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Lee And Nancy Get Gothic Makeover

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The Lee Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra classic ‘Summer Wine’ has been given a gothic makeover by goth metaller Ville Valo and Polish singer Natalia Avelon. ‘Summer Wine’ originally appeared on the 1996 Reprise album ‘Nancy In London,’ and was just one of many commercially successful duets with Lee Hazlewood. The new version of the track by goth-metal band HIM's enigmatic frontman Ville Valo and Avelon is feautured in a forthcoming German film Das Wilde Liben (English title: Eight Miles High) - a biopic about German model and sixties sex symbol Uschi Obermaier. HIM began their career as a covers band their debut studio album contained pop-metal versions of Chris Isaak's "Wicked Game" and Blue Öyster Cult's "(Don't Fear) The Reaper". ‘Summer Wine’ is due for release on February 27 through Reprise. A trailer for Eight Miles High, which is yet to be scheduled for a UK release, can be viewed at by clicking here

The Lee Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra classic ‘Summer Wine’ has been given a gothic makeover by goth metaller Ville Valo and Polish singer Natalia Avelon.

‘Summer Wine’ originally appeared on the 1996 Reprise album ‘Nancy In London,’ and was just one of many commercially successful duets with Lee Hazlewood.

The new version of the track by goth-metal band HIM’s enigmatic frontman Ville Valo and Avelon is feautured in a forthcoming German film Das Wilde Liben (English title: Eight Miles High) – a biopic about German model and sixties sex symbol Uschi Obermaier.

HIM began their career as a covers band their debut studio album contained pop-metal versions of Chris Isaak’s “Wicked Game” and Blue Öyster Cult’s “(Don’t Fear) The Reaper”.

‘Summer Wine’ is due for release on February 27 through Reprise.

A trailer for Eight Miles High, which is yet to be scheduled for a UK release, can be viewed at by clicking here

Watch Iggy Pop Get Demonic Over Peanut Butter

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Everyday, we bring you the best thing we've seen on YouTube -- a great piece of archive footage, a music promo or a clip from one of our favourite movies of TV shows. Today: See Iggy Pop and his Stooges perform 'TV Eye' live at the Cincinnati Pop Festival in 1970. Pop stage dives into the crowd – leaving the live commentators unsure of what to say. They even cut to an advert break! Watch out for Pop rubbing his chest with peanut butter and throwing it into the eager crowd. Foodstuffs can be rock ‘n’ roll! See the Stooges play with their food – by clicking here now

Everyday, we bring you the best thing we’ve seen on YouTube — a great piece of archive footage, a music promo or a clip from one of our favourite movies of TV shows.

Today: See Iggy Pop and his Stooges perform ‘TV Eye’ live at the Cincinnati Pop Festival in 1970.

Pop stage dives into the crowd – leaving the live commentators unsure of what to say. They even cut to an advert break!

Watch out for Pop rubbing his chest with peanut butter and throwing it into the eager crowd.

Foodstuffs can be rock ‘n’ roll!

See the Stooges play with their food – by clicking here now

Uncut’s 2007 Album Preview Special

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UNCUT: What were the things that you were listening to that were hitting you for the album? JONNIE RUSSELL: There’s definitely a lot of variety of things that I think we were listening to as a band. When we first came together and started playing a couple of years ago there are certain albums we were listening to at the time. A lot of Tom Waits records, Bone Machine and records like that which were seminal records for us. At the same time we were listening to things like Sam Cooke and Nina Simone. Rock music too, from the Velvet Underground to The Modern Lovers. I think we have a lot of reference points and they’re the high points. UNCUT: So how can we expect all that to work into the album? JR: (haha) I’m not sure, I’m not sure how much of those are actually soundalised in there, or kind of conceptionally or stylistically factored in there. I think there’s a little bit of everything there if you listen hard enough. UNCUT: What can we expect from the album then? JR: It’s twelve songs, all of which kind of span the year and a half of our songwriting. There’s a good amount of variety from guitars, rock or blues tunes to some slower, more piano driven songs and some drums and blues kind of prison chants. UNCUT: Do you have a favourite? JR: I don’t think so. UNCUT: What went on in SXSW because you got into quite a bit of a bidding war going on? JR: I think SXSW was probably the beginning to our exposure to the music industry in a more broad sense. Some of the people we spent time with were different labels that were based in LA. The most surprising thing was the interest from over here (UK). It was a really good chance to meet really good people from here in the UK which eventually led to a trip a few months ago to meet some of these people, labels and see them on their own turf. That was probably the most eye-opening experience, being opened up to the industry at large. UNCUT:; Did your experiences at SXSW check in with your opinion of the music industry? JR: I think it in some way coloured it in differently [than] if we'd had experience of being in a band for 15 years. I think it gave us a unique crash-course in it as far as the way people work and sell themselves. It was a really bizarre thing that all of a sudden they’re talking about some songs that you wrote in your basement. It’s a very bizarre to learn those things. UNCUT: What’s the best thing about being Cold War Kids at the moment? JR: That’s the easiest question you’ve asked yet. Getting to wake up in London and walk round the streets and get a coffee because people want to hear our songs over here. That’s like the biggest honour you can imagine, getting over to Europe. None of us ever thought we would, to be here and playing music and not spending your life savings is the best thing in the world about being in a band. Cold War Kids debut ‘Robbers & Cowards’ is released in February through V2 Records.

UNCUT: What were the things that you were listening to that were hitting you for the album?

JONNIE RUSSELL: There’s definitely a lot of variety of things that I think we were listening to as a band. When we first came together and started playing a couple of years ago there are certain albums we were listening to at the time. A lot of Tom Waits records, Bone Machine and records like that which were seminal records for us. At the same time we were listening to things like Sam Cooke and Nina Simone. Rock music too, from the Velvet Underground to The Modern Lovers. I think we have a lot of reference points and they’re the high points.

UNCUT: So how can we expect all that to work into the album?

JR: (haha) I’m not sure, I’m not sure how much of those are actually soundalised in there, or kind of conceptionally or stylistically factored in there. I think there’s a little bit of everything there if you listen hard enough.

UNCUT: What can we expect from the album then?

JR: It’s twelve songs, all of which kind of span the year and a half of our songwriting. There’s a good amount of variety from guitars, rock or blues tunes to some slower, more piano driven songs and some drums and blues kind of prison chants.

UNCUT: Do you have a favourite?

JR: I don’t think so.

UNCUT: What went on in SXSW because you got into quite a bit of a bidding war going on?

JR: I think SXSW was probably the beginning to our exposure to the music industry in a more broad sense. Some of the people we spent time with were different labels that were based in LA. The most surprising thing was the interest from over here (UK). It was a really good chance to meet really good people from here in the UK which eventually led to a trip a few months ago to meet some of these people, labels and see them on their own turf. That was probably the most eye-opening experience, being opened up to the industry at large.

UNCUT:; Did your experiences at SXSW check in with your opinion of the music industry?

JR: I think it in some way coloured it in differently [than] if we’d had experience of being in a band for 15 years. I think it gave us a unique crash-course in it as far as the way people work and sell themselves. It was a really bizarre thing that all of a sudden they’re talking about some songs that you wrote in your basement. It’s a very bizarre to learn those things.

UNCUT: What’s the best thing about being Cold War Kids at the moment?

JR: That’s the easiest question you’ve asked yet. Getting to wake up in London and walk round the streets and get a coffee because people want to hear our songs over here. That’s like the biggest honour you can imagine, getting over to Europe. None of us ever thought we would, to be here and playing music and not spending your life savings is the best thing in the world about being in a band.

Cold War Kids debut ‘Robbers & Cowards’ is released in February through V2 Records.

Dan Sartain Reschedules UK Tour

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Alabama music troubadour Dan Sartain has changed a few dates on his upcoming UK tour. The dates, previously announced on Uncut.co.uk, now includes an additional date in Edinburgh. Sartain’s London show has moved forward one night to February 7, meaning that alas, the planned show at Manchester’s Roadhouse is now cancelled. The full revised dates are as follows: Cambridge, The Loft (February 1) Oxford, Zodiac (2) Bristol, Thekla (3) Leeds, Cockpit (4) Edinburgh, Caberet Voltaire (5) Glasgow, Nice N Sleazy (6) London 100 Club (7) Dan sartian is supported at all shows by other Alabama band, Plate Six. To make up for the short notice change of date for his 100 Club show, Sartain is currently hosting a competition to win tickets to the private after-party at the venue. For the easy competition details – Click here to go to Sartain’s tour homepage Watch the video for Sartain’s new Liam Watson (White Stripes) produced single, ‘Flight of the Finch, released January 29 by clicking here

Alabama music troubadour Dan Sartain has changed a few dates on his upcoming UK tour.

The dates, previously announced on Uncut.co.uk, now includes an additional date in Edinburgh.

Sartain’s London show has moved forward one night to February 7, meaning that alas, the planned show at Manchester’s Roadhouse is now cancelled.

The full revised dates are as follows:

Cambridge, The Loft (February 1)

Oxford, Zodiac (2)

Bristol, Thekla (3)

Leeds, Cockpit (4)

Edinburgh, Caberet Voltaire (5)

Glasgow, Nice N Sleazy (6)

London 100 Club (7)

Dan sartian is supported at all shows by other Alabama band, Plate Six.

To make up for the short notice change of date for his 100 Club show, Sartain is currently hosting a competition to win tickets to the private after-party at the venue.

For the easy competition details – Click here to go to Sartain’s tour homepage

Watch the video for Sartain’s new Liam Watson (White Stripes) produced single, ‘Flight of the Finch, released January 29 by clicking here

Kanye West Keeps It Real

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US Grammy Award winning rapper Kanye West is to star in a new sit-com, based loosely on his life. The show will centre on West's daily life as a hugely successful rapper and producer and West is helping develop the show with genius producers Larry Charles andf Rick Rubin. Contrary to reports on sites such as Allhiphop.com that the show would be the latest reality TV fodder, West speaking to MTV News, has said, "I wouldn't do something as clichéd as a reality show. At least give me the credit for being more creative than that... For the last couple of years, Larry, Rick and I have been developing this pilot. It's a situational half-hour comedy. It's fictional, and loosely based on my life." Charles previous' exec produced credits include HBO's hit series Curb Your Enthusiasm, Seinfeld and more recently the international hit movie Borat.

US Grammy Award winning rapper Kanye West is to star in a new sit-com, based loosely on his life.

The show will centre on West’s daily life as a hugely successful rapper and producer and West is helping develop the show with genius producers Larry Charles andf Rick Rubin.

Contrary to reports on sites such as Allhiphop.com that the show would be the latest reality TV fodder, West speaking to MTV News, has said, “I wouldn’t do something as clichéd as a reality show. At least give me the credit for being more creative than that… For the last couple of years, Larry, Rick and I have been developing this pilot. It’s a situational half-hour comedy. It’s fictional, and loosely based on my life.”

Charles previous’ exec produced credits include HBO’s hit series Curb Your Enthusiasm, Seinfeld and more recently the international hit movie Borat.

US Folk Legend To Get UK Parliamentary Honour

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US folk legend, Tom Paxton will be honoured with an official Parliamentary tribute when he starts his UK tour at the end of the week. Paxton will be visiting the House of Commons on January 22, where his fans include former Labour Party leader Lord Kinnock and current Home Secretary John Reid. The visit to Parliament will take place prior to his show at the nearby Queen Elizabeth Hall. He will be received by a number of his fans in the House of Commons, as well as by many of his friends invited from the folk world. The man behind this warm acknowledgement is Alan Keen, MP for Feltham and Heston, who explained: “Tom has quite a number of fans in Parliament who are not just listeners, but who can also play and sing many of his best known songs." Alan Keen further emphasis the contribution that Paxton has made to popularise folk music, saying, “Tom Paxton has contributed so much to the world of contemporary folk song. His songs of protest against segregation in the southern states of the US in the sixties, apartheid in South Africa, the wars in Vietnam and Iraq through to the ethnic cleansing in the Balkans in the 90's. It was impossible not to be seriously moved by his recent tribute to New York City's fire fighters for their sacrifices following 9/11.” Paxton's UK tour starts this Saturday, and will play the following venues, some tickets are still available for the MP's favourite: Bristol St George’s Hall (Jan 20) London Queen Elizabeth Hall (22) Glasgow Royal Concert Hall (23) Salford Lowry (24) Milton Keynes The Stables (26) Worcester Huntingdon Hall (27) Worcester Huntingdon Hall (28) Gateshead The Sage Gateshead (29) For more information about the honour or for more show details - Click here to go to Tom's homepage

US folk legend, Tom Paxton will be honoured with an official Parliamentary tribute when he starts his UK tour at the end of the week.

Paxton will be visiting the House of Commons on January 22, where his fans include former Labour Party leader Lord Kinnock and current Home Secretary John Reid.

The visit to Parliament will take place prior to his show at the nearby Queen Elizabeth Hall. He will be received by a number of his fans in the House of Commons, as well as by many of his friends invited from the folk world.

The man behind this warm acknowledgement is Alan Keen, MP for Feltham and Heston, who explained: “Tom has quite a number of fans in Parliament who are not just listeners, but who can also play and sing many of his best known songs.”

Alan Keen further emphasis the contribution that Paxton has made to popularise folk music, saying, “Tom Paxton has contributed so much to the world of contemporary folk song. His songs of protest against segregation in the southern states of the US in the sixties, apartheid in South Africa, the wars in Vietnam and Iraq through to the ethnic cleansing in the Balkans in the 90’s. It was impossible not to be seriously moved by his recent tribute to New York City’s fire fighters for their sacrifices following 9/11.”

Paxton’s UK tour starts this Saturday, and will play the following venues, some tickets are still available for the MP’s favourite:

Bristol St George’s Hall (Jan 20)

London Queen Elizabeth Hall (22)

Glasgow Royal Concert Hall (23)

Salford Lowry (24)

Milton Keynes The Stables (26)

Worcester Huntingdon Hall (27)

Worcester Huntingdon Hall (28)

Gateshead The Sage Gateshead (29)

For more information about the honour or for more show details – Click here to go to Tom’s homepage

Watch This Serene Leonard Cohen Perfomance

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Everyday, we bring you the best thing we've seen on YouTube -- a great piece of archive footage, a music promo or a clip from one of our favourite movies of TV shows. Today: Watch Leonard Cohen perform a classic rendition of the Old Testament prayer reworking, ‘Who By Fire.’ Cohen is accompanied perfectly by legendary jazz saxophonist Sonny Rollins, and a backing choir. Simply beautiful. Check out Cohen and Rollins prayer – by clicking here now

Everyday, we bring you the best thing we’ve seen on YouTube — a great piece of archive footage, a music promo or a clip from one of our favourite movies of TV shows.

Today: Watch Leonard Cohen perform a classic rendition of the Old Testament prayer reworking, ‘Who By Fire.’

Cohen is accompanied perfectly by legendary jazz saxophonist Sonny Rollins, and a backing choir.

Simply beautiful.

Check out Cohen and Rollins prayer – by clicking here now

Unreleased Jim Morrison Song Is On Its Way

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The new album by Perry Farrell is set to feature a previously unreleased Jim Morrison vocal. Morrison's 'Woman In The Window' has been re-worked by former Jane's Addiction frontman Farrell on the debut album by his new band Satellite Party. 'Woman In The Window' is featured on the track 'Ultra Payloaded' from Satellite Party's album of the same name which is due for release in May. The album also features contributions from other stars including New Order's Peter Hook, Black Eyed Pea's Fergie, and Flea and John Frusciante from the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Satellite Party are due to play tonight (January 15) as part of the ESPN Winter X Games in Aspen, Colorado. They also played a special show last November with the Doors at LA's Whiskey-A-Go-Go as part of the Doors 40th anniversary.

The new album by Perry Farrell is set to feature a previously unreleased Jim Morrison vocal.

Morrison’s ‘Woman In The Window’ has been re-worked by former Jane’s Addiction frontman Farrell on the debut album by his new band Satellite Party.

‘Woman In The Window’ is featured on the track ‘Ultra Payloaded’ from Satellite Party’s album of the same name which is due for release in May.

The album also features contributions from other stars including New Order’s Peter Hook, Black Eyed Pea’s Fergie, and Flea and John Frusciante from the Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Satellite Party are due to play tonight (January 15) as part of the ESPN Winter X Games in Aspen, Colorado.

They also played a special show last November with the Doors at LA’s Whiskey-A-Go-Go as part of the Doors 40th anniversary.

Kaiser Chiefs In Championship Darts Contest!

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The Kaiser Chiefs, named after a South African football team, have been showing off their sporting prowess, this time at darts. The indie rock group took on former World Dart's Champion Booby George in a doubles contest at the BDO World Championships, that are currently taking place in Lakeside, Essex. Check out the video footage of the Kaisers throwing darts by clicking here now

The Kaiser Chiefs, named after a South African football team, have been showing off their sporting prowess, this time at darts.

The indie rock group took on former World Dart’s Champion Booby George in a doubles contest at the BDO World Championships, that are currently taking place in Lakeside, Essex.

Check out the video footage of the Kaisers throwing darts by clicking here now

Yo La Tengo Cover Arthur Lee

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Yo La Tengo have released a live session EP through iTunes this week. The four tracks include a live favourite of their cover of Arthur Lee's 'Luci Baines' by his pre-Love band, The American Four. The EP track-listing including the previously unreleased 'El Es Gay' is as follows: 1-El Es Gay 2-Pass the Hatchet, I Think I'm Goodkind 3-The Weakest Part 4-Luci Baines (Arthur Lee cover) The live version of "Pass The Hatchet, I Think I'm Goodkind" is even more mind-blowing than the rendition on the album, with perfectly executed improvisation. In contrast, 'The Weakest Part' is a stripped down version of the album track with piano and vocals by Georgia. 'I Am Not Afraid Of You And I Will Beat Your Ass' - Yo La Tengo's latest album is available now.

Yo La Tengo have released a live session EP through iTunes this week.

The four tracks include a live favourite of their cover of Arthur Lee’s ‘Luci Baines’ by his pre-Love band, The American Four.

The EP track-listing including the previously unreleased ‘El Es Gay’ is as follows:

1-El Es Gay

2-Pass the Hatchet, I Think I’m Goodkind

3-The Weakest Part

4-Luci Baines (Arthur Lee cover)

The live version of “Pass The Hatchet, I Think I’m Goodkind” is even more mind-blowing than the rendition on the album, with perfectly executed improvisation.

In contrast, ‘The Weakest Part’ is a stripped down version of the album track with piano and vocals by Georgia.

‘I Am Not Afraid Of You And I Will Beat Your Ass’ – Yo La Tengo’s latest album is available now.

Hold On For The Hold Steady

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Currently the most talked about band in America, The Hold Steady have just announced an additional London date for their fast selling series of shows in the UK next month. As well being rated Album of The Month in Uncut, The Hold Steady have been acclaimed in pretty much every end of 2006 albums poll for their third album 'Boys And Girls In America' which was released in the US in October last year; from Blender to Village Voice and Billboard to Rolling Stone via David Letterman all singing their garage-rock praises. In the last issue of Uncut, Editor Allan Jones had the following to say, "Meet America’s best new band…..Acute observation, devastating detail, soiled vignettes. It's a holy noise that runs from bone-crunching riffs that recall the Stones, Thin Lizzy, AC/DC, the E Street boys and The Replacements to swaggering doo-wop harmonies and hook-filled garage pop....Welcome to the first great album of 2007....5/5" (Album Of The Month) 'Boys and Girls In America' is released in the UK on January 22 and you better be quick if you want to catch them live to see for yourselves what all the fuss is about. The Hold Steady have only played one show in the UK, back in 2004, they supported Les Savy Sav! Catch The Hold Steady at the following venues next month if you can: Manchester Jabez Clegg (February 13) Glasgow Cathouse (14) London Hoxton Bar And Grill (15) (Sold Out) London Club NME @ Koko (16) London Borderline (17) (New added date) London Borderline (18) (Sold Out)

Currently the most talked about band in America, The Hold Steady have just announced an additional London date for their fast selling series of shows in the UK next month.

As well being rated Album of The Month in Uncut, The Hold Steady have been acclaimed in pretty much every end of 2006 albums poll for their third album ‘Boys And Girls In America’ which was released in the US in October last year; from Blender to Village Voice and Billboard to Rolling Stone via David Letterman all singing their garage-rock praises.

In the last issue of Uncut, Editor Allan Jones had the following to say, “Meet America’s best new band…..Acute observation, devastating detail, soiled vignettes. It’s a holy noise that runs from bone-crunching riffs that recall the Stones, Thin Lizzy, AC/DC, the E Street boys and The Replacements to swaggering doo-wop harmonies and hook-filled garage pop….Welcome to the first great album of 2007….5/5” (Album Of The Month)

‘Boys and Girls In America’ is released in the UK on January 22 and you better be quick if you want to catch them live to see for yourselves what all the fuss is about.

The Hold Steady have only played one show in the UK, back in 2004, they supported Les Savy Sav!

Catch The Hold Steady at the following venues next month if you can:

Manchester Jabez Clegg (February 13)

Glasgow Cathouse (14)

London Hoxton Bar And Grill (15) (Sold Out)

London Club NME @ Koko (16)

London Borderline (17) (New added date)

London Borderline (18) (Sold Out)

Sonic Youth Among Guests On Secret Album

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Sonic Youth are amongst the guest collaborators on the latest album from Future pilot AKA, 'Secrets From The Clockhouse.' The 16-tracked album due out on February 5, also features the talents of Belle & Sebastian, Can, Stooges, The Go-Betweens and karine Polwart. 'Secrets From The Clockhouse', is the fourth album conceived, written and produced by Sushil K Dade and is the follow up to 2004's 'Salute Your Soul' which also featured an eclectic range of artists. Glasgow based, Future Pilot AKA's debut album 'A Galaxy of Stars' was highly acclaimed in 1999 and in recent years has recorded with everyone from Cornershop to Alan Vega and Mikey Dread, James Kirk, Vic Godard, Philip Glass, Pastels and Bill Wells to name a handful of others. To coincide with the album's release, Future Pilot AKA will be performing a rare live date on January 28 at the Old Fruitmarket, City Halls in Glasgow. 'Secrets From The Clockhouse' is to be released through Creeping Bent Records.

Sonic Youth are amongst the guest collaborators on the latest album from Future pilot AKA, ‘Secrets From The Clockhouse.’

The 16-tracked album due out on February 5, also features the talents of Belle & Sebastian, Can, Stooges, The Go-Betweens and karine Polwart.

‘Secrets From The Clockhouse’, is the fourth album conceived, written and produced by Sushil K Dade and is the follow up to 2004’s ‘Salute Your Soul’ which also featured an eclectic range of artists.

Glasgow based, Future Pilot AKA’s debut album ‘A Galaxy of Stars’ was highly acclaimed in 1999 and in recent years has recorded with everyone from Cornershop to Alan Vega and Mikey Dread, James Kirk, Vic Godard, Philip Glass, Pastels and Bill Wells to name a handful of others.

To coincide with the album’s release, Future Pilot AKA will be performing a rare live date on January 28 at the Old Fruitmarket, City Halls in Glasgow.

‘Secrets From The Clockhouse’ is to be released through Creeping Bent Records.

Beatles Up For Auction

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George Harrison's original handwritten lyrics for The Beatles' While My Guitar Gently Weeps go on sale on Monday January 15. The lyrics will be part of a Cooper Auctions sale in Scottsdale, Arizona and are expected to fetch as much as £400,000. Written for the White Album and recorded by The Beatles in July 1968 with Eric Clapton on guitar, While My Guitar Gently Weeps is one of Harrison's greatest Beatles songs. The lyrics are on sale alongside what is being described the last ever piece of Beatles memorabilia - Sir George Martin's orignal score for the version of the song created for The Beatles' Love album. Sir George has donated all proceeds from the sale of the score - which is signed by Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Olivia Harrison, Yoko Ono and Martin himself - to the George Martin Music Foundation charity.

George Harrison’s original handwritten lyrics for The Beatles’ While My Guitar Gently Weeps go on sale on Monday January 15.

The lyrics will be part of a Cooper Auctions sale in Scottsdale, Arizona and are expected to fetch as much as £400,000.

Written for the White Album and recorded by The Beatles in July 1968 with Eric Clapton on guitar, While My Guitar Gently Weeps is one of Harrison’s greatest Beatles songs.

The lyrics are on sale alongside what is being described the last ever piece of Beatles memorabilia – Sir George Martin’s orignal score for the version of the song created for The Beatles’ Love album.

Sir George has donated all proceeds from the sale of the score – which is signed by Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Olivia Harrison, Yoko Ono and Martin himself – to the George Martin Music Foundation charity.

Sneaky Pete Kleinow 1932-2007

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Uncut is deeply saddened to learn of the death of the Flying Burrito Brother's pioneering pedal-steel maestro in a Californian nursing home on January 6. He was 72 and had been ill with Alzheimer's Disease. Sneaky Pete Kleinow was a pioneer of the fusion of country and rock which Gram Parsons dubbed 'Cosmic American Music.' He took the pedal steel guitar - an instrument previously associated with lachrymose redneck ballads and hackneyed swing records - and applied it for the first time in a rock'n'roll context. His versatile playing, heard to potent effect on the Flying Burrito Brothers' 1969 masterpiece, The Gilded Palace Of Sin, sent ripples throughout the rock world that are still being felt today. Suddenly, everybody wanted a pedal steel: Jerry Garcia and Jimmy Page experimented with the instrument on albums by the Grateful Dead and Led Zeppelin, while Sneaky Pete's own skills adorned recordings by the likes of Joe Cocker, Delaney & Bonnie, Little Feat, John Lennon, Frank Zappa, Stevie Wonder and Jackson Browne among others. Unknown to many fans of his music, he also enjoyed a highly successful parallel career as a special effects animator, working on such films as The Empire Strikes Back, The Right Stuff, Gremlins, and Terminator I and II. Born on August 20, 1934, in South Bend, Indiana, he began playing the steel guitar at the age of 17 but spent the first decade of his working life as a maintenance man for the Michigan State Highway Department. In 1963, he relocated to Los Angeles to take a day job as an animator in films and television. His nights, however, were spent in the city's clubs, sitting in with country bands from the nearby Bakersfield scene. Spotted by Parsons and Chris Hillman in early 1968, he was invited to help them reinforce The Byrds' country leanings. In the event, the band's internal politics meant that he never became a fully-fledged member, although he played club dates as a sideman. However, when Hillman and Parsons left to form The Flying Burrito Brothers, Kleinow became a founder member. He stayed with the Burritos until 1971, appearing on the band's first three LPs. Three years later he helped to reform them with a different line-up and was a mainstay until the early 1980s. He subsequently participated in a number of Burritos reunions, in addition to releasing several solo LPs and working prolifically as an in-demand session man. He fell ill with Alzheimer's Disease in 2006 and spent the last six months of his life in a care home.

Uncut is deeply saddened to learn of the death of the Flying Burrito

Brother’s pioneering pedal-steel maestro in a Californian nursing home on

January 6. He was 72 and had been ill with Alzheimer’s Disease.

Sneaky Pete Kleinow was a pioneer of the fusion of country and rock which Gram Parsons dubbed ‘Cosmic American Music.’ He took the pedal steel guitar – an instrument previously associated with lachrymose redneck

ballads and hackneyed swing records – and applied it for the first time in

a rock’n’roll context. His versatile playing, heard to potent effect on

the Flying Burrito Brothers’ 1969 masterpiece, The Gilded Palace Of Sin,

sent ripples throughout the rock world that are still being felt today.

Suddenly, everybody wanted a pedal steel: Jerry Garcia and Jimmy Page

experimented with the instrument on albums by the Grateful Dead and Led

Zeppelin, while Sneaky Pete’s own skills adorned recordings by the likes of

Joe Cocker, Delaney & Bonnie, Little Feat, John Lennon, Frank Zappa, Stevie Wonder and Jackson Browne among others. Unknown to many fans of his music, he also enjoyed a highly successful parallel career as a special effects animator, working on such films as The Empire Strikes Back, The Right Stuff, Gremlins, and Terminator I and II.

Born on August 20, 1934, in South Bend, Indiana, he began playing the steel guitar at the age of 17 but spent the first decade of his working life as a maintenance man for the Michigan State Highway Department. In 1963, he relocated to Los Angeles to take a day job as an animator in films and television. His nights, however, were spent in the city’s clubs, sitting in with country bands from the nearby Bakersfield scene. Spotted by Parsons and Chris Hillman in early 1968, he was invited to help them reinforce The Byrds’ country leanings.

In the event, the band’s internal politics meant that he never became a fully-fledged member, although he played club dates as a sideman. However, when Hillman and Parsons left to form The Flying Burrito Brothers, Kleinow became a founder member. He stayed with the Burritos until 1971, appearing on the band’s first three LPs. Three years later he helped to reform them with a different line-up and was a mainstay until the early 1980s. He subsequently participated in a number of Burritos reunions, in addition to releasing several solo LPs and working prolifically as an in-demand session man.

He fell ill with Alzheimer’s Disease in 2006 and spent the last six months

of his life in a care home.

REM To Be Inducted In Hall of Fame

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REM are amongst the five chosen to be inducted in this years´ US Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Patti Smith, Van Halen, The Ronettes and Grandmaster Flash will also be honoured in the annual ceremony in March. Artists are eligible for the honour of induction 25 years after their first music recording. R.E.M. released their debut single in 1982, later achieving commercial success with "Out of Time," their 1991 album that featured the worldwide hits, "Losing My Religion" and "Shiny Happy People." Patti Smith´s 1975 debut album "Horses" has repeatedly been voted one of the most influential rock albums of all time, and the punk icon was chosen to headline the finale bill at New York´s legendary venue CBGBs late last year.

REM are amongst the five chosen to be inducted in this years´ US Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Patti Smith, Van Halen, The Ronettes and Grandmaster Flash will also be honoured in the annual ceremony in March.

Artists are eligible for the honour of induction 25 years after their first music recording.

R.E.M. released their debut single in 1982, later achieving commercial success with “Out of Time,” their 1991 album that featured the worldwide hits, “Losing My Religion” and “Shiny Happy People.”

Patti Smith´s 1975 debut album “Horses” has repeatedly been voted one of the most influential rock albums of all time, and the punk icon was chosen to headline the finale bill at New York´s legendary venue CBGBs late last year.

Experimental Bob Dylan Biopic Imminent

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The rights to Todd Haynes biopic of Uncut´s Man of 2006 Bob Dylan have been snapped up by former Miramax producers Bob and Harvey Weinstein. The film´s working title is "I´m Not There: Suppositions On A Film Concerning Bob Dylan" and will portray various parts of the troubadour´s life as well as featuring a soundtrack performed by the great man himself. Willie Nelson and Yo La Tengo, and other artists that have previously recorded cover versions of Dylan tracks are also said to be contributing to the soundtrack. The new film will star a host of Hollywood A-listers - Richard Gere, Heath Ledger, Christian Bale and Cate Blanchett are all set to portray Bob Dylan at various times throughout his life. Julianne Moore, Adrien Brody and Charlotte Gainsbourg also have as yet unrevealed parts in the film. Maverick director Haynes´experimental film is scheduled for release in the US at the end of the year, with a UK release planned for early 2008.

The rights to Todd Haynes biopic of Uncut´s Man of 2006 Bob Dylan have been snapped up by former Miramax producers Bob and Harvey Weinstein.

The film´s working title is “I´m Not There: Suppositions On A Film Concerning Bob Dylan” and will portray various parts of the troubadour´s life as well as featuring a soundtrack performed by the great man himself.

Willie Nelson and Yo La Tengo, and other artists that have previously recorded cover versions of Dylan tracks are also said to be contributing to the soundtrack.

The new film will star a host of Hollywood A-listers – Richard Gere, Heath Ledger, Christian Bale and Cate Blanchett are all set to portray Bob Dylan at various times throughout his life.

Julianne Moore, Adrien Brody and Charlotte Gainsbourg also have as yet unrevealed parts in the film.

Maverick director Haynes´experimental film is scheduled for release in the US at the end of the year, with a UK release planned for early 2008.

Punk Elvis Dan Sartain Returns To The UK

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Uncut favourite Dan Sartain is to return to the UK for a series of shows, including an already sold-out show in London, this February. Gaining much acclaim in 2006, Uncut, Rolling Stone, ID and Spin magazine all highly rate the rambling, poetic Alabama singer songwriter, and to tie in with the dates, January 29 also sees the release of his Liam Watson(White Stripes) produced new single, ´Flight Of The Finch.´ To watch the video for the new track which is already a live favourite, click here Sartain brings with him on tour fellow Birmingham band, Plate Six, who also emerged from independent Alabama label, The Bent Rail Foundation. You can catch the rockabilly troubadour and guests at the following venues next month: Cambridge, The Loft (February 1) Oxford, Zodiac (2) Bristol, Thekla (3) Leeds, Cockpit (4) Glasgow, Nice N Sleazy (6) Manchester, Roadhouse (7) London, 100 Club (8)

Uncut favourite Dan Sartain is to return to the UK for a series of shows, including an already sold-out show in London, this February.

Gaining much acclaim in 2006, Uncut, Rolling Stone, ID and Spin magazine all highly rate the rambling, poetic Alabama singer songwriter, and to tie in with the dates, January 29 also sees the release of his Liam Watson(White Stripes) produced new single, ´Flight Of The Finch.´

To watch the video for the new track which is already a live favourite, click here

Sartain brings with him on tour fellow Birmingham band, Plate Six, who also emerged from independent Alabama label, The Bent Rail Foundation.

You can catch the rockabilly troubadour and guests at the following venues next month:

Cambridge, The Loft (February 1)

Oxford, Zodiac (2)

Bristol, Thekla (3)

Leeds, Cockpit (4)

Glasgow, Nice N Sleazy (6)

Manchester, Roadhouse (7)

London, 100 Club (8)

Dexys Midnight Runners – The Projected Passion Revue

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Even by Kevin Rowland’s torrid standards, 1981 was a strange year for Dexys. Following the hits of 1980, most of the original line-up had gone, and three exceptional singles (“Plan B”, “Show Me”, “Liars A To E”) more or less flopped. Undaunted, Rowland’s aims became loftier still. The Projected Passion Revue took his dynamic new team, in boxer boots and ponytails, on a theatre tour, supported by comedians and an interpretive dance troupe. The centrepiece of this essential comp is a Radio 1 recording - “in clarifying stereo,” claims host Gary Crowley - of a Projected Passion show. A set of old songs, R&B covers (“Respect”, stirringly reclaimed from clubland) and formative versions of Too-Rye-Ay material (notably a showstopping “Until I Believe In My Soul”), it persuasively suggests that Rowland never had a fitter, stronger band. The three ’81 singles plus b-sides and a cracking radio session fill out the package, showcasing punishingly drilled musicianship and Rowland’s intense, deathless quest to imbue meaning in clichés like “soul”, “purity” and “respect”. Within months, though, he’d tried to teach the horn section to play violins, lost another band, and embarked on the Celtic Soul trip that would bring him his greatest success. JOHN MULVEY

Even by Kevin Rowland’s torrid standards, 1981 was a strange year for Dexys. Following the hits of 1980, most of the original line-up had gone, and three exceptional singles (“Plan B”, “Show Me”, “Liars A To E”) more or less flopped. Undaunted, Rowland’s aims became loftier still. The Projected Passion Revue took his dynamic new team, in boxer boots and ponytails, on a theatre tour, supported by comedians and an interpretive dance troupe.

The centrepiece of this essential comp is a Radio 1 recording – “in clarifying stereo,” claims host Gary Crowley – of a Projected Passion show. A set of old songs, R&B covers (“Respect”, stirringly reclaimed from clubland) and formative versions of Too-Rye-Ay material (notably a showstopping “Until I Believe In My Soul”), it persuasively suggests that Rowland never had a fitter, stronger band.

The three ’81 singles plus b-sides and a cracking radio session fill out the package, showcasing punishingly drilled musicianship and Rowland’s intense, deathless quest to imbue meaning in clichés like “soul”, “purity” and “respect”. Within months, though, he’d tried to teach the horn section to play violins, lost another band, and embarked on the Celtic Soul trip that would bring him his greatest success.

JOHN MULVEY

Jamie T – Panic Prevention

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Thirty years after Culture's classic “Two Sevens Clash” inspired a wave of punky reggae Brits, the Jamaican groove is abroad as never before on the homefront. Jamie T joins a skankophile contingent that stretches from his pal Lily Allen to Damon Albarn. Charmingly prefab reggae is not, however, the only weapon in the 20-year-old's armoury. Jamie Treays’ apprenticeship has included running club nights at a central London folk venue, busking in his local high street and making magnificently eruptive guerrilla raids with his Clash-like electric band. In a plucky tradition of self-made Brits that stretches from Joe Strummer, through Billy Bragg, up to Mike Skinner, Treays is a contemporary poet of the everyday. His songs feature an Iraq war veteran back from the front (“Pacemaker”) and binge-drinking lasses on the tear (“Sheila”). Vitally, he also has a sophisticate’s feel for melodies that play on the heartstrings, most prominent on “So Lonely Was The Ballad” and “Salvador”. The opening “Brand New Bass Guitar” may be a ruff and ready piece of self-mythology that's a homage to Jamie T’s myspace roots, yet his epiglottal shakes and shudders recall ‘50s rocker The Big Bopper. Thereafter, his spit-singing raps mash Cockney argot and rudeboy insouciance. Panic Prevention, named for musical cure-alls he devised to fight pharmaceutically engendered panic attacks, is a glorious blend of wired energy and sullen attitude. Call it old skool, new school or whatever, the reggae influence is crucial, most explicitly on dub-heavy closer “Alicia Quays”. A modern folk poet who invokes past heroes as he brings the present to life, Jamie T’s next challenge will be to channel this feral and combustible brew into a career. In the meantime, he’s already made one of 2007's most notable debuts. Press that Panic button now. GAVIN MARTIN

Thirty years after Culture’s classic “Two Sevens Clash” inspired a wave of punky reggae Brits, the Jamaican groove is abroad as never before on the homefront. Jamie T joins a skankophile contingent that stretches from his pal Lily Allen to Damon Albarn.

Charmingly prefab reggae is not, however, the only weapon in the 20-year-old’s armoury. Jamie Treays’ apprenticeship has included running club nights at a central London folk venue, busking in his local high street and making magnificently eruptive guerrilla raids with his Clash-like electric band. In a plucky tradition of self-made Brits that stretches from Joe Strummer, through Billy Bragg, up to Mike Skinner, Treays is a contemporary poet of the everyday. His songs feature an Iraq war veteran back from the front (“Pacemaker”) and binge-drinking lasses on the tear (“Sheila”). Vitally, he also has a sophisticate’s feel for melodies that play on the heartstrings, most prominent on “So Lonely Was The Ballad” and “Salvador”.

The opening “Brand New Bass Guitar” may be a ruff and ready piece of self-mythology that’s a homage to Jamie T’s myspace roots, yet his epiglottal shakes and shudders recall ‘50s rocker The Big Bopper. Thereafter, his spit-singing raps mash Cockney argot and rudeboy insouciance. Panic Prevention, named for musical cure-alls he devised to fight pharmaceutically engendered panic attacks, is a glorious blend of wired energy and sullen attitude.

Call it old skool, new school or whatever, the reggae influence is crucial, most explicitly on dub-heavy closer “Alicia Quays”. A modern folk poet who invokes past heroes as he brings the present to life, Jamie T’s next challenge will be to channel this feral and combustible brew into a career. In the meantime, he’s already made one of 2007’s most notable debuts. Press that Panic button now.

GAVIN MARTIN

Pentangle – The Time Has Come

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On paper, the formula looked impeccable. Take London’s two most dextrous folk-blues guitarists, toss in a jazz double bassist and drummer, then summon a young blues singer looking to extend her reach. At the end of 1966 the spell was cast and the five points of the magickal star were staked out to describe The Pentangle, Britain’s first folk-jazz-blues supergroup: Bert Jansch, John Renbourn, Danny Thompson, Terry Cox and Jacqui McShee. Compiled by Jansch biographer Colin Harper, The Time Has Come is a digest of rare or unheard studio and live takes, TV spots, soundtrack work, plus selected album tracks and singles, spanning four discs and five years. It’s an impressive overview of the group’s best years (up to 1973 when they split), if occasionally frayed at the edges: the group themselves are bemused that anyone would want to hear their ‘unofficial’ side. Emerging from the London scene, Pentangle were less pastorally inflected than many folk-rock relatives. They didn’t rock as hard as Fairport Convention, weren’t as stolidly rooted in loamy folk tradition as Steeleye Span, nor as warbly and wyrd as The Incredible String Band. They were hardly shy or retiring types like Nick Drake, either - certain members partook liberally of ‘hospitality’. Jazz and the ‘60s folk-blues revival were the teachers that had nurtured Jansch and Renbourn, and the light snap and twang of Cox and Thompson’s rhythm section kept the music aerated but never fluffy. Pentangle also achieved a prominence none of the above managed in their lifetimes. Their song “Light Flight” was chosen as theme for the BBC sitcom Take Three Girls, which propelled the group into a nation’s humming consciousness. Included here in original and live versions, its bustly jingle remains their most teethgrinding moment. When this box begins, they have already been playing regularly all summer at the Horseshoe Hotel on Tottenham Court Road, honing a repertoire largely based on folk standards, but with a couple of self-penned instrumentals. They sound ropey: on “Poison”, from the never released first session from August ‘67, McShee is off-key, fighting for notes. Six months later, feisty New York manager Jo Lustig has tightened them up and begun securing TV and radio appearances. Before the end of 1968, they are filling the Royal Festival Hall on their own. The group are in their element flying through their “Waltz”, from the debut Pentangle, or the complex traceries of the newly released “Koran” and their signature song “Pentangling”, an improv ripe for embroidery. The brutal world depicted in Britain’s ancient ballads wasn’t so far from Jansch’s heroin dirge “The Needle Of Death”, and in their choice of folk covers Pentangle usually plumped for the more murderous end of the traditional ballad scale: brides with pistols like “Sovay” (played on TOTP) or the much interpreted tale of curse and metamorphosis, “Tam Lin” (recorded for the Ava Gardner movie The Devil’s Widow in 1970). Many of these tracks typify the way most British folk reaches its most exciting peaks at the moment it becomes electrified - Neil Young recently remarked that Jansch did for the acoustic what Hendrix did for the Stratocaster. “Green Willow”, one of several tracks from a lost session recently rediscovered in an attic, is a curious mix of synth bass, ‘singing’ jazz flute and glam rock-flutter-echoing drums. The instrumental edit of “Jack Orion” is a mirror of Tim Buckley’s contemporaneous Happy Sad, with vibes and drumless acoustic/electric scudding into view. The tempo-shuffling blues “Helping Hand”, from Reflection (1971), is textured by Renbourn’s gorgeous, silken lead line spun from wah wah and volume pedal. “The Snows” from Solomon’s Seal (1972) is tempered by a sitar vapour trail. The Pentangle sound always just steered clear of the obvious signifiers and trappings of psychedelic rock/blues crossover. If at times the songs come off a little too flibbertigibbety for contemporary tastes, at its peaks Pentangle touched on something far more mercurial and elfin, deeply embedded in British music lore. By 1970 relations were becoming fractious. Jansch in particular seemed privately tormented by the way the group requirements diluted his formidable technique. The fourth album Cruel Sister flopped in late 1970; a failure to capitalise on the previous success that had helped them cross over (they were known for a certain unwillingness to tackle intra-band problems head-on.) Perhaps for the same reason, some of their earlier studio albums sound claustrophobic and stiff, as though they didn’t enjoy the palaver of rendering the tunes in the unforgiving light of the mic and desk. Reflection (1971) was the only time they used 16 tracks, and the space around them helps the music no end. It’s on the live recordings of disc three – an almost-complete reconstruction of the Royal Festival Hall concert that was cherrypicked for the live half of 1968’s live/studio double Sweet Child – that the solid air of their studio work liquefies and steams into the ether. More swinging tunes like “Hear My Call” and “I’ve Got A Feeling” are essentially derivations from Miles Davis’s “All Blues”, but their jazz impulse came more impressively to the fore in the last two years, 1971–72. A version of “Pentangling” is thrown in from a Norwegian TV slot the same year, with a marvellously confident Thompson bass solo. Disc four is a ragbag of live appearances culled from television and two tired-sounding numbers from the Isle Of Wight festival. By this time they were clearly having more fun with the kind of extended improvisations grandstanded on a 20 minute cut of “Pentangling” from Aberdeen Music Hall. The final “People On The Highway” belies the tensions and apathy that folded the group at the end of 1972 – Jansch and McShee even chuckle to each other in melodic mid-flight. You can hear how, if the spell hadn’t been broken by exhaustion the following year, they might have mutated Britain’s folk tradition into a less earthy direction than Fairport or Steeleye Span. ROB YOUNG

On paper, the formula looked impeccable. Take London’s two most dextrous folk-blues guitarists, toss in a jazz double bassist and drummer, then summon a young blues singer looking to extend her reach. At the end of 1966 the spell was cast and the five points of the magickal star were staked out to describe The Pentangle, Britain’s first folk-jazz-blues supergroup: Bert Jansch, John Renbourn, Danny Thompson, Terry Cox and Jacqui McShee.

Compiled by Jansch biographer Colin Harper, The Time Has Come is a digest of rare or unheard studio and live takes, TV spots, soundtrack work, plus selected album tracks and singles, spanning four discs and five years. It’s an impressive overview of the group’s best years (up to 1973 when they split), if occasionally frayed at the edges: the group themselves are bemused that anyone would want to hear their ‘unofficial’ side.

Emerging from the London scene, Pentangle were less pastorally inflected than many folk-rock relatives. They didn’t rock as hard as Fairport Convention, weren’t as stolidly rooted in loamy folk tradition as Steeleye Span, nor as warbly and wyrd as The Incredible String Band. They were hardly shy or retiring types like Nick Drake, either – certain members partook liberally of ‘hospitality’. Jazz and the ‘60s folk-blues revival were the teachers that had nurtured Jansch and Renbourn, and the light snap and twang of Cox and Thompson’s rhythm section kept the music aerated but never fluffy.

Pentangle also achieved a prominence none of the above managed in their lifetimes. Their song “Light Flight” was chosen as theme for the BBC sitcom Take Three Girls, which propelled the group into a nation’s humming consciousness. Included here in original and live versions, its bustly jingle remains their most teethgrinding moment.

When this box begins, they have already been playing regularly all summer at the Horseshoe Hotel on Tottenham Court Road, honing a repertoire largely based on folk standards, but with a couple of self-penned instrumentals. They sound ropey: on “Poison”, from the never released first session from August ‘67, McShee is off-key, fighting for notes. Six months later, feisty New York manager Jo Lustig has tightened them up and begun securing TV and radio appearances. Before the end of 1968, they are filling the Royal Festival Hall on their own.

The group are in their element flying through their “Waltz”, from the debut Pentangle, or the complex traceries of the newly released “Koran” and their signature song “Pentangling”, an improv ripe for embroidery. The brutal world depicted in Britain’s ancient ballads wasn’t so far from Jansch’s heroin dirge “The Needle Of Death”, and in their choice of folk covers Pentangle usually plumped for the more murderous end of the traditional ballad scale: brides with pistols like “Sovay” (played on TOTP) or the much interpreted tale of curse and metamorphosis, “Tam Lin” (recorded for the Ava Gardner movie The Devil’s Widow in 1970).

Many of these tracks typify the way most British folk reaches its most exciting peaks at the moment it becomes electrified – Neil Young recently remarked that Jansch did for the acoustic what Hendrix did for the Stratocaster. “Green Willow”, one of several tracks from a lost session recently rediscovered in an attic, is a curious mix of synth bass, ‘singing’ jazz flute and glam rock-flutter-echoing drums. The instrumental edit of “Jack Orion” is a mirror of Tim Buckley’s contemporaneous Happy Sad, with vibes and drumless acoustic/electric scudding into view.

The tempo-shuffling blues “Helping Hand”, from Reflection (1971), is textured by Renbourn’s gorgeous, silken lead line spun from wah wah and volume pedal. “The Snows” from Solomon’s Seal (1972) is tempered by a sitar vapour trail. The Pentangle sound always just steered clear of the obvious signifiers and trappings of psychedelic rock/blues crossover. If at times the songs come off a little too flibbertigibbety for contemporary tastes, at its peaks Pentangle touched on something far more mercurial and elfin, deeply embedded in British music lore.

By 1970 relations were becoming fractious. Jansch in particular seemed privately tormented by the way the group requirements diluted his formidable technique. The fourth album Cruel Sister flopped in late 1970; a failure to capitalise on the previous success that had helped them cross over (they were known for a certain unwillingness to tackle intra-band problems head-on.) Perhaps for the same reason, some of their earlier studio albums sound claustrophobic and stiff, as though they didn’t enjoy the palaver of rendering the tunes in the unforgiving light of the mic and desk. Reflection (1971) was the only time they used 16 tracks, and the space around them helps the music no end.

It’s on the live recordings of disc three – an almost-complete reconstruction of the Royal Festival Hall concert that was cherrypicked for the live half of 1968’s live/studio double Sweet Child – that the solid air of their studio work liquefies and steams into the ether. More swinging tunes like “Hear My Call” and “I’ve Got A Feeling” are essentially derivations from Miles Davis’s “All Blues”, but their jazz impulse came more impressively to the fore in the last two years, 1971–72. A version of “Pentangling” is thrown in from a Norwegian TV slot the same year, with a marvellously confident Thompson bass solo.

Disc four is a ragbag of live appearances culled from television and two tired-sounding numbers from the Isle Of Wight festival. By this time they were clearly having more fun with the kind of extended improvisations grandstanded on a 20 minute cut of “Pentangling” from Aberdeen Music Hall. The final “People On The Highway” belies the tensions and apathy that folded the group at the end of 1972 – Jansch and McShee even chuckle to each other in melodic mid-flight. You can hear how, if the spell hadn’t been broken by exhaustion the following year, they might have mutated Britain’s folk tradition into a less earthy direction than Fairport or Steeleye Span.

ROB YOUNG