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Richard & Linda Thompson, and a bit more Robert Wyatt

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Been a bit distracted today, as I've been engaged in a Sisyphean task to try and compile all the catalogue numbers of the Factory label, including the cat, Rob Gretton's dental work and so on. Further to my Robert Wyatt review yesterday, I now have a fraction more info to flesh out my impressions. Fairly unsurprisingly, guest players include Eno, Phil Manzanera and Paul Weller, who've all figured on the last couple of Wyatt albums, if memory serves. The other thing I've gleaned is that "Comicopera" is split into three "acts": "Lost In Noise" (vaguely romantic), "The Here And The Now" (vaguely political) and "Away With The Fairies" (largely Spanish). I haven't had a chance to play "Comicopera" today to check all this out, so I'll try and report back again on this engrossing record. I've just finished listening to a Richard & Linda Thompson live album from November 1975, never released at the time, which is set to come out in August, I think. Unsurprisingly, it's terrific, drawing on their first three duo albums for most of the material. One of my favourite Richard songs, "The Calvary Cross", stretches out to 14 minutes of wracked soloing, and it's almost matched by an 11-minute version of "Night Comes In". For the most part, though, the tone is one of nervy jauntiness: an accordian player (John Kirkpatrick, I imagine) is all over everything here - so much so, you occasionally wish he'd ease off and give Richard some space. There's also a version of "Now Be Thankful", one of Richard's last Fairport Convention songs, given a new dimension by Linda's lead. It's at times like this that I wonder whether, of all the British folk singers who emerged in the late '60s and early '70s, she might be my favourite. It's a kind of forceful economy which she has, a sense of passion which never strays into either sentimentality or folksy cliche. I saw her sing a few years ago, at a great Festival Hall show that was effectively a jam session featuring Rufus Wainwright, his sister Martha, the McGarrigles and sundry relatives, folk brats and fellow travellers, and her voice hadn't changed at all. Rumour has it she has a new solo album due later this year. I'll keep you posted when I hear more. And also, there's reportedly a deluxe (whatever that means) version of "Liege And Lief" on the way. Not sure if anything new will fetch up there, but we'll soon see, hopefully.

Been a bit distracted today, as I’ve been engaged in a Sisyphean task to try and compile all the catalogue numbers of the Factory label, including the cat, Rob Gretton’s dental work and so on. Further to my Robert Wyatt review yesterday, I now have a fraction more info to flesh out my impressions.

Ryan Adams Premieres New Material In London

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Supporting his forthcoming album, "Easy Tiger", Ryan Adams and his backing band The Cardinals, played in a sold out venue in Camden last night (June 7). Ryan Adams had initially planned to unveil his ninth album, out June 25, in Stonehenge, but due to the potential safety risk he rescheduled to play in Koko and at Manchester University. In a set that lasted a little over an hour, Adams sang, “Two”, “Rip-Off” and “I Taught Myself How To Grow Old” from his new album and the crowd pleasers “My Winding Wheel” and “Goodnight Hollywood Blvd”. Following his interview in the latest Uncut issue, Adams said: “I’m not interested in making solo records…I’m into being in a band,” and he certainly took on that role, playing a stripped down gig where he swapped the guitar for Ray-Ban sunglasses while he sat on level with the Cardinals. The full set list was: Games Omg Blue Hotel Sun Also Nightbirds I Taught Myself Carolina Rain Dear John Pearls Goodnight hblvd Rip Off How Do You Keep Two I See Monsters Starlite Diner Let It Ride Listen to a taster of the new tracks up on Adams' Myspace page here

Supporting his forthcoming album, “Easy Tiger”, Ryan Adams and his backing band The Cardinals, played in a sold out venue in Camden last night (June 7).

Ryan Adams had initially planned to unveil his ninth album, out June 25, in Stonehenge, but due to the potential safety risk he rescheduled to play in Koko and at Manchester University.

In a set that lasted a little over an hour, Adams sang, “Two”, “Rip-Off” and “I Taught Myself How To Grow Old” from his new album and the crowd pleasers “My Winding Wheel” and “Goodnight Hollywood Blvd”.

Following his interview in the latest Uncut issue, Adams said: “I’m not interested in making solo records…I’m into being in a band,” and he certainly took on that role, playing a stripped down gig where he swapped the guitar for Ray-Ban sunglasses while he sat on level with the Cardinals.

The full set list was:

Games

Omg

Blue Hotel

Sun Also

Nightbirds

I Taught Myself

Carolina Rain

Dear John

Pearls

Goodnight hblvd

Rip Off

How Do You Keep

Two

I See Monsters

Starlite Diner

Let It Ride

Listen to a taster of the new tracks up on Adams’ Myspace page here

Paul McCartney – Live At The Electric Ballroom

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Paul McCartney Electric Ballroom, London Thursday, June 8, 2007 “It’s a long time we did a gig like this,” says McCartney part way through tonight’s not-so secret gig, and you’d imagine even the most devoted Beatles’ scholar would be hard pressed to recall the last time Macca played a venue with the word “Ballroom” in the title – let alone any venue with a capacity of a 1,000. Certainly, the last time Macca played the UK was when he headlined Glastonbury in 2004. Tonight, then, is clearly something of an event, and though ostensibly part of the promotion for his new album, Memory Almost Full (his first rock record since 2005’s Chaos And Creation In The Backyard), he engages enthusiastically with his bejewelled back catalogue, playing no less than 10 Beatles’ songs. The audience comprises competition winners and fan club members, though the balcony is packed with celebrities, presumably rattling their jewellery by way of appreciation. Dressed in a long-sleeved grey t-shirt and dark trousers, and flanked by a band who look like their auditioning for a reality TV show to be the next Razorlight, Macca arrives on stage at 8.30 sharp and plays for almost two hours. It’s fantastic, almost surreal, to see him playing such a small venue, performing “Drive My Car”, “The Long And Winding Road”, “Back In The USSR” (complete with aeroplane sound effects) and “Let It Be”. More than, say, Dylan and the Stones, his songs are hardwired into our genetic make-up – children are born able to sing along to “Hey Jude” – and to hear them in a venue of such relative intimacy by the standard of usual Macca gigs connects us directly to some kind of etheric record, the public consciousness. There’s no point – and, indeed, why should he? – for Macca to try to escape the shadow of The Beatles, and on “That Was Me,” he sings almost incredulously about “sweating cobwebs under contract/In the celllar/On TV/That was me… [It’s] pretty hard to take it in.” Introducing “I’ll Follow The Sun”, from Beatles For Sale, he remembers “writing this in a house… that’s now a National Heritage thing.” After a heart-stopping version of “Blackbird”, he dedicates “Here Today”, from Tug Of Love, to “John, George and Linda.” Between songs, his banter occasionally become cringe-worthy, whether it be the faux Jamaican patois into which he frequently lapses, a daft explanation of how Camden got its name, or doing bad impressions of Harry Enfield’s Scousers. The final leg features a blistering cover of Carl Perkins’ “Matchbox”, “Get Back” and “Hey Jude”, the latter becoming both the end of the main set and the start of the encore, only a heartless churl incapable of being swept along with the “Na na na na na na na” chorus. “Let It Be” is followed by “Lady Madonna,” and he closes with “I Saw Her Standing There”, indelibly and magnificently locating us back to 1963, at the birth of everything. MICHAEL BONNER Full set list: 'Drive My Car' 'Only Mama Knows' 'Dance Tonight' 'C Moon' 'The Long And Winding Road' 'I'll Follow The Sun' 'Calico Skies' 'That Was Me' 'Blackbird' 'Here Today' 'Back In The USSR' 'Nod Your Head' 'House Of Wax' 'I've Got A Feeling' 'Matchbox' 'Get Back' 'Hey Jude' 'Let It Be' 'Lady Madonna' 'I Saw Her Standing There' Pic credit: Rex Features

Paul McCartney

Electric Ballroom, London

Thursday, June 8, 2007

“It’s a long time we did a gig like this,” says McCartney part way through tonight’s not-so secret gig, and you’d imagine even the most devoted Beatles’ scholar would be hard pressed to recall the last time Macca played a venue with the word “Ballroom” in the title – let alone any venue with a capacity of a 1,000.

Certainly, the last time Macca played the UK was when he headlined Glastonbury in 2004. Tonight, then, is clearly something of an event, and though ostensibly part of the promotion for his new album, Memory Almost Full (his first rock record since 2005’s Chaos And Creation In The Backyard), he engages enthusiastically with his bejewelled back catalogue, playing no less than 10 Beatles’ songs. The audience comprises competition winners and fan club members, though the balcony is packed with celebrities, presumably rattling their jewellery by way of appreciation.

Dressed in a long-sleeved grey t-shirt and dark trousers, and flanked by a band who look like their auditioning for a reality TV show to be the next Razorlight, Macca arrives on stage at 8.30 sharp and plays for almost two hours. It’s fantastic, almost surreal, to see him playing such a small venue, performing “Drive My Car”, “The Long And Winding Road”, “Back In The USSR” (complete with aeroplane sound effects) and “Let It Be”. More than, say, Dylan and the Stones, his songs are hardwired into our genetic make-up – children are born able to sing along to “Hey Jude” – and to hear them in a venue of such relative intimacy by the standard of usual Macca gigs connects us directly to some kind of etheric record, the public consciousness.

There’s no point – and, indeed, why should he? – for Macca to try to escape the shadow of The Beatles, and on “That Was Me,” he sings almost incredulously about “sweating cobwebs under contract/In the celllar/On TV/That was me… [It’s] pretty hard to take it in.” Introducing “I’ll Follow The Sun”, from Beatles For Sale, he remembers “writing this in a house… that’s now a National Heritage thing.” After a heart-stopping version of “Blackbird”, he dedicates “Here Today”, from Tug Of Love, to “John, George and Linda.”

Between songs, his banter occasionally become cringe-worthy, whether it be the faux Jamaican patois into which he frequently lapses, a daft explanation of how Camden got its name, or doing bad impressions of Harry Enfield’s Scousers.

The final leg features a blistering cover of Carl Perkins’ “Matchbox”, “Get Back” and “Hey Jude”, the latter becoming both the end of the main set and the start of the encore, only a heartless churl incapable of being swept along with the “Na na na na na na na” chorus. “Let It Be” is followed by “Lady Madonna,” and he closes with “I Saw Her Standing There”, indelibly and magnificently locating us back to 1963, at the birth of everything.

MICHAEL BONNER

Full set list:

‘Drive My Car’

‘Only Mama Knows’

‘Dance Tonight’

‘C Moon’

‘The Long And Winding Road’

‘I’ll Follow The Sun’

‘Calico Skies’

‘That Was Me’

‘Blackbird’

‘Here Today’

‘Back In The USSR’

‘Nod Your Head’

‘House Of Wax’

‘I’ve Got A Feeling’

‘Matchbox’

‘Get Back’

‘Hey Jude’

‘Let It Be’

‘Lady Madonna’

‘I Saw Her Standing There’

Pic credit: Rex Features

Wilco Issue Defence Over VW Ad Music

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Illinois alt.rockers Wilco have responded to criticism from some of their fans over the use of material from new album "Sky Blue Sky" being used in Volkswagen commercials. Fans have said that the band have 'sold-out' to allow their music to be used in this way, but Jeff Tweedy and co have defended themselves with a lengthy letter on their official website, saying adverts are merely a way of gaining exposure. The full statement is as follows: "As many of you are aware, Volkswagen has recently begun running a series of TV commercials featuring Wilco music. Why? This is a subject we've discussed internally many times over the years regarding movies, TV shows and even the odd advertisement. With the commercial radio airplay route getting more difficult for many bands (including Wilco); we see this as another way to get the music out there. As with most of the above (with the debatable exception of radio) the band gets paid for this. And we feel okay about VWs. Several of us even drive them. If you're keeping track, this is not the first time Wilco has licensed a song to or even been involved in a commercial - most recently a TV spot for Telefonica Mobile in Spain used a Wilco song and some years prior Jeff Tweedy appeared in a campaign for Apple Computer. Wilco have licensed hundreds of songs to television shows and films worldwide... from festival-only indie films to major motion pictures and weekly TV shows. Thus far the songs in the VW campaign are 'The Thanks I Get' (a bonus track from Sky Blue Sky sessions, available for download via the Enhanced CD and via iTunes) and 'You Are My Face'. We expect to have more details re: other songs shortly. The current plan (subject to change, like everything) is for 5 or 6 songs to be used. That's it. Don't believe everything you read unless you read it here". For uptodate Wilco tour news and to hear archive sessions, go here for wilcoworld.net

Illinois alt.rockers Wilco have responded to criticism from some of their fans over the use of material from new album “Sky Blue Sky” being used in Volkswagen commercials.

Fans have said that the band have ‘sold-out’ to allow their music to be used in this way, but Jeff Tweedy and co have defended themselves with a lengthy letter on their official website, saying adverts are merely a way of gaining exposure.

The full statement is as follows:

“As many of you are aware, Volkswagen has recently begun running a series of TV commercials featuring Wilco music. Why? This is a subject we’ve discussed internally many times over the years regarding movies, TV shows and even the odd advertisement. With the commercial radio airplay route getting more difficult for many bands (including Wilco); we see this as another way to get the music out there. As with most of the above (with the debatable exception of radio) the band gets paid for this. And we feel okay about VWs. Several of us even drive them.

If you’re keeping track, this is not the first time Wilco has licensed a song to or even been involved in a commercial – most recently a TV spot for Telefonica Mobile in Spain used a Wilco song and some years prior Jeff Tweedy appeared in a campaign for Apple Computer. Wilco have licensed hundreds of songs to television shows and films worldwide… from festival-only indie films to major motion pictures and weekly TV shows.

Thus far the songs in the VW campaign are ‘The Thanks I Get’ (a bonus track from Sky Blue Sky sessions, available for download via the Enhanced CD and via iTunes) and ‘You Are My Face’. We expect to have more details re: other songs shortly. The current plan (subject to change, like everything) is for 5 or 6 songs to be used. That’s it. Don’t believe everything you read unless you read it here”.

For uptodate Wilco tour news and to hear archive sessions, go here for wilcoworld.net

Weller And Eno Guest On New Robert Wyatt LP

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Details about the new Robert Wyatt album "Comicopera" have been released. The former Soft Machine member and revered musician has finished recording and self-producing the follow-up to his Mercury Music Prize nominated "Cuckooland" and it features several guest artists across it's three 'acts.' Paul Weller, Brian Eno and Roxy Music's Phil Manzanera all appear on the new record, and Wyatt says he was aiming to capture the sound of the group together. He says: "Music isn't just an abstract pleasure, it is a company, when you play a record. Why I like Duke Ellington and Charles Mingus, the Big Bands -is because every character in the band is identifiable as that person - there's this group of humans in a room." "Comicopera" is divided into three acts- 'Lost In Noise', 'The Here And The Now', and 'Away With The Fairies'. The full tracklisting is as follows: Act One: Lost In Noise 1 Stay Tunes 2 Just As You Are 3 You You 4 A.W.O.L. 5 Anachronist Act Two: The Here And The Now 6 A Beautiful Peace 7 Be Serious 8 On The Town Square 9 Mob Rule 10 A Beautiful War 11 Out of The Blue Act Three: Away With The Fairies 12 Del Mondo 13 Cancion de Julieta 14 Pastafari 15 Fragment 16 Hasta Siempre The album is released through Domino on October 8. For further details go to Domino's official label website here

Details about the new Robert Wyatt album “Comicopera” have been released.

The former Soft Machine member and revered musician has finished recording and self-producing the follow-up to his Mercury Music Prize nominated “Cuckooland” and it features several guest artists across it’s three ‘acts.’

Paul Weller, Brian Eno and Roxy Music’s Phil Manzanera all appear on the new record, and Wyatt says he was aiming to capture the sound of the group together.

He says: “Music isn’t just an abstract pleasure, it is a company, when you play a record. Why I like Duke Ellington and Charles Mingus, the Big Bands -is because every character in the band is identifiable as that person – there’s this group of humans in a room.”

“Comicopera” is divided into three acts- ‘Lost In Noise’, ‘The Here And The Now’, and ‘Away With The Fairies’.

The full tracklisting is as follows:

Act One: Lost In Noise

1 Stay Tunes

2 Just As You Are

3 You You

4 A.W.O.L.

5 Anachronist

Act Two: The Here And The Now

6 A Beautiful Peace

7 Be Serious

8 On The Town Square

9 Mob Rule

10 A Beautiful War

11 Out of The Blue

Act Three: Away With The Fairies

12 Del Mondo

13 Cancion de Julieta

14 Pastafari

15 Fragment

16 Hasta Siempre

The album is released through Domino on October 8.

For further details go to Domino’s official label website here

Jools Holland Headlines Cutty Sark Benefit

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Jools Holland is to headline a benefit gig to raise funds to restore the recently destroyed Cutty Sark in Greenwich. Accompanied by his Rhythm & Blues Orchestra, the musician and Greenwich local boy hopes the benefit will help towards the £25 milliion rebuild cost of the 19th century London landmark. The show on July 2 at new venue Indigo02 at the 02 Arena (formerly the Millennium Dome), will also see singers Lulu, Louise Marshall and Ruby Turner join Holland onstage. Tickets for the fundraiser are on sale now through the indigo2 website here

Jools Holland is to headline a benefit gig to raise funds to restore the recently destroyed Cutty Sark in Greenwich.

Accompanied by his Rhythm & Blues Orchestra, the musician and Greenwich local boy hopes the benefit will help towards the £25 milliion rebuild cost of the 19th century London landmark.

The show on July 2 at new venue Indigo02 at the 02 Arena (formerly the Millennium Dome), will also see singers Lulu, Louise Marshall and Ruby Turner join Holland onstage.

Tickets for the fundraiser are on sale now through the indigo2 website here

Babyshambles Confirm The View As Support

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Dundee based four piece The View have been confirmed to support Babyshambles on some of their arena dates in November. The band originally gained exposure early last year after impressing Pete Doherty with a busked set before a Babyshambles show in their hometown. The View will join Babyshambl...

Dundee based four piece The View have been confirmed to support Babyshambles on some of their arena dates in November.

The band originally gained exposure early last year after impressing Pete Doherty with a busked set before a Babyshambles show in their hometown.

The View will join Babyshambles at Birmingham NIA on November 28 and at Nottingham Arena on November 30.

More support acts for the Babyshambles tour are to be announced soon.
The tour will coincide with the release of the band’s new album, due for release in the Autumn.

The full dates are as follows:

Manchester MEN Arena (November 22)
Newcastle Metro Radio Arena (23)
Brighton Centre (25)
Bournemouth BIC (26)
Wembley Arena (27)
Birmingham NIA, with The View (28)
Nottingham Arena, with The View (30)
Glasgow SECC (December 1)

More information about the tour is available here from Babyshambles official website

Click here for more info on The View’s official website

The Chumscrubber

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DIR: Arie Posin ST: Jamie Bell, Glenn Close, Ralph Fiennes Dean (Jamie Bell) visits his only friend in the world, Troy, but finds he's hanged himself. He doesn't tell anyone, because "nobody will care". Eventually, they do, but only because they want to force Dean to recover Troy's drugs stash. Dean's pop-psychologist father (William Fichtner) fills him to the eyeballs with medication, while his mother (Allison Janney) is herself too high to notice. In upper-class Hillside, California, both young and old are too doped-up or self-obsessed to realise there's mayhem going on in front of their chemically-numbed noses, ravaging their bland, safe "community". Somewhere between Donnie Darko and Desperate Housewives, Posin's debut is often funny and incisive, although every character is so whacked-out that it verges on the plain ludicrous. Its themes of dysfunctional families (parents as addled as teen kids) and communication breakdowns have been dealt with repeatedly before. In what you might call the school of American Beauty, The Squid And The Whale did this best and Thumbsucker did it most similarly to what's on view here. It's hard to like these cosseted narcissists. Yet an acidic script that goes to some shockingly dark corners and a who's-who of quality acting make this cynical cackle morbidly compelling. CHRIS ROBERTS You can watch the trailer for the movie here. Click on the links below: Windows Media - lo / hi

DIR: Arie Posin

ST: Jamie Bell, Glenn Close, Ralph Fiennes

Dean (Jamie Bell) visits his only friend in the world, Troy, but finds he’s hanged himself. He doesn’t tell anyone, because “nobody will care”. Eventually, they do, but only because they want to force Dean to recover Troy’s drugs stash. Dean’s pop-psychologist father (William Fichtner) fills him to the eyeballs with medication, while his mother (Allison Janney) is herself too high to notice. In upper-class Hillside, California, both young and old are too doped-up or self-obsessed to realise there’s mayhem going on in front of their chemically-numbed noses, ravaging their bland, safe “community”.

Somewhere between Donnie Darko and Desperate Housewives, Posin’s debut is often funny and incisive, although every character is so whacked-out that it verges on the plain ludicrous. Its themes of dysfunctional families (parents as addled as teen kids) and communication breakdowns have been dealt with repeatedly before.

In what you might call the school of American Beauty, The Squid And The Whale did this best and Thumbsucker did it most similarly to what’s on view here. It’s hard to like these cosseted narcissists. Yet an acidic script that goes to some shockingly dark corners and a who’s-who of quality acting make this cynical cackle morbidly compelling.

CHRIS ROBERTS

You can watch the trailer for the movie here. Click on the links below:

Windows Media –

lo / hi

The City Of Violence

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DIR: Ryoo Seung-Hwan ST: Jung Doo-Hong, Ryoo Seung-Hwan, Lee Beom-Soo With Die Bad and Crying Fist, Ryoo established himself as the Korean Tarantino - a director capable of adding artistic depth to action. If that comparison is accepted, The City of Violence is Ryoo's Kill Bill, a homage to the great Asian martial arts movies. In a film he wrote, produced, directed and stars in, Ryoo abandons plausibility in favour of style. The story concerns Tae-soo, a Seoul detective returning to his home town for the funeral of a childhood friend. Before long he's chasing shadows in the underworld, and re-examining his friendship with Jang Pil-ho (played with slimy intensity by comic actor Lee Beom-soo). But plot is nothing. With a soundtrack which flickers between Morricone-esque soundscapes and 70s funk, Ryoo's film is a ballet of gymnastic violence. It starts in top gear and thunders towards a beautifully- choreographed finale of daggers-drawn, swivelling feet and somersaults, which opens up like a Chinese box. Along the way there are split-screens and collapsing scaffolds, slow-mo hockey sticks and starbursts of sugar glass. It's kinetic and beautiful. But that's all. ALASTAIR McKAY

DIR: Ryoo Seung-Hwan

ST: Jung Doo-Hong, Ryoo Seung-Hwan, Lee Beom-Soo

With Die Bad and Crying Fist, Ryoo established himself as the Korean Tarantino – a director capable of adding artistic depth to action. If that comparison is accepted, The City of Violence is Ryoo’s Kill Bill, a homage to the great Asian martial arts movies. In a film he wrote, produced, directed and stars in, Ryoo abandons plausibility in favour of style.

The story concerns Tae-soo, a Seoul detective returning to his home town for the funeral of a childhood friend. Before long he’s chasing shadows in the underworld, and re-examining his friendship with Jang Pil-ho (played with slimy intensity by comic actor Lee Beom-soo). But plot is nothing.

With a soundtrack which flickers between Morricone-esque soundscapes and 70s funk, Ryoo’s film is a ballet of gymnastic violence. It starts in top gear and thunders towards a beautifully- choreographed finale of daggers-drawn, swivelling feet and somersaults, which opens up like a Chinese box. Along the way there are split-screens and collapsing scaffolds, slow-mo hockey sticks and starbursts of sugar glass.

It’s kinetic and beautiful. But that’s all.

ALASTAIR McKAY

Peter Gabriel Heralds Arrival Of Rock

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Peter Gabriel is to rock Cornwall's Eden Project this month, with a specially created concert on June 20, to unveil a giant oval stone sculpture. The 70-ton stone sculpture, called Seed, has been created by artist Peter Randall-Page and is thought to be one of the largest made from a single piece of stone. Gabriel, through his collective WOMAD has been a longtime supporter of the Eden Project, who stage shows there each year as part of the Eden Sessions, to raise money for the Eden Trust charity. Gabriel is also planning on creatively contributing to the designs of Eden's forthcoming development, The Edge. Gabriel previously performed on the Eden's stage as part of Live 8 two years ago - but this concert will be founder of Genesis' first full concert there. Tickets for the concert are now on sale now priced at £35. More information is available here from the Eden Project's official website

Peter Gabriel is to rock Cornwall’s Eden Project this month, with a specially created concert on June 20, to unveil a giant oval stone sculpture.

The 70-ton stone sculpture, called Seed, has been created by artist Peter Randall-Page and is thought to be one of the largest made from a single piece of stone.

Gabriel, through his collective WOMAD has been a longtime supporter of the Eden Project, who stage shows there each year as part of the Eden Sessions, to raise money for the Eden Trust charity.

Gabriel is also planning on creatively contributing to the designs of Eden’s forthcoming development, The Edge.

Gabriel previously performed on the Eden’s stage as part of Live 8 two years ago – but this concert will be founder of Genesis’ first full concert there.

Tickets for the concert are now on sale now priced at £35.

More information is available here from the Eden Project’s official website

Robert Wyatt’s “Comicopera”

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I've been promising to write about this Robert Wyatt album for quite a while now, I'm aware. But it's been hard to blog about this one. Not because of any problems with the music - it's wonderful, actually. The problem I'm finding is that listening to "Comicopera" is a kind of immersive experience, so much so that it's hard to come out of it with a critical angle. You know those photos of jazz musicians from the '50s and '60s? Blue Note sleeves, Herman Leonard portraits, the ones where the musician looks away from the lens, absorbed, while a coil of cigarette smoke is caught in low lights? That's what "Comicopera" reminds me of. There's always been a jazz element to Wyatt's music, of course, but "Comicopera" goes beyond that, so that it seems imbued with a particular, romantic jazz atmosphere: a somnambulent fug, maybe. Following the pattern of "Cuckooland" from a few years back, Wyatt (I assume it's him, anyway: I have no credits right now) is playing more and more trumpet, allowing his horn to pick up the high notes that he can no longer quite reach. One of the many charms of "Comicopera" is how his trumpet and voice seep into one another, both gracefully disintegrated instruments. On the title track and in many other places, Wyatt hums wordlessly over a crepuscular ambient hum, and it can be hard to tell when he's playing and when he's singing. This is the prevailing vibe. Drums are brushed indolently, and some earlyish Miles Davis sides have clearly been worn out over the years. "Do Us A Favour" feels like a primitive, Anglicised response to "So What?", with the perpetually puzzled Wyatt expressing a certain envy for those who have religious faith. "Just As You Are", meanwhile, is an extraordinarily tender duet (with a singer I can't place, sorry, though she sounds like a warm Nico, if you can imagine that) about enduring love, clearly intended for Alfreda Benge. Or possibly written by her, come to think of it. I'll fill in some of these gaps when the credits turn up, I promise. Occasionally, there's a break in this enveloping atmosphere. "Beautiful Peace" begins with Wyatt exclaiming, "Oh look, there's a dead rabbit; all flat!", then becomes a warm, ambling strumalong, much more simple and direct than his usual meticulously layered sound. "Something Unbelievable" is dense and cloudy, but edgier and more dissonant than usual, built around a series of escalating, jolting organ stabs. By the end, Wyatt pretty much abandons English, with a string of Spanish songs. "Pastafari" is a lovely and curious piece on, I think, vibes, and finally, "Hasta Siempre" suggests Wyatt is belatedly auditioning for one of those many empty spots in the Buena Vista Social Club. He'd be a great recruit, of course: how many other British singers have continued such a sympathetic, long and open-minded love affair with the possibilities of song, and can summon up melancholy and enduring passion with such mature guile? This is a beautiful album, and I should listen to it some more.

I’ve been promising to write about this Robert Wyatt album for quite a while now, I’m aware. But it’s been hard to blog about this one. Not because of any problems with the music – it’s wonderful, actually. The problem I’m finding is that listening to “Comicopera” is a kind of immersive experience, so much so that it’s hard to come out of it with a critical angle.

Marc Bolan 30th Anniversary Gig Planned

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Marc Bolan's life and music is to be celebrated on the 30th anniversary of the T-Rex front man's death at a concert this September. The concert at London's Shepherd's Bush Empire will feature a line-up including veteran producer Tony Visconti who worked with T-Rex for the majority of their recording career. Artists confirmed to appear so far include Marc Almond, Shakin' Stevens, and John's Children vocalist Andy Ellison, who along with other vocalists will perform unique versions of classic glam T-Rex songs backed by renowned tribute act T-Rextasy. Marc Bolan: The Celebration takes place on September 15, and proceeds raised will be split between Nordoff Robins Music Therapy and the PRS Members Fund. September also sees the release of an anniversary edition 40-track T-Rex and Bolan compilation through Universal records, including Bolan's ten top ten hit singles. Click here for more show details or to book online at www.shepherds-bush-empire.co.uk Pic credit: Sukita

Marc Bolan’s life and music is to be celebrated on the 30th anniversary of the T-Rex front man’s death at a concert this September.

The concert at London’s Shepherd’s Bush Empire will feature a line-up including veteran producer Tony Visconti who worked with T-Rex for the majority of their recording career.

Artists confirmed to appear so far include Marc Almond, Shakin’ Stevens, and John’s Children vocalist Andy Ellison, who along with other vocalists will perform unique versions of classic glam T-Rex songs backed by renowned tribute act T-Rextasy.

Marc Bolan: The Celebration takes place on September 15, and proceeds raised will be split between Nordoff Robins Music Therapy and the PRS Members Fund.

September also sees the release of an anniversary edition 40-track T-Rex and Bolan compilation through Universal records, including Bolan’s ten top ten hit singles.

Click here for more show details or to book online at www.shepherds-bush-empire.co.uk

Pic credit: Sukita

Watch The Klaxons Go Samurai Crazy In New Video

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The Klaxons have covered old rave classic It's Not Over Yet for their fifth single, due for release later this month. The original by DJs Paul Oakenfold and Steve Osborne under the guise of Grace, was a House anthem, reaching number six in the UK charts in 1995, whilst topping the US dance charts...

The Klaxons have covered old rave classic It’s Not Over Yet for their fifth single, due for release later this month.

The original by DJs Paul Oakenfold and Steve Osborne under the guise of Grace, was a House anthem, reaching number six in the UK charts in 1995, whilst topping the US dance charts too.

More than a decade on the track still sounds great, it even features on Oakendfolds 2006 album A Lively Mind – and the rockier evolved Klaxons version has an equally rock video.

Check out the boys defeat strange flying objects whilst dressed as skintight leather clad Samurais in the video for It’s Not Over Yet here:

Windows Media –
lo / hi

Grinderman To Support The White Stripes In NYC

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Grinderman have announced a one-off London at the end of this month. The four piece featuring Nick Cave and Bad Seed members Warren Ellis, Martyn Casey and Jim Sclavunos will play the Kentish Town Forum on June 20. As well as the rare UK date, Grinderman whose self-titled debut album is still getting rave reviews, have just been confirmed as support to The White Stripes at their mammoth show at New York's Madison Square Gardens on July 24. They will then play a handful of headline shows in Chicago and San Francisco. Catch Cave and co at the following shows: London, Forum (June 20) New York, Madison Square Garden (Supporting The White Stripes) (July 24) Chicago, Metro (25) San Francisco, Great American Music Hall (26) San Francisco, Slims (27)

Grinderman have announced a one-off London at the end of this month.

The four piece featuring Nick Cave and Bad Seed members Warren Ellis, Martyn Casey and Jim Sclavunos will play the Kentish Town Forum on June 20.

As well as the rare UK date, Grinderman whose self-titled debut album is still getting rave reviews, have just been confirmed as support to The White Stripes at their mammoth show at New York’s Madison Square Gardens on July 24.

They will then play a handful of headline shows in Chicago and San Francisco.

Catch Cave and co at the following shows:

London, Forum (June 20)

New York, Madison Square Garden (Supporting The White Stripes) (July 24)

Chicago, Metro (25)

San Francisco, Great American Music Hall (26)

San Francisco, Slims (27)

Dylan, Sinatra And A Restless Farwell

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I was talking recently to fellow Uncut Bob fanatic Damien Love, ostensibly about a feature we are working on together for Uncut’s looming 10th anniversary issue. Pretty soon, however, the conversation had drifted somewhat in the direction of Dylan bootlegs – the alternative Bob universe, if you like – and what might be the best of them. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7i1rG610fWU

I was talking recently to fellow Uncut Bob fanatic Damien Love, ostensibly about a feature we are working on together for Uncut’s looming 10th anniversary issue. Pretty soon, however, the conversation had drifted somewhat in the direction of Dylan bootlegs – the alternative Bob universe, if you like – and what might be the best of them.

Jack White and Joanna Newsom (not together, mind)

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I just noticed this morning that Jack White has two albums coming out on June 18. There's the White Stripes' "Icky Thump", and then there's "Hentch-Forth.Five" by The Hentchmen. I have a few Hentchmen records somewhere at home, and they're full-blooded, uncomplicated garage rock, typical of all those Detroit records I bought around 2001. This one eluded my grasp, though, with good reason. "Hentch-Forth" originally came out in 1998, limited to 1,000 vinyl copies. I wonder how much those vinyl discs are worth now? Because it transpires that, for this album, The Hentchmen were augmented by Jack White. There he is on the back cover. The three Hentchmen are posing stiffly in thrift shop jumpers, trying very hard to look like they sound - ie like a geeky/deranged high school band from 1965. A boyish Jack, meanwhile, is stood a few paces away. He is dressed in black, with a sort of short back and sides cut, cigarette by his side. He is glaring at his bandmates, evidently keen that people realise that while he's happy to play with these dorks, he's not actually one of them. It's a great picture, and the record's not bad either - though whether I'd ever choose to play most of it ahead of, say, "Nuggets" is doubtful. The Hentchmen are a guitar/organ/drums combo, and Jack mainly adds bass, ironically, to these punchy ramalams. Listen out for him on a bash through the Yardbirds' "Psycho Daisies", though. Just as the White Stripes are beginning their career, here's White on guitar, already playing those shrill, spluttery leads - a kind of ecstatic punctuation - which would become his trademark. Also in the post today was the new EP by Joanna Newsom. Newsom has never really struck me as a fan of puns, but this one is called "Joanna Newsom & The Ys Street Band". It's making the point that, unlike "Ys" itself, this EP features her touring band instead of the full Van Dyke Parks-and-orchestra trip. "Cosmia" from "Ys" is here, in its stripped-back, live form - proof that there's substance to these marvellous songs beyond the opulent instrumental packaging. Most interesting, though, is a new song called "Colleen", which she played on her UK tour in January. It's a frenzied Celtic jig where her resemblance to Kate Bush is more pronounced than ever. Unlike "Ys", this music feels more immediate, for all its complexity ("Colleen" is a bit shorter than most "Ys" songs, but it still gallops through a bunch of radically different passages, still evades corny old verse-chorus-verse) it doesn't sound like Newsom has spent two years fretting over every note. That perfectionism was one of the glories of "Ys", but "Colleen" proves that something approaching spontaneity works for her, too. Amazing stuff.

I just noticed this morning that Jack White has two albums coming out on June 18. There’s the White Stripes‘ “Icky Thump”, and then there’s “Hentch-Forth.Five” by The Hentchmen.

Happy Mondays To Tour Again In September

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After receiving rave reviews for their first tour in seven years, the Happy Mondays are planning to do it all again with another tour later this year. The Happy Mondays will tour from September, with support coming from up and coming band, The Sunshine Underground. Shaun, Bez and Gaz are considered to be at their best with their current energizing performances - new tracks like "Jellybean" are full of Mondays dance swagger. The ‘revitalised’ Happy Mondays play their final UK gig on their current comeback tour, at London's Astoria (June 6), before jetting off to New York for two further dates. Catch their second tour in the following venues: Nottingham, Rock City (September 27) Glasgow, Carling Academy (28) Sheffield, Octagon (October 1) Newcastle, Carling Academy (2) Bristol, Carling Academy (3) Oxford, Zodiac (5) Brixton, Carling Academy (6) Norwich, UEA (8) Southampton, Guildhall (9) Leeds University (10) Birmingham, Carling Academy (12) Liverpool, Carling Academy (13) Tickets are on sale from tomorrow at 10am and start from £25 to £27.50.

After receiving rave reviews for their first tour in seven years, the Happy Mondays are planning to do it all again with another tour later this year.

The Happy Mondays will tour from September, with support coming from up and coming band, The Sunshine Underground.

Shaun, Bez and Gaz are considered to be at their best with their current energizing performances – new tracks like “Jellybean” are full of Mondays dance swagger.

The ‘revitalised’ Happy Mondays play their final UK gig on their current comeback tour, at London’s Astoria (June 6), before jetting off to New York for two further dates.

Catch their second tour in the following venues:

Nottingham, Rock City (September 27)

Glasgow, Carling Academy (28)

Sheffield, Octagon (October 1)

Newcastle, Carling Academy (2)

Bristol, Carling Academy (3)

Oxford, Zodiac (5)

Brixton, Carling Academy (6)

Norwich, UEA (8)

Southampton, Guildhall (9)

Leeds University (10)

Birmingham, Carling Academy (12)

Liverpool, Carling Academy (13)

Tickets are on sale from tomorrow at 10am and start from £25 to £27.50.

Creation Records founder Alan McGee Brings Death Disco To TV

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Music industry veteran Alan McGee, renowned for championing new and alternative music, is to bring his popular club night Death Disco to Rockworld.TV on Sky. Death Disco TV will feature three bands playing to a live audience at London’s Cuckoo Club. The first of the monthly programmes will feature The Holloways, Reverend and the Makers, and The Chavs – the supergroup formed by former Libertine Carl Barat with the Charlatans’ Tim Burgess, Razorlights’ Andy Burrows and Primal Scream’s Martin Duffy. McGee who is renowned for signing Oasis, says the opportunity to make programmes is a great thing. He commented: “When they suggested doing a TV version of Death Disco it really appealed to me. It’s a chance to showcase some great new music to a wider audience and that’s got to be a good thing.” As well as McGee, Rockworld.TV have also enlisted former XFM and now BBC London DJ Gary Crowley to champion alternative music on the channel. Starting on June 10, “Gary Crowley Presents…” will feature a mix of live, acoustic performances with interviews with artists. The first episode will see sets and chat with former Sex Pistol Glen Matlock and newer bands The Bishops and The Draytones. Rockworld.TV is available on SKY channel 368 and on demand through their IPTV platform online here

Music industry veteran Alan McGee, renowned for championing new and alternative music, is to bring his popular club night Death Disco to Rockworld.TV on Sky.

Death Disco TV will feature three bands playing to a live audience at London’s Cuckoo Club. The first of the monthly programmes will feature The Holloways, Reverend and the Makers, and The Chavs – the supergroup formed by former Libertine Carl Barat with the Charlatans’ Tim Burgess, Razorlights’ Andy Burrows and Primal Scream’s Martin Duffy.

McGee who is renowned for signing Oasis, says the opportunity to make programmes is a great thing. He commented: “When they suggested doing a TV version of Death Disco it really appealed to me. It’s a chance to showcase some great new music to a wider audience and that’s got to be a good thing.”

As well as McGee, Rockworld.TV have also enlisted former XFM and now BBC London DJ Gary Crowley to champion alternative music on the channel.

Starting on June 10, “Gary Crowley Presents…” will feature a mix of live, acoustic performances with interviews with artists. The first episode will see sets and chat with former Sex Pistol Glen Matlock and newer bands The Bishops and The Draytones.

Rockworld.TV is available on SKY channel 368 and on demand through their IPTV platform online here

The Traveling Wilburys – Volumes 1 And 3

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R 1988 THE TRAVELING WILBURYS Volume 1 5* R 1989 Volume 3 4* If it had taken place during the 1970s, the teaming of Bob Dylan, George Harrison, Roy Orbison, Tom Petty and ELO mastermind Jeff Lynne would have towered over supergroups like Blind Faith and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. But in 1988, when Traveling Wilburys, Vol. 1 appeared, Dylan was perceived as being in decline, Harrison was far removed from his post-Beatles landmark All Things Must Pass, Orbison was ancient history to most fans and Petty had yet to release the career-revitalizing Full Moon Fever. On top of that, the assembled legends deliberately downplayed the whole thing, adopting tongue-in-cheek fake names and subsuming their instantly recognizable styles into the leveling context of Lynne’s production. The formation of the Wilburys was practically an afterthought. Lynne had just finished producing Cloud Nine for Harrison, and Warner Bros. Records asked them to come up with a B-side for the first single. Corraling their friends Petty, Dylan and Orbison, they came up with “Handle With Care,” featuring the swapping of lead vocals from one indelible voice to the next throughout the song, topped off by a rousing blend of those voices in the refrains. This sublime side brought the Traveling Wilburys to life. Recorded in L.A. in just 10 days, the supremely accomplished Volume 1 now seems like a boxful of revelations. Dylan submits to the novelty of placing his unruly voice amid Lynne’s scrupulous, glossy production on “Dirty World,” “Congratulations” and the captivating “Tweeter and the Monkey Man”. Orbison absolutely blows the roof off what would be his last rock aria, “Not Alone Any More”. Petty’s “Last Night,” suffused with bonhomie, and the synth-meets-horns production number “Margarita” exemplify the extremes of his longstanding partnership with Lynne. And the reinvigorated Harrison’s “End of the Line” returns him to the form of his early solo work, while coming off as both more poignant and more life-affirming in retrospect. Orbison died before the rest reconvened for the facetiously titled Vol. 3, and, not surprisingly, it’s a less spirited affair, with uniformly solid performance but only occasionally inspired material, the standout being Dylan’s lilting “If You Belonged To Me,” on which he updates his Blood On The Tracks style, and Petty’s “You Took My Breath Away,” a grand homage to their fallen comrade. But those voices and presences transcend any limitations, making the Wilburys one of rock’s most disarming aberrations. BUD SCOPPA

R 1988

THE TRAVELING WILBURYS

Volume 1

5*

R 1989

Volume 3

4*

If it had taken place during the 1970s, the teaming of Bob Dylan, George Harrison, Roy Orbison, Tom Petty and ELO mastermind Jeff Lynne would have towered over supergroups like Blind Faith and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. But in 1988, when Traveling Wilburys, Vol. 1 appeared, Dylan was perceived as being in decline, Harrison was far removed from his post-Beatles landmark All Things Must Pass, Orbison was ancient history to most fans and Petty had yet to release the career-revitalizing Full Moon Fever. On top of that, the assembled legends deliberately downplayed the whole thing, adopting tongue-in-cheek fake names and subsuming their instantly recognizable styles into the leveling context of Lynne’s production.

The formation of the Wilburys was practically an afterthought. Lynne had just finished producing Cloud Nine for Harrison, and Warner Bros. Records asked them to come up with a B-side for the first single. Corraling their friends Petty, Dylan and Orbison, they came up with “Handle With Care,” featuring the swapping of lead vocals from one indelible voice to the next throughout the song, topped off by a rousing blend of those voices in the refrains. This sublime side brought the Traveling Wilburys to life.

Recorded in L.A. in just 10 days, the supremely accomplished Volume 1 now seems like a boxful of revelations. Dylan submits to the novelty of placing his unruly voice amid Lynne’s scrupulous, glossy production on “Dirty World,” “Congratulations” and the captivating “Tweeter and the Monkey Man”. Orbison absolutely blows the roof off what would be his last rock aria, “Not Alone Any More”. Petty’s “Last Night,” suffused with bonhomie, and the synth-meets-horns production number “Margarita” exemplify the extremes of his longstanding partnership with Lynne. And the reinvigorated Harrison’s “End of the Line” returns him to the form of his early solo work, while coming off as both more poignant and more life-affirming in retrospect.

Orbison died before the rest reconvened for the facetiously titled Vol. 3, and, not surprisingly, it’s a less spirited affair, with uniformly solid performance but only occasionally inspired material, the standout being Dylan’s lilting “If You Belonged To Me,” on which he updates his Blood On The Tracks style, and Petty’s “You Took My Breath Away,” a grand homage to their fallen comrade. But those voices and presences transcend any limitations, making the Wilburys one of rock’s most disarming aberrations.

BUD SCOPPA

Queens Of The Stone Age – Era Vulgaris

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Halfway through their fifth album, Queens Of The Stone Age frontman Josh Homme nails what it is to be living in these times. Here everyone wants to party, and everyone wants to try everything. Some people might call it an age of decadence. Queens Of The Stone Age, meanwhile, have called it “Era Vulgaris” – and Josh Homme is the self-appointed spokesman for the generation. This is a band, after all, who have made a virtue of trying everything. A heavy rock band whose personal mythology is built on songs like their excellent Feel Good Hit Of The Summer (essentially a list of drugs Homme had consumed), and whose music has encompassed jazz and polka, Queens are a group whose superb music is the product of enquiring, if hedonistic minds. It’s a policy that has brought them great success (the triumphant Songs For The Deaf Album, anchored around contributions from then-singer Mark Lanegan), and personal upheaval (founder member Nick Oliveri was sacked for transgressing too far into unacceptable behaviour), but this flexible attitude towards nearly everything is maintained rigidly here. Produced by long-time associate and godfather figure of Californian desert rock Chris Goss, there are textbook moments of monolithic rock music here - the hypnotic ‘Turning On The Screw’, the woozy ‘Suture Up Your Future’ and seduction slow jam ‘Make It Witchu’. Perversely, though, Homme calls this a dance record – and Battery ‘Acid” and “Misfit Love” are both shot through with the band’s own noisy interpretation of the genre. Whatever the sources they plunder, though, here Queens Of The Stone Age perform in the same way they have throughout their career: they continue to find some clever ways to do a pretty dumb thing. It’s true, our generation may occasionally be clouded by indecision, and have its palette jaded by too much choice. Era Vulgaris, though, is a demonstration in how originality can still find a way to shine through. DAN MARTIN

Halfway through their fifth album, Queens Of The Stone Age frontman Josh Homme nails what it is to be living in these times. Here everyone wants to party, and everyone wants to try everything. Some people might call it an age of decadence. Queens Of The Stone Age, meanwhile, have called it “Era Vulgaris” – and Josh Homme is the self-appointed spokesman for the generation.

This is a band, after all, who have made a virtue of trying everything. A heavy rock band whose personal mythology is built on songs like their excellent Feel Good Hit Of The Summer (essentially a list of drugs Homme had consumed), and whose music has encompassed jazz and polka, Queens are a group whose superb music is the product of enquiring, if hedonistic minds.

It’s a policy that has brought them great success (the triumphant Songs For The Deaf Album, anchored around contributions from then-singer Mark Lanegan), and personal upheaval (founder member Nick Oliveri was sacked for transgressing too far into unacceptable behaviour), but this flexible attitude towards nearly everything is maintained rigidly here.

Produced by long-time associate and godfather figure of Californian desert rock Chris Goss, there are textbook moments of monolithic rock music here – the hypnotic ‘Turning On The Screw’, the woozy ‘Suture Up Your Future’ and seduction slow jam ‘Make It Witchu’.

Perversely, though, Homme calls this a dance record – and Battery ‘Acid” and “Misfit Love” are both shot through with the band’s own noisy interpretation of the genre.

Whatever the sources they plunder, though, here Queens Of The Stone Age perform in the same way they have throughout their career: they continue to find some clever ways to do a pretty dumb thing. It’s true, our generation may occasionally be clouded by indecision, and have its palette jaded by too much choice. Era Vulgaris, though, is a demonstration in how originality can still find a way to shine through.

DAN MARTIN