherd’s Bush Empire has accumulated no less a fanatical fan base. You couldn’t have got more people into the venue at gunpoint, and there’s a growing hum of anticipation when the stage lights go down and a teasing wait ensues before a spruce Ritter, clean-shaven and sharply suited, appears to great cheers. From where I’m pinned to the bar – well, you have to stand somewhere – what immediately follows is somewhat underpowered, the “London Calling” guitar intro to “Mind’s Eye”, all but lost in a muffled, bass-heavy sound. Things get reasonably quickly sorted, however, and the tongue-twisting rollicking Dylanesque romp of “To The Dogs Or Whoever” – the opening track from the new The Historical Conquests Of Josh Ritter, which provides nearly half of tonight’s set list – is expertly dispatched by a band whose only deficiency is a lack of obvious charisma. The surging “Good Man” is another early highlight, as the band and Ritter lock into what by now is a seamless groove, great tunes from all four albums jostling for attention, the simmering shuffle of “Monster Ballads” and, later, the Springsteen wallop of “Wolves” from The Animal Years, particularly striking. There are terrific moments when the band drop away and Ritter takes a ore or less solo spotlight on songs like the recent “The Temptation Of Adam” and the earlier “Harrisburg” and “Lawrence, KS”, both from The Golden Age Of Radio (there is, sadly, no “Me And Jiggs”, with its rousing namecheck for Townes Van Zandt). The audience is in full, passionate voice for the inevitable singalong that “Kathleen” has become, but respectfully hushed for the haunting “Girl In The War”. They are roaring again, however, on “Snow Is Gone”, but wisely leave it to Josh for most of the closing “Lillian, Egypt”, though a lot of them can’t help joining in on the song’s irrepressible chorus, which is genuinely heart-lifting. Ritter exits, finally, chased by cheers, a smile on his face as big as the arenas that if he keeps on going like this he’ll very soon be filling. Josh Ritter Set List Shepherd’s Bush Empire November 22, 2007 Naked As A Window Mind’s Eye To The Dogs Or Whoever Good Man Open Doors Here At The Right Time Monster Ballads Harrisburg The Temptation Of Adam Rumors Still Beating Real Long Distance Right Moves Wildfires Wolves Empty Hearts Lawrence KS Kathleen Encores Girl In The War Snow Is Gone Lillian, Egypt

It must have been an unusually quiet day, because we are not usually out and about when we should be working, nose to grindstone, shackled to the pleasurable daily graft of putting together Uncut.

Help!

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Several years ago, director Richard Lester received an honorary scroll proclaiming him “the father of MTV”; by all accounts, he promptly wired back and demanded a blood test. Help! (1965), Lester’s second Beatles feature, has much to answer for: it leads directly to the cheaper but just as cheerful screen exploits of The Monkees and beyond that, to Duran Duran’s globe-trotting videos (presaged in Help!’s gratuitous jaunt to the Bahamas) and, heaven help us, to Spice World. The film’s pranky ’60s surrealism – owing a lot to Lester’s former collaborators Peter Sellers and Spike Milligan – has dated badly, and the Bond-spoofing premise, in which Ringo is pursued by Leo McKern’s band of sinister orientals, is a hanger for some unpalatable racial stereotypes. The farce is just about held aloft by the presence of such comedy stalwarts as Patrick Cargill and Roy Kinnear, and the odd visual gag still endures: notably, the first sight of the futuristic bachelor pad behind a terrace housing façade. The songs still look fresh, inventively shot by cinematographer David Watkin: check out the filters on “Another Girl” and the insouciantly inventive editing on “Ticket To Ride”, not to mention the gorgeous kaleidoscopic end credits (this restoration restores the colours to their vivid glory). Extras include EastEnders’ Wendy Richard on how she ended up on the cutting room floor with Frankie Howerd, whose scenes fell flatter than a Ringo vocal. EXTRAS: Docs on the making of Help! (including interviews with Lester, Eleanor Bron, Victor Spinetti and Watkin); on the missing Howerd sequence; and on the restored version; plus trailers. JONATHAN ROMNEY

Several years ago, director Richard Lester received an honorary scroll proclaiming him “the father of MTV”; by all accounts, he promptly wired back and demanded a blood test. Help! (1965), Lester’s second Beatles feature, has much to answer for: it leads directly to the cheaper but just as cheerful screen exploits of The Monkees and beyond that, to Duran Duran’s globe-trotting videos (presaged in Help!’s gratuitous jaunt to the Bahamas) and, heaven help us, to Spice World.

The film’s pranky ’60s surrealism – owing a lot to Lester’s former collaborators Peter Sellers and Spike Milligan – has dated badly, and the Bond-spoofing premise, in which Ringo is pursued by Leo McKern’s band of sinister orientals, is a hanger for some unpalatable racial stereotypes. The farce is just about held aloft by the presence of such comedy stalwarts as Patrick Cargill and Roy Kinnear, and the odd visual gag still endures: notably, the first sight of the futuristic bachelor pad behind a terrace housing façade.

The songs still look fresh, inventively shot by cinematographer David Watkin: check out the filters on “Another Girl” and the insouciantly inventive editing on “Ticket To Ride”, not to mention the gorgeous kaleidoscopic end credits (this restoration restores the colours to their vivid glory). Extras include EastEnders’ Wendy Richard on how she ended up on the cutting room floor with Frankie Howerd, whose scenes fell flatter than a Ringo vocal.

EXTRAS: Docs on the making of Help! (including interviews with Lester, Eleanor Bron, Victor Spinetti and Watkin); on the missing Howerd sequence; and on the restored version; plus trailers.

JONATHAN ROMNEY

Got A Question For Billy Bragg?

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Billy Bragg is taking part in Uncut's An Audience With... feature next week, and we're after your questions to put to the great man. So, is there anything you've always wanted to ask him? Ever wondered whether he'd accept a knighthood..? What are his memories of working with Peter Mandelson during Red Wedge..? Who'd he like to see play him in the biopic, Bragg: The Barking Years..? Send your questions by next Monday (Nov 26) to: farah_ishaq@ipcmedia.com

Billy Bragg is taking part in Uncut’s An Audience With… feature next week, and we’re after your questions to put to the great man.

So, is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask him?

Ever wondered whether he’d accept a knighthood..?

What are his memories of working with Peter Mandelson during Red Wedge..?

Who’d he like to see play him in the biopic, Bragg: The Barking Years..?

Send your questions by next Monday (Nov 26) to: farah_ishaq@ipcmedia.com

The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford

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DIRECTED BY ANDREW DOMINIK | STARRING BRAD PITT, CASEY AFFLECK, SAM SHEPARD “Jesse James was a lowdown thief, a pervert and a sonofabitch,” Sam Fuller declared in his autobiography, A Third Face. “But you couldn’t show that stuff on a screen back then. The whole truth didn’t help get films made.” I Shot Jesse James (1948) was Fuller’s first picture, 10 days in the making, and filmed entirely on a Republic Studios backlot. Even biting his tongue, he made a more arresting entry in James-ian mythology than such celebrated auteurs as Nic Ray and Fritz Lang, who preferred to print the legend. Why mess with America’s favourite outlaw? Robin Hood with a six-shooter, Jesse James has inspired more movies than Billy the Kid or Butch and Sundance put together. Central planks in the Jesse James story were embedded in the public imagination early on, even during his lifetime. The fact that he’d tried to surrender after the civil war only to be shot in the chest; the maiming of his mother in an ill-advised Pinkerton raid on his home; and the important consideration that his robberies targeted supposed Yankee carpet-baggers: the banks and the railroads. A traditional ballad that crops up in many movies, including Fuller’s, lays it on thick: “He took from the rich and he gave to the poor, He’d a hand, and a heart, and a brain.” Fittingly enough, Nick Cave does the honours as a saloon troubadour in director Andrew Dominik’s rueful and elegiac film. Based on Ron Hansen’s novel of the same name, and borrowing from it large chunks of decorously antiquated narration, The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford breaks with tradition by sticking to the sorry end of Jesse’s career. That is, after the disastrous raid on Northfield and the breakup of the James-Younger gang. Heroics are nowhere in evidence, and the myth gets short shrift from Jesse himself (a dyed-dark, brooding Brad Pitt). “It’s all lies,” he gently disabuses his most avid acolyte, 19-year-old Robert Ford (Casey Affleck). This Jesse is not about to hand a red cent to the poor. Instead – in the film’s first and only robbery – we see him beat a railway guard with such excessive brutality even his partners are shocked. Pitt’s Jesse James may not be Fuller’s lowdown pervert, but he’s a sonofabitch if you cross him – or even if he suspects that you might. In this, the character bears some resemblance to Mark Brandon Reid, the garrulous Aussie sociopath ferociously played by Eric Bana in Dominik’s only previous movie, Chopper (2000). But this is an infinitely more reflective and self-conscious piece, and where Bana/Reid revelled in his volatility and his tabloid fame, a ruminative Pitt/James carries his celebrity heavily; like his propensity for violence, it is an affliction he appears to regret but cannot control; the cross he has to bear. Morbidly paranoid, he’s left alone to ponder which of his associates will be the first to betray him. This is Brutus and Caesar (the story Sam Fuller originally had his eye on), and it’s the story of Judas Iscariot. In Dominik’s movie the assassination takes place on Palm Sunday, and Judas – Ford – enjoys considerably more screen time than his victim. “People take me for a nincompoop,” Bob admits to Frank James (Sam Shepard) early on. “I have qualities that don’t come shining through.” That’s putting it mildly. The new makeshift James gang is a collection of dim opportunists and layabouts, mostly cousins and neighbours (they’re played with amiable flakiness by Jeremy Renner, Chris Speers, Garret Dillahunt and Sam Rockwell as Bob’s go-along brother, Charlie), but even in this unprepossessing crowd Bob is a standing joke, the designated boob. Frank can only shake his head and give him a wide berth. A desperado in his dreams, Bob idolises Jesse so fervently it’s as if he wants to pull on his boots in the morning. And he suffers mightily for it; this long movie describes Ford’s time in Jesse’s orbit as a series of abject disappointments, humiliations and indignities, mostly of his own making. Affleck doesn’t sentimentalise Bob’s pinched and wretched narcissism, but as the slow, sad coda makes clear, the assassination was Ford’s tragedy as well as Jesse’s, an infamous folly he would live to regret and replay – several hundred times in fact, for an audience of eager rubberneckers. Filmed by regular Coens DoP Roger Deakins in languid, wispy vignettes, the lens sometimes smudged with Vaseline, this is the West as Eadweard Muybridge might have photographed it if he’d only taken his experiments in kinetic motion a stage further. Malick, Kubrick and Cimino would surely recognise a kindred spirit in Dominik; this flagrantly uncommercial enterprise seems designed as a heroic folly in and of itself. It’s another weighty monument to the death of the West, and within a whisker of the masterpiece Dominik was evidently shooting for. Tom Charity

DIRECTED BY ANDREW DOMINIK | STARRING BRAD PITT, CASEY AFFLECK, SAM SHEPARD

“Jesse James was a lowdown thief, a pervert and a sonofabitch,” Sam Fuller declared in his autobiography, A Third Face. “But you couldn’t show that stuff on a screen back then. The whole truth didn’t help get films made.”

I Shot Jesse James (1948) was Fuller’s first picture, 10 days in the making, and filmed entirely on a Republic Studios backlot. Even biting his tongue, he made a more arresting entry in James-ian mythology than such celebrated auteurs as Nic Ray and Fritz Lang, who preferred to print the legend. Why mess with America’s favourite outlaw? Robin Hood with a six-shooter, Jesse James has inspired more movies than Billy the Kid or Butch and Sundance put together.

Central planks in the Jesse James story were embedded in the public imagination early on, even during his lifetime. The fact that he’d tried to surrender after the civil war only to be shot in the chest; the maiming of his mother in an ill-advised Pinkerton raid on his home; and the important consideration that his robberies targeted supposed Yankee carpet-baggers: the banks and the railroads. A traditional ballad that crops up in many movies, including Fuller’s, lays it on thick: “He took from the rich and he gave to the poor, He’d a hand, and a heart, and a brain.”

Fittingly enough, Nick Cave does the honours as a saloon troubadour in director Andrew Dominik’s rueful and elegiac film. Based on Ron Hansen’s novel of the same name, and borrowing from it large chunks of decorously antiquated narration, The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford breaks with tradition by sticking to the sorry end of Jesse’s career. That is, after the disastrous raid on Northfield and the breakup of the James-Younger gang. Heroics are nowhere in evidence, and the myth gets short shrift from Jesse himself (a dyed-dark, brooding Brad Pitt). “It’s all lies,” he gently disabuses his most avid acolyte, 19-year-old Robert Ford (Casey Affleck).

This Jesse is not about to hand a red cent to the poor. Instead – in the film’s first and only robbery – we see him beat a railway guard with such excessive brutality even his partners are shocked. Pitt’s Jesse James may not be Fuller’s lowdown pervert, but he’s a sonofabitch if you cross him – or even if he suspects that you might.

In this, the character bears some resemblance to Mark Brandon Reid, the garrulous Aussie sociopath ferociously played by Eric Bana in Dominik’s only previous movie, Chopper (2000). But this is an infinitely more reflective and self-conscious piece, and where Bana/Reid revelled in his volatility and his tabloid fame, a ruminative Pitt/James carries his celebrity heavily; like his propensity for violence, it is an affliction he appears to regret but cannot control; the cross he has to bear. Morbidly paranoid, he’s left alone to ponder which of his associates will be the first to betray him.

This is Brutus and Caesar (the story Sam Fuller originally had his eye on), and it’s the story of Judas Iscariot. In Dominik’s movie the assassination takes place on Palm Sunday, and Judas – Ford – enjoys considerably more screen time than his victim.

“People take me for a nincompoop,” Bob admits to Frank James (Sam Shepard) early on. “I have qualities that don’t come shining through.”

That’s putting it mildly. The new makeshift James gang is a collection of dim opportunists and layabouts, mostly cousins and neighbours (they’re played with amiable flakiness by Jeremy Renner, Chris Speers, Garret Dillahunt and Sam Rockwell as Bob’s go-along brother, Charlie), but even in this unprepossessing crowd Bob is a standing joke, the designated boob. Frank can only shake his head and give him a wide berth.

A desperado in his dreams, Bob idolises Jesse so fervently it’s as if he wants to pull on his boots in the morning. And he suffers mightily for it; this long movie describes Ford’s time in Jesse’s orbit as a series of abject disappointments, humiliations and indignities, mostly of his own making. Affleck doesn’t sentimentalise Bob’s pinched and wretched narcissism, but as the slow, sad coda makes clear, the assassination was Ford’s tragedy as well as Jesse’s, an infamous folly he would live to regret and replay – several hundred times in fact, for an audience of eager rubberneckers.

Filmed by regular Coens DoP Roger Deakins in languid, wispy vignettes, the lens sometimes smudged with Vaseline, this is the West as Eadweard Muybridge might have photographed it if he’d only taken his experiments in kinetic motion a stage further. Malick, Kubrick and Cimino would surely recognise a kindred spirit in Dominik; this flagrantly uncommercial enterprise seems designed as a heroic folly in and of itself. It’s another weighty monument to the death of the West, and within a whisker of the masterpiece Dominik was evidently shooting for.

Tom Charity

Casey Affleck Talks To Uncut About New Movie

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Uncut Q&A: Casey Affleck UNCUT: You’ve made a two-and-a-half hour movie about Jesse James with just one train robbery. A daring move, surely? CASEY AFFLECK: You’re right. It’s definitely not what people might expect from a Jesse James western. There aren’t many gunfights or train robberies. But I think it’s well-made and the story’s told well, so people should enjoy it. I don’t want to underestimate the audience for it. But I also wonder if people outside of America will care about it, knowing less about Jesse James. He’s part of American folklore, you know? He was also a folk hero when he was alive. Wasn’t that part of what attracted a wide-eyed Robert Ford to him? Robert Ford was just a little kid when he started reading comic books about Jesse James. But people didn’t really know who James was. They only knew him from comics. Everyone lived in small pockets of urban areas, like the big northern cities, New York or Washington, and they didn’t have any personal experience of Jesse James. To them, he was only what he’d become in the comic books as a legend. When he was killed, it was easy for people to romanticise it and turn him into this Robin Hood hero that he wasn’t, you know? Did you find it hard to see through the myth of Jesse James? I wonder what he was really like, how special he really was? In photos, he looks like a scrappy, weaselly guy, you know? I wonder what it was about him that people latched onto? Was he that magnetic? Was he just a good shot? Was he fearless? What was it about his character that made him a legend? Because he didn’t really rob trains and give to the poor that much. He didn’t have a political agenda, he was just like a lot of those people: a confederate, who lost the war and was bitter about it. I don’t think he was like a Che Guevara, someone who really had a cause. The film portrays him as a depressive. I think his own legend started to consume him, you know? And he tried to live up to it. He felt either maligned by things he’d read, or he craved positive attention, so he’d leave notes on trains that he’d robbed. The dynamic between Robert Ford and Jesse James is fascinating. Ford is like a deranged fan, and Jesse laps it up. But that changes later on. It’s pretty complex why those two guys end up in opposition to each other, but really it just boils down to one moment early on in the film. One accident turns everything on its head. Before then, things were going as well as ever for Robert Ford, he’d finally got close to his hero, and his hero is flattered by the way that Robert Ford flatters him and so he lets him in close. Then there’s this one gunfight, this totally irrelevant thing, which puts my character in a spot where he is easily manipulated by the police. It can’t have been easy for the director Andrew Dominik to make such a long, artful film for a Hollywood studio? We had an enormous amount of resistance because Andrew was trying to do something that wasn’t all that commercial, you know? There was a lot of money on the line and a lot of people who had seen the movie a different way. It could easily have been much more exciting, more of an action movie. I certainly think it’s exciting, but he definitely didn’t make an action movie. Was there much conflict between the director and the studio? Brad Pitt has said that there were countless different cuts of the movie. Andrew was always coming up against the powers-that-be, and he didn’t have the clout that a more experienced director might have. This is only his second film. He relied on his powers of persuasion, which were formidable, but he also had Brad as a producer, and Brad didn’t take any money from the film and he put his own money into it. When we needed extra days to shoot, Brad paid for them himself. He always supported Andrew. It’s pretty admirable, man. Brad is like the biggest movie star in the world, right? And he goes and does these movies? That’s risking a lot. Most other movie stars are like:Make sure the next one grosses so much, so I get so many points on the one after that.” Brad doesn’t give a damn. Interview: Dave Calhoun

Uncut Q&A: Casey Affleck

UNCUT: You’ve made a two-and-a-half hour movie about Jesse James with just one train robbery. A daring move, surely?

CASEY AFFLECK: You’re right. It’s definitely not what people might expect from a Jesse James western. There aren’t many gunfights or train robberies. But I think it’s well-made and the story’s told well, so people should enjoy it. I don’t want to underestimate the audience for it. But I also wonder if people outside of America will care about it, knowing less about Jesse James. He’s part of American folklore, you know?

He was also a folk hero when he was alive. Wasn’t that part of what attracted a wide-eyed Robert Ford to him?

Robert Ford was just a little kid when he started reading comic books about Jesse James. But people didn’t really know who James was. They only knew him from comics. Everyone lived in small pockets of urban areas, like the big northern cities, New York or Washington, and they didn’t have any personal experience of Jesse James. To them, he was only what he’d become in the comic books as a legend. When he was killed, it was easy for people to romanticise it and turn him into this Robin Hood hero that he wasn’t, you know?

Did you find it hard to see through the myth of Jesse James?

I wonder what he was really like, how special he really was? In photos, he looks like a scrappy, weaselly guy, you know? I wonder what it was about him that people latched onto? Was he that magnetic? Was he just a good shot? Was he fearless? What was it about his character that made him a legend? Because he didn’t really rob trains and give to the poor that much. He didn’t have a political agenda, he was just like a lot of those people: a confederate, who lost the war and was bitter about it. I don’t think he was like a Che Guevara, someone who really had a cause.

The film portrays him as a depressive.

I think his own legend started to consume him, you know? And he tried to live up to it. He felt either maligned by things he’d read, or he craved positive attention, so he’d leave notes on trains that he’d robbed.

The dynamic between Robert Ford and Jesse James is fascinating. Ford is like a deranged fan, and Jesse laps it up. But that changes later on.

It’s pretty complex why those two guys end up in opposition to each other, but really it just boils down to one moment early on in the film. One accident turns everything on its head. Before then, things were going as well as ever for Robert Ford, he’d finally got close to his hero, and his hero is flattered by the way that Robert Ford flatters him and so he lets him in close. Then there’s this one gunfight, this totally irrelevant thing, which puts my character in a spot where he is easily manipulated by the police.

It can’t have been easy for the director Andrew Dominik to make such a long, artful film for a Hollywood studio?

We had an enormous amount of resistance because Andrew was trying to do something that wasn’t all that commercial, you know? There was a lot of money on the line and a lot of people who had seen the movie a different way. It could easily have been much more exciting, more of an action movie. I certainly think it’s exciting, but he definitely didn’t make an action movie.

Was there much conflict between the director and the studio? Brad Pitt has said that there were countless different cuts of the movie.

Andrew was always coming up against the powers-that-be, and he didn’t have the clout that a more experienced director might have. This is only his second film. He relied on his powers of persuasion, which were formidable, but he also had Brad as a producer, and Brad didn’t take any money from the film and he put his own money into it. When we needed extra days to shoot, Brad paid for them himself. He always supported Andrew.

It’s pretty admirable, man. Brad is like the biggest movie star in the world, right? And he goes and does these movies? That’s risking a lot. Most other movie stars are like:Make sure the next one grosses so much, so I get so many points on the one after that.” Brad doesn’t give

a damn.

Interview: Dave Calhoun

Foo Fighters Add Another Night At Wembley

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The first show has only been on sale for a couple of hours, but the Foo Fighters have already added a second show to their residency at Wembley Stadium next summer. The new date is on June 6, the day before the previously-announced show. As Grohl revealed yesterday, the massive shows will feature the band playing on a stage right in the middle of the hallowed turf. The band will now play the London venue on June 6 and 7, and Dave Grohl has announced they will play "in the round" - on a stage in the middle of the stadium. "When we were thinking about doing Wembley we were thinking it's so huge how do we make it feel like an intimate gig?" explained Grohl. "We are doing it in the round. We're going to build a stage in the middle of the stadium with ramps going in different directions. There won't be a bad seat in the house." Grohl added fans would not have to worry about having to stare at his back all night set up in the middle. "I believe the stage will probably rotate," he told Radio 1. "I don't want to give away all the secrets but no matter where you're sitting you'll be in spitting distance from me. Let's hope they don't make as much of a mess of the pitch as those American footballers who ruined the grass for the England vs Croatia game the other night!

The first show has only been on sale for a couple of hours, but the Foo Fighters have already added a second show to their residency at Wembley Stadium next summer.

The new date is on June 6, the day before the previously-announced show. As Grohl revealed yesterday, the massive shows will feature the band playing on a stage right in the middle of the hallowed turf.

The band will now play the London venue on June 6 and 7, and Dave Grohl has announced they will play “in the round” – on a stage in the middle of the stadium.

“When we were thinking about doing Wembley we were thinking it’s so huge how do we make it feel like an intimate gig?” explained Grohl. “We are doing it in the round. We’re going to build a stage in the middle of the stadium with ramps going in different directions. There won’t be a bad seat in the house.”

Grohl added fans would not have to worry about having to stare at his back all night set up in the middle.

“I believe the stage will probably rotate,” he told Radio 1. “I don’t want to give away all the secrets but no matter where you’re sitting you’ll be in spitting distance from me.

Let’s hope they don’t make as much of a mess of the pitch as those American footballers who ruined the grass for the England vs Croatia game the other night!

Dylan Revisits 1963 Classic For The World Fair

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There have been plenty of rumours surrounding Bob Dylan's recording activities these past few months. But here, at last, is some hard fact. The great man has recorded a new version of "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall". The song will be used to promote next year's world fair, Expo Zaragoza 2008, in northern Spain. A local band, Amaral, have been chosen by Dylan to provide a Spanish-language version of the tune, too. The festival's theme is Water And Sustainable Development. Expo Zaragoza president Roque Gistau revealed that Dylan's contribution includes a spoken-word sectionon the importance of clean water across the planet. "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall" will be heard on TV adverts for the festival, which will start appearing in Spain on December 17.

There have been plenty of rumours surrounding Bob Dylan‘s recording activities these past few months. But here, at last, is some hard fact. The great man has recorded a new version of “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall”.

The song will be used to promote next year’s world fair, Expo Zaragoza 2008, in northern Spain. A local band, Amaral, have been chosen by Dylan to provide a Spanish-language version of the tune, too.

The festival’s theme is Water And Sustainable Development. Expo Zaragoza president Roque Gistau revealed that Dylan’s contribution includes a spoken-word sectionon the importance of clean water across the planet.

“A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” will be heard on TV adverts for the festival, which will start appearing in Spain on December 17.

New Bonnie Prince Billy Album Sneaks Out!

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With a lack of fuss remarkable even by his standards, Will Oldham appears to have released a new Bonnie "Prince" Billy album this week. "Ask Forgiveness" is an eight-track covers album, recorded in Philadelphia with Greg Weeks and Meg Baird from one of our favourite psych-folk groups, Espers. The most famous song tackled by Oldham is probably Bjork's "I've Seen It All", which originally appeared on the "Dancer In The Dark" soundtrack. He also gets busy with tunes by Phil Ochs, Merle Haggard, Mickey Newbury, Danzig and - yes! - R Kelly! Here's the full tracklisting: I Came To Hear The Music I've Seen It All Am I Demon? My Life I'm Loving The Street The Way I Am Cycles The World's Greatest

With a lack of fuss remarkable even by his standards, Will Oldham appears to have released a new Bonnie “Prince” Billy album this week.

“Ask Forgiveness” is an eight-track covers album, recorded in Philadelphia with Greg Weeks and Meg Baird from one of our favourite psych-folk groups, Espers.

The most famous song tackled by Oldham is probably Bjork‘s “I’ve Seen It All”, which originally appeared on the “Dancer In The Dark” soundtrack. He also gets busy with tunes by Phil Ochs, Merle Haggard, Mickey Newbury, Danzig and – yes! – R Kelly!

Here’s the full tracklisting:

I Came To Hear The Music

I’ve Seen It All

Am I Demon?

My Life

I’m Loving The Street

The Way I Am

Cycles

The World’s Greatest