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Bjork’s Volta

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As I write, I've just started listening to Bjork's new album, "Volta", for the third time. The first single, "Earth Intruders", is playing right now, a kind of euphoric marching song driven by three radical beat scientists: freestyling avant drummer Chris Corsano; Congolese troupe Konono No1; and, most notably, Timbaland. It's pretty dizzying, as you might imagine. After the domestic intimacies of "Vespertine" and "Medulla", I think Bjork's plan on "Volta" might be to locate some great global pulse, a way of drawing energies and finding affinities from a wide and tasteful range of collaborators. That's the feel anyway. "Volta" is certainly more exuberant and in-your-face than the gorgeous miniatures of her recent work. It's not commercial pop music, exactly, for all Timbaland's glittery array of previous employers. But it's not unapproachably avant-garde, either, for all the fearsome credibility of many of her new accomplices. If there's an analogue to Timbaland's previous work, "Earth Intruders" and an even punchier, weirder track called "Innocence" recall the alien tribal electro sound he created for Missy Elliott circa "Work It". "Innocence" is quite, quite extraordinary; wild acid clicks and squelches swarming around Bjork as she sings with the sort of triumphal abandon found on "Violently Happy". "Untouchable innocence, it's still here," she declares, "but in different places". Besides "Violently Happy", "Volta" reminds me of "Debut" in a few other places. A radical updating of "Debut", for sure, but there's a similar sense of open-minded adventure. I guess that's defined pretty much all of Bjork's career, but the vigorous desire to embrace a new world of possibilities is comparable here. There are also the sombre massed horn passages, a recurrent theme on several tracks, which remind me a little of "The Anchor Song": "Wanderlust" is maybe my favourite right now, beginning with a long chorus of ship's horns before Bjork sails in, using seagoing metaphors to explain her artistic questing. That, or maybe she's singing about nice trips on her new boat. What else? There are a couple of more fragile pieces recalling "Vespertine", notably "Hope", where Timbaland's simulated tabla flutter goes up against the filigree kora playing of Toumani Diabate. Bjork, incidentally, is singing at this point, "What's the lesser of two evils? If a suicide bomber made to look pregnant manages to kill her target or not?" Then there's an incredibly hard techno track, "Declare Independence", where more ship's horns usher in ferocious beats from Mark Bell that recall his work on the second LFO album. And a couple of tunes featuring Anthony Hegarty, most notably "The Dull Flame Of Desire", which pits both of them up against another austere massed horn accompaniment, and pattering drums from Lightning Bolt's awesome Brian Chippendale. These Anthony tracks are the only ones that haven't really got to me yet, potentially because I find him a lovely but strangely limited vocalist, and his routine has been relatively inescapable for the past year or so. "Volta" finds Bjork driving some incredibly talented collaborators to surprise themselves, and in that context, Anthony's schtick seems predictable. But then again, I need to play all of this plenty more. As ever, I'll get back to you. . .

As I write, I’ve just started listening to Bjork‘s new album, “Volta”, for the third time. The first single, “Earth Intruders”, is playing right now, a kind of euphoric marching song driven by three radical beat scientists: freestyling avant drummer Chris Corsano; Congolese troupe Konono No1; and, most notably, Timbaland. It’s pretty dizzying, as you might imagine.

Japanese Psych Rock Legends Come To UK

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Ghost, legends in the new psych rock scene are to make some rare appearances in the UK in May, their first in three years. Following on from the release of their acclaimed ninth album, "In Stormy Nights," the Drag City recording artists are proud to confirm three UK dates around their All Tomorrow's Parties shows in Minehead. Ghost, with the line-up from "In Stormy Nights" are Masaki Batoh (Acoustic guitar, vocals, springer), Taishi Takizawa - (saxophone, flute, vibraphone, theremin, etc), Kazuo Ogino - (piano, analog synthesizer, kaval, gaida, tenor recorder), Takuyuki Moriya – (contrabass), Michio Kurihara – (electric guitar), Junzo Tateiwa - (frame drums, cymbals, timpani, tabla, drums) will be bringing their trademark folk sounds, improvisations and avant-garde constructions to the stage. Catch Ghost at the following venues: Glasgow, Mono (May 17) Minehead, ATP Festival (18) Minehead, ATP Festival (19) Manchester, Islington Mill (20) London, 93 Feet East (21) Pic credit: Ben Chasney

Ghost, legends in the new psych rock scene are to make some rare appearances in the UK in May, their first in three years.

Following on from the release of their acclaimed ninth album, “In Stormy Nights,” the Drag City recording artists are proud to confirm three UK dates around their All Tomorrow’s Parties shows in Minehead.

Ghost, with the line-up from “In Stormy Nights” are Masaki Batoh (Acoustic guitar, vocals, springer), Taishi Takizawa – (saxophone, flute, vibraphone, theremin, etc), Kazuo Ogino – (piano, analog synthesizer, kaval, gaida, tenor recorder), Takuyuki Moriya – (contrabass), Michio Kurihara – (electric guitar), Junzo Tateiwa – (frame drums, cymbals, timpani, tabla, drums) will be bringing their trademark folk sounds, improvisations and avant-garde constructions to the stage.

Catch Ghost at the following venues:

Glasgow, Mono (May 17)

Minehead, ATP Festival (18)

Minehead, ATP Festival (19)

Manchester, Islington Mill (20)

London, 93 Feet East (21)

Pic credit: Ben Chasney

Van The Man Returns To Play Liverpool This Summer

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Legendary folk genius Van Morrison, OBE, is the latest addition to Liverpool's Summer Pops festival this July. He will play Aintree Racecourse on July 12 - returning to the city after two sell-out shows at the Philharmonic Hall last Summer as part of the Irish Festival that took place. Speaking about last year's special performances, Morrison proclaimed "The shows in Liverpool were very enjoyable, we had a ball!" Van the Man's latest release "Van Morrison At The Movies" has seen him continue to receive raptuous praise. The album even made it in to the US Billboard Top 40 upon it's release. The collection includes some of his most renowned songs - Everyone from Martin Scorcese to John Landis have used Morrison's music for their films, including "Moondance", "Brown Eyed Girl" and 'Bright Side Of The Road." Morrison's career, spans four decades, and he has influenced many contemporary artists. He was inducted into the Rock'n'Roll Hall Of Fame in 1993. Previously announced acts playing the Summer Pops season are OMD, Deacon Blue and Steely Dan. Tickets for the July 12 show go on sale from today, priced £28.50 and £32.50. More information about Van and the other Pops shows is available here from cmplive.com

Legendary folk genius Van Morrison, OBE, is the latest addition to Liverpool’s Summer Pops festival this July.

He will play Aintree Racecourse on July 12 – returning to the city after two sell-out shows at the Philharmonic Hall last Summer as part of the Irish Festival that took place.

Speaking about last year’s special performances, Morrison proclaimed “The shows in Liverpool were very enjoyable, we had a ball!”

Van the Man’s latest release “Van Morrison At The Movies” has seen him continue to receive raptuous praise. The album even made it in to the US Billboard Top 40 upon it’s release.

The collection includes some of his most renowned songs – Everyone from Martin Scorcese to John Landis have used Morrison’s music for their films, including “Moondance”, “Brown Eyed Girl” and ‘Bright Side Of The Road.”

Morrison’s career, spans four decades, and he has influenced many contemporary artists. He was inducted into the Rock’n’Roll Hall Of Fame in 1993.

Previously announced acts playing the Summer Pops season are OMD, Deacon Blue and Steely Dan.

Tickets for the July 12 show go on sale from today, priced £28.50 and £32.50.

More information about Van and the other Pops shows is available here from cmplive.com

Stones Tickets Go With A Bang

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Tickets for The Rolling Stones O2 Arena shows in August went on sale this morning at 9am and were completely sold-out by half past. The band announced the UK leg of their ongoing Bigger Bang Tour last week and public response meant that the London shows were increased to two, on August 21 and 23. The Stones date at Dublin’s Slane Castle also went on sale this morning and also sold-out almost immediately. The Slane Castle show will be the group's first open-air show in Ireland in 25 years. As previously reported, the Stones also play the Isle Of Wight Festival on June 10 - their first headlining festival appearence ever. The full European tour dates are as follows: Belgium, Werchter Park (June 5) Nijmegen, Holland, Goffertpark (8) Isle of Wight, UK, Isle of Wight Festival (10) Frankfurt, Germany, Commerzbank (13) Paris, France, Stade De France (16) Lyon, France, Stade Gerland (18) Barcelona, Spain, Olympic Stadium (21) San Sebastian, Spain, Anoeta (23) Lisbon, Portugal, Alvalade Stadium (25) Madrid, Spain, Calderon Stadium (28) El Ejido, Spain, Santo Domingo Stadium (30) Rome, Italy, Olympic Stadium (July 6) Budva, Montenegro, Jaz Beach (9) Belgrade, Serbia, Hippodrome (14) Bucharest, Romania Lia Manoliu Stadium (17) Budapest, Hungary, The Puskas Ferenc Stadium (20) Brno, Czech Republic, Outdoor Exhibition Centre (22) Kiev, Ukraine, NSC Olimpiys’kyi (25) St Petersburg, Russia, Place Square (28) Helsinki, Finland, Olympic Stadium (August 1) Gothenburg, Sweden, Ullevi Stadium (3) Copenhagen, Denmark, Parken (5) Oslo, Norway, Valle Hovin (8) Düsseldorf, Germany, LTU Arena (13) Hamburg, Germany, AOL Arena (15) Dublin, ROI, Slane Castle (18) London, UK, O2 Arena (21)

Tickets for The Rolling Stones O2 Arena shows in August went on sale this morning at 9am and were completely sold-out by half past.

The band announced the UK leg of their ongoing Bigger Bang Tour last week and public response meant that the London shows were increased to two, on August 21 and 23.

The Stones date at Dublin’s Slane Castle also went on sale this morning and also sold-out almost immediately. The Slane Castle show will be the group’s first open-air show in Ireland in 25 years.

As previously reported, the Stones also play the Isle Of Wight Festival on June 10 – their first headlining festival appearence ever.

The full European tour dates are as follows:

Belgium, Werchter Park (June 5)

Nijmegen, Holland, Goffertpark (8)

Isle of Wight, UK, Isle of Wight Festival (10)

Frankfurt, Germany, Commerzbank (13)

Paris, France, Stade De France (16)

Lyon, France, Stade Gerland (18)

Barcelona, Spain, Olympic Stadium (21)

San Sebastian, Spain, Anoeta (23)

Lisbon, Portugal, Alvalade Stadium (25)

Madrid, Spain, Calderon Stadium (28)

El Ejido, Spain, Santo Domingo Stadium (30)

Rome, Italy, Olympic Stadium (July 6)

Budva, Montenegro, Jaz Beach (9)

Belgrade, Serbia, Hippodrome (14)

Bucharest, Romania Lia Manoliu Stadium (17)

Budapest, Hungary, The Puskas Ferenc Stadium (20)

Brno, Czech Republic, Outdoor Exhibition Centre (22)

Kiev, Ukraine, NSC Olimpiys’kyi (25)

St Petersburg, Russia, Place Square (28)

Helsinki, Finland, Olympic Stadium (August 1)

Gothenburg, Sweden, Ullevi Stadium (3)

Copenhagen, Denmark, Parken (5)

Oslo, Norway, Valle Hovin (8)

Düsseldorf, Germany, LTU Arena (13)

Hamburg, Germany, AOL Arena (15)

Dublin, ROI, Slane Castle (18)

London, UK, O2 Arena (21)

Madness To Headline This Year’s Guilfest

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Nutty boys Madness are confirmed as one of the headliners for this year's GuilFest music festival in July. The annual three-day event at Stoke Park, Guildford, will also see headline performances from Supergrass, Squeeze and the Magic Numbers. Voted as Best Family Festival at last year's Festival Awards, GuilFest, now in it's 16th year, takes place from July 13 - 15. Supergrass will headline the opening night with a greatest hits set, taking time out from recording their as-yet-untitled sixth studio album, the follow-up to 2005's Top 10 album "Road To Rouen." Squeeze’s headline slot on July 14 will be the band's only summer performance. Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford have performed together as a reunited Squeeze since 1998. Squeeze are responsible for a string of classic hits including "Cool for Cats", "Up the Junction", "Pulling Mussells (From The Shell)", "Take Me I'm Yours." Britain’s biggest-selling singles band of the 80s, Madness headline GuilFest on Sunday July 15. With 21 Top 20 chart smashes in their huge arsenal of hits include "One Step Beyond", "Night Boat To Cairo", "Baggy Trousers", "House of Fun", "Our House" and "My Girl." Many more acts are to be announced in the coming weeks. Weekend tickets start at £90 and day tickets are £40. Child tickets (12-16)are £50 for the weekend or £30 per day. Under 12s go free. Full line-up info and ticketing details are available from guilfest.co.uk here

Nutty boys Madness are confirmed as one of the headliners for this year’s GuilFest music festival in July.

The annual three-day event at Stoke Park, Guildford, will also see headline performances from Supergrass, Squeeze and the Magic Numbers.

Voted as Best Family Festival at last year’s Festival Awards, GuilFest, now in it’s 16th year, takes place from July 13 – 15.

Supergrass will headline the opening night with a greatest hits set, taking time out from recording their as-yet-untitled sixth studio album, the follow-up to 2005’s Top 10 album “Road To Rouen.”

Squeeze’s headline slot on July 14 will be the band’s only summer performance. Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford have performed together as a reunited Squeeze since 1998. Squeeze are responsible for a string of classic hits including “Cool for Cats”, “Up the Junction”, “Pulling Mussells (From The Shell)”, “Take Me I’m Yours.”

Britain’s biggest-selling singles band of the 80s, Madness headline GuilFest on Sunday July 15. With 21 Top 20 chart smashes in their huge arsenal of hits include “One Step Beyond”, “Night Boat To Cairo”, “Baggy Trousers”, “House of Fun”, “Our House” and “My Girl.”

Many more acts are to be announced in the coming weeks.

Weekend tickets start at £90 and day tickets are £40. Child tickets (12-16)are £50 for the weekend or £30 per day. Under 12s go free.

Full line-up info and ticketing details are available from guilfest.co.uk here

Bono Accepts Honorary Knighthood

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U2 front man, and humanitarian campaigner Bono has been awarded an honorary knighthood at a ceremony in Dublin. Accompanied by band members The Edge and Adam Clayton, as well as his wife and children, the singer received the honour from British Ambassador David Reddaway. Because the singer, 46, is Irish, technically he will not be able to call himself a 'Sir' - a source of jokes at the small gathering. Bono quipped "You have permission to call me anything you want except Sir." Alternatives he suggested were "Lord of lords, your demi-godness." Bono's official new title is Knight Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (KBE) and he said that accepting it would make it easier to campaign about Third World Debt with politicians around the world. He said: "An award like this actually really helps me get through a few doors I wouldn't get through and that's the truth, that's the way the world is." British Prime Minister did not attend the ceremony held at David Reddaway's official residence, but did send a letter, saying the honour proved that links between Ireland and the UK are getting better. Blair said: "I'll leave it to others far more knowledgeable than me to talk about U2's music - all I'll say is that, along with millions of others right across the world, I'm a huge fan. It has been a great year for this award to happen in, and it does feel like this country and Great Britain are closer than they have ever been." Previous non-British nationals who have recieved Knighthoods include the other Irish rock star campaigner Bob Geldof as well as Placido Domingo and Hollywood filmmaker Steven Spielberg.

U2 front man, and humanitarian campaigner Bono has been awarded an honorary knighthood at a ceremony in Dublin.

Accompanied by band members The Edge and Adam Clayton, as well as his wife and children, the singer received the honour from British Ambassador David Reddaway.

Because the singer, 46, is Irish, technically he will not be able to call himself a ‘Sir’ – a source of jokes at the small gathering. Bono quipped “You have permission to call me anything you want except Sir.” Alternatives he suggested were “Lord of lords, your demi-godness.”

Bono’s official new title is Knight Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (KBE) and he said that accepting it would make it easier to campaign about Third World Debt with politicians around the world.

He said: “An award like this actually really helps me get through a few doors I wouldn’t get through and that’s the truth, that’s the way the world is.”

British Prime Minister did not attend the ceremony held at David Reddaway’s official residence, but did send a letter, saying the honour proved that links between Ireland and the UK are getting better.

Blair said: “I’ll leave it to others far more knowledgeable than me to talk about U2’s music – all I’ll say is that, along with millions of others right across the world, I’m a huge fan. It has been a great year for this award to happen in, and it does feel like this country and Great Britain are closer than they have ever been.”

Previous non-British nationals who have recieved Knighthoods include the other Irish rock star campaigner Bob Geldof as well as Placido Domingo and Hollywood filmmaker Steven Spielberg.

Snow Patrol Fire Up For New Single

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Snow Patrol's contribution to the new Spiderman 3 soundtrack "Signal Fire" is to be made available as a digi-download single next month The track, written especially for the movie, and already featuring in the film trailer will be downloadable from April 30. Spiderman 3 opens in the UK on May 4 and the film soundtrack also features original music from The Flaming Lips, The Killers, Wolfmother, and Yeah Yeah Yeahs. Snow Patrol, who are on the verge of selling 4million copies worldwide of their fourth album "Eyes Open"are currently on tour in North America. Following these sold-out dates, the band fronted by Gary Lightbody will play shows in Japan before returning to the UK for a series of Summer festival headline shows. You can catch Snow Patrol at the following UK festivals this summer: Isle of Wight Festival (June 8) Oxegen Festival, Co. Kildare, Ireland (July 7) T In The Park Festival, Balado Park, Scotland (July 8) V Festival, Chelmsford (August 18) V Festival, Stafford (August 19) Band info and exclusive downloads available from snowpatrol.com

Snow Patrol’s contribution to the new Spiderman 3 soundtrack “Signal Fire” is to be made available as a digi-download single next month

The track, written especially for the movie, and already featuring in the film trailer will be downloadable from April 30.

Spiderman 3 opens in the UK on May 4 and the film soundtrack also features original music from The Flaming Lips, The Killers, Wolfmother, and Yeah Yeah Yeahs.

Snow Patrol, who are on the verge of selling 4million copies worldwide of their fourth album “Eyes Open”are currently on tour in North America.

Following these sold-out dates, the band fronted by Gary Lightbody will play shows in Japan before returning to the UK for a series of Summer festival headline shows.

You can catch Snow Patrol at the following UK festivals this summer:

Isle of Wight Festival (June 8)

Oxegen Festival, Co. Kildare, Ireland (July 7)

T In The Park Festival, Balado Park, Scotland (July 8)

V Festival, Chelmsford (August 18)

V Festival, Stafford (August 19)

Band info and exclusive downloads available from snowpatrol.com

Tangled Up In Bob. . .

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For anyone not keeping an eye on such things, Bob Dylan started his European tour on Tuesday with a show in a 600-seater club in Stockholm called Debaser Medis - and the big news for Bobcats is that for the first time in a few years, Dylan is playing electric guitar again. At Debaser Medis, he was on guitar for the first seven songs. The following night, he played guitar on the opening five numbers of the 16-song set (see complete set lists below). No one seems to know for sure quite why Dylan gave up playing guitar in the first place – some people putting it down to a back problem, others arthritis and others claiming he needed the top of his piano to place lyric sheets in case, memory faltering, he started forgetting the words to the songs – although from a variety of vantage points at Dylan shows over the last three or four years, I’ve spotted no evidence of that. If anyone’s got any ideas on why Bob gave up on guitar and why circumstances have now changed, I’d be interested in hearing from you. Meanwhile, here’s the set lists for the first two shows of the tour: Debaser Medis, Stockholm March 27, 2007 1 Most Likely You Go Your Way And I’ll Go Mine 2 Not Dark Yet 3 I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight 4 It’s Alright, Ma (I’m Only Bleeding) 5 Tears Of Rage 6 Highway 61 Revisited 7 Lay Lady Lay 8 Rollin’ And Tumblin’ 9 To Ramona 10 Country Pie 11 tangled Up In Blue 12 a Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall 13 Summer Days 14 Like A Rolling Stone 15 Thunder On The Mountain 16 All Along The Watchtower Globe, Stockholm March 28, 2007 1 Cat’s In The Well 2 Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right 3 Watching The River Flow 4 It’s Alright, ma (I’m Only Bleeding) 5 When The Deal Goes Down 6 Honest With Me 7 Girl Of The North Country 8 Tangled Up In Blue 9 Country Pie 10 Nettie Moore 11 Rollin’ And Tumblin’ 12 A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall 13 Summer Days 14 Like a Rolling Stone 15 Thunder On The Mountain 16 All Along The Watchtower

For anyone not keeping an eye on such things, Bob Dylan started his European tour on Tuesday with a show in a 600-seater club in Stockholm called Debaser Medis – and the big news for Bobcats is that for the first time in a few years, Dylan is playing electric guitar again.

The B-52s Get Into Lovebox

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The B-52s, The Rapture and Tinariwen are amongst the diverse and stellar line-up just confirmed for this Summer's Lovebox Weekender at London's Victoria Park. The 30,000 capacity, two-day event, now in it's fifth year, takes place on July 21 and 22 and will see some of the biggest names from around the world play. Artists announced today for the celebration of music and culture are organisers Groove Armada who will close the bash on the Sunday night, and Toots & The Maytals, Layo & Bushwacka, James Yorkston, Tinariwen and Tiga. This will be the B-52s first UK performance in several years. As previously reported, the band are currently working with New Order's producer Steve Osbourne on their first album since 1992's "Good Stuff." Lovebox will feature a club tent, a world/folk/country/rock & roll music area as well as cutting-edge culture throughout: arts installations, street theatre, circus, comedy, film and multimedia performances. Tickets for Lovebox will go on sale next Tuesday April 3 at 9am, priced £35 per day or £60 for the whole shebang. More information about the love-in are available from loveboxweekender here

The B-52s, The Rapture and Tinariwen are amongst the diverse and stellar line-up just confirmed for this Summer’s Lovebox Weekender at London’s Victoria Park.

The 30,000 capacity, two-day event, now in it’s fifth year, takes place on July 21 and 22 and will see some of the biggest names from around the world play.

Artists announced today for the celebration of music and culture are organisers Groove Armada who will close the bash on the Sunday night, and Toots & The Maytals, Layo & Bushwacka, James Yorkston, Tinariwen and Tiga.

This will be the B-52s first UK performance in several years. As previously reported, the band are currently working with New Order’s producer Steve Osbourne on their first album since 1992’s “Good Stuff.”

Lovebox will feature a club tent, a world/folk/country/rock & roll music area as well as cutting-edge culture throughout: arts installations, street theatre, circus, comedy, film and multimedia performances.

Tickets for Lovebox will go on sale next Tuesday April 3 at 9am, priced £35 per day or £60 for the whole shebang.

More information about the love-in are available from loveboxweekender here

Beastie Boys Play Instrumental Gala Event

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Beastie Boys are to play a second show at Bestival, the festival curated by Rob Da Bank. The Isle Of Wight boutique festival taking place between 7-9 September, has so far confirmed the NYC hip hop veterans and The Chemical Brothers as headliners. The Beastie Boys, whose only UK festival appearance is at Bestival, will also now be playing a second show over the weekend. They are set to play a speacial instrumental gala event in the Big Top on Sunday night as well. As reported on the Beastieboys.com website - it is the group's intention to play several instrumental shows as they tour throughout the Summer. They also report that there will be a follow-up album to 2004's "To The Five Boroughs" released this year. The band posted this on their website: "Hi... here's a few things you might wanna know about.. 1. we have a new record coming out 2. it's gonna be sick 3. we're playing a bunch of shows this summer (see below) 4. they're gonna be sick 5. we're gonna play some instrumental only shows also 6. better call your doctor..cause they're gonna be sick 7. it's gonna be a gala event 8. we're changing up the website...sick 9. got new gear coming soon...again...sick.. 10. go see a tailor and get tapered up..." Other acts recently confirmed for Bestival include the Gossip, Soul II Soul, Bat For Lashes and Candie Payne. Weekend tickets for Bestival cost £115, Child tickets 13-15 cost £57.50 &Under 12s go free. More Bestival news and tickets are available here from bestival.net

Beastie Boys are to play a second show at Bestival, the festival curated by Rob Da Bank.

The Isle Of Wight boutique festival taking place between 7-9 September, has so far confirmed the NYC hip hop veterans and The Chemical Brothers as headliners.

The Beastie Boys, whose only UK festival appearance is at Bestival, will also now be playing a second show over the weekend. They are set to play a speacial instrumental gala event in the Big Top on Sunday night as well.

As reported on the Beastieboys.com website – it is the group’s intention to play several instrumental shows as they tour throughout the Summer.

They also report that there will be a follow-up album to 2004’s “To The Five Boroughs” released this year.

The band posted this on their website:

“Hi… here’s a few things you might wanna know about..

1. we have a new record coming out

2. it’s gonna be sick

3. we’re playing a bunch of shows this summer (see below)

4. they’re gonna be sick

5. we’re gonna play some instrumental only shows also

6. better call your doctor..cause they’re gonna be sick

7. it’s gonna be a gala event

8. we’re changing up the website…sick

9. got new gear coming soon…again…sick..

10. go see a tailor and get tapered up…”

Other acts recently confirmed for Bestival include the Gossip, Soul II Soul, Bat For Lashes and Candie Payne.

Weekend tickets for Bestival cost £115, Child tickets 13-15 cost £57.50 &Under 12s go free.

More Bestival news and tickets are available here from bestival.net

Ocean Colour Scene To Rock Hard For Charity

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Britpop Brummies Ocean Colour Scene are to play a one-off gig for charity in the intimate surrounds of London Piccadilly's Hard Rock Cafe next week. The gig on April 5 is part of Hard Rock’s 'March on Stage' series in aid of Nordoff Robbins, the UK’s leading independent provider of music therapy services. Each year the charity provides over 30,000 music therapy sessions to children and adults in need across the UK. Ocean Colour Scene are likely to play through tracks from their back catalogue - including mid-90s hits "Riverboat Song", "Travellers Tune", and "The Day We Caught The Train." Tickets, priced £25, will go on sale from Monday February 19. Artists that have previously played at the Hard Rock Cafe include Paul McCartney, Elton John, Aerosmith and The Killers. More details about how you can support Nordoff Robbins is available here Information about the Hard Rock Cafe and how to see OCS is available here

Britpop Brummies Ocean Colour Scene are to play a one-off gig for charity in the intimate surrounds of London Piccadilly’s Hard Rock Cafe next week.

The gig on April 5 is part of Hard Rock’s ‘March on Stage’ series in aid of Nordoff Robbins, the UK’s leading independent provider of music therapy services. Each year the charity provides over 30,000 music therapy sessions to children and adults in need across the UK.

Ocean Colour Scene are likely to play through tracks from their back catalogue – including mid-90s hits “Riverboat Song”, “Travellers Tune”, and “The Day We Caught The Train.”

Tickets, priced £25, will go on sale from Monday February 19.

Artists that have previously played at the Hard Rock Cafe include Paul McCartney, Elton John, Aerosmith and The Killers.

More details about how you can support Nordoff Robbins is available here

Information about the Hard Rock Cafe and how to see OCS is available here

Bloc Party Mainman Slams Oasis as ‘Stupid Luddites’

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Kele Okereke has retorted back to Oasis' Liam Gallagher's jibes that Bloc Party look like a 'University Challenge team' by labelling them 'stupid Luddites.' In an interview with Ben Marshall in this month's Uncut magazine, Okereke says: "Why is it bad to look like you might have been to university? why is it bad to better yourself? It's all about the weird way in which this country chooses to view the working clases. It really is daft to reinforce the idea that there is something cool about being dumb. When asked if Oasis deserved to win the BRIT Award for 'Outstanding Contribution To Music,' Okereke replies: "Absolutely not. I think Oasis are the most overrated and pernicious band of all time. They have had a totally negative and dangerous impact upon the state of British music. They have made stupidity hip. They claim to be inspired by The Beatles but - and this so saddens me - they have failed to grasp that The Beatles were about constant change and evolution. Oasis are repetitive luddites." We await Liam's response... Read the full Ben Marshall meets Kele Okereke interview in the May issue of Uncut, on sale now. Pic credit: Phil Wallis

Kele Okereke has retorted back to Oasis’ Liam Gallagher’s jibes that Bloc Party look like a ‘University Challenge team’ by labelling them ‘stupid Luddites.’

In an interview with Ben Marshall in this month’s Uncut magazine, Okereke says: “Why is it bad to look like you might have been to university? why is it bad to better yourself? It’s all about the weird way in which this country chooses to view the working clases. It really is daft to reinforce the idea that there is something cool about being dumb.

When asked if Oasis deserved to win the BRIT Award for ‘Outstanding Contribution To Music,’ Okereke replies:

“Absolutely not. I think Oasis are the most overrated and pernicious band of all time. They have had a totally negative and dangerous impact upon the state of British music. They have made stupidity hip. They claim to be inspired by The Beatles but – and this so saddens me – they have failed to grasp that The Beatles were about constant change and evolution. Oasis are repetitive luddites.”

We await Liam’s response…

Read the full Ben Marshall meets Kele Okereke interview in the May issue of Uncut, on sale now.

Pic credit: Phil Wallis

Kings Of Leon – Because Of The Times

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Since their arrival in 2003, Kings Of Leon have grown up fast. Despite two big albums, this is still a band wise enough to acknowledge its limits: almost as if they suspected that their punky take on the Creedence formula might have a limited lifespan, their third album sees them providing an interesting reworking of their original sound. Perhaps it’s the logical result of touring massive venues in America with U2 and Dylan last year. Whatever, (i)Because The Times(i) – named for the yearly Pentecostal shindig their preacher father dragged them to as children - finds the Followill boys edging further towards the realm of swampy, Zeppelin-esque rock. It’s all certainly a lot more complex, if a little less immediate, than anything they’ve done before. Opener "Knocked Up" acts as mission statement in itself. Their most epic song to date – at seven minutes plus – it’s a heavily percussive treat shot through with cousin Matthew’s wiry guitar figure. Essentially a tale of smalltown runaways, it could equally be about the group themselves. "People call us renegades," sings Caleb, "We like livin’ crazy/ We like takin’ on this town / Cause people’s gettin’ lazy". Given their prodigious schedule over the past two years, you could forgive KoL the odd note of weariness. Instead, they sound reborn. "Black Thumbnail", for instance, rocks like a cross between Creedence Clearwater Revival and the Pixies. As does muscular first single "On Call." But it’s on the swampy "Trunk" (like The Doors, but on a rainy night in Georgia) and the messy groove of "Arizona" that they really get into their groove. As good as the music is, though, special mention must be made to singer Caleb’s gusty voice. His phrasing – recently compared by Eddie Vedder to Sinatra, no less – is a joy to hear. Even when he’s delivering lines like "She looks so cool with her new Camaro / It’s black as coal and it go / Don’t it go go" he still manages to make it sound convincing. As with the record all round, it’s little short of miraculous. ROB HUGHES

Since their arrival in 2003, Kings Of Leon have grown up fast. Despite two big albums, this is still a band wise enough to acknowledge its limits: almost as if they suspected that their punky take on the Creedence formula might have a limited lifespan, their third album sees them providing an interesting reworking of their original sound.

Perhaps it’s the logical result of touring massive venues in America with U2 and Dylan last year. Whatever, (i)Because The Times(i) – named for the yearly Pentecostal shindig their preacher father dragged them to as children – finds the Followill boys edging further towards the realm of swampy, Zeppelin-esque rock.

It’s all certainly a lot more complex, if a little less immediate, than anything they’ve done before. Opener “Knocked Up” acts as mission statement in itself. Their most epic song to date – at seven minutes plus – it’s a heavily percussive treat shot through with cousin Matthew’s wiry guitar figure. Essentially a tale of smalltown runaways, it could equally be about the group themselves. “People call us renegades,” sings Caleb, “We like livin’ crazy/ We like takin’ on this town / Cause people’s gettin’ lazy”.

Given their prodigious schedule over the past two years, you could forgive KoL the odd note of weariness. Instead, they sound reborn. “Black Thumbnail”, for instance, rocks like a cross between Creedence Clearwater Revival and the Pixies. As does muscular first single “On Call.” But it’s on the swampy “Trunk” (like The Doors, but on a rainy night in Georgia) and the messy groove of “Arizona” that they really get into their groove.

As good as the music is, though, special mention must be made to singer Caleb’s gusty voice. His phrasing – recently compared by Eddie Vedder to Sinatra, no less – is a joy to hear. Even when he’s delivering lines like

“She looks so cool with her new Camaro / It’s black as coal and it go / Don’t it go go” he still manages to make it sound convincing.

As with the record all round, it’s little short of miraculous.

ROB HUGHES

Leonard Cohen – Reissues Of The Month

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Songs Of Leonard Cohen - 4* Songs From A Room - 3* Songs Of Love And Hate - 4* A sparsely furnished garret, the Bohemian Quarter, nightfall. Shadows conjoin and separate in the flickering light provided by a candle in a Dubonnet bottle, as the arguments of whores and sailors drift upwards from the street below. Monique, naked save for a Gauloise, looks up from her translation of "Les Chemins de la Liberté" to address the frowning poet hunched over his typewriter. “I’m bored with Sartre,” she pouts at him. “Make love to me, and then I’ll betray you.” Tiny briquettes of ash tumble from his cigarette as he mutters: “I’m writing another song about you. What’s your name again?” Released between December 1967 and March 1971, the first three Leonard Cohen albums conjure up such vivid scenarios of complicated love, and pose such colossal questions (why must we live? whom should we worship? are the riddles of Man and Womankind irresolvable, or perversely blissful?) that it’s hardly surprising they’re considered Serious Works by those who appreciate the major singer-songwriters of the ’60s and ’70s. Others – let us call them heathens – accuse the Works of being (itals)too(itals) Serious: of being wrist-slittingly depressing, in fact. Cohen’s wry compromise to the public, from a British perspective anyway, was to polarise opinion while becoming an enormous success. "Songs Of Love And Hate" was a UK Number 4 smash in 1971 (rubbing shoulders with "Sticky Fingers" and "Motown Chartbusters Vol. 5", while "Songs From A Room" (1969) climbed as high as 2 behind The Moody Blues. A poet and novelist with a fanbase in his native Canada, Cohen was already into his thirties when he recorded his first album for Columbia/CBS. "Songs Of Leonard Cohen" was, and remains, a significant debut – a haunting, sophisticated songbook full of absinthe-potent images. “So Long, Marianne” mentions a crucifix, a razor-blade, a “green lilac park” and, in a verse that alludes to a weirdly exquisite suicide, “your fine spider-web... fastening my ankle to a stone”. As well as a pair of exotic/erotic pièces de résistance, “Suzanne” and “Sisters Of Mercy”, the album also has the remarkable “Master Song”, where Cohen hints darkly at mind-control and sado-masochism in a series of hypnotically sinister couplets: “You met him at some temple where they take your clothes at the door/He was just a numberless man in a chair who’d just come back from the war”. Cohen knew what he wanted, and won his argument with producer John Simon that the album should not feature drums or prominent keyboards. Cohen’s own acoustic guitar gently undulates and gallops through the stark arrangements; other than his poker-faced vocal, there’s little else going on. Here, briefly, is a flugelhorn. Over there is an instrument that sounds half-zither, half-sitar, but then it’s gone. Free of clatter, the plaintive folk melodies suggest European traditions – more Tuscany or Catalonia, perhaps, than Greenwich Village and Laurel Canyon. We can now hear, on two previously unreleased outtakes included on this remastered CD, what Cohen was so desperate to avoid: good as they are, both songs ("Store Room" and "Blessed Is The Memory") are blatantly enamoured of Dylan’s "Blonde On Blonde". Cohen’s second album, "Songs From A Room" (issued here featuring a couple of unremarkable alternate takes), is less impressive than the debut. Fans of his most renowned tune, “Bird On A Wire”, will have to forgive this reviewer for finding it mawkish and dull, and it gets the album off to a plodding start. Other songs suffer from chronic “yoo-hoo syndrome” (“You who build the altars now...”, “You who are broken by power...”), as Cohen oversteps the line between punctilious syntax and self-parody. However, there’s terrific writing in “Lady Midnight” and “Story Of Isaac”, and also in “Seems So Long Ago, Nancy”, which recounts the fate of a girl who “wore green stockings and... slept with everyone”. Oddly, several songs are accompanied by Jew’s harp, making a twangy-chirpy sound, as though some crickets have tunnelled into the studio while Cohen sings his elegies for the slaughtered and heartbroken. "Songs Of Love And Hate", his third album, has no crickets. It has ominous swoops of cello, some singing children, and almost no hope or comfort. It’s a brilliant album, but if you get my meaning here, it’s not to be listened to at 4am with a bottle of whisky. “Avalanche” (later recorded by Nick Cave) catapults the listener in at the deep end, with a tale of Quasimodo-esque self-loathing that has a horribly grisly finale: “It is your turn, beloved, it is your flesh that I wear.” Then comes “Last Year’s Man”, in which Cohen appears paralysed by depression and writer’s block. In the third song, “Dress Rehearsal Rag” (also appearing here in an alternate version, with an electric backing group), he heaps scorn on his work, and disgustedly sets himself the most dire challenge of all: “Now if you can manage to get your trembling fingers to behave/Why don’t you try unwrapping a stainless steel razor-blade?/That’s right, it’s come to this/It’s come to this.” Fortunately it didn’t quite. Although a new generation of musicians would discover Cohen’s work and pay homage (REM, the Pixies and James were among those recording his songs for the 1991 tribute album "I’m Your Fan", Cohen himself worked slowly after "Songs Of Love And Hate", making only six albums between 1972 and 1988. (The second batch of remastered CDs is due for release in September.) In 1994 he vanished into a Zen Buddhist retreat in California, emerging five years later as a formally ordained monk. Now 72, he’s recently told interviewers that his famous depression, thanks to “the neurological processes of aging”, has finally lifted. DAVID CAVANAGH Pic credit: Redferns

Songs Of Leonard Cohen – 4*

Songs From A Room – 3*

Songs Of Love And Hate – 4*

A sparsely furnished garret, the Bohemian Quarter, nightfall. Shadows conjoin and separate in the flickering light provided by a candle in a Dubonnet bottle, as the arguments of whores and sailors drift upwards from the street below. Monique, naked save for a Gauloise, looks up from her translation of “Les Chemins de la Liberté” to address the frowning poet hunched over his typewriter. “I’m bored with Sartre,” she pouts at him. “Make love to me, and then I’ll betray you.” Tiny briquettes of ash tumble from his cigarette as he mutters: “I’m writing another song about you. What’s your name again?”

Released between December 1967 and March 1971, the first three Leonard Cohen albums conjure up such vivid scenarios of complicated love, and pose such colossal questions (why must we live? whom should we worship? are the riddles of Man and Womankind irresolvable, or perversely blissful?) that it’s hardly surprising they’re considered Serious Works by those who appreciate the major singer-songwriters of the ’60s and ’70s. Others – let us call them heathens – accuse the Works of being (itals)too(itals) Serious: of being wrist-slittingly depressing, in fact.

Cohen’s wry compromise to the public, from a British perspective anyway, was to polarise opinion while becoming an enormous success. “Songs Of Love And Hate” was a UK Number 4 smash in 1971 (rubbing shoulders with “Sticky Fingers” and “Motown Chartbusters Vol. 5”, while “Songs From A Room” (1969) climbed as high as 2 behind The Moody Blues.

A poet and novelist with a fanbase in his native Canada, Cohen was already into his thirties when he recorded his first album for Columbia/CBS.

“Songs Of Leonard Cohen” was, and remains, a significant debut – a haunting, sophisticated songbook full of absinthe-potent images. “So Long, Marianne” mentions a crucifix, a razor-blade, a “green lilac park” and, in a verse that alludes to a weirdly exquisite suicide, “your fine spider-web… fastening my ankle to a stone”. As well as a pair of exotic/erotic pièces de résistance, “Suzanne” and “Sisters Of Mercy”, the album also has the remarkable “Master Song”, where Cohen hints darkly at mind-control and sado-masochism in a series of hypnotically sinister couplets: “You met him at some temple where they take your clothes at the door/He was just a numberless man in a chair who’d just come back from the war”.

Cohen knew what he wanted, and won his argument with producer John Simon that the album should not feature drums or prominent keyboards. Cohen’s own acoustic guitar gently undulates and gallops through the stark arrangements; other than his poker-faced vocal, there’s little else going on. Here, briefly, is a flugelhorn. Over there is an instrument that sounds half-zither, half-sitar, but then it’s gone. Free of clatter, the plaintive folk melodies suggest European traditions – more Tuscany or Catalonia, perhaps, than Greenwich Village and Laurel Canyon. We can now hear, on two previously unreleased outtakes included on this remastered CD, what Cohen was so desperate to avoid: good as they are, both songs (“Store Room” and “Blessed Is The Memory”) are blatantly enamoured of Dylan’s “Blonde On Blonde”.

Cohen’s second album, “Songs From A Room” (issued here featuring a couple of unremarkable alternate takes), is less impressive than the debut. Fans of his most renowned tune, “Bird On A Wire”, will have to forgive this reviewer for finding it mawkish and dull, and it gets the album off to a plodding start. Other songs suffer from chronic “yoo-hoo syndrome” (“You who build the altars now…”, “You who are broken by power…”), as Cohen oversteps the line between punctilious syntax and self-parody. However, there’s terrific writing in “Lady Midnight” and “Story Of Isaac”, and also in “Seems So Long Ago, Nancy”, which recounts the fate of a girl who “wore green stockings and… slept with everyone”. Oddly, several songs are accompanied by Jew’s harp, making a twangy-chirpy sound, as though some crickets have tunnelled into the studio while Cohen sings his elegies for the slaughtered and heartbroken.

“Songs Of Love And Hate”, his third album, has no crickets. It has ominous swoops of cello, some singing children, and almost no hope or comfort. It’s a brilliant album, but if you get my meaning here, it’s not to be listened to at 4am with a bottle of whisky. “Avalanche” (later recorded by Nick Cave) catapults the listener in at the deep end, with a tale of Quasimodo-esque self-loathing that has a horribly grisly finale: “It is your turn, beloved, it is your flesh that I wear.” Then comes “Last Year’s Man”, in which Cohen appears paralysed by depression and writer’s block. In the third song, “Dress Rehearsal Rag” (also appearing here in an alternate version, with an electric backing group), he heaps scorn on his work, and disgustedly sets himself the most dire challenge of all: “Now if you can manage to get your trembling fingers to behave/Why don’t you try unwrapping a stainless steel razor-blade?/That’s right, it’s come to this/It’s come to this.” Fortunately it didn’t quite.

Although a new generation of musicians would discover Cohen’s work and pay homage (REM, the Pixies and James were among those recording his songs for the 1991 tribute album “I’m Your Fan”, Cohen himself worked slowly after “Songs Of Love And Hate”, making only six albums between 1972 and 1988. (The second batch of remastered CDs is due for release in September.)

In 1994 he vanished into a Zen Buddhist retreat in California, emerging five years later as a formally ordained monk. Now 72, he’s recently told interviewers that his famous depression, thanks to “the neurological processes of aging”, has finally lifted.

DAVID CAVANAGH

Pic credit: Redferns

Prefab Sprout – Steve McQueen

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R 1985 The original 1985 release of this, Prefab Sprout’s second album, confirmed what the previous year’s debut, "Swoon", had hinted: that the firmament had been graced by a star of singular twinkle. More than two decades on, the material wrought by Paddy McAloon for "Steve McQueen" still has the feel of a masterclass delivered by some amiably eccentric, terrifyingly brilliant Professor of Song. He would go on to wreak further, if infuriatingly intermittent, miracles – "Jordan: The Comeback" and "Andromeda Heights" – but "Steve McQueen" remains as rich and complete a single songbook as has ever been authored. Though often self-consciously arch, occasionally verging on too-clever-by-half, McAloon never allowed his intelligence to dominate his passions: for all the playful wittiness poured into the music and lyrics, "Steve McQueen" remains a piercingly sincere evocation of heartbreak. The best songs here - and the quality really varies only between a million miles better than average and certifiable thundering genius - are as eloquent as anything by Leonard Cohen, as angry as Elvis Costello at his most spiteful, and accompanied by the melodic grace of Brian Wilson. “Appetite”, “Goodbye Lucille” and especially “Bonny” are supremely pretty songs, freighting some pretty ugly truths. The career-spanning characterisations of McAloon as some flouncing, floppy-fringed Fotherington-Thomas were only ever the work of people who weren’t listening. The rawness of the emotions underpinning Thomas Dolby’s deceptively polished production is emphasised on the acoustic recordings of eight of the tracks, which appear as a bonus disc. McAloon’s new versions of “Faron Young” and “When Love Breaks Down”, addressing the romantic folly of his youth with the weary wisdom of his middle-aged voice, are especially baleful and glorious in their desperation and desolation. That key line of “Goodbye Lucille” – “Life’s not complete/Till your heart’s missed a beat” – now sounds much more like a promise than a threat. ANDREW MUELLER

R 1985

The original 1985 release of this, Prefab Sprout’s second album, confirmed what the previous year’s debut, “Swoon”, had hinted: that the firmament had been graced by a star of singular twinkle.

More than two decades on, the material wrought by Paddy McAloon for “Steve McQueen” still has the feel of a masterclass delivered by some amiably eccentric, terrifyingly brilliant Professor of Song. He would go on to wreak further, if infuriatingly intermittent, miracles – “Jordan: The Comeback” and “Andromeda Heights” – but “Steve McQueen” remains as rich and complete a single songbook as has ever been authored.

Though often self-consciously arch, occasionally verging on too-clever-by-half, McAloon never allowed his intelligence to dominate his passions: for all the playful wittiness poured into the music and lyrics,

“Steve McQueen” remains a piercingly sincere evocation of heartbreak. The best songs here – and the quality really varies only between a million miles better than average and certifiable thundering genius – are as eloquent as anything by Leonard Cohen, as angry as Elvis Costello at his most spiteful, and accompanied by the melodic grace of Brian Wilson. “Appetite”, “Goodbye Lucille” and especially “Bonny” are supremely pretty songs, freighting some pretty ugly truths. The career-spanning characterisations of McAloon as some flouncing, floppy-fringed Fotherington-Thomas were only ever the work of people who weren’t listening.

The rawness of the emotions underpinning Thomas Dolby’s deceptively

polished production is emphasised on the acoustic recordings of eight of the tracks, which appear as a bonus disc. McAloon’s new versions of “Faron Young” and “When Love Breaks Down”, addressing the romantic folly of his youth with the weary wisdom of his middle-aged voice, are especially baleful and glorious in their desperation and desolation. That key line of “Goodbye Lucille” – “Life’s not complete/Till your heart’s missed a beat” – now sounds much more like a promise than a threat.

ANDREW MUELLER

Coldplay – The Singles 1998-2006

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Listening to Coldplay’s debut single "The Blue Room" EP, it’s hard to picture them as the globe-straddling concern responsible for "X and Y". Geeky, gloomy and, on “High Speed” clearly in thrall to early Verve, they seem ill-equipped for a future slugging it out in the stadiums. And then comes “Yellow”. While only a churl would fail to acknowledge Chris Martin’s nerveless way with a tune since – exhibited endlessly here – it’s hard to imagine anyone exactly craving a lo-fidelity 7” box set of this ultimately highly polished, CD-shifting band. PAUL MOODY

Listening to Coldplay’s debut single “The Blue Room” EP, it’s hard to picture them as the globe-straddling concern responsible for “X and Y”. Geeky, gloomy and, on “High Speed” clearly in thrall to early Verve, they seem ill-equipped for a future slugging it out in the stadiums. And then comes “Yellow”.

While only a churl would fail to acknowledge Chris Martin’s nerveless way with a tune since – exhibited endlessly here – it’s hard to imagine anyone exactly craving a lo-fidelity 7” box set of this ultimately highly polished, CD-shifting band.

PAUL MOODY

Marnie Stern

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I've been meaning to write about the wonderful Marnie Stern album on Kill Rock Stars for a couple of weeks now. I was tipped off about it by one of Uncut's writers, Louis Pattison, who raved to me about it. She's "an extremely proficient one-woman axe hero," he wrote in an email, "a bit like Deerhoof but with better songs and added lead guitar power." Chuck in the battling influences of Sleater-Kinney and Lightning Bolt and damn, he was right. "In Advance Of The Broken Arm" is a frantic, exuberant rush of a record. Basically, Stern takes as her base the high-end twiddle and stupid velocity of Lightning Bolt (a sort of deranged, minimalist hardcore prog duo, if you've never come across them. They only play gigs on floors rather than stages, and I once saw them instigate a sit-down moshpit. It was amazing). The drummer is a guy called Zach Hill from Hella, who I've always considered something of a math-rock version of Lightning Bolt, but he has great octopoid skills here, contributing to the general frenzy. Over all this, Stern adds really joyful songs called things like "Plato's Fucked Up Cave" and my current favourite, "Put All Your Eggs In One Basket And Then Watch That Basket!!!" It's some gift to make catchy pop music out of what is effectively avant-garde metal, but she does it throughout "In Advance Of The Broken Arm". It reminds me, in a way, of how PJ Harvey was initially so inspired by the music of Big Black and the '80s US underground, but twisted those influences into something that was accessible but never felt compromised. I think Stern draws on the leftfield rock of the past few years in a similar way. And I also reckon that there's enough wit, melody and energy, never mind finger-shredding technical prowess, here to suggest that, like Harvey, Stern might go on to bigger things. Let's hope so. Here's the obligatory Myspace link. Finally, the Bjork album is on its way to Uncut even as I write. I'll post a preview tomorrow.

I’ve been meaning to write about the wonderful Marnie Stern album on Kill Rock Stars for a couple of weeks now. I was tipped off about it by one of Uncut’s writers, Louis Pattison, who raved to me about it. She’s “an extremely proficient one-woman axe hero,” he wrote in an email, “a bit like Deerhoof but with better songs and added lead guitar power.” Chuck in the battling influences of Sleater-Kinney and Lightning Bolt and damn, he was right.

Chemicals Confirmed For Creamfields

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The Chemical Brothers have been confirmed as headliners for this year's Creamfields dance event. The event takes place at Daresbury in Cheshire over August Bank Holiday weekend, running from 3pm to 6am on August 25. Joining the Chemical Brothers on the Main Stage are super stylers the Grammy-nomianted Groove Armada, hip hop vocalist Kelis and Amy Winehouse producer Mark Ronson. Looking forward to the party, Groove Armada said: "We grew up with a generation of hardened Cream party lovers and the Creamfields festival heritage for dance music is something that we hold dear. It's an institution and we are always delighted to be invited to play there." Carl Cox, who plays only two UK festivals this year, returns to Creamfields after seven years to headline the Cream & Goodgreef Arena. Uber-DJs Erick Morillo, Eddie Halliwell, Dave Clarke and 2 Many DJs playing live too. Other artists and DJ's confirmed so far for the 40,000 capacity event include Arctic Monkey's producers Simian Mobile Disco, new ravers New Young Pony Club and electro-clashers Tiga. Tickets for Creamfields are £57 and are on sale now. Full details of who will be partying hard and how to get tickets are available here from creamfields.com

The Chemical Brothers have been confirmed as headliners for this year’s Creamfields dance event.

The event takes place at Daresbury in Cheshire over August Bank Holiday weekend, running from 3pm to 6am on August 25.

Joining the Chemical Brothers on the Main Stage are super stylers the Grammy-nomianted Groove Armada, hip hop vocalist Kelis and Amy Winehouse producer Mark Ronson.

Looking forward to the party, Groove Armada said: “We grew up with a generation of hardened Cream party lovers and the Creamfields festival heritage for dance music is something that we hold dear. It’s an institution and we are always delighted to be invited to play there.”

Carl Cox, who plays only two UK festivals this year, returns to Creamfields after seven years to headline the Cream & Goodgreef Arena. Uber-DJs Erick Morillo, Eddie Halliwell, Dave Clarke and 2 Many DJs playing live too.

Other artists and DJ’s confirmed so far for the 40,000 capacity event include Arctic Monkey’s producers Simian Mobile Disco, new ravers New Young Pony Club and electro-clashers Tiga.

Tickets for Creamfields are £57 and are on sale now.

Full details of who will be partying hard and how to get tickets are available here from creamfields.com

New Numan Healing Collaboration Set For Release

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Gary Numan has collaborated with techno producer Ade Fenton for a forthcoming single "Healing" due for release on April 30. Numan previously worked with Fenton, an independent techno label owner last year on the album "Jagged" - with Fenton co-producing. Numan has since contributed vocals to four tracks on Fenton's forthcoming album "Artificial Perfect," including the forthcoming single. Renowned for his ability to create twisted soundscapes Fenton's album, "Artificial Perfect" comprises elements of Nine Inch Nails and Aphex Twin in the mix. Numan has contributed vocals to the album's opening track "The Leather Sea," as well as "Recall" and "Slide Away." "Healing" is released on April 30 through Submission Records/Universal SUB01. "Artificial Perfect follows on May 7. Watch the stark Fenton Vs Numan promo video by clicking here

Gary Numan has collaborated with techno producer Ade Fenton for a forthcoming single “Healing” due for release on April 30.

Numan previously worked with Fenton, an independent techno label owner last year on the album “Jagged” – with Fenton co-producing.

Numan has since contributed vocals to four tracks on Fenton’s forthcoming album “Artificial Perfect,” including the forthcoming single.

Renowned for his ability to create twisted soundscapes Fenton’s album, “Artificial Perfect” comprises elements of Nine Inch Nails and Aphex Twin in the mix.

Numan has contributed vocals to the album’s opening track “The Leather Sea,” as well as “Recall” and “Slide Away.”

“Healing” is released on April 30 through Submission Records/Universal SUB01. “Artificial Perfect follows on May 7.

Watch the stark Fenton Vs Numan promo video by clicking here

Echo And The Bunnymen To Play Free Music Festival

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Echo & The Bunnymen are one of the acts lined to play the Freevolution free music event this May, as part of Newcastle's Evolution music season. The all dayer at Newcastle Gateshead Quayside on May 28 will be headlined by homecoming heroes Maximo Park. The Bank Holiday event will host 15 acts playing across two stages and will also see performances by Larrikin Love, Joe Jackson and Hot Club De Paris on the Spillers Stage. Radio Soulwax, Simian Mobile Disco and Calvin Harris all play the second, Baltic stage. The Evolution festival, now in it's sixth year runs from May 20-28, with gigs and music seminars across Newcastle Gateshead, with many of the events running for free. The nine-day urban festival features over 20 indoor gigs in six venues across the city and culminates with the ever popular massive free outdoor event Freevolution. Evolution 07 will be helping to raise much needed funds for Northumbrian Water's adopted international charity WaterAid – the official charity of the festival for the second year running. A special music CD has been made for the festival with the £15 cost being donated to the charity. Evolution Festival Director Jim Mawdsley said: “We are again extremely proud to put together such a diverse and exciting programme for Evolution this year. This event is without doubt the biggest free music festival in the North and is a massive celebration of both our musical heritage and prominence on the world stage. It is only left for everyone to enjoy the whole week of gigs.” Some of the confirmed shows taking place under the Evolution banner are: Your Code Name Is: Milo, Baltic Center For Contemporary Art (May 20) The Waterboys, Hall 1, The Sage, Gateshead (May 21) Groove Armada, Carling Academy (May 22) Patti Smith and Band, Hall 1, The Sage, Gateshead (May 23) Nouvelle Vague, Newcastle University (May 24) Joan As Policewoman, Hall 2, The Sage, Gateshead (May 25) Full line-up and venue details are available here from evolutionfestival.co.uk Listen to tracks from all the performing artists at Evolution's MySpace page here

Echo & The Bunnymen are one of the acts lined to play the Freevolution free music event this May, as part of Newcastle’s Evolution music season.

The all dayer at Newcastle Gateshead Quayside on May 28 will be headlined by homecoming heroes Maximo Park. The Bank Holiday event will host 15 acts playing across two stages and will also see performances by Larrikin Love, Joe Jackson and Hot Club De Paris on the Spillers Stage.

Radio Soulwax, Simian Mobile Disco and Calvin Harris all play the second, Baltic stage.

The Evolution festival, now in it’s sixth year runs from May 20-28, with gigs and music seminars across Newcastle Gateshead, with many of the events running for free.

The nine-day urban festival features over 20 indoor gigs in six venues across the city and culminates with the ever popular massive free outdoor event Freevolution.

Evolution 07 will be helping to raise much needed funds for Northumbrian Water’s adopted international charity WaterAid – the official charity of the festival for the second year running. A special music CD has been made for the festival with the £15 cost being donated to the charity.

Evolution Festival Director Jim Mawdsley said: “We are again extremely proud to put together such a diverse and exciting programme for Evolution this year. This event is without doubt the biggest free music festival in the North and is a massive celebration of both our musical heritage and prominence on the world stage. It is only left for everyone to enjoy the whole week of gigs.”

Some of the confirmed shows taking place under the Evolution banner are:

Your Code Name Is: Milo, Baltic Center For Contemporary Art (May 20)

The Waterboys, Hall 1, The Sage, Gateshead (May 21)

Groove Armada, Carling Academy (May 22)

Patti Smith and Band, Hall 1, The Sage, Gateshead (May 23)

Nouvelle Vague, Newcastle University (May 24)

Joan As Policewoman, Hall 2, The Sage, Gateshead (May 25)

Full line-up and venue details are available here from evolutionfestival.co.uk

Listen to tracks from all the performing artists at Evolution’s MySpace page here