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Arctic Monkeys Announce Major Live Date

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Arctic Monkeys have announced they will be headlining their biggest ever show when they appear at Manchester's Lancashire Country Cricket Ground on Saturday July 28 2007. The band - who enjoyed a record-breaking 2006, which saw their debut album, Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not becaome the biggest-selling debut album ever - will be selecting the supporting bill from their favourite bands. An announcement confirming the rest of the bill is expected shortly. The concert will coincide with the release of the Monkeys' second album, songs from which will feature int he show, alongside already establ;ished favourites. The tickets for the 50,000 capacity event will go on general sale on Friday 15th December 2006 at 12.30pm. Arctic Monkeys’ registered fans will have 24 hour exclusive access to the online pre-sale which begins on Thursday 14th December 2006 at 12.30pm. For information about the pre sale go to www.arcticmonkeys.com CC Hotlines: 0871 220 0260 / 0871 230 6230 / 0161 832 1111 Buy online: www.gigsandtours.com / www.ticketmaster.co.uk In person at: Lancashire County Cricket Club box office, Palace Theatre box office Manchester, Piccadilly box office Manchester & Liverpool, Jacks Records Sheffield, Sheffield City Hall box office, Jumbo Records Leeds, Preston Guildhall box office. Coach travel: 0870 060 3779 / 01253 299266 Tickets on sale Friday 15th December 12.30pm

Arctic Monkeys have announced they will be headlining their biggest ever show when they appear at Manchester’s Lancashire Country Cricket Ground on Saturday July 28 2007.

The band – who enjoyed a record-breaking 2006, which saw their debut album, Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not becaome the biggest-selling debut album ever – will be selecting the supporting bill from their favourite bands. An announcement confirming the rest of the bill is expected shortly.

The concert will coincide with the release of the Monkeys’ second album, songs from which will feature int he show, alongside already establ;ished favourites.

The tickets for the 50,000 capacity event will go on general sale on Friday 15th December 2006 at 12.30pm.

Arctic Monkeys’ registered fans will have 24 hour exclusive access to the online pre-sale which begins on Thursday 14th December 2006 at 12.30pm. For information about the pre sale go to www.arcticmonkeys.com

CC Hotlines: 0871 220 0260 / 0871 230 6230 / 0161 832 1111

Buy online: www.gigsandtours.com / www.ticketmaster.co.uk

In person at: Lancashire County Cricket Club box office, Palace Theatre box office Manchester, Piccadilly box office Manchester & Liverpool, Jacks Records Sheffield, Sheffield City Hall box office, Jumbo Records Leeds, Preston Guildhall box office.

Coach travel: 0870 060 3779 / 01253 299266

Tickets on sale Friday 15th December 12.30pm

White Stripes hero to play intimate New Year’s Eve gig

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White Stripes influence Billy Childish is to play an intimate New Year’s Eve show at the Spitz in London. Despite falling out with the White Stripes earlier this year over claims the band made that Childish had plagiarised their songs, Childish is still sited as one of the White Stripes inspirations. Also joining Childish on the bill of this event are members of psychedelic-medieval group Circulus, who will be performing a special set as Princes In the Tower, the Surgeons, Pete Molinari and the Beep Seals. DJs from London folk clubs In the Pines and Health and Happiness will be spinning the tunes. For more information please go to http://www.spitz.co.uk/ http://www.wegottickets.com/event/14030

White Stripes influence Billy Childish is to play an intimate New Year’s Eve show at the Spitz in London. Despite falling out with the White Stripes earlier this year over claims the band made that Childish had plagiarised their songs, Childish is still sited as one of the White Stripes inspirations.

Also joining Childish on the bill of this event are members of psychedelic-medieval group Circulus, who will be performing a special set as Princes In the Tower, the Surgeons, Pete Molinari and the Beep Seals. DJs from London folk clubs In the Pines and Health and Happiness will be spinning the tunes.

For more information please go to

http://www.spitz.co.uk/

http://www.wegottickets.com/event/14030

Muse Add New Wembley Date

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Muse have announced a second show at the new Wembley Stadium after they sold all 70,000 tickets for their first concert there in under an hour. As well as their originally announced June 16 date, Muse now additionally play Wembley Stadium on June 17. Ticket are available from: By telephone: Ticketmaster - 0871 230 4425 (Dedicated Muse line), See tickets - 0871 2200 260, Ticketline - 0871 424 4444 & Stargreen - 0207 734 8932 Online: www.muse.mu / www.gigsandtours.com / www.LiveNation.co.uk or www.Ticketline.co.uk

Muse have announced a second show at the new Wembley Stadium after they sold all 70,000 tickets for their first concert there in under an hour.

As well as their originally announced June 16 date, Muse now additionally play Wembley Stadium on June 17.

Ticket are available from:

By telephone: Ticketmaster – 0871 230 4425 (Dedicated Muse line), See tickets – 0871 2200 260, Ticketline – 0871 424 4444 & Stargreen – 0207 734 8932

Online: www.muse.mu / www.gigsandtours.com / www.LiveNation.co.uk or www.Ticketline.co.uk

Dance With The Flaming Lips

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The Flaming Lips, described earlier this year by Uncut magazine as "America's greatest band", have issued an invitation to fans to appear onstage with them when they perform their New Year show at the University of Southern California Galen Center in Los Angeles this month. Of course, this isn't the first time the Lips have encouraged members of the audience to take an active role in their live mayhem - in fact, they're usually more than happy for locals to turn up and dress like giant rabbits or aliens whenever the band come into town. This time, however, they've gone one further and asked fans from anywhere to apply to appear. The band have invited interested parties to upload a three-minute dance audition video featuring any Flaming Lips song to YouTube, as well as filling in a entry form at http://www.flaminglips.com. Good luck, Lips loonies!

The Flaming Lips, described earlier this year by Uncut magazine as “America’s greatest band”, have issued an invitation to fans to appear onstage with them when they perform their New Year show at the University of Southern California Galen Center in Los Angeles this month.

Of course, this isn’t the first time the Lips have encouraged members of the audience to take an active role in their live mayhem – in fact, they’re usually more than happy for locals to turn up and dress like giant rabbits or aliens whenever the band come into town.

This time, however, they’ve gone one further and asked fans from anywhere to apply to appear.

The band have invited interested parties to upload a three-minute dance audition video featuring any Flaming Lips song to YouTube, as well as filling in a entry form at http://www.flaminglips.com.

Good luck, Lips loonies!

The Doors – Perception

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Although this impressive 40th anniversary box set is audio-led (its cornerstone being the six CDs, not the short DVDs that accompany them), it’s obvious we should begin with the 1967 Canadian television broadcast of "The End", the first great Doors psychotropic epic. Insert the DVD. Action. They crash into an almighty death-chord, Jim Morrison glaring at the camera and screaming: "Wake up!" For 11 minutes he commands his stage, writhing against the mic stand with lava in his eyes. The urgency mounts, the hippychick dancers lose their inhibitions and Morrison whips the hysteria upwards and upwards. Finally he sinks to his haunches to survey the mayhem he’s created. It’s amazing, riveting footage. Today, 35 years after Morrison’s death, The Doors are a rock’n’roll institution whose legacy is surprisingly brittle. After being revered for decades, they’ve recently slumped in stature – derided for meretricious poetry, leather trousers and worse. The current generation doesn’t seem to rate them. Even in older milieux, it’s become fashionable to damn them with faint praise: coupla good albums, then lost it big-time... A decent existential trip for teenagers, but a band you grow out of when you mature. Scarcely helping matters, a previous multi-disc anthology in 1997 ("The Doors Box Set") was a notorious botch-job that lost its way in dire rarities and absence of narrative. More seriously, the six Doors studio albums – the really important stuff – sounded lifeless on CD for 13 years until 1999 brought new, scintillating remasters by former engineer/producer Bruce Botnick. Packaged like a door with a peephole, "Perception" takes those 1999 remasters and adds out-takes to all six albums. Sharing each double-digipack is a 20-minute DVD of television clips and promo films. And that’s it. No live albums. No specious attempts to jiggle chronology. No “unreleased” poetry surreptitiously glued on to 1980s jazz-funk overdubs. The 33-minute blushing-pink pop album "Waiting For The Sun" swells to an hour, feasting on the bonus cuts: "Celebration Of The Lizard", a brutal phantasmagoria excised from the original 1968 tracklisting; "Albinoni’s Adagio In G Minor", a Morricone-style art-piece. "Morrison Hotel"’s out-takes are more prosaic: eight interminable cock-ups of "Roadhouse Blues". Not every Doors album benefits from these CD/DVD combinations. Unlike its freeway-haunting music, "LA Woman"’s DVD is claustrophobic and turgid. Indisputably, though, synthesis occurs elsewhere – magical unions of sight and sound – just like the leering, hunchbacked Doors riffs where wire-rimmed intellectualism and bone-hard carnality conjoin in electraglide guitar and harpsichord scales. And you realise how revolutionary, how thrilling The Doors really were, before all those biographies, movies and TV-advertised compilations turned them into cliché. Let’s acknowledge their versatility, for a start. Released at either end of 1967, "The Doors" and "Strange Days" are towering statements of crepuscular psychedelia that actually, when analysed, visit none of the usual psychedelic geography. "Break On Through (To The Other Side)" is a mambo. "Moonlight Drive" is a tango. They’re ecstatically embroidered ("Light My Fire", "The Crystal Ship"), then gammy-legged ("Love Me Two Times", "Back Door Man"), then suddenly we’re at the Kit Kat Club ("People Are Strange") where life-is-a-cabaret-old-chum. With no bassist to make them swing, the hypnotic repetitions of Ray Manzarek’s keyboard basslines were crucial. Black-and-white 1968 film of "When The Music’s Over" shows us what it looked like. Morrison is already puffy from the drinking, but Manzarek’s left hand is a bass machine, techno-repetitive, relentlessly risking RSI. Stretched wide by ’60s stereo separation, Manzarek and guitarist Robby Krieger evidently felt embellishment was necessary. Following the successful pop departure of "Waiting For The Sun", a cavalry of strings and brass reinforcements arrived for "The Soft Parade" (1969), prompting criticism that The Doors were selling out to muzak. The suave production textures (and inconsequential Krieger-written lyrics) must have disappointed many; others, myself included, swear by the poignant stoicism of these pop tunes. "The Soft Parade"’s DVD has a TV performance of the title track. Morrison is pissed and downright fat, with bouffant hair and preacher’s beard. He looks like a deranged, sweaty Bee Gee. Arrested that March in Miami for exposing his genitals onstage, it all went wrong for Morrison. Living the life of the anarchic drunk, he daily faced imprisonment but was hardly a free man in any case. The DVD for "Morrison Hotel" (1970) has jaw-dropping scenes of him being violently manhandled – by police, by girls, by freaks – while "Roadhouse Blues" blares out sardonically: "Let it roll, baby, roll... all night long." The craziness is frightening. "Morrison Hotel" and "LA Woman" (1971) were returns to a raunchy blues approach, but with provisos. The former revels in tonal contrasts (the exquisite "Peace Frog"/"Blue Sunday" segue), also suggesting a bizarre nautical bent ("Land Ho!", "Ship Of Fools"). The latter album is dominated by its original side-closers "LA Woman" and "Riders On The Storm" – ineffable road songs both – but is arguably the closest The Doors came to sounding like other bands. Morrison died in Paris while it was climbing the charts. He is not the messiah, not then, not now; and talk of snake-hipped shamen leaves many of us cold. But there’s infinitely more to Morrison than unfettered chemical experimentation and an oedipal encounter with the old lady. He deserves respect, not ridicule. And The Doors finally produce a box set that illuminates their shapeshifting music, where kaleidoscopes bumped into triskaidecahedrons. No wonder there’s so many ways of perceiving them. By DAVID CAVANAGH

Although this impressive 40th anniversary box set is audio-led (its cornerstone being the six CDs, not the short DVDs that accompany them), it’s obvious we should begin with the 1967 Canadian television broadcast of “The End”, the first great Doors psychotropic epic.

Insert the DVD. Action. They crash into an almighty death-chord, Jim Morrison glaring at the camera and screaming: “Wake up!” For 11 minutes he commands his stage, writhing against the mic stand with lava in his eyes. The urgency mounts, the hippychick dancers lose their inhibitions and Morrison whips the hysteria upwards and upwards. Finally he sinks to his haunches to survey the mayhem he’s created. It’s amazing, riveting footage.

Today, 35 years after Morrison’s death, The Doors are a rock’n’roll institution whose legacy is surprisingly brittle. After being revered for decades, they’ve recently slumped in stature – derided for meretricious poetry, leather trousers and worse. The current generation doesn’t seem to rate them. Even in older milieux, it’s become fashionable to damn them with faint praise: coupla good albums, then lost it big-time… A decent existential trip for teenagers, but a band you grow out of when you mature.

Scarcely helping matters, a previous multi-disc anthology in 1997 (“The Doors Box Set”) was a notorious botch-job that lost its way in dire rarities and absence of narrative. More seriously, the six Doors studio albums – the really important stuff – sounded lifeless on CD for 13 years until 1999 brought new, scintillating remasters by former engineer/producer Bruce Botnick.

Packaged like a door with a peephole, “Perception” takes those 1999 remasters and adds out-takes to all six albums. Sharing each double-digipack is a 20-minute DVD of television clips and promo films. And that’s it. No live albums. No specious attempts to jiggle chronology. No “unreleased” poetry surreptitiously glued on to 1980s jazz-funk overdubs.

The 33-minute blushing-pink pop album “Waiting For The Sun” swells to an hour, feasting on the bonus cuts: “Celebration Of The Lizard”, a brutal phantasmagoria excised from the original 1968 tracklisting; “Albinoni’s Adagio In G Minor”, a Morricone-style art-piece. “Morrison Hotel”’s out-takes are more prosaic: eight interminable cock-ups of “Roadhouse Blues”.

Not every Doors album benefits from these CD/DVD combinations. Unlike its freeway-haunting music, “LA Woman”’s DVD is claustrophobic and turgid. Indisputably, though, synthesis occurs elsewhere – magical unions of sight and sound – just like the leering, hunchbacked Doors riffs where wire-rimmed intellectualism and bone-hard carnality conjoin in electraglide guitar and harpsichord scales. And you realise how revolutionary, how thrilling The Doors really were, before all those biographies, movies and TV-advertised compilations turned them into cliché.

Let’s acknowledge their versatility, for a start. Released at either end of 1967, “The Doors” and “Strange Days” are towering statements of crepuscular psychedelia that actually, when analysed, visit none of the usual psychedelic geography. “Break On Through (To The Other Side)” is a mambo. “Moonlight Drive” is a tango. They’re ecstatically embroidered (“Light My Fire”, “The Crystal Ship”), then gammy-legged (“Love Me Two Times”, “Back Door Man”), then suddenly we’re at the Kit Kat Club (“People Are Strange”) where life-is-a-cabaret-old-chum.

With no bassist to make them swing, the hypnotic repetitions of Ray Manzarek’s keyboard basslines were crucial. Black-and-white 1968 film of “When The Music’s Over” shows us what it looked like. Morrison is already puffy from the drinking, but Manzarek’s left hand is a bass machine, techno-repetitive, relentlessly risking RSI.

Stretched wide by ’60s stereo separation, Manzarek and guitarist Robby Krieger evidently felt embellishment was necessary. Following the successful pop departure of “Waiting For The Sun”, a cavalry of strings and brass reinforcements arrived for “The Soft Parade” (1969), prompting criticism that The Doors were selling out to muzak. The suave production textures (and inconsequential Krieger-written lyrics) must have disappointed many; others, myself included, swear by the poignant stoicism of these pop tunes.

“The Soft Parade”’s DVD has a TV performance of the title track. Morrison is pissed and downright fat, with bouffant hair and preacher’s beard. He looks like a deranged, sweaty Bee Gee.

Arrested that March in Miami for exposing his genitals onstage, it all went wrong for Morrison. Living the life of the anarchic drunk, he daily faced imprisonment but was hardly a free man in any case. The DVD for “Morrison Hotel” (1970) has jaw-dropping scenes of him being violently manhandled – by police, by girls, by freaks – while “Roadhouse Blues” blares out sardonically: “Let it roll, baby, roll… all night long.” The craziness is frightening.

“Morrison Hotel” and “LA Woman” (1971) were returns to a raunchy blues approach, but with provisos. The former revels in tonal contrasts (the exquisite “Peace Frog”/”Blue Sunday” segue), also suggesting a bizarre nautical bent (“Land Ho!”, “Ship Of Fools”). The latter album is dominated by its original side-closers “LA Woman” and “Riders On The Storm” – ineffable road songs both – but is arguably the closest The Doors came to sounding like other bands. Morrison died in Paris while it was climbing the charts.

He is not the messiah, not then, not now; and talk of snake-hipped shamen leaves many of us cold. But there’s infinitely more to Morrison than unfettered chemical experimentation and an oedipal encounter with the old lady. He deserves respect, not ridicule. And The Doors finally produce a box set that illuminates their shapeshifting music, where kaleidoscopes bumped into triskaidecahedrons. No wonder there’s so many ways of perceiving them.

By DAVID CAVANAGH

Josh Ritter – Girl In The War

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Released earlier in 2006, Ritter’s "The Animal Years" marked a significant change in approach. With three previous albums having drawn parallels with James Taylor and Jackson Browne, there seemed little to distinguish Ritter from a whole host of Damien Rice types. But suddenly, his sense of the world seemed to expand. Instead of pining for girls in windows or sobbing tears of bourbon, the 30-year-old began addressing the political and the mythical. The sound widened, too. Drafting in Modest Mouse/Iron & Wine producer Brian Deck, Ritter’s fireside folk was now prone to the odd bout of electronica, swirling Hammond and loud guitars. As postscript to "The Animal Years", this seven-song EP is a collection of rarities and demos from around the same time. The title track (there are two versions here – the mandolin-led album take and an acoustic demo) frames the Iraq war from the viewpoint of apostles Peter and Paul. Exploring the hand-wringing of a divided nation, it’s a song Ritter recently sang to thunderous applause at The Centre For American Progress in Washington DC. The same sense of guilt pervades his cover of Modest Mouse’s "Blame It On The Tetons", whilst both "Peter Killed The Dragon" and an early "Monster Ballads" – one whispered to spare guitar, the other to fuzzy piano – borrow from Twain to sly, cryptic effect. The latter, particularly, is worthy of his hero Dylan: "And I was thinking about my river days / I was thinking about me and Jim / Passing Cairo on a getaway / With every steamboat like a hymn." Recorded in a guitar store in his hometown of Moscow, Idaho, the carefree skip of demo "In The Dark" masks a Biblical tale of sinking ships and raging fire. Highly imagistic but deceptively simple, Ritter’s songs pack all the mystery and strange logic of a Paul Auster novel. By ROB HUGHES

Released earlier in 2006, Ritter’s “The Animal Years” marked a significant change in approach. With three previous albums having drawn parallels with James Taylor and Jackson Browne, there seemed little to distinguish Ritter from a whole host of Damien Rice types.

But suddenly, his sense of the world seemed to expand. Instead of pining for girls in windows or sobbing tears of bourbon, the 30-year-old began addressing the political and the mythical. The sound widened, too. Drafting in Modest Mouse/Iron & Wine producer Brian Deck, Ritter’s fireside folk was now prone to the odd bout of electronica, swirling Hammond and loud guitars.

As postscript to “The Animal Years”, this seven-song EP is a collection of rarities and demos from around the same time. The title track (there are two versions here – the mandolin-led album take and an acoustic demo) frames the Iraq war from the viewpoint of apostles Peter and Paul. Exploring the hand-wringing of a divided nation, it’s a song Ritter recently sang to thunderous applause at The Centre For American Progress in Washington DC.

The same sense of guilt pervades his cover of Modest Mouse’s “Blame It On The Tetons”, whilst both “Peter Killed The Dragon” and an early “Monster Ballads” – one whispered to spare guitar, the other to fuzzy piano – borrow from Twain to sly, cryptic effect. The latter, particularly, is worthy of his hero Dylan: “And I was thinking about my river days / I was thinking about me and Jim / Passing Cairo on a getaway / With every steamboat like a hymn.”

Recorded in a guitar store in his hometown of Moscow, Idaho, the carefree skip of demo “In The Dark” masks a Biblical tale of sinking ships and raging fire. Highly imagistic but deceptively simple, Ritter’s songs pack all the mystery and strange logic of a Paul Auster novel.

By ROB HUGHES

Pavement – Wowee Zowee

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In the mid ‘90s, it seemed to be Jarvis Cocker’s prerogative to talk about misfits. In America, however, Steve Malkmus and Pavement were also fighting a slightly middle-class, wryly articulate, rather passive-aggressive battle on their behalf. A genuinely alternative band in a country which loosely thought the same of the Stone Temple Pilots, by 1995 Pavement seemed a little like a bullied child. A bullied child, that is, who had developed pronounced eccentricities as a kind of protective shield against the outside world. Certainly, by the time of Pavement’s third album, the gloves were off, creatively. Asserting all the while a genuinely hip personality (the album effortlessly encompasses subjects as diverse as wedding receptions, drugs and newbuild homes), "Wowee Zowee" saw them take the countrified slacker rock of 1994’s popular "Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain" and drive it down some markedly oblique turns. None, admittedly, quite as oblique as on the many, many extra tracks here - 32 will test even the confirmed Pavement nerd. Still, on the album proper, the band took some thrillingly diverse trips into their record collections. From Pink Floyd to punk, and (in the case of "Half A Canyon") from blues rock, to Stereolab, to Can, this was, and remains, thrilling, seat of the pants guitar rock. An over-used word of the period would have attributed this to some kind of freewheeling, "slacker" ethos. As regards the songwriting, however, it was articulacy rather than slackness that was on the cards. In many ways the equivalent of a Britpop band, Steve Malkmus’s wry turns of phrase ("Smoking up the fauna/Doing blotters/I don’t know which…") meant Pavement songs commented on their era as well as being bound up in it, a connection with the audience which still rings true today. Certainly, it won friends among British fellow travellers: Malkmus was a mate of Damon Albarn and Justine Frischmann; Jonny Greenwood later guested with the band. But Pavement were never at their best when being wholeheartedly accepted. Subsequent albums flirted more obviously with pop, to limited success. On "Wowee Zowee", though, Pavement flew as near as college rock ever had to a freak flag. By JOHN ROBINSON

In the mid ‘90s, it seemed to be Jarvis Cocker’s prerogative to talk about misfits. In America, however, Steve Malkmus and Pavement were also fighting a slightly middle-class, wryly articulate, rather passive-aggressive battle on their behalf.

A genuinely alternative band in a country which loosely thought the same of the Stone Temple Pilots, by 1995 Pavement seemed a little like a bullied child. A bullied child, that is, who had developed pronounced eccentricities as a kind of protective shield against the outside world.

Certainly, by the time of Pavement’s third album, the gloves were off, creatively. Asserting all the while a genuinely hip personality (the album effortlessly encompasses subjects as diverse as wedding receptions, drugs and newbuild homes), “Wowee Zowee” saw them take the countrified slacker rock of 1994’s popular “Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain” and drive it down some markedly oblique turns.

None, admittedly, quite as oblique as on the many, many extra tracks here – 32 will test even the confirmed Pavement nerd. Still, on the album proper, the band took some thrillingly diverse trips into their record collections. From Pink Floyd to punk, and (in the case of “Half A Canyon”) from blues rock, to Stereolab, to Can, this was, and remains, thrilling, seat of the pants guitar rock.

An over-used word of the period would have attributed this to some kind of freewheeling, “slacker” ethos. As regards the songwriting, however, it was articulacy rather than slackness that was on the cards. In many ways the equivalent of a Britpop band, Steve Malkmus’s wry turns of phrase (“Smoking up the fauna/Doing blotters/I don’t know which…”) meant Pavement songs commented on their era as well as being bound up in it, a connection with the audience which still rings true today.

Certainly, it won friends among British fellow travellers: Malkmus was a mate of Damon Albarn and Justine Frischmann; Jonny Greenwood later guested with the band. But Pavement were never at their best when being wholeheartedly accepted.

Subsequent albums flirted more obviously with pop, to limited success. On “Wowee Zowee”, though, Pavement flew as near as college rock ever had to a freak flag.

By JOHN ROBINSON

Lee Hazlewood – Cake Or Death

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Barton Lee Hazlewood is an American maverick who’s operated by his own supremely offbeat rules ever since producing Sanford Clark’s Top 10 hit "The Fool" over half a century ago. Hazlewood has written some of the strangest, most lugubriously despairing songs in the history of pop – not least "Some Velvet Morning", the myth-suffused duet with Nancy Sinatra and the oddest slice of MOR psychedelia ever to grace the US charts. Peripatetic and partial to good Scotch, Hazlewood has enjoyed late acclaim in his twilight years, lapping up the admiration of Beck, Jarvis and all the usual discerning suspects. Tragically he is now in the last stages of terminal cancer and has recorded "Cake Or Death" – a title borrowed from his unlikely hero, Eddie Izzard – as an adios to a world he has long observed with mordant amusement. The album, though, is a motley affair. Rounding up a gang of long-time collaborators, including his great protégé Duane Eddy (on a reheat of "These Boots Are Made For Walkin'") and returning to his beloved Scandinavia, "Cake Or Death" is by turns dryly nihilistic (the opening "Nothing"), whimsically silly ("Fred Freud"), politically withering ("Anthem", "Baghdad Nights", "White People Thing") and artlessly touching ("Please Come To Boston", a duet with jazz songbird Ann Kristin Hedmark). There are moments on "Cake Or Death" – "It’s Nothing To Me", the corny closer "The Old Man" – that unavoidably recall Johnny Cash’s "American V" or the choked-up farewell that was Warren Zevon’s "The Wind". Old Phoenix buddy Tommy Parsons takes a turn in the spotlight on the Tex-Mex-tinged "She’s Gonna Break Some Heart Tonight", while Lee’s eight-year-old granddaughter Phaedra intones "Some Velvet Morning" down the phone, apparently convinced the song was inspired by her rather than the other way round. Consequently, "Cake Or Death" feels more like a curate’s-egg of a coda than a useful entrée to Hazlewood’s work: a send-off, in other words, true to the spirit of the self-styled "Ol’ Grey-Haired Sonofabitch". By BARNEY HOSKYNS

Barton Lee Hazlewood is an American maverick who’s operated by his own supremely offbeat rules ever since producing Sanford Clark’s Top 10 hit “The Fool” over half a century ago. Hazlewood has written some of the strangest, most lugubriously despairing songs in the history of pop – not least “Some Velvet Morning”, the myth-suffused duet with Nancy Sinatra and the oddest slice of MOR psychedelia ever to grace the US charts.

Peripatetic and partial to good Scotch, Hazlewood has enjoyed late acclaim in his twilight years, lapping up the admiration of Beck, Jarvis and all the usual discerning suspects. Tragically he is now in the last stages of terminal cancer and has recorded “Cake Or Death” – a title borrowed from his unlikely hero, Eddie Izzard – as an adios to a world he has long observed with mordant amusement.

The album, though, is a motley affair. Rounding up a gang of long-time collaborators, including his great protégé Duane Eddy (on a reheat of “These Boots Are Made For Walkin'”) and returning to his beloved Scandinavia, “Cake Or Death” is by turns dryly nihilistic (the opening “Nothing”), whimsically silly (“Fred Freud”), politically withering (“Anthem”, “Baghdad Nights”, “White People Thing”) and artlessly touching (“Please Come To Boston”, a duet with jazz songbird Ann Kristin Hedmark).

There are moments on “Cake Or Death” – “It’s Nothing To Me”, the corny closer “The Old Man” – that unavoidably recall Johnny Cash’s “American V” or the choked-up farewell that was Warren Zevon’s “The Wind”.

Old Phoenix buddy Tommy Parsons takes a turn in the spotlight on the Tex-Mex-tinged “She’s Gonna Break Some Heart Tonight”, while Lee’s eight-year-old granddaughter Phaedra intones “Some Velvet Morning” down the phone, apparently convinced the song was inspired by her rather than the other way round.

Consequently, “Cake Or Death” feels more like a curate’s-egg of a coda than a useful entrée to Hazlewood’s work: a send-off, in other words, true to the spirit of the self-styled “Ol’ Grey-Haired Sonofabitch”.

By BARNEY HOSKYNS

Velvet Underground NOT Worth Fortune!

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An acetate of the legendary debut album from the Velvet Underground, the one with the banana on the sleeve, allegedly sold on eBay for a staggering $155,401 is still worth only the 75 cents its owner paid for it. The acetate copy of 'The Velvet Underground & Nico' was originally purchased at a Montreal flea market, and is thought to be one of only two in existence. The eBay auction ended last Friday with the news that a winning bid of $155,401 had been made, and unsurprisingly accepted by Warren Hill, who bought the acetate in September 2002. Saturn Records, based in Oakland, California, who were handling on the online sale, have since received an email from the apparent auction winner - who claims a fiend made the astonishing bid on his behalf "as a lark". "I'm so sorry," the email partly read. "I can barely afford gas for my car," it went on. Hill was reported to be "totally disappointed" by the news.

An acetate of the legendary debut album from the Velvet Underground, the one with the banana on the sleeve, allegedly sold on eBay for a staggering $155,401 is still worth only the 75 cents its owner paid for it.

The acetate copy of ‘The Velvet Underground & Nico’ was originally purchased at a Montreal flea market, and is thought to be one of only two in existence.

The eBay auction ended last Friday with the news that a winning bid of $155,401 had been made, and unsurprisingly accepted by Warren Hill, who bought the acetate in September 2002.

Saturn Records, based in Oakland, California, who were handling on the online sale, have since received an email from the apparent auction winner – who claims a fiend made the astonishing bid on his behalf “as a lark”.

“I’m so sorry,” the email partly read. “I can barely afford gas for my car,” it went on.

Hill was reported to be “totally disappointed” by the news.

Jarvis Cocker Makes Shock Cameo Appearance

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Jarvis Cocker made a surprise appearance in London with hot new band CSS this weekend. The Brazillian outfit, the darlings of the broadsheets and a recent Ban To Watch in Uncut magazine, were rounding off their tour with a special show at the London Forum last night (December 8). As their awesome performance was reaching a hot'n'steamy climax, including renditions of live favourites 'Alala' and 'Let's Make Love And Listen To Death From Above', singer Lovefoxx made a surprise announcement. "Sometimes we call him a friend, sometimes we call him a lover, tonight let's just call him Jarvis!" The Sheffield sex god, currently enjoying a comeback, then sauntered onstage just in time for a run-through of 'Alcohol' before the band encored with 'Pretend We're Dead' by grunge grrrls L7.

Jarvis Cocker made a surprise appearance in London with hot new band CSS this weekend.

The Brazillian outfit, the darlings of the broadsheets and a recent Ban To Watch in Uncut magazine, were rounding off their tour with a special show at the London Forum last night (December 8).

As their awesome performance was reaching a hot’n’steamy climax, including renditions of live favourites ‘Alala’ and ‘Let’s Make Love And Listen To Death From Above’, singer Lovefoxx made a surprise announcement.

“Sometimes we call him a friend, sometimes we call him a lover, tonight let’s just call him Jarvis!”

The Sheffield sex god, currently enjoying a comeback, then sauntered onstage just in time for a run-through of ‘Alcohol’ before the band encored with ‘Pretend We’re Dead’ by grunge grrrls L7.

Bob Dylan Spring Tour

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Bob Dylan returns to these shores in April for his first shows since the release of Modern Times earlier this year. Tickets go on sale this Friday (8th December) for the following venues: Glasgow, SECC (April 11) Newcastle Metro Radio Arena (12) Sheffield, Hallam FM Arena (14) London, Wembley Arena (15) Birmingham, NIA (17) ‘Modern Times’, which came out at the end of August and is Bob’s first new album in five years, has proved to be his best-selling record in over two decades - possibly since 'Desire' in 1976. In a way, Dylan is as big as he's ever been. The first volume of his memoirs, ‘Chronicles’, was one of the most acclaimed and best-selling non-fiction works of 2004, and last year's award-winning ‘No Direction Home’ film, directed by Martin Scorsese, drew rave notices and massive audiences as it charted Dylan's early career and rise to fame. As previously announced, Bob Dylan's XM Satellite Radio shows in the US, ‘Theme Time Radio Hour’, will be aired for the first time in the UK this month. Six of the shows will be broadcast on Radio 2 on consecutive evenings from Saturday December 23, before continuing on 6 Music on New Year's Eve and then on Friday nights from January 12.

Bob Dylan returns to these shores in April for his first shows since the release of Modern Times earlier this year.

Tickets go on sale this Friday (8th December) for the following venues:

Glasgow, SECC (April 11)

Newcastle Metro Radio Arena (12)

Sheffield, Hallam FM Arena (14)

London, Wembley Arena (15)

Birmingham, NIA (17)

‘Modern Times’, which came out at the end of August and is Bob’s first new album in five years, has proved to be his best-selling record in over two decades – possibly since ‘Desire’ in 1976.

In a way, Dylan is as big as he’s ever been.

The first volume of his memoirs, ‘Chronicles’, was one of the most acclaimed and best-selling non-fiction works of 2004, and last year’s award-winning ‘No Direction Home’ film, directed by Martin Scorsese, drew rave notices and massive audiences as it charted Dylan’s early career and rise to fame.

As previously announced, Bob Dylan’s XM Satellite Radio shows in the US, ‘Theme Time Radio Hour’, will be aired for the first time in the UK this month.

Six of the shows will be broadcast on Radio 2 on consecutive evenings from Saturday December 23, before continuing on 6 Music on New Year’s Eve and then on Friday nights from January 12.

The B-52s work with New Order producer

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The B-52's, the prototype Scissor Sisters with the colourful outfits and rhythmic pop music, are working with New Order's producer Steve Osbourne on their first new album since 1992. The band have described the new material as "Rock'n'Roll-Glam-Electro-Soul". The last B-52's album was 1992's 'Good Stuff' but they haven't recorded with founding member Cindy Wilson since 1989's 'Cosmic Thing'. "We took a short break which ended up lasting several years with each of us going our individual ways musically..." said guitarist Keith Strickland on Theb52s.com. "I considered doing a solo album, but in a moment of clarity I decided that I would rather put my energy into a new B-52's album." Strickland explained why they have chosen Osbourne to man the studio controls on this, their comeback project, which they actually began three years ago. "(He) produced the New Order album 'Get Ready' which I love," said Stickland. "When we were discussing producers for the album, I suggested Steve." There is a theme to The B-52's' forthcoming rock'n'roll-glam-electro-soul offering, although Strickland is reluctant to give too much away. "About halfway through these sessions we noticed a theme developing," he said. "However, I don't want to spoil the experience. You've got to hear it to believe it." A release date for the untitled album has yet to be announced.

The B-52’s, the prototype Scissor Sisters with the colourful outfits and rhythmic pop music, are working with New Order’s producer Steve Osbourne on their first new album since 1992.

The band have described the new material as “Rock’n’Roll-Glam-Electro-Soul”.

The last B-52’s album was 1992’s ‘Good Stuff’ but they haven’t recorded with founding member Cindy Wilson since 1989’s ‘Cosmic Thing’.

“We took a short break which ended up lasting several years with each of us going our individual ways musically…” said guitarist Keith Strickland on Theb52s.com. “I considered doing a solo album, but in a moment of clarity I decided that I would rather put my energy into a new B-52’s album.”

Strickland explained why they have chosen Osbourne to man the studio controls on this, their comeback project, which they actually began three years ago.

“(He) produced the New Order album ‘Get Ready’ which I love,” said Stickland. “When we were discussing producers for the album, I suggested Steve.”

There is a theme to The B-52’s’ forthcoming rock’n’roll-glam-electro-soul offering, although Strickland is reluctant to give too much away.

“About halfway through these sessions we noticed a theme developing,” he said. “However, I don’t want to spoil the experience. You’ve got to hear it to believe it.”

A release date for the untitled album has yet to be announced.

Razorlight Announce Arena Tour

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Razorlight have announced their UK tour plans for Spring 2007. The band, currently riding high in the charts with their self-titled second album, will be playing a seven-show arena tour of the UK. A total of 80,000 people will see them perform, including the final night which will be at London's Earl's Court. The tour dates are: Exeter West Point (March 30) Bournemouth BIC (April 1) Newcastle Arena (2) Manchester M.E.N (3) Glasgow SECC (5) Birmingham NEC(6) London Earl's Court (8) Tickets go on sale December 14 at 9am.

Razorlight have announced their UK tour plans for Spring 2007.

The band, currently riding high in the charts with their self-titled second album, will be playing a seven-show arena tour of the UK.

A total of 80,000 people will see them perform, including the final night which will be at London’s Earl’s Court.

The tour dates are:

Exeter West Point (March 30)

Bournemouth BIC (April 1)

Newcastle Arena (2)

Manchester M.E.N (3)

Glasgow SECC (5)

Birmingham NEC(6)

London Earl’s Court (8)

Tickets go on sale December 14 at 9am.

Mega City Four Singer Dies

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Darren 'Wiz' Brown, singer with early '90s pop-grunge/crusty leading lights Mega City Four, has died suddenly in London aged 44. Brown passed away on December 6 after suffering a blood clot on the brain. He had been taken ill at a rehearsal earlier in the week and died at St Georges Hospital in Tooting, south London. The MC4 frontman was living and working in Farnborough, having just finished writing songs for an album for his current band Ipanema. He had only recently returned from a successful tour of the States. With his guitarist brother Danny, bassist Gerry Bryant and drummer Chris Jones, the band released six studio albums between 1989 and 1996 and earned a reputation across the globe as an exciting live band. Mega City Four became UK alt.indie favourites in the late '80s and early '90s alongside peers Senseless Things, Neds Atomic Dustbin and Carter The Unstoppable Sex Machine. Their biggest hit was in 1992, when 'Shivering Sand' reached Number 35.

Darren ‘Wiz’ Brown, singer with early ’90s pop-grunge/crusty leading lights Mega City Four, has died suddenly in London aged 44.

Brown passed away on December 6 after suffering a blood clot on the brain. He had been taken ill at a rehearsal earlier in the week and died at St Georges Hospital in Tooting, south London.

The MC4 frontman was living and working in Farnborough, having just finished writing songs for an album for his current band Ipanema.

He had only recently returned from a successful tour of the States.

With his guitarist brother Danny, bassist Gerry Bryant and drummer Chris Jones, the band released six studio albums between 1989 and 1996 and earned a reputation across the globe as an exciting live band.

Mega City Four became UK alt.indie favourites in the late ’80s and early ’90s alongside peers Senseless Things, Neds Atomic Dustbin and Carter The Unstoppable Sex Machine.

Their biggest hit was in 1992, when ‘Shivering Sand’ reached Number 35.

Arcade Fire Relight The British Isles

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Arcade Fire will visit the UK in the New Year for five very special shows. The band will play three nights at St John’s Church, Smith Square with a further two nights at the Porchester Hall, West London. These dates are Arcade Fire's first UK shows since September 2005. The full list of dates is as follows: St John's, Smith Square, SW1 (January 29) St John's, Smith Square, SW1 (30) St John's, Smith Square, SW1 (31) Porchester Hall, W2 (February 1) Porchester Hall, W2 (2) Tickets for the intimate shows will go on sale this Friday(December 8)2. The band's as-yet-untitled second album will be released spring 2007. Further tour dates will be announced shortly. See www.arcadefire.com

Arcade Fire will visit the UK in the New Year for five very special shows.

The band will play three nights at St John’s Church, Smith Square with a further two nights at the Porchester Hall, West London.

These dates are Arcade Fire’s first UK shows since September 2005.

The full list of dates is as follows:

St John’s, Smith Square, SW1 (January 29)

St John’s, Smith Square, SW1 (30)

St John’s, Smith Square, SW1 (31)

Porchester Hall, W2 (February 1)

Porchester Hall, W2 (2)

Tickets for the intimate shows will go on sale this Friday(December 8)2.

The band’s as-yet-untitled second album will be released spring 2007.

Further tour dates will be announced shortly.

See www.arcadefire.com

Americana Chanteuse Back With New Album

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Tarnation, the brainchild of chanteuse Paula Frazer, are back, so wrap up warm and prepare yourselves for yet more deliciously chilly, sombre Americana-pop-with-a-'60s-sensibility. In February '07, Frazer plus Tarnation follow up the genre classic Gentle Creatures and the critically acclaimed Mirador with something sparse and beautiful. That something is Now It’s Time, by PAULA FRAZER AND TARNATION. Now It’s Time reconnects with Tarnation’s past and presents, according to the press release, "an olde tyme sound with whisping swirls of guitars and strings, wonderfully framing Paula Frazer’s signature angelic voice." More songs about memory and loss, hope and despair. Which sounds good to us. This time Tarnation comprise multi-instrumentalist Frazer, longtime collaborator Patrick Main on piano, and Jasmyn Wong on drums. Paula Frazer was born to a minister in the south and sang in his church choir at the age of four. She moved to San Francisco in the early '80s, where she played in various punk bands and even had a stint in the infamous Frightwig. The rest is history. The future? Now It's Time. Paula Frazer & Tarnation: ‘Now It’s Time’ Release Date: 26th February 2007 Catalogue No: BMR096 Label: Birdman Records

Tarnation, the brainchild of chanteuse Paula Frazer, are back, so wrap up warm and prepare yourselves for yet more deliciously chilly, sombre Americana-pop-with-a-’60s-sensibility.

In February ’07, Frazer plus Tarnation follow up the genre classic Gentle Creatures and the critically acclaimed Mirador with something sparse and beautiful.

That something is Now It’s Time, by PAULA FRAZER AND TARNATION. Now It’s Time reconnects with Tarnation’s past and presents, according to the press release, “an olde tyme sound with whisping swirls of guitars and strings, wonderfully framing Paula Frazer’s signature angelic voice.”

More songs about memory and loss, hope and despair. Which sounds good to us.

This time Tarnation comprise multi-instrumentalist Frazer, longtime collaborator Patrick Main on piano, and Jasmyn Wong on drums.

Paula Frazer was born to a minister in the south and sang in his church choir at the age of four. She moved to San Francisco in the early ’80s, where she played in various punk bands and even had a stint in the infamous Frightwig.

The rest is history. The future? Now It’s Time.

Paula Frazer & Tarnation: ‘Now It’s Time’

Release Date: 26th February 2007

Catalogue No: BMR096

Label: Birdman Records

Napalm Death Big Influence On Fine Art Shocker!

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Mark Titchner, a nominee for 2006's prestigious ‘Turner Prize’, has declared the music of Napalm Death to have been influential on his work. Titchner extols the virtues of the Death's ‘abrasive music’, praising their use of the voice as an instrument and the way they "push the boundaries of language". He also draws comparisons between the Brum rockers' unholy racket and his art. Have a look at Mark’s work, listen to expert Nicholas Bullen’s opinions on it at www.tate.org.uk/britain/turnerprize/2006/marktitchner.htm, then check out some classic Death and decide for yourselves how similar they are! In fact, look no further than Earache Records' 20-year anniversary edition of the highly influential debut Napalm Death album "Scum", due out in early 2007, complete with a recently filmed in-depth DVD documentary about the making of the album.

Mark Titchner, a nominee for 2006’s prestigious ‘Turner Prize’, has declared the music of Napalm Death to have been influential on his work.

Titchner extols the virtues of the Death’s ‘abrasive music’, praising their use of the voice as an instrument and the way they “push the boundaries of language”.

He also draws comparisons between the Brum rockers’ unholy racket and his art.

Have a look at Mark’s work, listen to expert Nicholas Bullen’s opinions

on it at www.tate.org.uk/britain/turnerprize/2006/marktitchner.htm, then check out some classic Death and decide for yourselves how similar they are!

In fact, look no further than Earache Records’ 20-year anniversary edition of the highly influential debut Napalm Death album “Scum”, due out in early 2007, complete with a recently filmed in-depth DVD documentary about the making of the album.

Beautiful South December Tour

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They've been touring the States in their Superbi bus, and now The Beautiful Southare set to play a string of dates in December. North-east's finest cap a year that has included touting their acerbic soft-rock across the globe. During the summer the band played everywhere from the Isle of Man to Dublin’s Croke Park with Robbie Williams in front of 85,000 people. The band also released their 10th Top 10 album, ‘Superbi’, in May 2006, which coincided with the 20th anniversary of Paul Heaton first entering the Top 10, with his previous band The Housemartins - whose other alumni, Norman Cook, has also carved out a pretty nifty career for himself. ‘Superbi’ was hailed as a return to form with lyricist Paul Heaton at the top of his game. Even after 17 years, the South are still masters of the deceptively mellifluous pop ditty. And live, they rock. See for yourselves on these pre-Xmas dates: 10 December Birmingham, NIA 0870 730 0196 doors 6pm 11 December Bournemouth, International Centre 0870 787 0404 doors 7pm 12 December London, Hammersmith Apollo 0870 606 3400 doors 7pm 14 December London, Hammersmith Palais 020 8600 2300 doors 7pm 15 December Manchester, MEN Arena 0870 190 8000 doors 6pm 16 December Sheffield, Hallam FM Arena 0114 256 5656 doors 6pm The Beautiful South are: Paul Heaton (vocals), Alison Wheeler (vocals), Dave Hemingway (vocals), Sean Welch (bass), Dave Rotheray (guitar) and Dave Stead (drums). www.beautifulsouth.co.uk

They’ve been touring the States in their Superbi bus, and now The Beautiful Southare set to play a string of dates in December.

North-east’s finest cap a year that has included touting their acerbic soft-rock across the globe.

During the summer the band played everywhere from the Isle of Man to Dublin’s Croke Park with Robbie Williams in front of 85,000 people.

The band also released their 10th Top 10 album, ‘Superbi’, in May 2006, which coincided with the 20th anniversary of Paul Heaton first entering the Top 10, with his previous band The Housemartins – whose other alumni, Norman Cook, has also carved out a pretty nifty career for himself.

‘Superbi’ was hailed as a return to form with lyricist Paul Heaton at the top of his game. Even after 17 years, the South are still masters of the deceptively mellifluous pop ditty.

And live, they rock. See for yourselves on these pre-Xmas dates:

10 December Birmingham, NIA 0870 730 0196 doors 6pm

11 December Bournemouth, International Centre 0870 787 0404 doors 7pm

12 December London, Hammersmith Apollo 0870 606 3400 doors 7pm

14 December London, Hammersmith Palais 020 8600 2300 doors 7pm

15 December Manchester, MEN Arena 0870 190 8000 doors 6pm

16 December Sheffield, Hallam FM Arena 0114 256 5656 doors 6pm

The Beautiful South are: Paul Heaton (vocals), Alison Wheeler (vocals), Dave Hemingway (vocals), Sean Welch (bass), Dave Rotheray (guitar) and Dave Stead (drums).

www.beautifulsouth.co.uk

Pete Townshend Tops The Bill At Tribute Gig

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Pete Townshend is to headline a special charity tribute night at London’s Roundhouse next month. Other guests at the all-star corcert will be Steve Winwood, Paul Weller and Bill Wyman, performing in hounour of former Traffic member Jim Capaldi, who died last year. The night entitled, Dear Mr. Fantasy after the Traffic album of the same name, will take place on January 21, close to the second anniversary of Capaldi’s death. The tribute show will also be a fundraiser for the Jubilee Action Street Children Appeal, a charity that Capaldi and his wife Anna supported. Other musicians scheduled for the special gig are former Deep Purple keyboardist Jon Lord, Gary Moore, Simon Kirke, Dennis Locorriere, the Storys, Andy Newmark, and Joe Walsh. Tickets go on sale on December 18.

Pete Townshend is to headline a special charity tribute night at London’s Roundhouse next month.

Other guests at the all-star corcert will be Steve Winwood, Paul Weller and Bill Wyman, performing in hounour of former Traffic member Jim Capaldi, who died last year.

The night entitled, Dear Mr. Fantasy after the Traffic album of the same name, will take place on January 21, close to the second anniversary of Capaldi’s death.

The tribute show will also be a fundraiser for the Jubilee Action Street Children Appeal, a charity that Capaldi and his wife Anna supported.

Other musicians scheduled for the special gig are former Deep Purple keyboardist Jon Lord, Gary Moore, Simon Kirke, Dennis Locorriere, the Storys, Andy Newmark, and Joe Walsh.

Tickets go on sale on December 18.

OMD Reform and Return With Aplomb

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OMD – Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark, namely Andy McCluskey and Paul Humphreys - are back, and working on lots of grand musical projects simultaneously. OMD are re-visiting their 1981 breakthrough album Architecture & Morality with a special European tour; during which they will play the album in its entirety for the first time ever – as well as utilising a massive 120-piece orchestra and choir as backing musicians. Architecture & Morality was one of the highest selling electronic albums of the early ‘80s, shifting over three million copies and spawning three Top 10 hits, “Souvenir,” “Joan Of Arc” and “Maid Of Orleans.” As well the comeback tour, McCluskey and Humphreys are also working on a unique audio-visual installation with award winning artist Peter Savile. The installation will be premiered at FACT in Liverpool in March as part of the city’s Capital of Culture celebrations. The installation has a working title of ‘The Energy Suite’ and is based on five electricity generating power facilities. Getting more orchestral action, OMD are also working with The London Philharmonic Orchestra for a unique concert tour incorporating their “Energy Suite” installation. The LPO will play “The Energy Suite” with giant screens carrying projections of the power station images, as well as interpretations of some of OMD’s hit records. The original 80’s band line-up of Andy McCluskey, Paul Humphreys, Martin Cooper and Malcolm Holmes plus the immense orchestral cast will play at the following UK venues next year: Dublin, Olympia (May 13) Glasgow Clyde Auditorium (15) Liverpool Empire (16) London Hammersmith Apollo (18)

OMD – Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark, namely Andy McCluskey and Paul Humphreys – are back, and working on lots of grand musical projects simultaneously.

OMD are re-visiting their 1981 breakthrough album Architecture & Morality with a special European tour; during which they will play the album in its entirety for the first time ever – as well as utilising a massive 120-piece orchestra and choir as backing musicians.

Architecture & Morality was one of the highest selling electronic albums of the early ‘80s, shifting over three million copies and spawning three Top 10 hits, “Souvenir,” “Joan Of Arc” and “Maid Of Orleans.”

As well the comeback tour, McCluskey and Humphreys are also working on a unique audio-visual installation with award winning artist Peter Savile. The installation will be premiered at FACT in Liverpool in March as part of the city’s Capital of Culture celebrations.

The installation has a working title of ‘The Energy Suite’ and is based on five electricity generating power facilities.

Getting more orchestral action, OMD are also working with The London Philharmonic Orchestra for a unique concert tour incorporating their “Energy Suite” installation. The LPO will play “The Energy Suite” with giant screens carrying projections of the power station images, as well as interpretations of some of OMD’s hit records.

The original 80’s band line-up of Andy McCluskey, Paul Humphreys, Martin Cooper and Malcolm Holmes plus the immense orchestral cast will play at the following UK venues next year:

Dublin, Olympia (May 13)

Glasgow Clyde Auditorium (15)

Liverpool Empire (16)

London Hammersmith Apollo (18)