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Watch The Best Video Of The Decade

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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 the MTV award-winning video for LCD Soundsystem’s first single “Losing My Edge.” The video from July 2002 gained massive acclaim and was a great way of grabbing attention as a new act on DFA Records. It is simplicity itself. We’ve been reminded just how good LCD Soundsystem are – their forthcoming album “Sound of Silver” due out in March has been played on the Uncut stereo twice a day since it arrived on Monday. Watch LCD front-man James Murphy repeatedly get slapped in the Losing My Edge Video 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 the MTV award-winning video for LCD Soundsystem’s first single “Losing My Edge.”

The video from July 2002 gained massive acclaim and was a great way of grabbing attention as a new act on DFA Records.

It is simplicity itself.

We’ve been reminded just how good LCD Soundsystem are – their forthcoming album “Sound of Silver” due out in March has been played on the Uncut stereo twice a day since it arrived on Monday.

Watch LCD front-man James Murphy repeatedly get slapped in the Losing My Edge Video by clicking here now

Bob On The Radio

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Uncut “Man of The Year” Bob Dylan is to bring his Theme Time Radio Hour to Radio 2 and BBC 6 Music from December 23. This will be the first opportunity for UK listeners to tune into the highly-acclaimed radio show. Dylan began broadcasting in May with a weekly radio show on XM Satellite Radio, the leading satellite radio service in the US. “Theme Time Radio Hour With Your Host Bob Dylan” will feature an eclectic mix of music hand-selected by Dylan. The radio shows also includes interviews and commentary on music and other topics. “Theme Time” means Dylan picks his music and ideas for shows around simple categories with unexpected and ingenoius results. The themes Dylan has picked will include “weather” – with a playlist that includes “A Place In The Sun” sung in Italian by Stevie Wonder, “The Wind Cries Mary” by Jimi Hendrix and “Keep On The Sunny Side” by The Carter Family. Other themes will include ‘cars’, ‘dance’, ‘police’, and ‘whiskey’. Dylan’s latest show for XM Satellite Radio was based on Thanksgiving, focussing primarily on food! Dylan’s playlist included “Rice Crispies (Wake Up in the Morning)” by The Rolling Stones, and “I Like Pie, I Like Cake” by The Four Clefs. Dylan says of his shows, "A lot of my own songs have been played on the radio, but this is the first time I've ever been on the other side of the mic." Lesley Douglas, Controller for BBC Radio 2 is excited for fans of Dylan saying, “It’ll be fascinating to hear who his favourite artists are and who has influenced him throughout his career.” You can catch Dylan on Radio 2 from December 23 at 7pm. For more details about the weekly showtimes – Click here for Radio 2’s homepage

Uncut “Man of The Year” Bob Dylan is to bring his Theme Time Radio Hour to Radio 2 and BBC 6 Music from December 23.

This will be the first opportunity for UK listeners to tune into the highly-acclaimed radio show.

Dylan began broadcasting in May with a weekly radio show on XM Satellite Radio, the leading satellite radio service in the US.

“Theme Time Radio Hour With Your Host Bob Dylan” will feature an eclectic mix of music hand-selected by Dylan. The radio shows also includes interviews and commentary on music and other topics.

“Theme Time” means Dylan picks his music and ideas for shows around simple categories with unexpected and ingenoius results.

The themes Dylan has picked will include “weather” – with a playlist that includes “A Place In The Sun” sung in Italian by Stevie Wonder, “The Wind Cries Mary” by Jimi Hendrix and “Keep On The Sunny Side” by The Carter Family.

Other themes will include ‘cars’, ‘dance’, ‘police’, and ‘whiskey’.

Dylan’s latest show for XM Satellite Radio was based on Thanksgiving, focussing primarily on food! Dylan’s playlist included “Rice Crispies (Wake Up in the Morning)” by The Rolling Stones, and “I Like Pie, I Like Cake” by The Four Clefs.

Dylan says of his shows, “A lot of my own songs have been played on the radio, but this is the first time I’ve ever been on the other side of the mic.”

Lesley Douglas, Controller for BBC Radio 2 is excited for fans of Dylan saying, “It’ll be fascinating to hear who his favourite artists are and who has influenced him throughout his career.”

You can catch Dylan on Radio 2 from December 23 at 7pm.

For more details about the weekly showtimes – Click here for Radio 2’s homepage

ROBERT ALTMAN RIP

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“I don’t have any plans to stop“, said Altman upon receiving his lifetime achievement Oscar earlier this year, “but history tells us I will”. Probably the most distinctive maverick of his generation, the Kansas-born director died on Monday in LA, aged 81. He’d made more films than he’d lived years. Among these were the great, the good and the woeful. His best work was satirical and atmospheric; his trademark interweaving narratives and multi-layered dialogues broke the mould and are often imitated. Is there a more common, lazily-applied adjective in film criticism than “Altmanesque”? He was already in his late 40s when 1970 anti-war black comedy MASH - already turned down by 17 other directors as potentially incendiary - made his name. “Oh, sure it’s a good film”, he told Uncut in 2001, “but that television series it became was despicable propaganda.” Studio suits watching rough cuts grumbled, “That idiot’s got them all talking at the same time”. On the back of its huge success (he never matched it commercially), he was allowed to develop his own style. In and out of fashion for the next three decades (in the Eighties he struggled to find funds), he was a constant force for subversion. “Trying to maintain the status quo is like trying to stop moving in a river”, he told us. “The film industry’s trivial and self-important. They just bow to the money. But there’s always dissent around the edges…” His sprawling ensemble casts - actors adored him, because he simply let them do what they were good at - graced such durable works as Nashville (75), A Wedding (78) and the Raymond Carver adaptation Short Cuts (93). He span genres on their heads: the Western in McCabe And Mrs Miller (71), noir in The Long Goodbye (73), British upstairs-downstairs class drama in Gosford Park (01). The Player (92) was an acid Hollywood lampoon which resurrected his career, though with typical perversity he told us, “That was just one film of many. It was superficial - the truth is much uglier. I preferred the one I made before that, Vincent And Theo…” His loose ends remained loose. “Life is not a puzzle to be solved”, he wrote, “but a riddle to be pondered.” Was that his abiding philosophy? “It’s true”, he said, ”there are no answers. You all seem to want happy endings. Well, I don’t know any happy endings. The only ending is death.” Yet on the way there his films shed fresh light on eternal truths, crackling with humour and poetry. “I’m a benevolent monarch on set”, he confided in us, eyes twinkling. “The others create, and I allow it. Most good things are an accident.” At the close of our 2001 interview, he said, “I’m always looking for another blank wall and some more paint. I just want to keep doing the same different things. I have a great life, lot of fun. I can’t envision myself not making films, I’ll probably die in the middle of one. But that’s all right. Although I’d rather die at the end of one.” A Prairie Home Companion will be released here next year. CHRIS ROBERTS

“I don’t have any plans to stop“, said Altman upon receiving his lifetime achievement Oscar earlier this year, “but history tells us I will”. Probably the most distinctive maverick of his generation, the Kansas-born director died on Monday in LA, aged 81. He’d made more films than he’d lived years.

Among these were the great, the good and the woeful. His best work was satirical and atmospheric; his trademark interweaving narratives and multi-layered dialogues broke the mould and are often imitated. Is there a more common, lazily-applied adjective in film criticism than “Altmanesque”?

He was already in his late 40s when 1970 anti-war black comedy MASH – already turned down by 17 other directors as potentially incendiary – made his name. “Oh, sure it’s a good film”, he told Uncut in 2001, “but that television series it became was despicable propaganda.” Studio suits watching rough cuts grumbled, “That idiot’s got them all talking at the same time”. On the back of its huge success (he never matched it commercially), he was allowed to develop his own style. In and out of fashion for the next three decades (in the Eighties he struggled to find funds), he was a constant force for subversion. “Trying to maintain the status quo is like trying to stop moving in a river”, he told us. “The film industry’s trivial and self-important. They just bow to the money. But there’s always dissent around the edges…”

His sprawling ensemble casts – actors adored him, because he simply let them do what they were good at – graced such durable works as Nashville (75), A Wedding (78) and the Raymond Carver adaptation Short Cuts (93). He span genres on their heads: the Western in McCabe And Mrs Miller (71), noir in The Long Goodbye (73), British upstairs-downstairs class drama in Gosford Park (01). The Player (92) was an acid Hollywood lampoon which resurrected his career, though with typical perversity he told us, “That was just one film of many. It was superficial – the truth is much uglier. I preferred the one I made before that, Vincent And Theo…”

His loose ends remained loose. “Life is not a puzzle to be solved”, he wrote, “but a riddle to be pondered.” Was that his abiding philosophy? “It’s true”, he said, ”there are no answers. You all seem to want happy endings. Well, I don’t know any happy endings. The only ending is death.”

Yet on the way there his films shed fresh light on eternal truths, crackling with humour and poetry. “I’m a benevolent monarch on set”, he confided in us, eyes twinkling. “The others create, and I allow it. Most good things are an accident.” At the close of our 2001 interview, he said, “I’m always looking for another blank wall and some more paint. I just want to keep doing the same different things. I have a great life, lot of fun. I can’t envision myself not making films, I’ll probably die in the middle of one. But that’s all right. Although I’d rather die at the end of one.” A Prairie Home Companion will be released here next year.

CHRIS ROBERTS

World’s Only Blue Beatles White Album Is Unveiled Today

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A one-off blue version of the Beatles celebrated “White Album” has been unveiled today at the Beatles Story permanent exhibition in Liverpool. It is 38 years to the day since the Beatles released their ninth studio album entitled “The Beatles” more commonly known as the “White Album.” The double-album was usually produced on white vinyl, but this blue version has been verified by Sotheby’s and Christie’s Auction houses as the only blue version in existence. The rare album’s owner, Colin McDonald, worked for the record pressing plant that produced the “White Album” in 1978 and the plant also happened to be pressing Linda Ronstadts “Blue Bayou” on blue vinyl at the same time. McDonald seized the fabulous opportunity to make himself a unique version of the “White Album” – the sleeve of which has since been autographed by Paul McCartney – making it the ultimate collector’s item. The blue “White Album” will be on display at the Beatles Story visitor attraction for a limited time.

A one-off blue version of the Beatles celebrated “White Album” has been unveiled today at the Beatles Story permanent exhibition in Liverpool.

It is 38 years to the day since the Beatles released their ninth studio album entitled “The Beatles” more commonly known as the “White Album.”

The double-album was usually produced on white vinyl, but this blue version has been verified by Sotheby’s and Christie’s Auction houses as the only blue version in existence.

The rare album’s owner, Colin McDonald, worked for the record pressing plant that produced the “White Album” in 1978 and the plant also happened to be pressing Linda Ronstadts “Blue Bayou” on blue vinyl at the same time.

McDonald seized the fabulous opportunity to make himself a unique version of the “White Album” – the sleeve of which has since been autographed by Paul McCartney – making it the ultimate collector’s item.

The blue “White Album” will be on display at the Beatles Story visitor attraction for a limited time.

Pioneering movie-maker Robert Altman Has Died

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Robert Altman has passed away, aged 81, his production company has announced this afternoon. The acclaimed director born in 1925 has been nominated for 5 Academy Awards in his lifetime. This year Altman was awarded an honourary Oscar for "a career that has repeatedly reinvented the art form". In his acceptance speech, he said he was grateful for the luck he'd had bestowed upon his movies, saying, "No other film-maker has gotten a better shake than I have. I'm very fortunate in my career.” He added, "I've never had to direct a film I didn't choose or develop. My love for film-making has given me an entree to the world and to the human condition." His films have tended to be arty, dark and sublime, and include The Player, Pret A Porter, Short Cuts, period mystery Gosford Park. His latest movie A Prairie Home Companion, starring Woody Harrelson and Tommy Lee Jones, premiered at the South By Southwest festival earlier this year. Altman's cause of death has not been revealed.

Robert Altman has passed away, aged 81, his production company has announced this afternoon.

The acclaimed director born in 1925 has been nominated for 5 Academy Awards in his lifetime.

This year Altman was awarded an honourary Oscar for “a career that has repeatedly reinvented the art form”.

In his acceptance speech, he said he was grateful for the luck he’d had bestowed upon his movies, saying, “No other film-maker has gotten a better shake than I have. I’m very fortunate in my career.”

He added, “I’ve never had to direct a film I didn’t choose or develop. My love for film-making has given me an entree to the world and to the human condition.”

His films have tended to be arty, dark and sublime, and include The Player, Pret A Porter, Short Cuts, period mystery Gosford Park.

His latest movie A Prairie Home Companion, starring Woody Harrelson and Tommy Lee Jones, premiered at the South By Southwest festival earlier this year.

Altman’s cause of death has not been revealed.

Watch Dexys Kevin Rowland Dance

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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 the brilliant promo video for Dexys Midnight Runners’ 1980 single, “There There My Dear.” Taken from the album “Searching For The Young Soul Rebels.” Listen to the joyous sax! Got to bring a smile to your face. Uncut have been reminded of Dexys’ genius with the arrival this morning of a rarities CD “The Projected Passion Revue.” The recordings are scheduled for release on January 29, including a Radio 1 concert session from 1981 and the Radio 1 Richard Skinner session from the same year. Watch the Dexys in Beenie-hat and ‘tash action by clicking here

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 the brilliant promo video for Dexys Midnight Runners’ 1980 single, “There There My Dear.”

Taken from the album “Searching For The Young Soul Rebels.”

Listen to the joyous sax! Got to bring a smile to your face.

Uncut have been reminded of Dexys’ genius with the arrival this morning of a rarities CD “The Projected Passion Revue.”

The recordings are scheduled for release on January 29, including a Radio 1 concert session from 1981 and the Radio 1 Richard Skinner session from the same year.

Watch the Dexys in Beenie-hat and ‘tash action by clicking here

Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour Releases Syd Tribute

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David Gilmour will release a cover of “Arnold Layne” in December in tribute to former Pink Floyd bandmate Syd Barrett. Gilmour announced the single’s release on his website, there are three tracks: two version’s of Arnold Layne – penned by Barratt and Pink Floyd’s first ever single in March 1967. Gilmour’s new versions of “Arnold Layne” were both recorded live at his triumphant shows at London’s prestigious Albert Hall earlier this year. David Bowie guests on vocals on one version and Richard Wright, another Floyd member appears on the other. A third live recorded track will also be available, an acoustic version of “Dark Globe” from Syd Barratt’s first solo album “The Madcap Laughs.” Gilmour says on his website, “This single is dedicated to the memory of Syd Barrett, who passed away in July.” The tracks will be available to download from Christmas Day. For more information about the David Gilmour – Click here to go to his artist homepage

David Gilmour will release a cover of “Arnold Layne” in December in tribute to former Pink Floyd bandmate Syd Barrett.

Gilmour announced the single’s release on his website, there are three tracks: two version’s of Arnold Layne – penned by Barratt and Pink Floyd’s first ever single in March 1967.

Gilmour’s new versions of “Arnold Layne” were both recorded live at his triumphant shows at London’s prestigious Albert Hall earlier this year.

David Bowie guests on vocals on one version and Richard Wright, another Floyd member appears on the other.

A third live recorded track will also be available, an acoustic version of “Dark Globe” from Syd Barratt’s first solo album “The Madcap Laughs.”

Gilmour says on his website, “This single is dedicated to the memory of Syd Barrett, who passed away in July.”

The tracks will be available to download from Christmas Day.

For more information about the David Gilmour – Click here to go to his artist homepage

Legendary Slits Frontwoman Writes For Uncut!

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Everywhere I go people still want to talk to me about The Slits. Sometimes it's old punks and rockers reminiscing about the anarchy of ‘77 to ‘79, sometimes its riot grrrls and 18 year olds that have just started their own band. It doesn’t make any difference to me whether their questions are original or I’ve already heard them a million times before, the important thing is people still want to know about The Slits. Whatever anyone else says, we weren’t just a punk rock group - we were four girls on a mission to bring about the revolution. We could have chosen film or theatre or literature or art as our medium but we chose music because we knew it would have the most impact and immediacy. I look at the bands making music these days and most of them seem happy to play by the rules and do what their managers and record labels tell them. They might call themselves free-spirited but you can tell they are in it for the exposure and the money and the record sales. It was never about anything that superficial for us. It was about passion and politics and the four of us coming together to create this incredible explosion of energy. People assume we must have had dozens of offers to reform The Slits over the years because bands like the Pistols have, but nobody ever asked us. I don’t know why but I think its probably because we were so bolshy and confrontational. People were either with us or against us. There was never an in-between. Me and Tessa are the only original members in the new incarnation of The Slits. The other girls are all new. They bring the youth and vitality and we bring the roots and the history and the legend. We don’t see what we’re doing as reforming The Slits either because we’re not interested in nostalgia. We’re interested in moving forwards and taking the group to the next level. I can’t comment on how the other girls in the original group feel because that’s a touchy subject. It's too personal and too political to discuss in the media and I don’t want to upset or deceive anybody. Tessa and I just knew we had to continue our mission. We lost touch completely when I moved to Jamaica but I’m glad we’re working together again. She’s an incredible bass player and an incredible woman. It took us ages to recruit the right girls but eventually we found Nadia, Adele, No, Holly and Lauren. Nadia and Adele both play the guitar, No plays the drums and Holly and Lauren both sing and are jacks of all trades. Holly is the daughter of Paul Cook from the Pistols and Lauren is the daughter of Mick Jones from The Clash - so the punk legacy continues! We played our first gigs together in London recently and I have to say, I think we sounded pretty good. I wouldn’t say I enjoyed myself because enjoyment is not a word I’d ever use to describe playing live but the audience seemed to have a good time. We played ‘Typical Girls’, ‘Instant Hit’, ‘Spend Spend Spend’, and a couple of songs from my recent solo album Dread More Dan Dead. Since then, we’ve gone into the studio with Marco from Adam and The Ants and recorded an EP, which should be out soon. There’s four tracks on it including a hypnotic, reggae version of ‘Kill Them With Love’ and a really raw version of ‘Number One Enemy’. That’s an original song that we wrote in ‘76 and never released or recorded. There’s also a completely new track which combines the sound of the old skool with more cutting edge hip hop. I don’t know what people will make of it but I like the fact all the tracks are so different. It would be great if one of them got lots of airplay and become a big hit but I can’t imagine that happening, not when the music industry is just as difficult as it was in ‘77. Men still overshadow women and women are still being depicted as sex kittens. I’ve been told bands like Le Tigre and Chicks on Speed have kept the spirit of The Slits alive over the last decade, but it's hard for me to comment since I’m not that familiar with their music. I like the idea of there being lots of baby Slits dotted across the world, though. I find that very empowering. The line-up and the sound might have changed but the attitude and intention of The Slits is exactly the same. We were musical terrorists then and we’re musical terrorists now. The revolution continues! ARI UP WAS TALKING TO SARAH-JANE Ari Up’s solo album Dread More Dan Dead is out now. For live dates and more info about The Slits visit www.theslits.co.uk

Everywhere I go people still want to talk to me about The Slits.

Sometimes it’s old punks and rockers reminiscing about the anarchy of ‘77 to ‘79, sometimes its riot grrrls and 18 year olds that have just started their own band.

It doesn’t make any difference to me whether their questions are original or I’ve already heard them a million times before, the important thing is people still want to know about The Slits.

Whatever anyone else says, we weren’t just a punk rock group – we were four girls on a mission to bring about the revolution. We could have chosen film or theatre or literature or art as our medium but we chose music because we knew it would have the most impact and immediacy.

I look at the bands making music these days and most of them seem happy to play by the rules and do what their managers and record labels tell them.

They might call themselves free-spirited but you can tell they are in it

for the exposure and the money and the record sales. It was never about

anything that superficial for us. It was about passion and politics and the

four of us coming together to create this incredible explosion of energy.

People assume we must have had dozens of offers to reform The Slits over the years because bands like the Pistols have, but nobody ever asked us. I don’t know why but I think its probably because we were so bolshy and

confrontational.

People were either with us or against us. There was never an in-between.

Me and Tessa are the only original members in the new incarnation of The

Slits. The other girls are all new. They bring the youth and vitality and we

bring the roots and the history and the legend.

We don’t see what we’re doing as reforming The Slits either because we’re not interested in nostalgia. We’re interested in moving forwards and taking the group to the next level.

I can’t comment on how the other girls in the original group feel because that’s a touchy subject. It’s too personal and too political to discuss in the media and I don’t want to upset or deceive anybody. Tessa and I just knew we had to continue our mission.

We lost touch completely when I moved to Jamaica but I’m glad we’re working together again. She’s an incredible bass player and an incredible woman.

It took us ages to recruit the right girls but eventually we found Nadia,

Adele, No, Holly and Lauren. Nadia and Adele both play the guitar, No plays the drums and Holly and Lauren both sing and are jacks of all trades. Holly is the daughter of Paul Cook from the Pistols and Lauren is the daughter of Mick Jones from The Clash – so the punk legacy continues!

We played our first gigs together in London recently and I have to say, I think we sounded pretty good. I wouldn’t say I enjoyed myself because enjoyment is not a word I’d ever use to describe playing live but the audience seemed to have a good time.

We played ‘Typical Girls’, ‘Instant Hit’, ‘Spend Spend Spend’, and a couple of songs from my recent solo album Dread More Dan Dead.

Since then, we’ve gone into the studio with Marco from Adam and The Ants and recorded an EP, which should be out soon.

There’s four tracks on it including a hypnotic, reggae version of ‘Kill Them With Love’ and a really raw version of ‘Number One Enemy’. That’s an original song that we wrote in ‘76 and never released or recorded. There’s also a completely new track which combines the sound of the old skool with more cutting edge hip hop.

I don’t know what people will make of it but I like the fact all the tracks are so different. It would be great if one of them got lots of airplay and become a big hit but I can’t imagine that happening, not when the music industry is just as difficult as it was in ‘77.

Men still overshadow women and women are still being depicted as sex kittens.

I’ve been told bands like Le Tigre and Chicks on Speed have kept the spirit

of The Slits alive over the last decade, but it’s hard for me to comment

since I’m not that familiar with their music.

I like the idea of there being lots of baby Slits dotted across the world, though. I find that very empowering. The line-up and the sound might have changed but the attitude and intention of The Slits is exactly the same.

We were musical terrorists then and we’re musical terrorists now. The revolution continues!

ARI UP WAS TALKING TO SARAH-JANE

Ari Up’s solo album Dread More Dan Dead is out now. For live dates and more info about The Slits visit www.theslits.co.uk

Richard Hawley to play homecoming show

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Acclaimed songwriter Richard Hawley has announced two winter shows, one in his hometown of Sheffield to round off his amazing year. Hawley’s third solo album Coles Corner, named after a place in Sheffield where lovers court, has just achieved Gold status in the UK – sales of over 100,000 copies. The album was also nominated for this years Mercury Music Prize – when the Arctic Monkeys pipped Hawley to the prize, the Monkeys Alex Turner quipped “Somebody call 999, Richard Hawley's been robbed!" The ex-Longpigs and Pulp member Hawley is currently in the studio recording a follow-up album but will play the following two shows: Shepherds Bush Empire (November 29) Sheffield City Hall (December 12) For more information about Hawley – Click here to go to his homepage

Acclaimed songwriter Richard Hawley has announced two winter shows, one in his hometown of Sheffield to round off his amazing year.

Hawley’s third solo album Coles Corner, named after a place in Sheffield where lovers court, has just achieved Gold status in the UK – sales of over 100,000 copies.

The album was also nominated for this years Mercury Music Prize – when the Arctic Monkeys pipped Hawley to the prize, the Monkeys Alex Turner quipped “Somebody call 999, Richard Hawley’s been robbed!”

The ex-Longpigs and Pulp member Hawley is currently in the studio recording a follow-up album but will play the following two shows:

Shepherds Bush Empire (November 29)

Sheffield City Hall (December 12)

For more information about Hawley – Click here to go to his homepage

The Return Of The Mighty Stooges

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Iggy Pop and the Stooges have just completed work on their first new studio album since 1973’s David Bowie-produced “Raw Power.” The new album is due for release in March, after mastering at London’s Abbey Road Studios. As previously reported on www.uncut.co.uk, The Stooges are now joined by The Minutemen’s bassist Mike Watt who replaces Dave Alexander. The 16-track album recorded with Steve Albini at Electrical Audio Studios in Chicago includes a vocal contribution from Brendan Benson on “Free And Freaky”. Other song titles for the new material include "Trollin',” "ATM," "You Can't Have Friends," "My Idea of Fun," "The Weirdness" and "Greedy Awful People." Iggy Pop, speaking to Billboard.com, confesses that being back with the Asheton brothers did prove difficult at times. He said, "Some of it is exciting and some of it is scary, and I don't care to go over there. But at the end of the day, I know these guys. I don't know anybody else quite that way, “ he concluded. Iggy and The Stooges are headlining the UK Nightmare Before Christmas festival at Minehead on December 8. They also plan to tour in the Spring around the time of the record’s release. A show on March 17 is already lined up at the South By Southwest festival in Austin, Texas. For Mike Watt’s perspective in making the new Stooges record – Click here

Iggy Pop and the Stooges have just completed work on their first new studio album since 1973’s David Bowie-produced “Raw Power.”

The new album is due for release in March, after mastering at London’s Abbey Road Studios.

As previously reported on www.uncut.co.uk, The Stooges are now joined by The Minutemen’s bassist Mike Watt who replaces Dave Alexander.

The 16-track album recorded with Steve Albini at Electrical Audio Studios in Chicago includes a vocal contribution from Brendan Benson on “Free And Freaky”.

Other song titles for the new material include “Trollin’,” “ATM,” “You Can’t Have Friends,” “My Idea of Fun,” “The Weirdness” and “Greedy Awful People.”

Iggy Pop, speaking to Billboard.com, confesses that being back with the Asheton brothers did prove difficult at times.

He said, “Some of it is exciting and some of it is scary, and I don’t care to go over there. But at the end of the day, I know these guys. I don’t know anybody else quite that way, “ he concluded.

Iggy and The Stooges are headlining the UK Nightmare Before Christmas festival at Minehead on December 8.

They also plan to tour in the Spring around the time of the record’s release.

A show on March 17 is already lined up at the South By Southwest festival in Austin, Texas.

For Mike Watt’s perspective in making the new Stooges record – Click here

Various Artists – Forever Changing: The Golden Age Of Elektra Records 1963-1973

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After 55 years in the American music business, it looks increasingly unlikely that we’ll hear from Elektra Records again. Formerly home to Tim Buckley, Love and The Doors, Elektra had a nondescript 1990s before being merged in 2004 with Atlantic. We are told it now exists merely "as an imprint of an office within the Warner Music Group corporate structure". An imprint within a structure is a sad end for a label that earned an international connoisseur audience in the 1960s with its mouthwatering folk/rock/blues roster, fastidious production values and trend-setting cover art. Even today – diminished to CD size – the landmark Elektra recordings ("Strange Days", "Forever Changes", "Goodbye And Hello") are artefacts of alarming beauty. No matter what the genre, Elektra’s Jac Holzman specialised in promoting off-kilter, incorrigible talent (Phil Ochs, Arthur Lee, Jim Morrison, Iggy Stooge), not only reflecting, but undoubtedly influencing, the strange course that American music took in the Vietnam era. From folk-rock to Lizard Kings to the 1970s singer-songwriter boom, Elektra’s logo was at the forefront. A five-CD anthology, "Forever Changing: The Golden Age Of Elektra Records 1963-73" doesn’t attempt to straddle the label’s lifetime. Compiled by three Englishmen (Uncut regular Mick Houghton, Stuart Batsford and Phil Smee), it focuses on a 10-year period of acceleration and revolution which made Elektra successful, but also unrecognisable. The box set begins with the first of six appearances by Judy Collins ("Turn! Turn! Turn!") and ends, a decade later, with a mortally over-hyped Bowie impersonator named Jobriath. It’s a proper story. The 40,000-word booklet tells of genius, madness, vindication, failure, disillusion and death. The compilers have been assiduous, skilfully sequencing 117 songs into a convincing 'flow', including more than 50 never released on CD before. The first disc is primarily non-electric. On its picaresque journey we encounter strait-laced balladeers, railroad hollerers, jug bands, banjoists and the political activist Ochs, represented by his anti-warcry "I Ain’t Marching Anymore". Judy Henske’s "High Flying Bird" (1964) is folk-rock’s future delineated in booming drums and bending guitar licks. Dick Rosmini’s triptych of impressionistic instrumentals rivals Bert Jansch. And whilst the more earnest folkies, inevitably, sound cruelly quaint at 40 years’ remove from Dallas motorcades and Cuban missiles, Fred Neil ("The Other Side To This Life") has a voice so sensually chocolatey that the generations between us and him simply fall away. The following two discs acknowledge Elektra’s 1966-67 move into electric rock with Love ("My Little Red Book", "Alone Again Or") and The Doors ("Light My Fire", "Five To One"). Neither disc relies very heavily on rock, however. There are haunting, well-chosen performances from Elektra’s coterie of idiosyncratic singers: Tom Rush, Tim Buckley, David Blue, David Ackles, Nico. The UK’s Incredible String Band ("First Girl I Loved") apply their outlandish Kenneth Williams voices to a rites-of-passage tale suffused with Indo-Chinese exoticism. And as the compilers intrepidly chart the outermost reaches of the Elektra roster, even '60s aficionados might stare blankly at names like Alasdair Clayre, David Stoughton and The Waphphle. This is serious archivist stuff. Indeed it’s disc three, a minor miracle of judicious programming, that affords most pleasure. Tom Rush’s poignant prototype of "No Regrets" is counterbalanced by Stoughton’s eerie toytown whimsy. The lethal melancholia of Nico and Ackles is cobwebbed away by the motorvatin' Stalk-Forrest Group (a pre-incarnation of Blue Oyster Cult), who propel us towards the MC5’s fever-pitched "Kick Out The Jams" by way of Delaney & Bonnie. Even Judy Collins, whose kumbaya-my-lordy tintinnabulations aren’t always welcome, is resplendent on "Both Sides Now". Elektra now led the field in artist diversity, and disc three proves it. But, tellingly, after a fists-flailing Stooges opener to disc four ("Down On The Street"), it’s fumigation time. The antiseptic scalpels of soft-rock make their clean incisions: Bread (who’d sell millions) and Farquahr and Plainsong (who wouldn’t). The singer-songwriter craft, always vital to Holzman’s plans, was dominating Elektra once again by 1972. The new superstar was not Jim Morrison, but Carly Simon. Disc four has laidback vibes, then, but not much mood alteration. There‘s little 'exclusivity', little to distinguish Elektra from other labels – from David Geffen's Asylum, for instance, with whom Holzman sanctioned a 1973 joining-of-forces. Elektra forged ahead into punk and New Wave (where it signed Television and The Cars), and even beyond to the Pixies and Sugarcubes, but its original identity had totally evaporated. That identity is a moot point when we consider disc five, which aims to take "a more skewed and tangential perspective". The joker in "Forever Changing"'s pack, disc five has no musical policy or mission statement, save that its contents are roughly chronological. Some of these bands didn’t stay at Elektra long. The Beefeaters became The Byrds, joining Columbia. The Lovin' Spoonful signed to Kama Sutra. Eric Clapton & The Powerhouse, a supergroup with Steve Winwood, was a 1966 studio one-off. Along the way, disc five is sidetracked gleefully by calypso crooners, bluegrassmen playing Beatles covers, marijuana paeans by pro-legalisation campaigners and – yes – bloody Judy Collins. But you can’t complain. The adventures, the snap decisions, the gambles and mistakes of life – "Forever Changing" has them all. It has music. Music that allows us to bear witness to what must have been a fabulous ride. By David Cavanagh

After 55 years in the American music business, it looks increasingly unlikely that we’ll hear from Elektra Records again. Formerly home to Tim Buckley, Love and The Doors, Elektra had a nondescript 1990s before being merged in 2004 with Atlantic. We are told it now exists merely “as an imprint of an office within the Warner Music Group corporate structure”.

An imprint within a structure is a sad end for a label that earned an international connoisseur audience in the 1960s with its mouthwatering folk/rock/blues roster, fastidious production values and trend-setting cover art. Even today – diminished to CD size – the landmark Elektra recordings (“Strange Days”, “Forever Changes”, “Goodbye And Hello”) are artefacts of alarming beauty.

No matter what the genre, Elektra’s Jac Holzman specialised in promoting off-kilter, incorrigible talent (Phil Ochs, Arthur Lee, Jim Morrison, Iggy Stooge), not only reflecting, but undoubtedly influencing, the strange course that American music took in the Vietnam era. From folk-rock to Lizard Kings to the 1970s singer-songwriter boom, Elektra’s logo was at the forefront.

A five-CD anthology, “Forever Changing: The Golden Age Of Elektra Records 1963-73” doesn’t attempt to straddle the label’s lifetime. Compiled by three Englishmen (Uncut regular Mick Houghton, Stuart Batsford and Phil Smee), it focuses on a 10-year period of acceleration and revolution which made Elektra successful, but also unrecognisable.

The box set begins with the first of six appearances by Judy Collins (“Turn! Turn! Turn!”) and ends, a decade later, with a mortally over-hyped Bowie impersonator named Jobriath. It’s a proper story. The 40,000-word booklet tells of genius, madness, vindication, failure, disillusion and death. The compilers have been assiduous, skilfully sequencing 117 songs into a convincing ‘flow’, including more than 50 never released on CD before.

The first disc is primarily non-electric. On its picaresque journey we encounter strait-laced balladeers, railroad hollerers, jug bands, banjoists and the political activist Ochs, represented by his anti-warcry “I Ain’t Marching Anymore”. Judy Henske’s “High Flying Bird” (1964) is folk-rock’s future delineated in booming drums and bending guitar licks. Dick Rosmini’s triptych of impressionistic instrumentals rivals Bert Jansch. And whilst the more earnest folkies, inevitably, sound cruelly quaint at 40 years’ remove from Dallas motorcades and Cuban missiles, Fred Neil (“The Other Side To This Life”) has a voice so sensually chocolatey that the generations between us and him simply fall away.

The following two discs acknowledge Elektra’s 1966-67 move into electric rock with Love (“My Little Red Book”, “Alone Again Or”) and The Doors (“Light My Fire”, “Five To One”). Neither disc relies very heavily on rock, however. There are haunting, well-chosen performances from Elektra’s coterie of idiosyncratic singers: Tom Rush, Tim Buckley, David Blue, David Ackles, Nico. The UK’s Incredible String Band (“First Girl I Loved”) apply their outlandish Kenneth Williams voices to a rites-of-passage tale suffused with Indo-Chinese exoticism. And as the compilers intrepidly chart the outermost reaches of the Elektra roster, even ’60s aficionados might stare blankly at names like Alasdair Clayre, David Stoughton and The Waphphle. This is serious archivist stuff.

Indeed it’s disc three, a minor miracle of judicious programming, that affords most pleasure. Tom Rush’s poignant prototype of “No Regrets” is counterbalanced by Stoughton’s eerie toytown whimsy. The lethal melancholia of Nico and Ackles is cobwebbed away by the motorvatin’ Stalk-Forrest Group (a pre-incarnation of Blue Oyster Cult), who propel us towards the MC5’s fever-pitched “Kick Out The Jams” by way of Delaney & Bonnie. Even Judy Collins, whose kumbaya-my-lordy tintinnabulations aren’t always welcome, is resplendent on “Both Sides Now”.

Elektra now led the field in artist diversity, and disc three proves it. But, tellingly, after a fists-flailing Stooges opener to disc four (“Down On The Street”), it’s fumigation time. The antiseptic scalpels of soft-rock make their clean incisions: Bread (who’d sell millions) and Farquahr and Plainsong (who wouldn’t). The singer-songwriter craft, always vital to Holzman’s plans, was dominating Elektra once again by 1972. The new superstar was not Jim Morrison, but Carly Simon.

Disc four has laidback vibes, then, but not much mood alteration. There‘s little ‘exclusivity’, little to distinguish Elektra from other labels – from David Geffen’s Asylum, for instance, with whom Holzman sanctioned a 1973 joining-of-forces. Elektra forged ahead into punk and New Wave (where it signed Television and The Cars), and even beyond to the Pixies and Sugarcubes, but its original identity had totally evaporated.

That identity is a moot point when we consider disc five, which aims to take “a more skewed and tangential perspective”. The joker in “Forever Changing”‘s pack, disc five has no musical policy or mission statement, save that its contents are roughly chronological. Some of these bands didn’t stay at Elektra long. The Beefeaters became The Byrds, joining Columbia. The Lovin’ Spoonful signed to Kama Sutra. Eric Clapton & The Powerhouse, a supergroup with Steve Winwood, was a 1966 studio one-off. Along the way, disc five is sidetracked gleefully by calypso crooners, bluegrassmen playing Beatles covers, marijuana paeans by pro-legalisation campaigners and – yes – bloody Judy Collins.

But you can’t complain. The adventures, the snap decisions, the gambles and mistakes of life – “Forever Changing” has them all. It has music. Music that allows us to bear witness to what must have been a fabulous ride.

By David Cavanagh

Robert Plant – Nine Lives (Box Set)

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Good grief, has Robert Plant really made all these albums? His solo career has now lasted nearly twice as long as Zeppelin’s, and the nine discs assembled here run from 1982’s "Pictures At Eleven" to last year’s "Mighty Rearranger". Their trajectory illustrates how he escaped from Zep’s shadow and grew increasingly adventurous in his musical syntheses and quest for cover versions. But while he excels on "Fate Of Nations" (1993), "Manic Nirvana" (1990) and "…Rearranger", some of the earlier stuff has dated both technologically and musically. More digestible is the "Sixty Six To Timbuktu" compilation, which cherry-picks the albums and adds a bunch of tantalising rarities. By Adam Sweeting

Good grief, has Robert Plant really made all these albums? His solo career has now lasted nearly twice as long as Zeppelin’s, and the nine discs assembled here run from 1982’s “Pictures At Eleven” to last year’s “Mighty Rearranger”.

Their trajectory illustrates how he escaped from Zep’s shadow and grew increasingly adventurous in his musical syntheses and quest for cover versions. But while he excels on “Fate Of Nations” (1993), “Manic Nirvana” (1990) and “…Rearranger”, some of the earlier stuff has dated both technologically and musically. More digestible is the “Sixty Six To Timbuktu” compilation, which cherry-picks the albums and adds a bunch of tantalising rarities.

By Adam Sweeting

Damien Rice – 9

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The gradual success of Rice’s 2002 debut, "O", took him from cult status to over-exposure. Fortunately, it hasn’t blunted his songwriting. "9" is a delicate and sometimes bleak record, verging at times on the melodramatic, with Rice apparently exploring the entrails of a terrible romantic hurt. His debt to Leonard Cohen is evident and, while the music sometimes swells to gloomy thunder (even sounding like PJ Harvey on "Me, My Yoke And I"), Rice is at his best when he’s quiet. The vocal on "Elephant" is brave, staking a terrain right on the edge of embarrassment, and the single "9 Crimes" is a tender duet with regular foil Lisa Hannigan. "O" fans will appreciate the sweet simplicity of "Dogs", while the Nick Cave-like "Accidental Babies" is a grimly intimate exploration of jealousy. By Alastair McKay

The gradual success of Rice’s 2002 debut, “O”, took him from cult status to over-exposure. Fortunately, it hasn’t blunted his songwriting. “9” is a delicate and sometimes bleak record, verging at times on the melodramatic, with Rice apparently exploring the entrails of a terrible romantic hurt.

His debt to Leonard Cohen is evident and, while the music sometimes swells to gloomy thunder (even sounding like PJ Harvey on “Me, My Yoke And I”), Rice is at his best when he’s quiet. The vocal on “Elephant” is brave, staking a terrain right on the edge of embarrassment, and the single “9 Crimes” is a tender duet with regular foil Lisa Hannigan. “O” fans will appreciate the sweet simplicity of “Dogs”, while the Nick Cave-like “Accidental Babies” is a grimly intimate exploration of jealousy.

By Alastair McKay

Willie Nelson And The Cardinals – Songbird

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Opening for Nelson at New York’s Beacon Theatre in November 2005, Ryan Adams closed with Whiskeytown classic "16 Days". "I wrote that song under the influence of much whiskey and Willie Nelson," he told the audience, "so I thought I'd do it for you." It was something of a surprising admission. An appearance at Nelson’s 2002 birthday bash notwithstanding, Adams has been much more associated with other outlaws; Gram Parsons, Dylan and Keith Richards in particular. But listen to, say, "Houses On The Hill" or "Oh My Sweet Carolina" and the Nelson influence is palpable. They may share a knack for controversy (Nelson recently hit the headlines for a Louisiana drugs bust), but what really draws together these two free spirits is a willingness to absorb all manner of musical styles. Following recent excursions into reggae and jazz, Nelson allows Adams free rein on "Songbird". By drafting in his own backing band The Cardinals – Neal Casal, Jon Graboff, Brad Pemberton and Catherine Popper – the sound is urgent and instinctive. Adams’ production frames Nelson’s knotty old pipes in boisterous settings, not least by turning Gram Parsons’ "$1,000 Wedding" into a cranky old rock number. An equally raucous take on Grateful Dead’s "Stella Blue" ends amidst a cloud of guitar spray, whilst Nelson’s own "Rainy Day Blues" is recast with a blowsy steel guitar solo and harmonica courtesy of Nelson veteran Mickey Raphael. Of the other covers, Leonard Cohen’s "Hallelujah" suffers next to inevitable comparisons with Messrs Buckley and Wainwright, but the two new originals are wonderful. Set against pedal steel, the plaintive "Back To Earth" is up there with Nelson’s finest work, whilst the Adams-penned "Blue Hotel" – country gospel lifted up by Hammond organ and churchy choir – feels like a modern classic. Word is they weren’t always sympathetic in the studio, and Adams has already admitted they have "a weird relationship", but the results are outstanding. Nelson’s best album in a decade. By Rob Hughes

Opening for Nelson at New York’s Beacon Theatre in November 2005, Ryan Adams closed with Whiskeytown classic “16 Days”. “I wrote that song under the influence of much whiskey and Willie Nelson,” he told the audience, “so I thought I’d do it for you.”

It was something of a surprising admission. An appearance at Nelson’s 2002 birthday bash notwithstanding, Adams has been much more associated with other outlaws; Gram Parsons, Dylan and Keith Richards in particular. But listen to, say, “Houses On The Hill” or “Oh My Sweet Carolina” and the Nelson influence is palpable.

They may share a knack for controversy (Nelson recently hit the headlines for a Louisiana drugs bust), but what really draws together these two free spirits is a willingness to absorb all manner of musical styles. Following recent excursions into reggae and jazz, Nelson allows Adams free rein on “Songbird”. By drafting in his own backing band The Cardinals – Neal Casal, Jon Graboff, Brad Pemberton and Catherine Popper – the sound is urgent and instinctive.

Adams’ production frames Nelson’s knotty old pipes in boisterous settings, not least by turning Gram Parsons’ “$1,000 Wedding” into a cranky old rock number. An equally raucous take on Grateful Dead’s “Stella Blue” ends amidst a cloud of guitar spray, whilst Nelson’s own “Rainy Day Blues” is recast with a blowsy steel guitar solo and harmonica courtesy of Nelson veteran Mickey Raphael.

Of the other covers, Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” suffers next to inevitable comparisons with Messrs Buckley and Wainwright, but the two new originals are wonderful. Set against pedal steel, the plaintive “Back To Earth” is up there with Nelson’s finest work, whilst the Adams-penned “Blue Hotel” – country gospel lifted up by Hammond organ and churchy choir – feels like a modern classic.

Word is they weren’t always sympathetic in the studio, and Adams has already admitted they have “a weird relationship”, but the results are outstanding. Nelson’s best album in a decade.

By Rob Hughes

San Francisco’s Flipper To Reform

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Inflential punk band Flipper are reforming again and the new incarnation has ex-Nirvana Krist Novoselic on bass and they will be bringing their trademark gigs of noise to the UK next month. Krist Novoselic is replacing Bruno DeMartis as Flipper’s new bassist, a dangerous role some would say. Talking about the band's history, Bruce Loose once quipped that being in Flipper was just "like Spinal Tap, except the bass player keeps dying". Flipper have lost many members to wreckless rock ‘n’ roll and numerous heroin overdoses throughout their patchy career, notably founder member Will Shatter who died in 1987 and bassist John Dougherty who died in 1992. After Shatter’s death, Bruce Loose, himself an addict, allegedly stole the band's master tapes from Subterranean's warehouse, to broker a deal with legendary LA-based producer Rick Rubin. Rubin still holds the rights to Flipper’s back catalogue and plans to re-release six albums plus an album’s worth of never-before-released tracks from the 1984 “Gone Fishin” sessions, on his own American Recordings label next year. The seminal punk band kick of their tour in Seattle on December 1, coming to the UK on December 8 to play the All Tomorrow’s Parties festival in Minehead with Iggy and The Stooges and Sonic Youth. Catch the rejuvenated Flipper at the following venues next month: Minehead - ATP festival “Nightmare Before Christmas” (December 8) London – Scala (11) Manchester - Academy 3 (13) Glasgow - The Garage (14) Belfast – Venue tbc (15) Dublin - The Village (16) Galway – Venue tbc (17)

Inflential punk band Flipper are reforming again and the new incarnation has ex-Nirvana Krist Novoselic on bass and they will be bringing their trademark gigs of noise to the UK next month.

Krist Novoselic is replacing Bruno DeMartis as Flipper’s new bassist, a dangerous role some would say.

Talking about the band’s history, Bruce Loose once quipped that being in Flipper was just “like Spinal Tap, except the bass player keeps dying”.

Flipper have lost many members to wreckless rock ‘n’ roll and numerous heroin overdoses throughout their patchy career, notably founder member Will Shatter who died in 1987 and bassist John Dougherty who died in 1992.

After Shatter’s death, Bruce Loose, himself an addict, allegedly stole the band’s master tapes from Subterranean’s warehouse, to broker a deal with legendary LA-based producer Rick Rubin.

Rubin still holds the rights to Flipper’s back catalogue and plans to re-release six albums plus an album’s worth of never-before-released tracks from the 1984 “Gone Fishin” sessions, on his own American Recordings label next year.

The seminal punk band kick of their tour in Seattle on December 1, coming to the UK on December 8 to play the All Tomorrow’s Parties festival in Minehead with Iggy and The Stooges and Sonic Youth.

Catch the rejuvenated Flipper at the following venues next month:

Minehead – ATP festival “Nightmare Before Christmas” (December 8)

London – Scala (11)

Manchester – Academy 3 (13)

Glasgow – The Garage (14)

Belfast – Venue tbc (15)

Dublin – The Village (16)

Galway – Venue tbc (17)

Watch The Afghan Whigs Go Beat Crazy

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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 The Afghan Whigs cover Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition” in this classic live performance. Frontman Greg Dulli is heard to shout out to the crowd, “Y’all just gonna stand there or what? This is a good fuckin beat!” Greg Dulli is currently on a short UK tour joined by his new band Twilight Singers and former Screaming Tree’s frontman Mark Lanagen. Watch Dulli in Whig-out action 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 The Afghan Whigs cover Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition” in this classic live performance.

Frontman Greg Dulli is heard to shout out to the crowd, “Y’all just gonna stand there or what? This is a good fuckin beat!”

Greg Dulli is currently on a short UK tour joined by his new band Twilight Singers and former Screaming Tree’s frontman Mark Lanagen.

Watch Dulli in Whig-out action by clicking here now

Quest for the Next Big Thing

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Echo & The Bunnymen singer Ian McCulloch is searching for music’s next big thing as part of a new unsigned bands competition, Pringlesunsung. The singer is joined by ex-Island Records Managing Director Marc Marot, Radio 2 contributor Paul Sexton and award-winning producers Bacon & Quarmby in a campaign that aims to help bands make and release their own material. McCulloch says he’s “really excited about being involved”, especially because of the fact that “the music industry can be hard to break into, especially if you sound or look a bit different to everyone else.” He adds that, "We need to encourage diversity in music, and campaigns like this are exactly the sort of thing that could uncover the next big thing in the music world." To enter the search, all bands have to do is post a song online along with a few details – so everyone can listen and rate what they hear. The winners of the search will get the chance to record a demo produced by Bacon & Quarmby as well as receive important management advice. The winning artists will potentially release a download single, too. Join Ian McCulloch for a special live webchat at 2pm this Friday (November 24) when he will dispense advice on how to get a foot in the musical door and dole out as many tips on how avoid pitfalls as possible! To find out more about McCulloch’s online chat – Click here to go to www.webchats.tv

Echo & The Bunnymen singer Ian McCulloch is searching for music’s next big thing as part of a new unsigned bands competition, Pringlesunsung.

The singer is joined by ex-Island Records Managing Director Marc Marot, Radio 2 contributor Paul Sexton and award-winning producers Bacon & Quarmby in a campaign that aims to help bands make and release their own material.

McCulloch says he’s “really excited about being involved”, especially because of the fact that “the music industry can be hard to break into, especially if you sound or look a bit different to everyone else.”

He adds that, “We need to encourage diversity in music, and campaigns like this are exactly the sort of thing that could uncover the next big thing in the music world.”

To enter the search, all bands have to do is post a song online along with a few details – so everyone can listen and rate what they hear.

The winners of the search will get the chance to record a demo produced by Bacon & Quarmby as well as receive important management advice. The winning artists will potentially release a download single, too.

Join Ian McCulloch for a special live webchat at 2pm this Friday (November 24) when he will dispense advice on how to get a foot in the musical door and dole out as many tips on how avoid pitfalls as possible!

To find out more about McCulloch’s online chat – Click here to go to www.webchats.tv

The Beatles Love Is Global

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The Beatles “Love Album” is launched by Apple Corps/ EMI today and has a special globally tracking music stream available on the band’s website. In 1967, The Beatles took part in a similar event when 'All You Need Is Love' was broadcast as part of a telethon, becoming one of history's biggest simultaneous broadcasts. This time around, by logging in, a Google map will appear allowing you to literally pin-point your location. You are able to see where the album has been streamed throughout the world. Demand for the site meant that its server crashed within 30 minutes of launching the stream, but the music is flowing once more. The new album is effectively the soundtrack to the Cirque du Soleil show of the same name, a celebration of The Beatles that opened last year in Las Vegas. The album was produced by George Martin and his son Giles from Abbey Road mastertapes to create a new perspective on Beatles classics like “Get Back”, “I Am The Walrus”, “I Want To Hold Your Hand”, “Strawberry Fields Forever” and “Lucy in The Sky With Diamonds”. From today, to become a part of the universal audience for the “Love” album visit www.thebeatles.com/hearlove and simply log on

The Beatles “Love Album” is launched by Apple Corps/ EMI today and has a special globally tracking music stream available on the band’s website.

In 1967, The Beatles took part in a similar event when ‘All You Need Is Love’ was broadcast as part of a telethon, becoming one of history’s biggest simultaneous broadcasts.

This time around, by logging in, a Google map will appear allowing you to literally pin-point your location. You are able to see where the album has been streamed throughout the world.

Demand for the site meant that its server crashed within 30 minutes of launching the stream, but the music is flowing once more.

The new album is effectively the soundtrack to the Cirque du Soleil show of the same name, a celebration of The Beatles that opened last year in Las Vegas.

The album was produced by George Martin and his son Giles from Abbey Road mastertapes to create a new perspective on Beatles classics like “Get Back”, “I Am The Walrus”, “I Want To Hold Your Hand”, “Strawberry Fields Forever” and “Lucy in The Sky With Diamonds”.

From today, to become a part of the universal audience for the “Love” album visit www.thebeatles.com/hearlove and simply log on

Bryan Ferry To Play UK Shows

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Bryan Ferry has announced an extensive UK tour to take place next March, including a prestigious date at London’s Albert Hall. The tour will coincide with the release of Ferry’s first solo album since 2002’s Top 10-charting album “Frantic”. Ferry has said that as well as his premiering his new solo material he will play tracks from the Roxy Music catalogue. Last summer Ferry and Roxy Music were the star headliners at the Isle of Wight, playing to a packed 40,000 capacity festival. Ferry also played the Live 8 concert in Berlin last summer, making him one of the few artists in the world to play at both Live 8 and the original Live Aid. You can catch Ferry at the following venues around the UK: Carlisle Sands Centre (March 1) Dundee Caird Hall (3) Glasgow Clyde Auditorium (4) Edinburgh Playhouse Theatre (5) Gateshead Sage Theatre (7) Birmingham Symphony Hall (8) Manchester Bridgewater Hall (10) Sheffield City Hall (11) Nottingham Royal Centre (13) London Royal Albert Hall (14 Bristol Colston Hall (16) Cardiff St Davids Hall (17) Ipswich Regent Theatre (19) Brighton Dome (20) Harrogate International Centre (22) Liverpool Philharmonic Hall (23) For ticket availability – Click here to go to nme.com/gigs

Bryan Ferry has announced an extensive UK tour to take place next March, including a prestigious date at London’s Albert Hall.

The tour will coincide with the release of Ferry’s first solo album since 2002’s Top 10-charting album “Frantic”.

Ferry has said that as well as his premiering his new solo material he will play tracks from the Roxy Music catalogue.

Last summer Ferry and Roxy Music were the star headliners at the Isle of Wight, playing to a packed 40,000 capacity festival.

Ferry also played the Live 8 concert in Berlin last summer, making him one of the few artists in the world to play at both Live 8 and the original Live Aid.

You can catch Ferry at the following venues around the UK:

Carlisle Sands Centre (March 1)

Dundee Caird Hall (3)

Glasgow Clyde Auditorium (4)

Edinburgh Playhouse Theatre (5)

Gateshead Sage Theatre (7)

Birmingham Symphony Hall (8)

Manchester Bridgewater Hall (10)

Sheffield City Hall (11)

Nottingham Royal Centre (13)

London Royal Albert Hall (14

Bristol Colston Hall (16)

Cardiff St Davids Hall (17)

Ipswich Regent Theatre (19)

Brighton Dome (20)

Harrogate International Centre (22)

Liverpool Philharmonic Hall (23)

For ticket availability – Click here to go to nme.com/gigs

The Prestige

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Batman director Christopher Nolan has been interested in adapting Christopher Priest's novel about two feuding Victorian magicians since the week he finished shooting Memento back in 2001. Nolan's movies have always been concerned with identity, trompe d'oeil and sleight of hand all of which are central to Priest's novel. Co-writing with brother Jonathan, the director's developed a story that exhibits his avowed love of Welles' alchemy of angles and perspective. Boasting a heaven-sent cast, The Prestige is a heart-pumping thriller and mesmerising mind-game. There hasn't been a tighter, more every-second-counts movie since, well, Memento. You immediately want to see it again, to fathom where the smoke and mirrors fooled you, where this brilliant director wilfully misdirected you. The title refers to the third and final "act" of any successful conjuring trick; the transformative moment when the magic happens. In fin de siecle England, Robert Angier (Jackman) and Alfred Borden (Bale) are up-and-coming illusionists, mentored by sage-like Cutter (Caine). Angier's a flashy, elegant showman, Borden a Cockney tough with more natural talent and, initially, greater keenness to get his hands dirty. When Angier's wife (Piper Perabo) is killed in an onstage accident, he lays the blame at Borden's door. The rivalry escalates, as does their fame. Soon it's out of control, with neither baulking at inflicting physical/psychological harm on each other. Glamorous assistant Olivia (Scarlett Johansson in a minor, bosomy role) is a trophy pawn. Using complex flashback structures, we're read their diaries as Borden faces trial for Angier's murder. We learn that a tormented Angier travelled to Colorado to seek out electrical pioneer Nikola Tesla (David Bowie, rueful, precise) whose inspiration helps him create the ultimate trick to better his foe; meanwhile both anti-heroes allowed spiralling obsession to wound those closest to them. The intensity is palpable; how it's achieved, less so. Breathtaking fast edits and multiple cut-aways bounce you between various time frames until the truth behind the bells and whistles is (perhaps) revealed. From its opening line - "Are you watching closely?" - to the final heartbeat, this is Nolan at his best - pushing every inch of the form's envelope yet keeping you twitching on the seat-edge. CHRIS ROBERTS

Batman director Christopher Nolan has been interested in adapting Christopher Priest’s novel about two feuding Victorian magicians since the week he finished shooting Memento back in 2001. Nolan’s movies have always been concerned with identity, trompe d’oeil and sleight of hand all of which are central to Priest’s novel.

Co-writing with brother Jonathan, the director’s developed a story that exhibits his avowed love of Welles’ alchemy of angles and perspective. Boasting a heaven-sent cast, The Prestige is a heart-pumping thriller and mesmerising mind-game. There hasn’t been a tighter, more every-second-counts movie since, well, Memento. You immediately want to see it again, to fathom where the smoke and mirrors fooled you, where this brilliant director wilfully misdirected you.

The title refers to the third and final “act” of any successful conjuring trick; the transformative moment when the magic happens. In fin de siecle England, Robert Angier (Jackman) and Alfred Borden (Bale) are up-and-coming illusionists, mentored by sage-like Cutter (Caine). Angier’s a flashy, elegant showman, Borden a Cockney tough with more natural talent and, initially, greater keenness to get his hands dirty. When Angier’s wife (Piper Perabo) is killed in an onstage accident, he lays the blame at Borden’s door.

The rivalry escalates, as does their fame. Soon it’s out of control, with neither baulking at inflicting physical/psychological harm on each other. Glamorous assistant Olivia (Scarlett Johansson in a minor, bosomy role) is a trophy pawn. Using complex flashback structures, we’re read their diaries as Borden faces trial for Angier’s murder.

We learn that a tormented Angier travelled to Colorado to seek out electrical pioneer Nikola Tesla (David Bowie, rueful, precise) whose inspiration helps him create the ultimate trick to better his foe; meanwhile both anti-heroes allowed spiralling obsession to wound those closest to them.

The intensity is palpable; how it’s achieved, less so. Breathtaking fast edits and multiple cut-aways bounce you between various time frames until the truth behind the bells and whistles is (perhaps) revealed. From its opening line – “Are you watching closely?” – to the final heartbeat, this is Nolan at his best – pushing every inch of the form’s envelope yet keeping you twitching on the seat-edge.

CHRIS ROBERTS