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Check out these Police Video Streams

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The Police are currently on the North American leg of their anniversary reunion tour, and the trio will arrive in the UK on September 4. Uncut.co.uk has got hold of some video clips from the trio's first show since announcing their reunion in February. They played an intimate fanclub show, check ...

The Police are currently on the North American leg of their anniversary reunion tour, and the trio will arrive in the UK on September 4.

Uncut.co.uk has got hold of some video clips from the trio’s first show since announcing their reunion in February. They played an intimate fanclub show, check out the clips below.

The Police’s 30th anniversary worldwide tour is being commemorated with a new compilation of the decade-spanning hits. The double disc collection of 30 songs is available from A&M Records this week.

Click here to view The Police clips:

Message In A Bottle

Can’t Stand Losing You

Roxanne

More information about the tour is available from The Police’s official website here

The Smiths Reunite

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A new documentary about The Smiths, as told by the band's former rhythm section; Mike Joyce and Andy Rourke, is to be released on DVD next month. "Inside The Smiths" tells the history of the band, and describes what it was like working with Morrissey and Johnny Marr. Mike Joyce says the reason he and Rourke have spoken for the first time on camera was that: “We wanted people to know what it was really like. It is more truthful than anything we have revealed in interviews before because we were relaxed with how it was done and who was doing it.” The documentary includes contributions from original Smiths snapper Stephen Wright, and in depth interviews with the former Smiths as well as musician friends and fans such as New Order's Peter Hook, The Fall's Mark E Smith and Buzzcocks' Pete Shelley. Younger artists such as Kaiser Chiefs' Ricky Wilson and Ordinary Boys' Preston offer their thoughts on the legacy of The Smiths too. Produced and directed by Manchester-based friend Stephen Petricco, "Inside The Smiths" will premiere at two free screenings around it's release date of July 16. The screenings will include a Q&A session. They take place in Manchester at TV21, Thomas Street on July 15 and at Fopp, on London's Tottenham Court Road on July 18. And as for that reunion? Rourke and Johnny Marr played on the same stage at the Manchester Evening News Arena this March, at a charity event organised by Rourke. He says "“Never say never. A lot's happened but, well, you just never know.”

A new documentary about The Smiths, as told by the band’s former rhythm section; Mike Joyce and Andy Rourke, is to be released on DVD next month.

“Inside The Smiths” tells the history of the band, and describes what it was like working with Morrissey and Johnny Marr. Mike Joyce says the reason he and Rourke have spoken for the first time on camera was that: “We wanted people to know what it was really like. It is more truthful than anything we have revealed in interviews before because we were relaxed with how it was done and who was doing it.”

The documentary includes contributions from original Smiths snapper Stephen Wright, and in depth interviews with the former Smiths as well as musician friends and fans such as New Order’s Peter Hook, The Fall’s Mark E Smith and Buzzcocks’ Pete Shelley.

Younger artists such as Kaiser Chiefs’ Ricky Wilson and Ordinary Boys’ Preston offer their thoughts on the legacy of The Smiths too.

Produced and directed by Manchester-based friend Stephen Petricco, “Inside The Smiths” will premiere at two free screenings around it’s release date of July 16. The screenings will include a Q&A session.

They take place in Manchester at TV21, Thomas Street on July 15 and at Fopp, on London’s Tottenham Court Road on July 18.

And as for that reunion? Rourke and Johnny Marr played on the same stage at the Manchester Evening News Arena this March, at a charity event organised by Rourke. He says ““Never say never. A lot’s happened but, well, you just never know.”

Sly Bringing The Family Stone To Hackney

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Sly & The Family Stone have today been confirmed as the opening night headline act for this year's Lovebox Weekender. The two-day festival in July in Victoria Park, Hackney, will see the funk and soul innovators headline a Saturday bill that includes Blondie, Super Furry Animals and Giles Peterson. Sly & The Family Stone, including many of the original members such as Lisa Stone and Cynthia Robinson, have not played in the UK since 1987 so the show promises to be an amazing run through of timeless tracks such as "Everyday People" and "Family Affair." Lovebox Sunday on July 22 is headlined by Weekender founders Groove Armada. Sunday also sees original new-wavers and a recently reunited B-52s perform in the UK for the first time in several years too. The Lovebox Weekender, as well as the mammoth array of music will also feature Green Areas, A kid's Playbox area, a fun steam railway, beach volleyball and more. Day tickets are £35, weekend are £60 and are available from loveboxweekender.com here Confirmed artists so far include: Saturday July 21 Sly & The Family Stone, Blondie, Super Furry Animals, The Presets, Patrick Wolf, Junior Boys, Tiga, Scratch Perverts, Gilles Peterson, Ojos De Brujo, Malcolm Middleton, Switch, Freeform Five, Groove Armada (‘Space Terrace’-style DJ set), Issst, Andy Votel, Pete Fowler, Rub’N’Tug, New Young Pony Club, Fuyija Miyagi, Blood Red Shoes, Who Made Who, Pull Tiger Tail, Friendly Fires, Man Like Me, Stateless, Secret Sundaze, Soul II Soul Soundsystem Live, Funk D’Void, Horse Meat Disco, Joey Negro (exclusive disco set), Maurice Fulton, Ska Cubano, K’Naan, Soothsayers, Vincent Vincent & The Villains, Dark Captain Light Captain, Adem, Rowenta Cash, DJ Russ Jones Sunday July 22 Groove Armada, The B-52’s, The Rapture, Hot Chip, Nouvelle Vague, Tinariwen, Toots & The Maytals, Felix Da Housecat, Digitalism, Layo & Bushwacka, Mr C, Andy Cato, Paul Arnold (Chew The Fat), Will Saul (Simple), The End, Don Letts, Greg Wilson, Ashley Beedle, DJ Diplo, Bonde Do Role, Buraka Som Sistema, DJ Format (exclusive Latin soul set), Trojan Soundsystem, Daddy G (Massive Attack), Dennis Alcapone, Anthony Johnson, Jerry Dammers, Andy Smith, DJ Derek, Solution Soundsystem, Earl 16, The Love Grocer Horns Section, Good Shoes, Mr Hudson & The Library, The Presets, Tiny Dancers, Palladium, Ra Ra Riot, The Whip, The Wallbirds, The Runners, Goldierocks, Candi Payne, Tunng, Hey Negrita, Dynamo's Rhythm Aces, Cut A Shine, Last Man Standing, Beardyman, Williams Fairey Brass Band

Sly & The Family Stone have today been confirmed as the opening night headline act for this year’s Lovebox Weekender.

The two-day festival in July in Victoria Park, Hackney, will see the funk and soul innovators headline a Saturday bill that includes Blondie, Super Furry Animals and Giles Peterson.

Sly & The Family Stone, including many of the original members such as Lisa Stone and Cynthia Robinson, have not played in the UK since 1987 so the show promises to be an amazing run through of timeless tracks such as “Everyday People” and “Family Affair.”

Lovebox Sunday on July 22 is headlined by Weekender founders Groove Armada. Sunday also sees original new-wavers and a recently reunited B-52s perform in the UK for the first time in several years too.

The Lovebox Weekender, as well as the mammoth array of music will also feature Green Areas, A kid’s Playbox area, a fun steam railway, beach volleyball and more.

Day tickets are £35, weekend are £60 and are available from loveboxweekender.com here

Confirmed artists so far include:

Saturday July 21

Sly & The Family Stone, Blondie, Super Furry Animals, The Presets, Patrick Wolf, Junior Boys, Tiga, Scratch Perverts, Gilles Peterson, Ojos De Brujo, Malcolm Middleton, Switch, Freeform Five, Groove Armada (‘Space Terrace’-style DJ set), Issst, Andy Votel, Pete Fowler, Rub’N’Tug, New Young Pony Club, Fuyija Miyagi, Blood Red Shoes, Who Made Who, Pull Tiger Tail, Friendly Fires, Man Like Me, Stateless, Secret Sundaze, Soul II Soul Soundsystem Live, Funk D’Void, Horse Meat Disco, Joey Negro (exclusive disco set), Maurice Fulton, Ska Cubano, K’Naan, Soothsayers, Vincent Vincent & The Villains, Dark Captain Light Captain, Adem, Rowenta Cash, DJ Russ Jones

Sunday July 22

Groove Armada, The B-52’s, The Rapture, Hot Chip, Nouvelle Vague, Tinariwen, Toots & The Maytals, Felix Da Housecat, Digitalism, Layo & Bushwacka, Mr C, Andy Cato, Paul Arnold (Chew The Fat), Will Saul (Simple), The End, Don Letts, Greg Wilson, Ashley Beedle, DJ Diplo, Bonde Do Role, Buraka Som Sistema, DJ Format (exclusive Latin soul set), Trojan Soundsystem, Daddy G (Massive Attack), Dennis Alcapone, Anthony Johnson, Jerry Dammers, Andy Smith, DJ Derek, Solution Soundsystem, Earl 16, The Love Grocer Horns Section, Good Shoes, Mr Hudson & The Library, The Presets, Tiny Dancers, Palladium, Ra Ra Riot, The Whip, The Wallbirds, The Runners, Goldierocks, Candi Payne, Tunng, Hey Negrita, Dynamo’s Rhythm Aces, Cut A Shine, Last Man Standing, Beardyman, Williams Fairey Brass Band

Patti Smith and Philip Glass To Read Poetry Together

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A celebratory weekend based on renowned composer Philip Glass' remarkable 35 year musical career, is to take place at the Barbican, to mark his 70th birthday this October. Patti Smith will join Glass onstage on October 19 for the opening night of Glassworks - performing a rare and intimate evening of piano and poetry inspired by their mutual love of beat poet Allen Ginsberg. The following night at the Barbican sees the premiere of Glass' new work based on Leonard Cohen'sprovocative Book of Longing. Glass was inspired over six years ago to put Cohen's words to music when Cohen read his poems to him. The new score will be performed by an ensemble of singers and musicians. Glassworks birthday celebrations culminates with a four-hour music marathon of Glass' Music in 12 Parts, one of his most renowned works. The score is regarded as one of the compostions that has defined minimalist music in the 20th Century and hasn't been performed in London in it's entirety in 22 years. Philip Glass and Patti Smith, The Poet Speaks, LSO St Lukes (October 19) Philip GlassBook of Longing, Barbican Hall (October 20) Philip Glass Ensemble, Barbican Hall (October 21) More information about the special events are available from the Barbican website here Barbican Box Office is: 0845 120 7550

A celebratory weekend based on renowned composer Philip Glass’ remarkable 35 year musical career, is to take place at the Barbican, to mark his 70th birthday this October.

Patti Smith will join Glass onstage on October 19 for the opening night of Glassworks – performing a rare and intimate evening of piano and poetry inspired by their mutual love of beat poet Allen Ginsberg.

The following night at the Barbican sees the premiere of Glass’ new work based on Leonard Cohen’sprovocative Book of Longing. Glass was inspired over six years ago to put Cohen’s words to music when Cohen read his poems to him. The new score will be performed by an ensemble of singers and musicians.

Glassworks birthday celebrations culminates with a four-hour music marathon of Glass’ Music in 12 Parts, one of his most renowned works. The score is regarded as one of the compostions that has defined minimalist music in the 20th Century and hasn’t been performed in London in it’s entirety in 22 years.

Philip Glass and Patti Smith, The Poet Speaks, LSO St Lukes (October 19)

Philip GlassBook of Longing, Barbican Hall (October 20)

Philip Glass Ensemble, Barbican Hall (October 21)

More information about the special events are available from the Barbican website here

Barbican Box Office is: 0845 120 7550

Super Furry Animals’ “Hey Venus”

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I know this is going to sound a bit churlish, but is it wrong to expect a very good band to really extend themselves? I ask because, for the past week or so, I've been playing the new Super Furry Animals album most days. It's lovely, without a doubt. But for some reason, it leaves me fractionally disappointed - as if them coming up with another 11 fine songs is somehow not quite good enough. "Hey Venus" is, I think, consciously unambitious. Rather than some kind of epic, genre-straddling, state-of-the-world address, it's direct, catchy, guitar pop, economic in length (a swift 36 minutes). There are some opulent orchestral arrangements, but on songs like "Show Your Hand" even the French horn clarion calls sound jaunty rather than portentous. Much here sounds like a small reaction to the leisurely excesses of the last SFA album, "Love Kraft". The longest song is less than five minutes, and most are a minute or two shorter than that. There are certainly a couple of gorgeous, ambling ballads in the "Love Kraft" vein - notably "Suckers", "Wolves" (a bit like "Run Christian Run", now I think about it) and "Show Your Hand", a sort of cosmic Bacharach trip. But the frazzled stomps that dominate here - "Neo Consumer", "Into The Night", "Baby Ate My Eightball" - mark a return to the simple punch of "Fuzzy Logic", albeit with richer and more skilful instrumentation. There's that curious take they have on glam back again, so that "Runaway" feels like something ersatz and Spectorised from about 1974 - like The Rubettes, as one of my colleagues pointed out the other day. Only good, obviously. The opening "Gateway Song" is a clear indication of SFA's group mindset right now: 45 seconds of joyful, dumb catchiness designed to get you hooked. And it works, up to a point. Listening to "Hey Venus" is a deeply pleasurable experience, but maybe it's a tiny bit undemanding. I don't mean to go into some rant about how rock must have gravitas and be challenging for it to succeed: I don't believe that. But there's a nagging disappointment that a band with so many ideas should ostensibly be going over old ground. Maybe, too, I feel it's time for Super Furry Animals to really stretch themselves. We know they can write lush, playful, jingly pop songs and dreaming saturated ballads in their sleep, but we also know that they can do more than that: the countless live shows I've seen them play over the past decade have proved that time and time again. Am I being too tough on them? Maybe: let me know what you think.

I know this is going to sound a bit churlish, but is it wrong to expect a very good band to really extend themselves? I ask because, for the past week or so, I’ve been playing the new Super Furry Animals album most days. It’s lovely, without a doubt. But for some reason, it leaves me fractionally disappointed – as if them coming up with another 11 fine songs is somehow not quite good enough.

New Prince Album Details Revealed

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Prince has revealed details about his forthcoming studio album "Planet Earth" which is scheduled for release on July 16. The music icon's 24th studio album, is to be released through Columbia Records, his first distributed through them since 2004's "Musicology." The new album features a reunion with his former backing group Revolution's Wendy and Lisa. They last sang with Prince on the 1986 Parade tour before leaving to perform as a duo. The first single from "Planet Earth" will be "Guitar" and will be released on July 9, a week before the album's release. In addition, as mobile company 02 are media partners for the singer's upcoming 21-night residency at the 02 Arena starting August 1 - 02 customers will be able to download the single for free for a limited period of time from June 25. The full tracklisting for the ten-track "Planet Earth" is: "Planet Earth" "Guitar" "Somewhere Here on Earth" "The One U Wanna C" "Future Baby Mama" "Mr. Goodnight" "All the Midnights in the World" "Chelsea Rodgers" "Lion of Judah" "Revelation" The last six dates for Prince's mammoth set of dates in London have just been announced as August 24, 25 and September 6, 16, 20, 21. Tickets go on sale this Friday (June 15) at 9am.

Prince has revealed details about his forthcoming studio album “Planet Earth” which is scheduled for release on July 16.

The music icon’s 24th studio album, is to be released through Columbia Records, his first distributed through them since 2004’s “Musicology.”

The new album features a reunion with his former backing group Revolution’s Wendy and Lisa. They last sang with Prince on the 1986 Parade tour before leaving to perform as a duo.

The first single from “Planet Earth” will be “Guitar” and will be released on July 9, a week before the album’s release.

In addition, as mobile company 02 are media partners for the singer’s upcoming 21-night residency at the 02 Arena starting August 1 – 02 customers will be able to download the single for free for a limited period of time from June 25.

The full tracklisting for the ten-track “Planet Earth” is:

“Planet Earth”

“Guitar”

“Somewhere Here on Earth”

“The One U Wanna C”

“Future Baby Mama”

“Mr. Goodnight”

“All the Midnights in the World”

“Chelsea Rodgers”

“Lion of Judah”

“Revelation”

The last six dates for Prince’s mammoth set of dates in London have just been announced as August 24, 25 and September 6, 16, 20, 21.

Tickets go on sale this Friday (June 15) at 9am.

Arcade Fire Confirm UK Arena Tour

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Arcade Fire have confirmed a six-date UK Arena tour, starting in Glasgow on October 26. Having just completed a sell out US tour, including a raptuously received set at Coachella festival, the Grammy nominated multi-instrumentalists will now play cities such as Newcastle, Nottingham for the first time, as part of their European Tour. Win Butler and co are also performing at various UK festivals this summer, starting with a headline performance at next month's Uncut-sponsored Latitude festival. They also play at Reading and Leeds and at T in the Park. The third single from Arcade Fire's second album "Neon Bible" is to be "No Cars Go", and is due for release on July 23. Tickets for the Arcade Fire arena tour go onsale this Friday (June 15) at 9am. £1 from each ticket sold will benefit charity Partners In Health. They will play: Glasgow SECC (October 26) Manchester MEN Arena (27) Newcastle Metro Radio Arena (29) Cardiff International Arena (30) Nottingham Arena (31) London Alexandra Palace (November 17)

Arcade Fire have confirmed a six-date UK Arena tour, starting in Glasgow on October 26.

Having just completed a sell out US tour, including a raptuously received set at Coachella festival, the Grammy nominated multi-instrumentalists will now play cities such as Newcastle, Nottingham for the first time, as part of their European Tour.

Win Butler and co are also performing at various UK festivals this summer, starting with a headline performance at next month’s Uncut-sponsored Latitude festival. They also play at Reading and Leeds and at T in the Park.

The third single from Arcade Fire’s second album “Neon Bible” is to be “No Cars Go”, and is due for release on July 23.

Tickets for the Arcade Fire arena tour go onsale this Friday (June 15) at 9am. £1 from each ticket sold will benefit charity Partners In Health.

They will play:

Glasgow SECC (October 26)

Manchester MEN Arena (27)

Newcastle Metro Radio Arena (29)

Cardiff International Arena (30)

Nottingham Arena (31)

London Alexandra Palace (November 17)

Ash Call Time On Albums

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Rock trio Ash have decided to stop making albums on the eve of the release of their sixth LP "Twilight Of The Innocents." Ash have instead decided to continue to record and publish singles only, using downloads and the internet to make their music available. In a statement issued today, Tim Wheeler says the band is excited "to [be] dedicating ourselves wholly to the art of the single for the digital age.” Abandoning the traditional method of recording albums, means that fans will get to hear new material as often and as quickly as the band can produce it. Frontman Tim Wheeler says: "By leaving this behind we can enter a new phase of spontaneity and creativity. We have our own studio in New York, we can record a track and release it the next day if we feel like it, give it to people while it's fresh." The band known for consistently releasing hit singles - Ash have had 17 top 40 hits - it is planned that compilations of single tracks released will be made available in the future. Tim Wheeler explains the thoughts that went into the decision to call time on the album as as an artform. He says: “The way people listen to music has changed, with the advent of the download the emphasis has reverted to single tracks. It hasn't helped that most people have forgotten how to make a decent album. I'm constantly disappointed with records I buy. I believe our new album is the pinnacle of everything we've done thus far, and I'm proud that this will be remembered as our last album. The future lies elsewhere and we can have a lot of fun by changing things up. It's like the Wild West at the moment and a time to take chances and try out new ideas. We're the first band to do this , but I very much doubt we'll be the last."

Rock trio Ash have decided to stop making albums on the eve of the release of their sixth LP “Twilight Of The Innocents.”

Ash have instead decided to continue to record and publish singles only, using downloads and the internet to make their music available.

In a statement issued today, Tim Wheeler says the band is excited “to [be] dedicating ourselves wholly to the art of the single for the digital age.”

Abandoning the traditional method of recording albums, means that fans will get to hear new material as often and as quickly as the band can produce it.

Frontman Tim Wheeler says: “By leaving this behind we can enter a new phase of spontaneity and creativity. We have our own studio in New York, we can record a track and release it the next day if we feel like it, give it to people while it’s fresh.”

The band known for consistently releasing hit singles – Ash have had 17 top 40 hits – it is planned that compilations of single tracks released will be made available in the future.

Tim Wheeler explains the thoughts that went into the decision to call time on the album as as an artform.

He says: “The way people listen to music has changed, with the advent of the download the emphasis has reverted to single tracks. It hasn’t helped that most people have forgotten how to make a decent album. I’m constantly disappointed with records I buy.

I believe our new album is the pinnacle of everything we’ve done thus far, and I’m proud that this will be remembered as our last album. The future lies elsewhere and we can have a lot of fun by changing things up. It’s like the Wild West at the moment and a time to take chances and try out new ideas. We’re the first band to do this , but I very much doubt we’ll be the last.”

The White Stripes – Icky Thump

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Recorded over three weeks at Nashville's Blackbird Studio - an unaccountably lengthy process for one of rock's most swift, efficient duos - *Icky Thump* is a strange beast indeed. By turns direct, quizzical, loose, and intense, it’s more eclectic in terms of approach than any previous White Stripes recording. It's named after the old Northern English expostulation Ecky Thump (meaning "Well I never!" or, more strongly, "Bugger me!"), one of the quaint Anglo idioms which appear to have reached Jack White via his English wife, Karen Elson. It might, however, have been more appropriately named after another, "Rag And Bone", whose recycling motif better reflects the album's varied styles and its application of old forms. “Rag And Bone”, the song, is a comic rendering of the album’s method. Here Mexican mariachi and Celtic folk lie alongside the band's basic blues-rock riffs, while Jack yells out the band’s creation manifesto: "Bring out your junk and we'll give it a home/A broken trumpet or a telephone". Not that Icky Thump is the first White Stripes album to reap the benefits of ad-hoc music making, of course. (i)Get Behind Me Satan(i) was remarkable for it’s use of piano and marimba – the materials which happened to be at hand in the studio. This time there’s nothing quite so left-field. Having set to work on this album after finishing touring his other concern, pop-rock band The Raconteurs, guitars are front and centre in this release. Not only that, they are recorded such a way as to suggest this is a band looking to compete. Now on signed to Warner Bros in America, this features songs of a directness not seen since their eponymous 1999 debut – and ones which it’s not hard to imagine doing well in stadiums. So for all its moments of inspired juxtaposition, much of this album sounds like Led Zeppelin in a particularly crazed mood. The brutal drums and bass of tracks like "Catch Hell Blues", "300MPH Torrential Outpour Blues" and the title track are periodically interrupted by lead guitar of such piercing fury that it's almost as if the songs themselves are bursting apart at the seams. As well they might, when lyrically-speaking, Jack's either in a schizoid quandary - "Well, there's three people in the mirror/And I'm wondering which of them I should choose" - or just looking for trouble. "If you're trying to get into some hot water,” he intones, in “Catch Hell Blues”, “I can help you find it". The addition of organ and synthesiser to the band's instrumental palette pushes the music in new and unforeseen directions. With its driving organ riff punctuated by heavy fuzz-guitar interjections, and Jack working at the upper limit of his register, "I'm Slowly Turning Into You" sounds like Led Zeppelin jamming with Atomic Rooster, than which there can be few heavier combinations. One of several ruminations here upon emotional change and development, it finds the singer slowly coming to the realisation that he's been unconsciously imitating "all those little things that you do", and that, moreover, he actually prefers this new, imitative self to his own character. Sometimes, the change is neither forced nor welcomed, but arrives as a slowly dawning realisation, as in "A Martyr For My Love For You", in which Jack finds himself feeling uncomfortable and ashamed for lusting after a teenage girl: "...as shaky as I must've seemed/Talking junk through her/Giggle little teenage dream". In a sudden burst of self-denial, he decides to protect her from his darker side by just walking away, ignoring her claims of cowardice to bask in his new-found nobility. A song not likely to be covered by Motley Crue, one would imagine. Of course, the band's broader blues heritage is an important constituent of *Icky Thump*. It’s there most clearly in the no-money blues "Bone Broke", and particularly "Effect And Cause", the ramshackle steel-appendage guitar blues which closes the album - wherein Jack, whilst admitting he's no angel, turns the tables on his complaining partner, rejecting her habit of getting annoyed at his reaction to her transgressions, rather than accepting the blame herself. But ultimately the album's blues undertow is lightened by the more unusual tracks, like Corky Robbins's "Conquest", a dramatic *norteño* blues spiced with mariachi trumpets, whose role-reversal-romance lyric Jack attacks with the theatrical gusto of a matador addressing the bull. Meanwhile, the album's two-track centrepiece of "Prickly Thorn, But Sweetly Worn" and "St Andrew" – a pair of faux-Celtic folk pastiches featuring the bagpipe drones of Jim Drury alomgside Jack's mandolin - pay tribute to the Whites' professed “Scottish ancestry”. The album's definitive cut, however, is the title track, a reflection upon America's problematic relations with immigrants, particularly the Mexican immigrants upon whose underpaid exertions it relies. "Who's using who? What should we do?" asks Jack, "Well, you can't be a pimp and a prostitute too." Sonically, it features everything that makes *Icky Thump* such a compellingly weird experience, including one of the album's plethora of guitar solos (more than on any previous White Stripes record) and, it's claimed, the very same waspish-sounding keyboard used on The Tornadoes' epochal "Telstar”. A small point, seemingly, but a significant one. With "Icky Thump", Jack and Meg’s music again makes them a rarefied perch from which they can gaze both back into rock's past, and forward into its future. ANDY GILL

Recorded over three weeks at Nashville’s Blackbird Studio – an unaccountably lengthy process for one of rock’s most swift, efficient duos – *Icky Thump* is a strange beast indeed. By turns direct, quizzical, loose, and intense, it’s more eclectic in terms of approach than any previous White Stripes recording.

It’s named after the old Northern English expostulation Ecky Thump (meaning “Well I never!” or, more strongly, “Bugger me!”), one of the quaint Anglo idioms which appear to have reached Jack White via his English wife, Karen Elson. It might, however, have been more appropriately named after another, “Rag And Bone”, whose recycling motif better reflects the album’s varied styles and its application of old forms.

“Rag And Bone”, the song, is a comic rendering of the album’s method.

Here Mexican mariachi and Celtic folk lie alongside the band’s basic blues-rock riffs, while Jack yells out the band’s creation manifesto: “Bring out your junk and we’ll give it a home/A broken trumpet or a telephone”.

Not that Icky Thump is the first White Stripes album to reap the benefits of ad-hoc music making, of course. (i)Get Behind Me Satan(i) was remarkable for it’s use of piano and marimba – the materials which happened to be at hand in the studio. This time there’s nothing quite so left-field. Having set to work on this album after finishing touring his other concern, pop-rock band The Raconteurs, guitars are front and centre in this release.

Not only that, they are recorded such a way as to suggest this is a band looking to compete. Now on signed to Warner Bros in America, this features songs of a directness not seen since their eponymous 1999 debut – and ones which it’s not hard to imagine doing well in stadiums. So for all its moments of inspired juxtaposition, much of this album sounds like Led Zeppelin in a particularly crazed mood. The brutal drums and bass of tracks like “Catch Hell Blues”, “300MPH Torrential Outpour Blues” and the title track are periodically interrupted by lead guitar of such piercing fury that it’s almost as if the songs themselves are bursting apart at the seams.

As well they might, when lyrically-speaking, Jack’s either in a schizoid quandary – “Well, there’s three people in the mirror/And I’m wondering which of them I should choose” – or just looking for trouble. “If you’re trying to get into some hot water,” he intones, in “Catch Hell Blues”, “I can help you find it”.

The addition of organ and synthesiser to the band’s instrumental palette pushes the music in new and unforeseen directions. With its driving organ riff punctuated by heavy fuzz-guitar interjections, and Jack working at the upper limit of his register, “I’m Slowly Turning Into You” sounds like Led Zeppelin jamming with Atomic Rooster, than which there can be few heavier combinations. One of several ruminations here upon emotional change and development, it finds the singer slowly coming to the realisation that he’s been unconsciously imitating “all those little things that you do”, and that, moreover, he actually prefers this new, imitative self to his own character.

Sometimes, the change is neither forced nor welcomed, but arrives as a slowly dawning realisation, as in “A Martyr For My Love For You”, in which Jack finds himself feeling uncomfortable and ashamed for lusting after a teenage girl: “…as shaky as I must’ve seemed/Talking junk through her/Giggle little teenage dream”. In a sudden burst of self-denial, he decides to protect her from his darker side by just walking away, ignoring her claims of cowardice to bask in his new-found nobility. A song not likely to be covered by Motley Crue, one would imagine.

Of course, the band’s broader blues heritage is an important constituent of *Icky Thump*. It’s there most clearly in the no-money blues “Bone Broke”, and particularly “Effect And Cause”, the ramshackle steel-appendage guitar blues which closes the album – wherein Jack, whilst admitting he’s no angel, turns the tables on his complaining partner, rejecting her habit of getting annoyed at his reaction to her transgressions, rather than accepting the blame herself.

But ultimately the album’s blues undertow is lightened by the more unusual tracks, like Corky Robbins’s “Conquest”, a dramatic *norteño* blues spiced with mariachi trumpets, whose role-reversal-romance lyric Jack attacks with the theatrical gusto of a matador addressing the bull. Meanwhile, the album’s two-track centrepiece of “Prickly Thorn, But Sweetly Worn” and “St Andrew” – a pair of faux-Celtic folk pastiches featuring the bagpipe drones of Jim Drury alomgside Jack’s mandolin – pay tribute to the Whites’ professed “Scottish ancestry”.

The album’s definitive cut, however, is the title track, a reflection upon America’s problematic relations with immigrants, particularly the Mexican immigrants upon whose underpaid exertions it relies. “Who’s using who? What should we do?” asks Jack, “Well, you can’t be a pimp and a prostitute too.”

Sonically, it features everything that makes *Icky Thump* such a compellingly weird experience, including one of the album’s plethora of guitar solos (more than on any previous White Stripes record) and, it’s claimed, the very same waspish-sounding keyboard used on The Tornadoes’ epochal “Telstar”. A small point, seemingly, but a significant one. With “Icky Thump”, Jack and Meg’s music again makes them a rarefied perch from which they can gaze both back into rock’s past, and forward into its future.

ANDY GILL

Q&A: The White Stripes’ Jack White

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UNCUT: How did "Icky Thump" come to be? JW: The Raconteurs tour was ending, and I called Meg up and said, ‘I’ve got some time coming up here in December and January – maybe we should get together,’ I had some things cooking, and we had a couple of songs which we didn’t get to put on "Satan", so she moved to Nashville for a couple of months, and we started hammering it out. You just start doing it. This is the first album where I had a chalkboard on the wall, to write down the names of things. We recorded in January, but in December, that chalkboard was empty. We had a couple of riffs, but not one finished song. A lot was written in the studio, and this happens a lot with us – only for the first album did we actually have songs written. U: So how did the Nashville sessions work? JW: It’s almost like going to work. You just get in there, you clock in, and it’s like someone says, “Well, you’ve got to box up these dirty boxes and ship them to Switzerland” And you go, “Oh, OK.” Because things are so constricted in the White Stripes, like we’re only going to wear white, red and black, and it’s only going to have these three components, I think people’s biggest misconception about us is that we also premeditate all these songs, which we don’t at all. There was so much piano on the last album, because there was a piano in the room and a marimba in the next room. If there had been a sitar in the room and a zither, they would probably have been on there too. That’s how it goes. U: The recording took three weeks. That’s longer than usual, but it’s still not a long time… JW: I hearken back to the days when bands didn’t have any overdubs. There are songs on here which are one take, which are just me and Meg playing live, like “Catch Hell Blues” – we’re proud of that, because we know the conditions it was made under. If people say “I love your song”, and I think “I spent $600,000 dollars and recorded it on computer and it took six months….” I mean, what’s the big deal? Anybody can do that! But if they love the song, and you look back and think all you had was a book of matches and a screwdriver, then you can be proud… U: This is a very heavy rock record. Did you want to cut loose again? JW: I had just come off tour with the Raconteurs, so I probably had a lot of guitars in my head. I was doing a lot of guitar improvisation with those guys every night, and that’s something I hadn’t done since I was in The Go, maybe. It was new for me – I was playing solos I never had time to play in the White Stripes. I learned a lot from Brendan (Benson) and Little Jack (Lawrence). I got a chance to learn a lot more about my instrument - I’m from a different department. Brendan knows how to lay an A minor augmented nnth chord. I don’t even know what that is. U: There are some great noises on the record… JW:I try to set up this wall and break through it. I like to see if the guitar can break through this barrage and you can access a new tone or melody through all that stuff that’s in the way. That’s how I like to see it, as attacking something and conquering. You break through all that opposition, and if you can, maybe something beautiful will happen. U: How far is the White Stripes an experiment in what you can do with the duo format? JW: In every aspect the White Stripes is a band that has no safety nets. There’s no set lists. Meg and I hardly ever rehearse for a tour or a live show. My guitars aren’t very well made, like kids first guitars, and maybe people don’t know that it’s harder to play – it’s important to me that there’s a struggle happening. I went to see Broadway shows recently and I thought “Why do they have a script?” I got so jealous. That’s so easy! In the White Stripes, there has to be some kind of struggle., if things are falling apart how can I keep them together? U:The Scottish element to the record is very interesting… JW: Well, Meg and I are half-Scottish...I wrote the song on mandolin. When I started to play pipe organ along with it, I thought this has to be bagpipes, because I didn’t want it to sound like American folk music or Irish music. I wanted it to have a Scottish feel, so luckily we found a bagpiper in Nashville. U: And there’s other British stuff on the record, too: the pearly king outfits, Rag And Bone, Icky Thump as a title… Has your wife been influencing you? JW: My wife is completely inspiring to me. She’s always throwing this stuff out, half the time to make me laugh, like this rag and bone thing – when she was a little girl she wanted to run away with the rag and bone men, because she thought they were going to an exotic land. She tells me these things, pretty soon you’re playing a riff and yelling “Rag and bone…!” U: So have you seen the Goodies? JW:“No! People keep asking me about it. I want to see it. I feel bad, because I thought I had a pretty good grasp of British comedy shows…” INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

UNCUT: How did “Icky Thump” come to be?

JW: The Raconteurs tour was ending, and I called Meg up and said, ‘I’ve got some time coming up here in December and January – maybe we should get together,’ I had some things cooking, and we had a couple of songs which we didn’t get to put on “Satan”, so she moved to Nashville for a couple of months, and we started hammering it out. You just start doing it. This is the first album where I had a chalkboard on the wall, to write down the names of things. We recorded in January, but in December, that chalkboard was empty. We had a couple of riffs, but not one finished song. A lot was written in the studio, and this happens a lot with us – only for the first album did we actually have songs written.

U: So how did the Nashville sessions work?

JW: It’s almost like going to work. You just get in there, you clock in, and it’s like someone says, “Well, you’ve got to box up these dirty boxes and ship them to Switzerland” And you go, “Oh, OK.” Because things are so constricted in the White Stripes, like we’re only going to wear white, red and black, and it’s only going to have these three components, I think people’s biggest misconception about us is that we also premeditate all these songs, which we don’t at all. There was so much piano on the last album, because there was a piano in the room and a marimba in the next room. If there had been a sitar in the room and a zither, they would probably have been on there too. That’s how it goes.

U: The recording took three weeks. That’s longer than usual, but it’s still not a long time…

JW: I hearken back to the days when bands didn’t have any overdubs. There are songs on here which are one take, which are just me and Meg playing live, like “Catch Hell Blues” – we’re proud of that, because we know the conditions it was made under. If people say “I love your song”, and I think “I spent $600,000 dollars and recorded it on computer and it took six months….” I mean, what’s the big deal? Anybody can do that! But if they love the song, and you look back and think all you had was a book of matches and a screwdriver, then you can be proud…

U: This is a very heavy rock record. Did you want to cut loose again?

JW: I had just come off tour with the Raconteurs, so I probably had a lot of guitars in my head. I was doing a lot of guitar improvisation with those guys every night, and that’s something I hadn’t done since I was in The Go, maybe. It was new for me – I was playing solos I never had time to play in the White Stripes. I learned a lot from Brendan (Benson) and Little Jack (Lawrence). I got a chance to learn a lot more about my instrument – I’m from a different department. Brendan knows how to lay an A minor augmented nnth chord. I don’t even know what that is.

U: There are some great noises on the record…

JW:I try to set up this wall and break through it. I like to see if the guitar can break through this barrage and you can access a new tone or melody through all that stuff that’s in the way. That’s how I like to see it, as attacking something and conquering. You break through all that opposition, and if you can, maybe something beautiful will happen.

U: How far is the White Stripes an experiment in what you can do with the duo format?

JW: In every aspect the White Stripes is a band that has no safety nets. There’s no set lists. Meg and I hardly ever rehearse for a tour or a live show. My guitars aren’t very well made, like kids first guitars, and maybe people don’t know that it’s harder to play – it’s important to me that there’s a struggle happening. I went to see Broadway shows recently and I thought “Why do they have a script?” I got so jealous. That’s so easy! In the White Stripes, there has to be some kind of struggle., if things are falling apart how can I keep them together?

U:The Scottish element to the record is very interesting…

JW: Well, Meg and I are half-Scottish…I wrote the song on mandolin. When I started to play pipe organ along with it, I thought this has to be bagpipes, because I didn’t want it to sound like American folk music or Irish music. I wanted it to have a Scottish feel, so luckily we found a bagpiper in Nashville.

U: And there’s other British stuff on the record, too: the pearly king outfits, Rag And Bone, Icky Thump as a title… Has your wife been influencing you?

JW: My wife is completely inspiring to me. She’s always throwing this stuff out, half the time to make me laugh, like this rag and bone thing – when she was a little girl she wanted to run away with the rag and bone men, because she thought they were going to an exotic land. She tells me these things, pretty soon you’re playing a riff and yelling “Rag and bone…!”

U: So have you seen the Goodies?

JW:“No! People keep asking me about it. I want to see it. I feel bad, because I thought I had a pretty good grasp of British comedy shows…”

INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

Q&A: Editor’s Tom Smith

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UNCUT: There are a lot of songs about death on this album… Tom Smith: A few things have happened to me over the last couple of years that have made me feel closer to it than I ever have before. But it’s kind of colliding with warmth and love on this record. We tried to touch on death in a way that wasn’t totally morbid. U:What was the recording process like? TS: We had built up confidence from touring for the last 20 months, so we weren’t afraid of trying new things – be it piano, acoustic guitar, strings. It wasn’t that we had this idea to make a huge-sounding record, it just kind of happened that way. U: Any sophomore-album jitters? TS: Not really. I think we would have, had it not been a happy experience. But we never felt like we were taking the songs where they shouldn’t go. We just try to make music that gives us a buzz and makes the hairs on the back of our necks raise, and I think that as long as we’re still doing that, it’ll be all right.

UNCUT: There are a lot of songs about death on this album…

Tom Smith: A few things have happened to me over the last couple of years that have made me feel closer to it than I ever have before. But it’s kind of colliding with warmth and love on this record. We tried to touch on death in a way that wasn’t totally morbid.

U:What was the recording process like?

TS: We had built up confidence from touring for the last 20 months, so we weren’t afraid of trying new things – be it piano, acoustic guitar, strings. It wasn’t that we had this idea to make a huge-sounding record, it just kind of happened that way.

U: Any sophomore-album jitters?

TS: Not really. I think we would have, had it not been a happy experience. But we never felt like we were taking the songs where they shouldn’t go. We just try to make music that gives us a buzz and makes the hairs on the back of our necks raise, and I think that as long as we’re still doing that, it’ll be all right.

Editors – An End Has A Start

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The age-old sophomore album dilemma is perhaps most difficult for bands that have made extremely distinctive-sounding debuts: When such strong stylistic earmarks have been established, how to evolve without abandoning them? Editors defined themselves with the twitchy bass lines and lugubrious vocals of last year’s The Back Room as a band whose debt to Joy Division was no secret, but who carved out their own little corner of the gloom-rock dancefloor. They made sure that no matter how cavernous the dread they conjured up, their lyrics conveyed a certain optimistic sweetness, as if they were extending a reassuring hand in the dark. An End Has A Start is no different in that sense, but Editors’ signature clamor is notably more expansive. Avoiding the ponderous repetition that dragged down songs like “Bullets” on the first record, they concoct a gentler, dreamier atmosphere with less apparent anxiety, and create a shadowy veil of sadness, shot through with hopeful transcendence. On the lovely “Bones,” “Smokers At the Hospital Doors,” and “When Anger Shows,” it works particularly well. Here, the graveyard murk is lifted by ghostly, anthemic synths and Tom Smith’s pleading vocals (“These dreams I can’t make sense of /I just need you to tell me it’s OK”). The band’s allure is predicated to a large extent upon Smith’s sonorous voice, and on An End Has A Start he sounds both tender and vaguely bored, as if he doesn’t always entirely believe his own platitudes, but he’s still going to do his best to shepherd the rest of us into a place of comfort. At times, though - as in “Push Your Head Towards the Air” and “Well Worn Hand” - he gives in to the fear, and these piano-and-voice-based numbers, almost hymn-like in their simplicity, work particularly well. When Editors go straight for the heart, often they strike their truest, and most resonant, chord. APRIL LONG

The age-old sophomore album dilemma is perhaps most difficult for bands that have made extremely distinctive-sounding debuts: When such strong stylistic earmarks have been established, how to evolve without abandoning them?

Editors defined themselves with the twitchy bass lines and lugubrious vocals of last year’s The Back Room as a band whose debt to Joy Division was no secret, but who carved out their own little corner of the gloom-rock dancefloor. They made sure that no matter how cavernous the dread they conjured up, their lyrics conveyed a certain optimistic sweetness, as if they were extending a reassuring hand in the dark.

An End Has A Start is no different in that sense, but Editors’ signature clamor is notably more expansive. Avoiding the ponderous repetition that dragged down songs like “Bullets” on the first record, they concoct a gentler, dreamier atmosphere with less apparent anxiety, and create a shadowy veil of sadness, shot through with hopeful transcendence.

On the lovely “Bones,” “Smokers At the Hospital Doors,” and “When Anger Shows,” it works particularly well. Here, the graveyard murk is lifted by ghostly, anthemic synths and Tom Smith’s pleading vocals (“These dreams I can’t make sense of /I just need you to tell me it’s OK”).

The band’s allure is predicated to a large extent upon Smith’s sonorous voice, and on An End Has A Start he sounds both tender and vaguely bored, as if he doesn’t always entirely believe his own platitudes, but he’s still going to do his best to shepherd the rest of us into a place of comfort.

At times, though – as in “Push Your Head Towards the Air” and “Well Worn Hand” – he gives in to the fear, and these piano-and-voice-based numbers, almost hymn-like in their simplicity, work particularly well. When Editors go straight for the heart, often they strike their truest, and most resonant, chord.

APRIL LONG

Ryan Adams – Easy Tiger

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By his own prolific standards, Ryan Adams has been strangely quiet of late. Since the drowsy 29, a weak finale to the flurry that sired Cold Roses and Jacksonville City Nights in 2005, he appears to have eased down almost completely. There were clearly things that needed shaking from the system. Continuing to plant soul and hip-hop oddments on his website (under the various guises of DJ Reggie, Were Wolph and Rhoda Rho), he hasn’t exactly been kicking his heels, but it’s his interim work with others that seems to have the biggest influence on Easy Tiger. Having chummed up with the Grateful Dead’s Phil Lesh, Adams also produced Willie Nelson’s Songbird last year. And here, both influences are evident from the off. Opener "Goodnight Rose" – recently stretched to eight-and-a-half glorious minutes on US TV’s The Henry Rollins Show – could be Nelson trembling through a turn-of-the-‘70s Dead tune. The same goes for "Tears Of Gold", another beauty, set to pedal steel. And though Adams mined the Dead’s "Truckin’" on 29’s title track, he now seems to know where to take it. But the real triumph of Easy Tiger is less rooted in the sound, more in the attitude. With the unfussy production of Jamie Candiloro (engineer of Rock And Roll), the newly sober, cleaned-up Adams appears more at ease in his own skin, soothing himself into these thirteen songs rather than straining hard. "Rip Off", for instance, with its lovely mandolins and gentle guitar, is as careworn and rumpled as anything by John Prine. FM juggernaut and recent live favourite "Halloweenhead" is about as rocking as it gets. With the Cardinals back on board (drummer Brad Pemberton, bassist Chris Feinstein, steel player Jon Graboff and guitarist Neal Casal), Easy Tiger feels like a more assured follow-up to the countrified Cold Roses. All in all, a break seems to have done Ryan Adams the power of good. Shrewdly edited, filled with good judgement, this is simply great work, from a rejuvenated musician ROB HUGHES Pic credit: Neal Casal

By his own prolific standards, Ryan Adams has been strangely quiet of late. Since the drowsy 29, a weak finale to the flurry that sired Cold Roses and Jacksonville City Nights in 2005, he appears to have eased down almost completely.

There were clearly things that needed shaking from the system. Continuing to plant soul and hip-hop oddments on his website (under the various guises of DJ Reggie, Were Wolph and Rhoda Rho), he hasn’t exactly been kicking his heels, but it’s his interim work with others that seems to have the biggest influence on Easy Tiger.

Having chummed up with the Grateful Dead’s Phil Lesh, Adams also produced Willie Nelson’s Songbird last year. And here, both influences are evident from the off. Opener “Goodnight Rose” – recently stretched to eight-and-a-half glorious minutes on US TV’s The Henry Rollins Show – could be Nelson trembling through a turn-of-the-‘70s Dead tune. The same goes for “Tears Of Gold”, another beauty, set to pedal steel. And though Adams mined the Dead’s “Truckin’” on 29’s title track, he now seems to know where to take it.

But the real triumph of Easy Tiger is less rooted in the sound, more in the attitude. With the unfussy production of Jamie Candiloro (engineer of Rock And Roll), the newly sober, cleaned-up Adams appears more at ease in his own skin, soothing himself into these thirteen songs rather than straining hard.

“Rip Off”, for instance, with its lovely mandolins and gentle guitar, is as careworn and rumpled as anything by John Prine. FM juggernaut and recent live favourite “Halloweenhead” is about as rocking as it gets. With the Cardinals back on board (drummer Brad Pemberton, bassist Chris Feinstein, steel player Jon Graboff and guitarist Neal Casal), Easy Tiger feels like a more assured follow-up to the countrified Cold Roses.

All in all, a break seems to have done Ryan Adams the power of good. Shrewdly edited, filled with good judgement, this is simply great work, from a rejuvenated musician

ROB HUGHES

Pic credit: Neal Casal

Justice – †

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Justice are Gaspard Augé and Xavier de Rosnay, two Parisian producers who first made waves back in 2003 with a remix of Simian’s “Never Be Alone”. Comparisons with Daft Punk are not entirely lazy – not only are Justice keen students of their Parisian countrymen's muscular energy and pneumatic bounce, they also share a manager in Ed Banger owner Pedro Winter. If anything, mind, the young turks might just have the edge. “Waters Of Nazareth” yawns like a car crusher, mashing hip-hop, electro and funk into gleaming slabs of sound, while “D.A.N.C.E” displays a lighter touch, channelling Chic disco in a whirl of sugary keyboards and euphoric violin stabs. LOUIS PATTISON

Justice are Gaspard Augé and Xavier de Rosnay, two Parisian producers who first made waves back in 2003 with a remix of Simian’s “Never Be Alone”.

Comparisons with Daft Punk are not entirely lazy – not only are Justice keen students of their Parisian countrymen’s muscular energy and pneumatic bounce, they also share a manager in Ed Banger owner Pedro Winter.

If anything, mind, the young turks might just have the edge. “Waters Of Nazareth” yawns like a car crusher, mashing hip-hop, electro and funk into gleaming slabs of sound, while “D.A.N.C.E” displays a lighter touch, channelling Chic disco in a whirl of sugary keyboards and euphoric violin stabs.

LOUIS PATTISON

Sonic Youth revisited

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Apologies for the lack of blogging action these past couple of days. I have a stack of excuses - perilous deadlines, aborted radio interviews, leaving the Super Furry Animals album at home, that sort of thing, as if you care. I'll try and write something about Super Furry Animals' "Hey Venus" in the next couple of days, as well as Richard Hawley, Caribou, Rilo Kiley, that Jason Isbell record I've been meaning to do something about for a month, and so on. I guess I could write something about the lovely Congolese soukous band I saw at Stokefest in North London on Sunday, while chasing my son up and down a double decker bus with a bar in it. Today, though, I've been reacquainting myself with Sonic Youth's "Daydream Nation". "Daydream Nation" was a mighty important record for me as a student, along with "Sister"; I suppose it was the music that introduced me to the possibilities of noise, of how a song can be stretched into exhilarating and fractious new shapes. Sonic Youth are one of those bands who don't just make magnificent music themselves (their last three albums prove they're still doing just that), but act as a kind of portal to so much more outre sound. The cover art also got me hooked on Gerhardt Richter, by the by. This deluxe CD reissue of "Daydream Nation" that's just turned up sounds, I'm pleased to say, just as vital as it did 19 years ago. It's one of my favourite records, but it can still surprise me: that "Teen Age Riot" remains as good an album opening as I've ever heard is no shock, but today we were all bowled over by "Rain King", not one of the tracks I've usually privileged. And there's the paciness of it all. I always think, probably lazily, of "Daydream Nation" as a luxuriant, gradually unravelling suite of songs, as the point where the downtown punk kids started jamming and drifting off. But actually, there's a fairly relentless propulsion to it all, not just in the linear precision of those meshed guitars, but in the drumming of Steve Shelley. For all his intricate little tumbles, he's still hammering away at near-hardcore pace for much of the set. And, for that matter, throughout the live versions which make up much of Disc 2. Compared with some of the previous Youth reissues, the absence of lost songs is a disappointment: a Lee Ranaldo demo of "Eric's Trip" is about it. The live versions, though, make those forthcoming live performances of the album seem incredibly tantalising. And there's also a bunch of cover versions culled from various comps and singles. I'd never heard their take on Captain Beefheart's "Electricity" before, but it illustrates one of the great secrets of Sonic Youth: if they hadn't been so busy making transcendent avant-rock, they'd have been a fucking marvellous garage band.

Apologies for the lack of blogging action these past couple of days. I have a stack of excuses – perilous deadlines, aborted radio interviews, leaving the Super Furry Animals album at home, that sort of thing, as if you care. I’ll try and write something about Super Furry Animals’ “Hey Venus” in the next couple of days, as well as Richard Hawley, Caribou, Rilo Kiley, that Jason Isbell record I’ve been meaning to do something about for a month, and so on.

Brett Anderson To Play Special Acoustic Gig

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Brett Anderson is to perform a special acoustic show next month, coinciding with the release of his new five track EP "Back To You." The "Acoustic evening with Brett Anderson takes place in the lush surrounds of Islington's Union Chapel on July 19, just after the release of his new Drowned In Sound label recording. The EP released just prior to the gig at the Chapel on July 9 will feature four acoustic reworkings of tracks from the former Suede frontman's recent debut solo album. The tracks are: 1. Back To You 2. Ebony 3. Infinite Kiss 4. Love Is Dead 5. Song For My Father More info available from Brett Anderson's official website here

Brett Anderson is to perform a special acoustic show next month, coinciding with the release of his new five track EP “Back To You.”

The “Acoustic evening with Brett Anderson takes place in the lush surrounds of Islington’s Union Chapel on July 19, just after the release of his new Drowned In Sound label recording.

The EP released just prior to the gig at the Chapel on July 9 will feature four acoustic reworkings of tracks from the former Suede frontman’s recent debut solo album.

The tracks are:

1. Back To You

2. Ebony

3. Infinite Kiss

4. Love Is Dead

5. Song For My Father

More info available from Brett Anderson’s official website here

Klaxons On The Road Again

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Klaxons have announced a new UK tour, to start in November, and fans will get the chance to get hold of tickets in a special pre-sale starting tomorrow (June 13). Having just completed a sell-out tour of the UK and US in the last two months, the band are currently filling up radio airwaves with imminent single "Not Over Yet" - their guitar version of the '95 Oakenfold/Grace house anthem. Tickets for the last UK your sold-out within hours, but Klaxons.net here will host a pre-sale for the Autumn tour, from tomorrow at 9am. General sale begins on Friday (June 15) at 9am through usual ticket outlets. Bring your glo-sticks to the following venues: Manchester, Apollo (November 26) Edinburgh, Corn Exchange (27) Newcastle, Academy (28) Southampton, Guildhall (30) Leeds, University (December 1) Cardiff, University (2) Birmingham, Academy (4) London, Brixton Academy (5)

Klaxons have announced a new UK tour, to start in November, and fans will get the chance to get hold of tickets in a special pre-sale starting tomorrow (June 13).

Having just completed a sell-out tour of the UK and US in the last two months, the band are currently filling up radio airwaves with imminent single “Not Over Yet” – their guitar version of the ’95 Oakenfold/Grace house anthem.

Tickets for the last UK your sold-out within hours, but Klaxons.net here will host a pre-sale for the Autumn tour, from tomorrow at 9am.

General sale begins on Friday (June 15) at 9am through usual ticket outlets.

Bring your glo-sticks to the following venues:

Manchester, Apollo (November 26)

Edinburgh, Corn Exchange (27)

Newcastle, Academy (28)

Southampton, Guildhall (30)

Leeds, University (December 1)

Cardiff, University (2)

Birmingham, Academy (4)

London, Brixton Academy (5)

The White Stripes To Blitz Canada This Month

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The White Stripes are to embark on a 21 date tour of Canada and the US, starting next week (June 24). The duo who have just released their sixth album "Icky Thump" to universal acclaim kick off their whirlwind tour in Burnaby, Canada on June 24 and finish up in Minnesota on July 31. Support on all dates comes from Alabama rockabily musician Dan Sartain, after Jack White personally invited him on the tour. The singer who has previously worked with White Stripes' producer Liam Watson for his "Join Dan Sartain" album, impressed Jack White at a last minute show in Nashville recently. The White Stripes play the following venues: Burnaby, Canada (June 24) Calgary, AB (29) Edmonton, AB (30) Saskatoon, SK (July 1) Winnipeg, MB (2) Thunder Bay, ONT (3) Toronto, ONT (5) Montreal, QC (6) London, ONT (7) Moncton, NB (10) Charlottetown, PEN (11) Halifax, NS (13) Glacier Bay, NS (14) St Johns, NF (16) Portland, MAINE (22) Boston, MA (23) Wallingford, CT (25) Wilmington, CT (27) North Myrtle Beach, SC (29) Birmingham, AL (30) Southaven, MS (31)

The White Stripes are to embark on a 21 date tour of Canada and the US, starting next week (June 24).

The duo who have just released their sixth album “Icky Thump” to universal acclaim kick off their whirlwind tour in Burnaby, Canada on June 24 and finish up in Minnesota on July 31.

Support on all dates comes from Alabama rockabily musician Dan Sartain, after Jack White personally invited him on the tour.

The singer who has previously worked with White Stripes’ producer Liam Watson for his “Join Dan Sartain” album, impressed Jack White at a last minute show in Nashville recently.

The White Stripes play the following venues:

Burnaby, Canada (June 24)

Calgary, AB (29)

Edmonton, AB (30)

Saskatoon, SK (July 1)

Winnipeg, MB (2)

Thunder Bay, ONT (3)

Toronto, ONT (5)

Montreal, QC (6)

London, ONT (7)

Moncton, NB (10)

Charlottetown, PEN (11)

Halifax, NS (13)

Glacier Bay, NS (14)

St Johns, NF (16)

Portland, MAINE (22)

Boston, MA (23)

Wallingford, CT (25)

Wilmington, CT (27)

North Myrtle Beach, SC (29)

Birmingham, AL (30)

Southaven, MS (31)

The Rolling Stones Live At The Isle Of Wight Festival

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The Rolling Stones Isle Of Wight Festival 10 June 2007   The last time the Rolling Stones played a UK festival – Knebworth Fair in 1976 – there were no giant TV screens, no wristbands and no corporate hospitality. 31 years later, The Rolling Stones have rekindled their festival spirit at the Isle of Wight, although the surroundings couldn’t be more different from Knebworth. Today, the 60,000 capacity crowd are treated to the full Stones experience – the huge lightshow, those ubiquitous giant TV screens, and a specially adapted telescopic walkway running into the crowd. As they hit the stage, Keith cranking out the riff for "Start Me Up", the Stones are on fantastic form, pelting pell mell through "You Got Me Rocking", "Tumbling Dice" and "Rough Justice", thrilling the crowd in Seaclose Park, Jagger even providing a bit of light relief for the occasion. "This is exciting, we haven’t done a festival in years. I like this one – it’s very clean," he tells the crowd, before deadpanning his way through the weekend’s best bit of banter. "It’s very expensive too," he winks. "Two quid for a bottle of water! Four quid for a burger! Then a dog ate my dope!" Joining the band onstage are Paolo Nutini, who duets on "Love In Vain", and Amy Winehouse. Backstage gossip suggested the Stones had been calling her "the Madam" for refusing to rehearse with them, and when she does deliver a somewhat wayward version of The Temptations' "Ain't Too Proud To Beg" you can see their point. But it certainly adds a spontaneous air to tonight’s performance that gives the show a certain frisson. "Miss You", "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" and "Honky Tonk Women" are played at the end of their extended catwalk in the heart of the frenzied crowd, before the band return to the big stage for a finale of "Sympathy For The Devil", "Brown Sugar" and “"Jumping Jack Flash" that makes it feel like the Stones have actually missed this kind of show. The Isle of Wight might not have boasted the usual pristine qualities of their own shows, but having walked the festival tightrope and triumphed with a dangerous and dirty rock’n’roll show, you hope – expensive burger or not – they’ll be back. PAUL STOKES  Set list:   'Start Me Up' 'You Got Me Rocking' 'Rough Justice' 'Love In Vain' (with Paolo Nutini) 'Can't You Hear Me Knocking' 'Ain't Too Proud To Beg' (with Amy Winehouse) 'Tumbling Dice' 'Wanna Hold You' 'Slipping Away' 'Miss You' '(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction' 'Honky Tonk Women' 'Sympathy For The Devil' 'Brown Sugar' 'Jumping Jack Flash' Pic credit: Rex Features

The Rolling Stones

Isle Of Wight Festival

10 June 2007

 

The last time the Rolling Stones played a UK festival – Knebworth Fair in 1976 – there were no giant TV screens, no wristbands and no corporate hospitality. 31 years later, The Rolling Stones have rekindled their festival spirit at the Isle of Wight, although the surroundings couldn’t be more different from Knebworth.

Today, the 60,000 capacity crowd are treated to the full Stones experience – the huge lightshow, those ubiquitous giant TV screens, and a specially adapted telescopic walkway running into the crowd.

As they hit the stage, Keith cranking out the riff for “Start Me Up”, the Stones are on fantastic form, pelting pell mell through “You Got Me Rocking”, “Tumbling Dice” and “Rough Justice”, thrilling the crowd in Seaclose Park, Jagger even providing a bit of light relief for the occasion.

“This is exciting, we haven’t done a festival in years. I like this one – it’s very clean,” he tells the crowd, before deadpanning his way through the weekend’s best bit of banter. “It’s very expensive too,” he winks. “Two quid for a bottle of water! Four quid for a burger! Then a dog ate my dope!”

Joining the band onstage are Paolo Nutini, who duets on “Love In Vain”, and Amy Winehouse. Backstage gossip suggested the Stones had been calling her “the Madam” for refusing to rehearse with them, and when she does deliver a somewhat wayward version of The Temptations’ “Ain’t Too Proud To Beg” you can see their point. But it certainly adds a spontaneous air to tonight’s performance that gives the show a certain frisson.

“Miss You”, “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” and “Honky Tonk Women” are played at the end of their extended catwalk in the heart of the frenzied crowd, before the band return to the big stage for a finale of “Sympathy For The Devil”, “Brown Sugar” and “”Jumping Jack Flash” that makes it feel like the Stones have actually missed this kind of show.

The Isle of Wight might not have boasted the usual pristine qualities of their own shows, but having walked the festival tightrope and triumphed with a dangerous and dirty rock’n’roll show, you hope – expensive burger or not – they’ll be back.

PAUL STOKES 

Set list:

 

‘Start Me Up’

‘You Got Me Rocking’

‘Rough Justice’

‘Love In Vain’ (with Paolo Nutini)

‘Can’t You Hear Me Knocking’

‘Ain’t Too Proud To Beg’ (with Amy Winehouse)

‘Tumbling Dice’

‘Wanna Hold You’

‘Slipping Away’

‘Miss You’

‘(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction’

‘Honky Tonk Women’

‘Sympathy For The Devil’

‘Brown Sugar’

‘Jumping Jack Flash’

Pic credit: Rex Features

Jerry Lee Lewis, King Of Rock’N’Roll

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I’ve just finished reading Nick Tosches’ Hellfire, a jaw-dropping biography of Jerry Lee Lewis that is by common agreement the best book about rock’n’roll ever written. I’m reviewing it for next month’s Uncut, and can’t recommend it highly enough. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ifEc-RazQlY

I’ve just finished reading Nick Tosches’ Hellfire, a jaw-dropping biography of Jerry Lee Lewis that is by common agreement the best book about rock’n’roll ever written. I’m reviewing it for next month’s Uncut, and can’t recommend it highly enough.