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Duran Duran – Red Carpet Massacre

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As last year’s 'Only After Dark' compilation of postpunk synthpop suggested, DD have belatedly concluded that they’re really more Arcadia than Power Station, and with this – their first album since guitarist John Taylor split – they’d like to come across as godfathers of avant-pop. If you’re willing to overlook Simon Le Bon’s always peculiar lyrics and occasionally strained singing, 'Red Carpet Massacre' is actually pretty impressive. The three Timbaland/Timberlake hookups are effective rather than embarrassing, and with the slinky “Nite Runner” they’ve produced their best single since 1986’s “Skin Trade”. STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

As last year’s ‘Only After Dark’ compilation of postpunk synthpop suggested, DD have belatedly concluded that they’re really more Arcadia than Power Station, and with this – their first album since guitarist John Taylor split – they’d like to come across as godfathers of avant-pop.

If you’re willing to overlook Simon Le Bon’s always peculiar lyrics and occasionally strained singing, ‘Red Carpet Massacre’ is actually pretty impressive. The three Timbaland/Timberlake hookups are effective rather than embarrassing, and with the slinky “Nite Runner” they’ve produced their best single since 1986’s “Skin Trade”.

STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

Fabriclive36: James Murphy And Pat Mahoney / LCD Soundsystem – 45:33

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James Murphy’s out to make you sweat. His Fabric mix, co-compiled with LCD Soundsystem drummer Pat Mahoney, is a mix of unashamed disco glitz (Chic, Daniel Wang, New York’s ZE Records) seemingly designed to confuse up post-punk stragglers hoping for The Fall. Meanwhile, LCD’s “45.33” finds its way to CD for the first time. Commissioned by Nikeas an exercise mix for iPods, this euphoric, largely electronic set finds Murphy adapting DJ dynamics for the running machine. The checkerboard sleeve, meanwhile, hints at one key influence – the pulsing, layered synthetic Krautrock of Manuel Gottsching’s “E2-E4”. LOUIS PATTISON

James Murphy’s out to make you sweat. His Fabric mix, co-compiled with LCD Soundsystem drummer Pat Mahoney, is a mix of unashamed disco glitz (Chic, Daniel Wang, New York’s ZE Records) seemingly designed to confuse up post-punk stragglers hoping for The Fall.

Meanwhile, LCD’s “45.33” finds its way to CD for the first time. Commissioned by Nikeas an exercise mix for iPods, this euphoric, largely electronic set finds Murphy adapting DJ dynamics for the running machine. The checkerboard sleeve, meanwhile, hints at one key influence – the pulsing, layered synthetic Krautrock of Manuel Gottsching’s “E2-E4”.

LOUIS PATTISON

Gorillaz – D-sides

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Testament to the astonishing fecundity of the project, Gorillaz’ second round-up of offcuts, noodles and sketches still has an excellent strike rate. Highlights? The War Child-commissioned “Hong Kong” (featuring some sublime Chinese zither), the hiphop Ian Dury of “The Rockit” and the twinkly, blurry Icelandic protest ballad “Stop The Dams” (complete with typically oddball cameo from Einar Sugarcube). The additional disc of remixes - particularly Jamie T’s “Kids With Guns” farrago - is less essential, but still includes a terrific “Chinese NY” take on “Dirty Harry”. STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

Testament to the astonishing fecundity of the project, Gorillaz’ second round-up of offcuts, noodles and sketches still has an excellent strike rate.

Highlights? The War Child-commissioned “Hong Kong” (featuring some sublime Chinese zither), the hiphop Ian Dury of “The Rockit” and the twinkly, blurry Icelandic protest ballad “Stop The Dams” (complete with typically oddball cameo from Einar Sugarcube).

The additional disc of remixes – particularly Jamie T’s “Kids With Guns” farrago – is less essential, but still includes a terrific “Chinese NY” take on “Dirty Harry”.

STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

PJ Harvey New Single Revealed

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PJ Harvey's next single to be released will be 'The Piano' on November 26. The second single to be taken from the singer's eight studio album 'White Chalk' is to also feature a track 'Heaven' recorded in 1988, during one of Harvey's first ever recording sessions. 'The Piano' will be released on download and limited edition 7” vinyl. Harvey's first White Chalk single 'When Under Ether' was released on September 17 also backed by a previously unreleased 80's-recorded track 'Wait'. You can read Uncut's review of 'White Chalk' here.

PJ Harvey‘s next single to be released will be ‘The Piano’ on November 26.

The second single to be taken from the singer’s eight studio album ‘White Chalk’ is to also feature a track ‘Heaven’ recorded in 1988, during one of Harvey’s first ever recording sessions.

‘The Piano’ will be released on download and limited edition 7” vinyl.

Harvey’s first White Chalk single ‘When Under Ether’ was released on September 17 also backed by a previously unreleased 80’s-recorded track ‘Wait’.

You can read Uncut’s review of ‘White Chalk’ here.

Bloc Party To Play Tiny Secret Gig

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Bloc Party are to play a very exclusive gig at a secret UK location soon, and the only way to get tickets is by grabbing a copy of the special NME Bloc Party single giveaway. The band's latest single 'Flux' - which shows off the band's new dancier direction is being released in two parts - the first of which is free with Uncut's sister publication NME this week (November 14). The CD features four exclusive mixes of the single and comes with access to a private website through which you can enter the draw to buy tickets for the gig. There is also a host of other download content available. CD2 of the single, featuring the original version of the song, is available to buy in shops from November 12.

Bloc Party are to play a very exclusive gig at a secret UK location soon, and the only way to get tickets is by grabbing a copy of the special NME Bloc Party single giveaway.

The band’s latest single ‘Flux‘ – which shows off the band’s new dancier direction is being released in two parts – the first of which is free with Uncut’s sister publication NME this week (November 14).

The CD features four exclusive mixes of the single and comes with access to a private website through which you can enter the draw to buy tickets for the gig.

There is also a host of other download content available.

CD2 of the single, featuring the original version of the song, is available to buy in shops from November 12.

Iron Maiden Cause Ticket Mayhem In Scandinavia

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Iron Maiden's Somewhere Back In Time world tour is continuing to sell amazingly well, and the latest countries to go Maiden mad are Sweden and Finland - with the band selling 123, 500 tickets yesterday alone. An extra concert at Finland's 30,000 capacity Ratina Stadium has today been announced for July 19, after the show Helsinki's 41, 500 Olympic Stadium was inundated with requests yesterday. Tickets for the added show will go on sale this Friday, November 16 at 9am. The tour's Scandinavian promoter Thomas Johansson of EMA Telstar said: “We said when we announced this tour that is was the biggest Nordic Tour by any rock band ever and that we wanted to ensure that as many fans as possible could get to see this amazing band. You must appreciate that Helsinki has a population of half a million so this is equivalent to selling out a dozen Wembley Stadiums before lunch." Tickets also went on sale yesterday for Maiden's Columbia concert and also broke records for sales in the South American country. Phil Rodriguez, the promoter for Simon Bolivar Stadium in Bogota said: “Box Office records were broken from the very start and Maiden mania is sweeping Columbia. We sold over 12,000 on just the first day. Nobody has ever done this, it’s fantastic – this is usually a “slow” market for ticket sales.” The Somewhere Back In Time tour will see Iron Maiden resurrect their 80s Powerslave Tour, with the stage production based on the same Egyptian theme. Iron Maiden are also releasing DVDs of their classic Live After Death and Maiden England shows from the mid-80s, previously only available on VHS, on February 4, 2008. The tour kicks off in India in February. UK dates are expected to be in the Summer. World tour dates so far confirmed are as follows – tickets for India, Japan, Mexico, Brazil, Chile and Argentina are yet to go on sale. See www.ironmaiden.com for info. Mumbai, India - Bandra Kurla Complex (February 1) Perth, Australia - Burswood Dome (4) Melbourne, Australia - Rod Laver Arena (6/7) Sydney, Australia - Acer Arena (9/10) Brisbane, Australia - Entertainment Centre (12) Yokohama, Japan - Pacifico Yokohama (15) Tokyo, Japan - Messe (16) Los Angeles, USA -The Forum (19) Guadalajara, Mexico - Auditoria Telmex (21) Monterrey, Mexico - Arena Monterrey (22) Mexico City, Mexico - Sports Palace (24) San Jose, Costa Rica - Saprisa Stadium (26) Bogota, Columbia - Simon Bolivar Park (28) Sao Paulo, Brazil – Alhembi Stadium (March 2) Porto Allegre, Brazil - Gigantinho (5) Buenos Aires , Argentina - Ferrofcarril Oeste Stadium (7) Santiago, Chile - Pista Atletica (9) Puerto Rico - San Juan Coliseo (12) New Jersey, USA - Izod Centre (14) Toronto, Canada - Air Canada Centre (16) Stockholm, Sweden - Stockholm Stadium (July 16) Helsinki, Finland - Helsinki Olympic Stadium (18) Trondheim, Norway - Lerkendalstadium (22) Oslo, Norway - Valle Hovin (24) Gothenburg, Sweden - Ullevi Stadium (26) Horsens, Denmark - Horsens Gods Bane Pladsen (27) Wachen Open Air Festival, Germany (August 1-3)

Iron Maiden‘s Somewhere Back In Time world tour is continuing to sell amazingly well, and the latest countries to go Maiden mad are Sweden and Finland – with the band selling 123, 500 tickets yesterday alone.

An extra concert at Finland’s 30,000 capacity Ratina Stadium has today been announced for July 19, after the show Helsinki’s 41, 500 Olympic Stadium was inundated with requests yesterday.

Tickets for the added show will go on sale this Friday, November 16 at 9am.

The tour’s Scandinavian promoter Thomas Johansson of EMA Telstar said: “We said when we announced this tour that is was the biggest Nordic Tour by any rock band ever and that we wanted to ensure that as many fans as possible could get to see this amazing band. You must appreciate that Helsinki has a population of half a million so this is equivalent to selling out a dozen Wembley Stadiums before lunch.”

Tickets also went on sale yesterday for Maiden’s Columbia concert and also broke records for sales in the South American country.

Phil Rodriguez, the promoter for Simon Bolivar Stadium in Bogota said: “Box Office records were broken from the very start and Maiden mania is sweeping Columbia. We sold over 12,000 on just the first day. Nobody has ever done this, it’s fantastic – this is usually a “slow” market for ticket sales.”

The Somewhere Back In Time tour will see Iron Maiden resurrect their 80s Powerslave Tour, with the stage production based on the same Egyptian theme.

Iron Maiden are also releasing DVDs of their classic Live After Death and Maiden England shows from the mid-80s, previously only available on VHS, on February 4, 2008.

The tour kicks off in India in February. UK dates are expected to be in the Summer.

World tour dates so far confirmed are as follows – tickets for India, Japan, Mexico, Brazil, Chile and Argentina are yet to go on sale. See www.ironmaiden.com for info.

Mumbai, India – Bandra Kurla Complex (February 1)

Perth, Australia – Burswood Dome (4)

Melbourne, Australia – Rod Laver Arena (6/7)

Sydney, Australia – Acer Arena (9/10)

Brisbane, Australia – Entertainment Centre (12)

Yokohama, Japan – Pacifico Yokohama (15)

Tokyo, Japan – Messe (16)

Los Angeles, USA -The Forum (19)

Guadalajara, Mexico – Auditoria Telmex (21)

Monterrey, Mexico – Arena Monterrey (22)

Mexico City, Mexico – Sports Palace (24)

San Jose, Costa Rica – Saprisa Stadium (26)

Bogota, Columbia – Simon Bolivar Park (28)

Sao Paulo, Brazil – Alhembi Stadium (March 2)

Porto Allegre, Brazil – Gigantinho (5)

Buenos Aires , Argentina – Ferrofcarril Oeste Stadium (7)

Santiago, Chile – Pista Atletica (9)

Puerto Rico – San Juan Coliseo (12)

New Jersey, USA – Izod Centre (14)

Toronto, Canada – Air Canada Centre (16)

Stockholm, Sweden – Stockholm Stadium (July 16)

Helsinki, Finland – Helsinki Olympic Stadium (18)

Trondheim, Norway – Lerkendalstadium (22)

Oslo, Norway – Valle Hovin (24)

Gothenburg, Sweden – Ullevi Stadium (26)

Horsens, Denmark – Horsens Gods Bane Pladsen (27)

Wachen Open Air Festival, Germany (August 1-3)

Cut Of The Day: Black Crowes Do Dylan

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Cut of the day: November 13 Check out this live performance by the Atlanta rock band The Black Crowes covering Bob Dylan's 'Rainy Day Women #12 and 35'. The footage was filmed at Moscow's Monsters of Rock festival in 1991. The band are currently mixing a new sixteen track studio album in New York, their first since 2001's 'Lions' - due for release early next year. Check it out here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WtMPlY3duz4&rel=1 If you have any trouble viewing the embedded video above, click here.

Cut of the day: November 13

Check out this live performance by the Atlanta rock band The Black Crowes covering Bob Dylan‘s ‘Rainy Day Women #12 and 35’.

The footage was filmed at Moscow’s Monsters of Rock festival in 1991.

The band are currently mixing a new sixteen track studio album in New York, their first since 2001’s ‘Lions’ – due for release early next year.

Check it out here:

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

Radiohead Sign To US Record Label

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Radiohead have now confirmed that their latest album 'In Rainbows' is to get a physical release in the US after the band signed another record deal. The band are now signed to Dave Matthews' ATO label, currently being distributed through SonyBMG in the States, though 'In Rainbows' will be put out through ATO's TBD Records imprint on January 2. The label is also home to psychedelic rockers My Morning Jacket. As previously reported, Radiohead have signed to British independent label XL in the UK, who will release a physical format of 'In Rainbows' on December 31. Radiohead's seventh album, their first since 2004, and the end of their deal with EMI Records, was released on October 10 as a download only release through their own website. 'In Rainbows' is currently only available exclusively through Radiohead.com.

Radiohead have now confirmed that their latest album ‘In Rainbows’ is to get a physical release in the US after the band signed another record deal.

The band are now signed to Dave Matthews‘ ATO label, currently being distributed through SonyBMG in the States, though ‘In Rainbows’ will be put out through ATO’s TBD Records imprint on January 2.

The label is also home to psychedelic rockers My Morning Jacket.

As previously reported, Radiohead have signed to British independent label XL in the UK, who will release a physical format of ‘In Rainbows’ on December 31.

Radiohead’s seventh album, their first since 2004, and the end of their deal with EMI Records, was released on October 10 as a download only release through their own website.

‘In Rainbows’ is currently only available exclusively through Radiohead.com.

The compelling sex life of Aidan John Moffat

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Just looking at the booklet which comes with the new Aidan John Moffat (out of Arab Strap) CD. Opposite the page which begins, in big letters, “PART ONE: POOP”, there’s something that isn’t a disclaimer, more a claimer, I suppose. “The characters portrayed in this work are non-fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is entirely intentional.” Moffat is one of those artists that, you suspect, it might be difficult to be friends with, let alone lovers, given the likelihood that your basest instincts and most human frailties would probably end up on a record sooner or later. For the past year or two, it’s seemed as if he’s been suppressing that instinct to expose a little, thanks to some pleasant but inconsequential instrumental records released under the predictably saucy name, Lucky Pierre. But now that Arab Strap have been put out of their misery – a band, I think, who started to become a bit boring around the time they started trying to be more of a band, and less of a spoken-word-odyssey-with-accompanying-post-rock – it seems as if Moffat can happily return to his greatest strength: droll and explicit narratives about sex and incompetence and dreadful intoxication and stains and so on. This is the gist of “I Can Hear Your Heart”, a sort of audio novel, a spoken-word narrative set to various snippets of music – mainly the sort of grainy, looped easy listening samples that are familiar from Lucky Pierre records, rather than the Slint/New Order hybrids so often favoured by Arab Strap (and in part perpetuated by Moffat’s old henchman Malcolm Middleton on his somewhat overpraised solo records). It’s not a perfect album. There’s some fairly grating mucking-about in the middle (a collapsing version of Springsteen’s “Hungry Heart” is one of the more coherent snatches), and a notably poor poem called “All The Love You Need” which tries to invert a bunch of racist terms and fails, perhaps inevitably. The sort of people who actually worry about Political Correctness might find this a breath of fresh air; I didn’t. But at its best, “I Can Hear Your Heart” shows what a compelling writer Moffat remains. You’re tempted to see him as a novelist in denial, and the CD begins with a stern warning from Moffat to read the (very fine) short story in the CD booklet first. But as the highlights of the album unravel, it’s Moffat’s bleary, oddly romantic delivery which adds much to his sordid story about various girlfriends, threesomes, random shags and such. Reading that short story, “Poop”, first, you discover Moffat having a line in a pub toilet on a night out with his girlfriend and his ex. He notices a telephone number on the wall of the cubicle, prefaced by the line “For Free Sex Phone”, and feeds it into his phone, saved as “4Sex”. On the CD, it gradually becomes clear that the irate Glaswegian on the phone is the unfortunate recipient of the drunkenly curious Moffat’s 4Sex calls. I won’t give away the whole story, though it’s worth pointing out that it takes a few listens to work it out. The climax is a straight, unaccompanied tale called “Hilary And Back” which, in ten minutes, finds Moffat in stripey pyjama trousers and laden down with beer, gatecrashing a party and getting off, after a fashion, with the 16-year-old birthday girl. There’s something really poignant about the writing, and a crisp atmosphere which pulls you into Moffat’s morally indeterminate, generally slightly grubby universe. It’s the sort of track you can only imagine playing once, but end up playing again and again. It’s on again now, putting me off my writing, actually. . .

Just looking at the booklet which comes with the new Aidan John Moffat (out of Arab Strap) CD. Opposite the page which begins, in big letters, “PART ONE: POOP”, there’s something that isn’t a disclaimer, more a claimer, I suppose. “The characters portrayed in this work are non-fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is entirely intentional.”

Smashing Pumpkins Announce UK Tour

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Smashing Pumpkins have announced that they are heading to the UK for an arena tour in February 2008. The band's only comeback shows in the UK last year were headlining the Carling Reading and Leeds festival in August, and an intimate show at London's Shepherds Bush Empire around the release of their first album since 2000, 'Zeitgeist.' The band, comprising original Pumpkins members Corgan and Jimmy Chamberlain, now also includes bassist Ginger Reyes (The Halo Friendlies), guitarist Jeff Schroeder (The Lassie Foundation), and keyboardist Lisa Harriton. Tickets for the UK shows go on sale this Friday, November 16 at midday. The Smashing Pumpkins will play: Glasgow SECC (February 12) Nottingham Arena (14) Manchester MEN Arena (15) London O2 Arena (16) Pic credit: Lubrano/ Live pix

Smashing Pumpkins have announced that they are heading to the UK for an arena tour in February 2008.

The band’s only comeback shows in the UK last year were headlining the Carling Reading and Leeds festival in August, and an intimate show at London’s Shepherds Bush Empire around the release of their first album since 2000, ‘Zeitgeist.’

The band, comprising original Pumpkins members Corgan and Jimmy Chamberlain, now also includes bassist Ginger Reyes (The Halo Friendlies), guitarist Jeff Schroeder (The Lassie Foundation), and keyboardist Lisa Harriton.

Tickets for the UK shows go on sale this Friday, November 16 at midday.

The Smashing Pumpkins will play:

Glasgow SECC (February 12)

Nottingham Arena (14)

Manchester MEN Arena (15)

London O2 Arena (16)

Pic credit: Lubrano/ Live pix

Today’s playlist

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Mild frenzy at Uncut today as we put the finishing touches to our end-of-year issue. As a consequence, I've not had a chance to do the full blog, but here's the music we've played in the office. Favourites? "Bummed", which has aged much better than the simultaneously reissued "Pills 'N' Thrills & Bellyaches", and the compelling return to form of Aidan Moffat from Arab Strap. I'll get round to doing a full write-up on this one in the next day or two, in theory. 1 Various Artists - Monopoly Of Brilliance (Southern) 2 Various Artists - Rarities From The Bob Hite Vaults (Sub Rosa) 3 Various Artists - Soma Compilation 2007 (Soma) 4 Soulja Boy - Tellem.com (ColliPark Music/Interscope) 5 Quinn Walker - Laughter's An Asshole (Voodoo Eros) 6 Metronomy - LP Sampler (Because) 7 One More Grain - Isle Of Grain (White Heat) 8 Happy Mondays - Bummed (Collector's Edition) (Rhino) 9 Aidan John Moffat - I Can Hear Your Heart (Chemikal Underground)

Mild frenzy at Uncut today as we put the finishing touches to our end-of-year issue. As a consequence, I’ve not had a chance to do the full blog, but here’s the music we’ve played in the office. Favourites?

Write a Christmas song for Sufjan Stevens!

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Not content with releasing a box set of Christmas songs this time last year, Sufjan Stevens is busy writing and recording another one for Christmas 2007. The catch is, this time, only one person may ever hear it! Asthmatic Kitty, Stevens' label is advertising on its website for fans to send in their own Christmas songs. The best one, according to Stevens, will win Stevens' own new song - theirs to use how they like! We think that's what is happening, anyway: it all seems kind of cute but complicated. Here's what it says over at Asthmatic Kitty, anyway: "Write an original Christmas song, record it, and email the song to us. Asthmatic Kitty will pick a winner, and that person will trade rights to their song for rights to Sufjan's song. "Just like a gift exhange, Sufjan's song becomes your song. You can hoard it for yourself, sell it to a major soft drink corporation, use it in your daughter's first Christmas video, or share it for free on your website. No one except Sufjan and you will hear his song, unless you decide otherwise. You get the song and all legal rights to it. We get the same rights to your song. "By submitting your song, you also give us permission to stream it online." Ho ho ho.

Not content with releasing a box set of Christmas songs this time last year, Sufjan Stevens is busy writing and recording another one for Christmas 2007.

The catch is, this time, only one person may ever hear it! Asthmatic Kitty, Stevens’ label is advertising on its website for fans to send in their own Christmas songs. The best one, according to Stevens, will win Stevens’ own new song – theirs to use how they like!

We think that’s what is happening, anyway: it all seems kind of cute but complicated. Here’s what it says over at Asthmatic Kitty, anyway:

“Write an original Christmas song, record it, and email the song to us. Asthmatic Kitty will pick a winner, and that person will trade rights to their song for rights to Sufjan’s song.

“Just like a gift exhange, Sufjan’s song becomes your song. You can hoard it for yourself, sell it to a major soft drink corporation, use it in your daughter’s first Christmas video, or share it for free on your website. No one except Sufjan and you will hear his song, unless you decide otherwise. You get the song and all legal rights to it. We get the same rights to your song.

“By submitting your song, you also give us permission to stream it online.”

Ho ho ho.

Norman Mailer Dies – 1923 – 2007

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NORMAN MAILER 1923 – 2007 It’s a rather grim inevitability that the greats of American literature are now beginning to pass away. In April this year, we lost Kurt Vonnegut, author of Slaughterhouse Five and Breakfast Of Champions, at the age of 85. Now, Norman Mailer has died a few months shy of his 85th birthday. Mailer wasn't just a novelist, he was a tough guy in the tradition of Hemingway; a drinker who battled with all manner of addictions during his life, a womaniser who stabbed his second wife during a row, a pugilist who commentated on the Ali-Frazier “Rumble In The Jungle” and once head-butted Truman Capote. Mailer's first book, The Naked And The Dead, was published in 1948 and based on his own experiences in World War 2. It immediately established him as a major force in literature, and he would continue to hold that position across the next half century years, twice winning the Pulitzer Prize (in 1968 for Armies Of The Night and in 1979 for The Execution's Song) and turning in another masterpiece, the epic CIA thriller Harlot's Ghost, in 1991. Mailer had defined himself as a provocative counter-culturalist and a commentator during the 1950s and Sixties. He wrote plenty of political nonfiction, was arrested on anti-Vietnam demonstrations and once ran for mayor of New York. But Harlot’s Ghost found him still inspired by the churn of politics and history, and able to keep firm grip of a 1,300 page narrative. Like most of his generation – Roth, Bellow, Updike, Vidal, Didion, Pynchon, Wolfe– Mailer lived through the War, and had seen the fall of Kennedy’s Camelot. These things you imagine, tend to stick with you. He wrote a play about Marilyn Monroe and after Harlot’s Ghost came a biography of Lee Harvey Oswald. Mailer’s last book, The Castle In The Forest, published this year, theorised that Hitler had been the product of incestuous union, brought about by Satanic intervention. He was reportedly working on a follow-up. Mailer’s life, certainly, was famously as controversial as his writings. “What’s the use of being a writer if you can’t irritate a great man people?” he said. But, despite the brilliance of his writing, you can’t help but question the litany of fights, marriages (six) and, perhaps worst of all, his lobbying for the parole of convicted killer Jack Abbott in 1980 that saw Abbott, once freed, kill again. One of the Sunday colour supplements interviewed Mailer around the publication of The Castle In The Forest. When asked what his favourite novel was, Mailer replied: “Moby Dick.” Much was subsequently made in the article that Mailer, like Captain Ahab, was obsessively searching for his own great white – the Great American Novel. In fact, Mailer wrote at least two books that are strong contenders for the title: The Naked And The Dead and Harlot’s Ghost. MICHAEL BONNER

NORMAN MAILER

1923 – 2007

It’s a rather grim inevitability that the greats of American literature are now beginning to pass away. In April this year, we lost Kurt Vonnegut, author of Slaughterhouse Five and Breakfast Of Champions, at the age of 85.

Now, Norman Mailer has died a few months shy of his 85th birthday.

Mailer wasn’t just a novelist, he was a tough guy in the tradition of Hemingway; a drinker who battled with all manner of addictions during his life, a womaniser who stabbed his second wife during a row, a pugilist who commentated on the Ali-Frazier “Rumble In The Jungle” and once head-butted Truman Capote.

Mailer’s first book, The Naked And The Dead, was published in 1948 and based on his own experiences in World War 2. It immediately established him as a major force in literature, and he would continue to hold that position across the next half century years, twice winning the Pulitzer Prize (in 1968 for Armies Of The Night and in 1979 for The Execution’s Song) and turning in another masterpiece, the epic CIA thriller Harlot’s Ghost, in 1991.

Mailer had defined himself as a provocative counter-culturalist and a commentator during the 1950s and Sixties. He wrote plenty of political nonfiction, was arrested on anti-Vietnam demonstrations and once ran for mayor of New York. But Harlot’s Ghost found him still inspired by the churn of politics and history, and able to keep firm grip of a 1,300 page narrative.

Like most of his generation – Roth, Bellow, Updike, Vidal, Didion, Pynchon, Wolfe– Mailer lived through the War, and had seen the fall of Kennedy’s Camelot. These things you imagine, tend to stick with you. He wrote a play about Marilyn Monroe and after Harlot’s Ghost came a biography of Lee Harvey Oswald. Mailer’s last book, The Castle In The Forest, published this year, theorised that Hitler had been the product of incestuous union, brought about by Satanic intervention. He was reportedly working on a follow-up.

Mailer’s life, certainly, was famously as controversial as his writings. “What’s the use of being a writer if you can’t irritate a great man people?” he said. But, despite the brilliance of his writing, you can’t help but question the litany of fights, marriages (six) and, perhaps worst of all, his lobbying for the parole of convicted killer Jack Abbott in 1980 that saw Abbott, once freed, kill again.

One of the Sunday colour supplements interviewed Mailer around the publication of The Castle In The Forest. When asked what his favourite novel was, Mailer replied: “Moby Dick.” Much was subsequently made in the article that Mailer, like Captain Ahab, was obsessively searching for his own great white – the Great American Novel. In fact, Mailer wrote at least two books that are strong contenders for the title: The Naked And The Dead and Harlot’s Ghost.

MICHAEL BONNER

McLaren causes Anarchy in the Jungle

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Never one to avoid a fuss, Malcolm McLaren has pulled out of ITV's "I'm A Celebrity - Get Me Out Of Here!" before the gruelling reality show has even begun. McLaren flew to Australia with his fellow contestants - some of whom Uncut has even heard of - but changed his mind about eating bugs, wearing khaki, sharing camps with minor EastEnders actors and so on at the very last moment. In so doing, he outperformed his old charge John Lydon, who lasted a few days in the jungle before walking out a couple of years ago. Should you still want to watch the show, it kicks off on ITV1 tonight (November 12) at 9pm. In the absence of Malc, rock interest is provided by the reliably feisty Cerys Matthews and some bloke who used to be in Five.

Never one to avoid a fuss, Malcolm McLaren has pulled out of ITV’s “I’m A Celebrity – Get Me Out Of Here!” before the gruelling reality show has even begun.

McLaren flew to Australia with his fellow contestants – some of whom Uncut has even heard of – but changed his mind about eating bugs, wearing khaki, sharing camps with minor EastEnders actors and so on at the very last moment.

In so doing, he outperformed his old charge John Lydon, who lasted a few days in the jungle before walking out a couple of years ago.

Should you still want to watch the show, it kicks off on ITV1 tonight (November 12) at 9pm. In the absence of Malc, rock interest is provided by the reliably feisty Cerys Matthews and some bloke who used to be in Five.

Radiohead cover The Smiths and New Order

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Radiohead's independent-minded multi-media assault continued last Friday (November 9) with a lengthy webcast on their channel, radiohead.tv. The show was titled 'Thumbs Down' and featured the band making thumbs-down signals throughout. "This is 'Thumbs Down',"explained singer Thom Yorke helpfully. "This is our way of celebrating the fact that we finished a record. We've been doing some stupid stuff really for a couple of weeks, knocking some stuff together. Don't expect any quality level cos there is none, except when of course when the professionals are involved and there are a couple here because frankly we need 'em." Radiohead performed a bunch of songs from their excellent "In Rainbows", plus cracking covers of New Order's "Ceremony" and The Smiths' "The Headmaster Ritual". Most of the action took place in their studio, though a clip for the track "15 Step" used an extended clip from the David Fincher movie "Se7en", replacing Gwyneth Paltrow's head in the box with that of a cheerfully singing Thom Yorke. The band also DJed throughout the broadcast. Here's their playlist: Burial: "Near Dark" M.I.A.: "Pull Up the People" Tomas Anderson: "Happy Happy" !!!: "Heart of Hearts" Kings of Leon: "My Party" Asian Dub Foundation: "Model Apprentice" Jorge Ben: "Take It Easy My Brother Charlie" Les Baxter: "The Ancient Galleon" The First Edition: "Just Dropped in (To See What Condition My Condition Was in)" Iggy Pop: "Nightclubbin'" Squarepusher: "My Red Hot Car" Bauhaus: "Bella Lugosi's Dead" Iron and Wine: "Pagan Angel and a Borrowed Car" Captain Beefheat: "Sun Zoom Spark" Bonnie Prince Billy: "Lessons From What's Poor" Asian Dub Foundation: "Naxalite" Ray Charles: "It Should've Been Me" Juana Molina: "Micael" Fela Kuti & the Africa 70: "Alu Jon Jonki Jon"

Radiohead‘s independent-minded multi-media assault continued last Friday (November 9) with a lengthy webcast on their channel, radiohead.tv.

The show was titled ‘Thumbs Down’ and featured the band making thumbs-down signals throughout.

“This is ‘Thumbs Down’,”explained singer Thom Yorke helpfully. “This is our way of celebrating the fact that we finished a record. We’ve been doing some stupid stuff really for a couple of weeks, knocking some stuff together. Don’t expect any quality level cos there is none, except when of course when the professionals are involved and there are a couple here because frankly we need ’em.”

Radiohead performed a bunch of songs from their excellent “In Rainbows”, plus cracking covers of New Order‘s “Ceremony” and The Smiths‘ “The Headmaster Ritual”.

Most of the action took place in their studio, though a clip for the track “15 Step” used an extended clip from the David Fincher movie “Se7en”, replacing Gwyneth Paltrow‘s head in the box with that of a cheerfully singing Thom Yorke.

The band also DJed throughout the broadcast. Here’s their playlist:

Burial: “Near Dark”

M.I.A.: “Pull Up the People”

Tomas Anderson: “Happy Happy”

!!!: “Heart of Hearts”

Kings of Leon: “My Party”

Asian Dub Foundation: “Model Apprentice”

Jorge Ben: “Take It Easy My Brother Charlie”

Les Baxter: “The Ancient Galleon”

The First Edition: “Just Dropped in (To See What Condition My Condition Was in)”

Iggy Pop: “Nightclubbin'”

Squarepusher: “My Red Hot Car”

Bauhaus: “Bella Lugosi’s Dead”

Iron and Wine: “Pagan Angel and a Borrowed Car”

Captain Beefheat: “Sun Zoom Spark”

Bonnie Prince Billy: “Lessons From What’s Poor”

Asian Dub Foundation: “Naxalite”

Ray Charles: “It Should’ve Been Me”

Juana Molina: “Micael”

Fela Kuti & the Africa 70: “Alu Jon Jonki Jon”

Eels Go Hits And Rarities Crazy!

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Mark 'E' Everett's ever-changing Eels project are celebrated on two hefty compilations, scheduled for release on January 21, 2008. "Meet The EELS: Essential EELS Vol. 1, 1996-2006" features 24 of their most famous tracks - though it also includes a previously unreleased take on Missy Elliott's "Get Ur Freak On". The package also includes a DVD with 12 of the band's promo videos. Meanwhile, "EELS Useless Trinkets: B-Sides, Soundtracks, Rarities and Unreleased 1996-2006" has 50 tracks sprawling across two CDs, and promises to be something of the motherlode for hardcore Eels fans. Cover versions on this one include Screamin’ Jay Hawkins’ “I Put A Spell On You”, James Carr’s “Dark End of The Street” and Prince’s “If I Was Your Girlfriend.” It comes with a six-track DVD filmed at their Lollapalooza Festival show in 2006. Here are the tracklistings for both packages: MEET THE EELS: Essential EELS Vol. I, 1996-2006 (CD+DVD): 01 novocaine for the soul 02 susan's house 03 my beloved monster 04 your lucky day in hell 05 3 speed 06 last stop: this town 07 climbing to the moon (jon brion remix)* 08 flyswatter 09 i like birds 10 mr. E's beautiful blues 11 it's a motherfucker 12 souljacker part 1 13 that's not really funny 14 fresh feeling 15 get ur freak on* 16 saturday morning 17 love of the loveless 18 dirty girl (live at town hall) 19 i need some sleep 20 hey man (now you're really living) 21 i'm going to stop pretending that i didn't break your heart 22 trouble with dreams 23 railroad man 24 losing streak EELS VIDEO COLLECTION DVD: 01 novocaine for the soul 02 susan's house 03 rags to rags 04 your lucky day in hell 05 last stop: this town 06 cancer for the cure 07 flyswatter 08 souljacker part I 09 saturday morning 10 hey man (now you're really living) 11 trouble with dreams 12 dirty girl (live at town hall) EELS USELESS TRINKETS: B-Sides, Soundtracks, Rarities and Unreleased 1996-2006 (2CD+DVD) DISC 1: 01 novocaine for the soul (live from hell) 02 fucker 03 my beloved monster (live from tennessee) 04 dog's life 05 susan's apartment 06 manchester girl (BBC) 07 flower (BBC) 08 my beloved mad monster party (BBC) 09 animal 10 stepmother 11 everything's gonna be cool this christmas 12 your lucky day in hell (michael simpson remix)* 13 altar boy 14 novocaine for the soul (moog cookbook remix) 15 if i was your girlfriend (live)* 16 bad news 17 funeral parlor 18 hospital food (BBC) 19 open the door (BBC) 20 birdgirl on a cell phone 21 vice president fruitley 22 my beloved monstrosity 23 dark end of the street (live)* 24 the cheater's guide to your heart (live)* 25 useless trinkets* DISC 2: 01 mr. E's beautiful remix 02 souljacker part I (alternate version)* 03 dog faced boy (alternate version)* 04 jennifer eccles 05 rotten world blues 06 can't help falling in love 07 christmas is going to the dogs 08 mighty fine blues 09 eyes down 10 skywriting 11 taking a bath in rust 12 estranged friends* 13 her 14 waltz of the naked clowns 15 i like birds (live)* 16 sad foot sign 17 living life 18 the bright side 19 after the operation 20 jelly dancers 21 i could never take the place of your man (live at Town Hall) 22 mr. E's beautiful blues (live at Town Hall) 23 i want to protect you* 24 i put a spell on you (live)* 25 saw a ufo* EELS LOLLAPALOOZA 2006 DVD: 01 saturday morning 02 eyes down 03 my beloved monster 04 a magic world 05 not ready yet 06 souljacker part I *previously unreleased

Mark ‘E’ Everett’s ever-changing Eels project are celebrated on two hefty compilations, scheduled for release on January 21, 2008.

“Meet The EELS: Essential EELS Vol. 1, 1996-2006” features 24 of their most famous tracks – though it also includes a previously unreleased take on Missy Elliott‘s “Get Ur Freak On”. The package also includes a DVD with 12 of the band’s promo videos.

Meanwhile, “EELS Useless Trinkets: B-Sides, Soundtracks, Rarities and Unreleased 1996-2006” has 50 tracks sprawling across two CDs, and promises to be something of the motherlode for hardcore Eels fans.

Cover versions on this one include Screamin’ Jay Hawkins’ “I Put A Spell On You”, James Carr’s “Dark End of The Street” and Prince’s “If I Was Your Girlfriend.” It comes with a six-track DVD filmed at their Lollapalooza Festival show in 2006.

Here are the tracklistings for both packages:

MEET THE EELS: Essential EELS Vol. I, 1996-2006 (CD+DVD):

01 novocaine for the soul

02 susan’s house

03 my beloved monster

04 your lucky day in hell

05 3 speed

06 last stop: this town

07 climbing to the moon (jon brion remix)*

08 flyswatter

09 i like birds

10 mr. E’s beautiful blues

11 it’s a motherfucker

12 souljacker part 1

13 that’s not really funny

14 fresh feeling

15 get ur freak on*

16 saturday morning

17 love of the loveless

18 dirty girl (live at town hall)

19 i need some sleep

20 hey man (now you’re really living)

21 i’m going to stop pretending that i didn’t break your heart

22 trouble with dreams

23 railroad man

24 losing streak

EELS VIDEO COLLECTION DVD:

01 novocaine for the soul

02 susan’s house

03 rags to rags

04 your lucky day in hell

05 last stop: this town

06 cancer for the cure

07 flyswatter

08 souljacker part I

09 saturday morning

10 hey man (now you’re really living)

11 trouble with dreams

12 dirty girl (live at town hall)

EELS USELESS TRINKETS: B-Sides, Soundtracks, Rarities and

Unreleased 1996-2006 (2CD+DVD)

DISC 1:

01 novocaine for the soul (live from hell)

02 fucker

03 my beloved monster (live from tennessee)

04 dog’s life

05 susan’s apartment

06 manchester girl (BBC)

07 flower (BBC)

08 my beloved mad monster party (BBC)

09 animal

10 stepmother

11 everything’s gonna be cool this christmas

12 your lucky day in hell (michael simpson remix)*

13 altar boy

14 novocaine for the soul (moog cookbook remix)

15 if i was your girlfriend (live)*

16 bad news

17 funeral parlor

18 hospital food (BBC)

19 open the door (BBC)

20 birdgirl on a cell phone

21 vice president fruitley

22 my beloved monstrosity

23 dark end of the street (live)*

24 the cheater’s guide to your heart (live)*

25 useless trinkets*

DISC 2:

01 mr. E’s beautiful remix

02 souljacker part I (alternate version)*

03 dog faced boy (alternate version)*

04 jennifer eccles

05 rotten world blues

06 can’t help falling in love

07 christmas is going to the dogs

08 mighty fine blues

09 eyes down

10 skywriting

11 taking a bath in rust

12 estranged friends*

13 her

14 waltz of the naked clowns

15 i like birds (live)*

16 sad foot sign

17 living life

18 the bright side

19 after the operation

20 jelly dancers

21 i could never take the place of your man (live at Town Hall)

22 mr. E’s beautiful blues (live at Town Hall)

23 i want to protect you*

24 i put a spell on you (live)*

25 saw a ufo*

EELS LOLLAPALOOZA 2006 DVD:

01 saturday morning

02 eyes down

03 my beloved monster

04 a magic world

05 not ready yet

06 souljacker part I

*previously unreleased

Sex Pistols Kick Off Residency In The Capital

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Last night (November 8), the original line-up of the Sex Pistols began their five-date run at London's Brixton Academy. Johnny Rotten, Glen Matlock, Steve Jones and Paul Cook have reunited to celebrate the 30th anniversary of their album, Never Mind The Bollocks. In the audience at the gig were documentary maker Julien Temple, comedians Adrian Edmondson and Mark Lamarr as well as England under 21 football team manager, Stuart Pearce. The complete set list for last night's show was: "Pretty Vacant" "17/Lazy Sod" "No Feelings" "New York" "Did You No Wrong" "Liar" "Holidays In The Sun" "Submission" "Stepping Stone" "No Fun" "Problems" "God Save The Queen" "EMI" Encore: "Bodies" "Anarchy In The UK"

Last night (November 8), the original line-up of the Sex Pistols began their five-date run at London’s Brixton Academy.

Johnny Rotten, Glen Matlock, Steve Jones and Paul Cook have reunited to celebrate the 30th anniversary of their album, Never Mind The Bollocks.

In the audience at the gig were documentary maker Julien Temple, comedians Adrian Edmondson and Mark Lamarr as well as England under 21 football team manager, Stuart Pearce.

The complete set list for last night’s show was:

“Pretty Vacant”

“17/Lazy Sod”

“No Feelings”

“New York”

“Did You No Wrong”

“Liar”

“Holidays In The Sun”

“Submission”

“Stepping Stone”

“No Fun”

“Problems”

“God Save The Queen”

“EMI”

Encore:

“Bodies”

“Anarchy In The UK”

How A Beatle Saved Python

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The ex-Python and Oscar-nominated film director Terry Gilliam has revealed how George Harrison came to the rescue on the controversial classic, Monty Python's Life Of Brian. "We had pop stars who were our friends, rich pop stars like George Harrison and record companies who made a lot of money, and they liked us, and they gave us money," he says in a documentary about his work to be screened on Turner Classic Movies on November 24. "Just as the crew was heading out to Tunisia to go to work, EMI, who were backing at that point, pulled out, leaving us high and dry. "Thank God George Harrison came to the rescue, and thank God he liked what we had done, and we were able to make the film without any Hollywood involvement or anything, just private pop star money." Harrison set up Handmade Films in 1979 to finance Life Of Brian. The company subsequently went on to make other British classics including The Long Good Friday and Withnail & I.

The ex-Python and Oscar-nominated film director Terry Gilliam has revealed how George Harrison came to the rescue on the controversial classic, Monty Python’s Life Of Brian.

“We had pop stars who were our friends, rich pop stars like George Harrison and record companies who made a lot of money, and they liked us, and they gave us money,” he says in a documentary about his work to be screened on Turner Classic Movies on November 24.

“Just as the crew was heading out to Tunisia to go to work, EMI, who were backing at that point, pulled out, leaving us high and dry.

“Thank God George Harrison came to the rescue, and thank God he liked what we had done, and we were able to make the film without any Hollywood involvement or anything, just private pop star money.”

Harrison set up Handmade Films in 1979 to finance Life Of Brian. The company subsequently went on to make other British classics including The Long Good Friday and Withnail & I.

The Verve Return To London

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After four rapturously-received shows in Glasgow and Blackpool, the long-anticipated Verve reunion tour arrived in London last night, and Uncut was at the front to witness their powerful return. Richard Ashcroft, Nick McCabe, Peter Salisbury and Simon Jones played a greatest hits set that lasted for over two hours. One new song was unveiled, called "Sit And Wonder", while one rarity, "Let The Damage Begin" (the b-side to "This Is Music") was dusted down. You can read a full report of the show at Uncut's Wild Mercury Sound blog. The Verve play The Roundhouse again tonight (November 9), before embarking on a sold-out arena tour next month. Here's last night's setlist: 1 This Is Music 2 Space And Time 3 Gravity Grave 4 Weeping Willow 5 Life's An Ocean 6 Sonnet 7 Sit And Wonder 8 Velvet Morning 9 Already There 10 Stormy Clouds 11 Let The Damage Begin 12 On Your Own 13 The Rolling People 14 The Drugs Don't Work 15 Bittersweet Symphony ~ 16 A Northern Soul 17 History 18 Lucky Man 19 Come On

After four rapturously-received shows in Glasgow and Blackpool, the long-anticipated Verve reunion tour arrived in London last night, and Uncut was at the front to witness their powerful return.

Richard Ashcroft, Nick McCabe, Peter Salisbury and Simon Jones played a greatest hits set that lasted for over two hours. One new song was unveiled, called “Sit And Wonder”, while one rarity, “Let The Damage Begin” (the b-side to “This Is Music”) was dusted down.

You can read a full report of the show at Uncut’s Wild Mercury Sound blog.

The Verve play The Roundhouse again tonight (November 9), before embarking on a sold-out arena tour next month.

Here’s last night’s setlist:

1 This Is Music

2 Space And Time

3 Gravity Grave

4 Weeping Willow

5 Life’s An Ocean

6 Sonnet

7 Sit And Wonder

8 Velvet Morning

9 Already There

10 Stormy Clouds

11 Let The Damage Begin

12 On Your Own

13 The Rolling People

14 The Drugs Don’t Work

15 Bittersweet Symphony

~

16 A Northern Soul

17 History

18 Lucky Man

19 Come On

The Verve at the Roundhouse

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Which comeback is this again? As The Verve mooch onto the stage at the Roundhouse, I’m reminded of a night at Glasgow Barrowlands maybe ten years ago. Nick McCabe had just rejoined the band, and I guess “Bittersweet Symphony” was about to be released. The lights went down, and the impeccable DJ played David Axelrod’s “Holy Are You”. Then the band came on: Simon Jones lunging at the crowd triumphantly; Ashcroft imperious, transported; McCabe a self-effacing figure consumed with his work. Men spilled beer and hugged each other. They’re back! I’m reminded of all this because at the Roundhouse, it all happens again. Only Peter Salisbury, the drummer, appears to have aged much, and only reserve guitarist Simon Tonge is missing, spirited away to become Damon Albarn’s henchman in Blur, Gorillaz, The Good, The Bad & The Queen and God knows what else. The DJ follows Yoko Ono with Can, then takes off “I Want More” halfway through to cue up “Holy Are You”. The Verve materialise, begin with “This Is Music”, then spend the next two-odd hours playing what may well be a near-identical set to that Barrowlands show. As revivals go, it’s rather eerie: The Verve don’t seem to be revisiting past glories, merely continuing them. If there is a change, it’s a good one. The Verve’s reunion is necessarily predicated on the return of McCabe and, consequently, the band’s silvery, psychedelic side is in the ascendant tonight. This is what I always loved most about the band – I wrote a mildly hysterical cover story about McCabe for NME when he left the second time, lauding him as the band’s key figure. I guess, given Ashcroft’s subsequent humdrum solo career, I was right about that. Backed by a superb rhythm section – their airy, gravitational funk has got better with age, I think – McCabe drives the aqueous jams that were at the heart of the band’s early glory: “Already There”, “Life’s An Ocean”, “Stormy Clouds”, a transcendentally lovely “Gravity Grave”. It’s McCabe’s gift that he can switch so effortlessly from delicate, impressionistic curlicues to thunderously heavy stomp (what on earth has he been doing for the past decade?), and it’s a powerful context in which to place Richard Ashcroft, always more convincing as the holy fool than the earnest balladeer. Indeed, this music is, in places, so unanchored, it seems a miracle how this bunch of effete, tasteful hippies became a blokey institution, second-favourite band of every Oasis fan. That becomes clearer when Ashcroft straps on his acoustic guitar and relegates McCabe to a sort of background colourist. Obviously some of these ballads (“The Drugs Don’t Work”, “Space And Time” especially) remain quite brilliant, several classes apart from the mawkish gunk they influenced and which now fills the 25+ sector of British indiedom, from Coldplay on down. But by the time “Lucky Man” is rolled out for the encores, I’ve had enough of this path, and it’s a tremendous relief when McCabe puts his foot down for the “Whole Lotta Love”-style freakout of “Come On”. He’s allowed to spatter “Bittersweet Symphony” with feedback, too, after waiting patiently for a couple of lyrics while that memorable string loop asserts itself. It remains a great song, one of those occasions where Ashcroft’s everyman mysticism is alchemically transformed – by a great tune, I suppose – from platitudes into rallying cries. There’s a new song, too, “Sit And Wonder”, not quite in the featherlight class of “The Thaw Session”, which I wrote about the other week. It’s still good, though, not least because there isn’t actually much of a song there. Ashcroft reads a few lyrics from a paper, while the band lock into one of those grooves that they discovered early in their career – a way of making something cosmic out of baggy, ostensibly. Soon, though, Ashcroft puts his shades on, and McCabe loses himself in one of those unravelling, unthrusting, magnificently subtle solos at which he has always excelled. More of that, and this might really be a comeback with a future.

Which comeback is this again? As The Verve mooch onto the stage at the Roundhouse, I’m reminded of a night at Glasgow Barrowlands maybe ten years ago. Nick McCabe had just rejoined the band, and I guess “Bittersweet Symphony” was about to be released. The lights went down, and the impeccable DJ played David Axelrod’s “Holy Are You”. Then the band came on: Simon Jones lunging at the crowd triumphantly; Ashcroft imperious, transported; McCabe a self-effacing figure consumed with his work. Men spilled beer and hugged each other. They’re back!