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Evil Dead Takes To The Stage

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“Evil Dead-The Musical” a show based on Sam Raimi’s 80’s cult horror movies Evil Dead and Evil Dead II opened last night off-Broadway, New York. Based on the scripts from the 3 movies - Evil Dead, Evil Dead II and the third affilliated film Army of Darkness- the rock musical is full of blood, gore and clever musical numbers. Original songs scored for the new musical include "What the Fuck Was That", "Look Who's Evil Now" and "All The Men In My Life Keep Getting Killed By Candarian Demons". The original horror movie pastiche hero ‘Ash’ will be played by a Bruce Campbell look-alike Ryan Ward. Directors of the musical Hinton Battle and Christopher Bond have got the backing of all original Evil Dead writers, producers and directors, including Sam Raimi. Bruce Campbell – the original Evil Dead-tamer actor from the 80's films will be holding a sold-out Q&A session after tonight’s performance. “Evil Dead – The Musical” is scheduled to run its camp gorefest until the end of the year. Plans to tour the musical to other major cities has been touted but have not been finalized as yet. For more information and to play in the interactive Evil Dead ‘cabin - Click here to go to the show’s website

“Evil Dead-The Musical” a show based on Sam Raimi’s 80’s cult horror movies Evil Dead and Evil Dead II opened last night off-Broadway, New York.

Based on the scripts from the 3 movies – Evil Dead, Evil Dead II and the third affilliated film Army of Darkness- the rock musical is full of blood, gore and clever musical numbers.

Original songs scored for the new musical include “What the Fuck Was That”, “Look Who’s Evil Now” and “All The Men In My Life Keep Getting Killed By Candarian Demons”.

The original horror movie pastiche hero ‘Ash’ will be played by a Bruce Campbell look-alike Ryan Ward.

Directors of the musical Hinton Battle and Christopher Bond have got the backing of all original Evil Dead writers, producers and directors, including Sam Raimi.

Bruce Campbell – the original Evil Dead-tamer actor from the 80’s films will be holding a sold-out Q&A session after tonight’s performance.

“Evil Dead – The Musical” is scheduled to run its camp gorefest until the end of the year.

Plans to tour the musical to other major cities has been touted but have not been finalized as yet.

For more information and to play in the interactive Evil Dead ‘cabin – Click here to go to the show’s website

New Arctic Monkeys Album Imminent

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Arctic Monkeys’ Alex Turner has exclusively told Uncut that he’s been working hard on new material despite the distraction of a whirlwind year, it’s been the “best year of our lives” he says. Turner has been writing lots of new songs, he says it’s like a compulsion, “I can’t stop writing songs, I don’t know what else I’m going to do.” Turner adds that the song tempo as illustrated on million-selling debut album “Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not” will be slower on the new one. The Monkey’s front man even contemplates that some of the songs will be played acoustically, he says “I’ve written quite a few slower ones- there’s 13 or 14 songs, maybe a few more, in different states.” He names one of the new Arctic Monkeys’ tracks as “Brain Storm” and head of Domino Records Laurence Bell who’s already heard the track, describes it as “very bright and metallic – it’ll shock a few people.” The Arctic Monkeys, our Hall of Fame New Band of the Year, are exclusively interviewed in the December issue of Uncut, on sale now.

Arctic Monkeys’ Alex Turner has exclusively told Uncut that he’s been working hard on new material despite the distraction of a whirlwind year, it’s been the “best year of our lives” he says.

Turner has been writing lots of new songs, he says it’s like a compulsion, “I can’t stop writing songs, I don’t know what else I’m going to do.”

Turner adds that the song tempo as illustrated on million-selling debut album “Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not” will be slower on the new one.

The Monkey’s front man even contemplates that some of the songs will be played acoustically, he says “I’ve written quite a few slower ones- there’s 13 or 14 songs, maybe a few more, in different states.”

He names one of the new Arctic Monkeys’ tracks as “Brain Storm” and head of Domino Records Laurence Bell who’s already heard the track, describes it as “very bright and metallic – it’ll shock a few people.”

The Arctic Monkeys, our Hall of Fame New Band of the Year, are exclusively interviewed in the December issue of Uncut, on sale now.

Noel Gallagher, Russell Brand and Co Rock Koko

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Noel Gallagher was joined onstage by his idol Paul Weller at a charity gig featuring a host of Britpop stars past and present at Koko in Camden last night. The night was organised and compered by tabloid-friendly comedian Russell Brand to raise money for drugs charity Focus 12. Referring to his own drug-addled past, Brand said: “I used to get drugs off people, now I’m trying to get people off drugs. I won’t bore you with the fact that this is about raising money for charity, though, mainly because the room smells like cannabis and cocaine.” Wearing four-inch heeled boots and hair somewhere between Captain Hook and the Earl of Rochester, the flamboyant comic stayed unusually quiet all night, preferring to let the music take centre stage. But Noel’s notorious younger brother Liam threatened to steal the show before a note had been played. The chants of “Liam! Liam!” rang around the room when the side-burned singer appeared on a balcony, goading the crowd and throwing water and plastic cups onto the heads below. North London hopefuls The Holloways opened proceedings with their folky, tuneful pop, given a country lilt by some dextrous fiddle playing, but the chants of “Oasis” throughout their set made it clear what the crowd wanted. They were followed by Carl Barat’s Dirty Pretty Things, who were last-minute replacements for Kasabian. Charlatans frontman Tim Burgess, a long-time friend of the Gallaghers, joined them for raucous versions of “Deadwood” and “Bang Bang You’re Dead”. DPT returned the favour, accompanying Burgess on a lively run-through of The Charlatans’ 1997 hit “North Country Boy”. When he finally arrived onstage to deafening cheers, accompanied by bandmate Gem Archer on electric guitar, Noel opened with the rarely performed “(Its Good) to Be Free” and treated the faithful to an acoustic set of hits, album tracks and B-sides such as “Slide Away”, “Listen Up”, “Half the World Away” and a faithful rendition of the Beatles’ 1967 masterpiece “Strawberry Fields Forever”. Noel told the crowd Kasabian guitarist Serge Pizzorno was suffering from laryngitis or “something pretentious like that” before dedicating “Cast No Shadow” to him. Mod legend Weller appeared half-way through Noel’s set to sing his 2005 solo single “Come On/Let’s Go” and the classic Jam song “Thick as Thieves” from the band’s 1979 album Setting Sons, but the crowd’s reaction was only luke-warm. Noel clearly enjoyed playing with the modfather but cries for “Champagne Supernova”, the 1995 Oasis track on which Weller played lead guitar, went ignored. Noel stormed from the stage during the encore of “Married With Children”, frustrated by a technical problem, leaving a flustered Brand struggling to keep the throng happy (“it’s the machines, I tell you, they’re against us. You’ve all seen Terminator 2!”) but it was only minutes before the Mancunian’s rapturous return.

Noel Gallagher was joined onstage by his idol Paul Weller at a charity gig featuring a host of Britpop stars past and present at Koko in Camden last night.

The night was organised and compered by tabloid-friendly comedian Russell Brand to raise money for drugs charity Focus 12.

Referring to his own drug-addled past, Brand said: “I used to get drugs off people, now I’m trying to get people off drugs. I won’t bore you with the fact that this is about raising money for charity, though, mainly because the room smells like cannabis and cocaine.”

Wearing four-inch heeled boots and hair somewhere between Captain Hook and the Earl of Rochester, the flamboyant comic stayed unusually quiet all night, preferring to let the music take centre stage.

But Noel’s notorious younger brother Liam threatened to steal the show before a note had been played. The chants of “Liam! Liam!” rang around the room when the side-burned singer appeared on a balcony, goading the crowd and throwing water and plastic cups onto the heads below.

North London hopefuls The Holloways opened proceedings with their folky, tuneful pop, given a country lilt by some dextrous fiddle playing, but the chants of “Oasis” throughout their set made it clear what the crowd wanted.

They were followed by Carl Barat’s Dirty Pretty Things, who were last-minute replacements for Kasabian.

Charlatans frontman Tim Burgess, a long-time friend of the Gallaghers, joined them for raucous versions of “Deadwood” and “Bang Bang You’re Dead”.

DPT returned the favour, accompanying Burgess on a lively run-through of The Charlatans’ 1997 hit “North Country Boy”.

When he finally arrived onstage to deafening cheers, accompanied by bandmate Gem Archer on electric guitar, Noel opened with the rarely performed “(Its Good) to Be Free” and treated the faithful to an acoustic set of hits, album tracks and B-sides such as “Slide Away”, “Listen Up”, “Half the World Away” and a faithful rendition of the Beatles’ 1967 masterpiece “Strawberry Fields Forever”.

Noel told the crowd Kasabian guitarist Serge Pizzorno was suffering from laryngitis or “something pretentious like that” before dedicating “Cast No Shadow” to him.

Mod legend Weller appeared half-way through Noel’s set to sing his 2005 solo single “Come On/Let’s Go” and the classic Jam song “Thick as Thieves” from the band’s 1979 album Setting Sons, but the crowd’s reaction was only luke-warm.

Noel clearly enjoyed playing with the modfather but cries for “Champagne Supernova”, the 1995 Oasis track on which Weller played lead guitar, went ignored.

Noel stormed from the stage during the encore of “Married With Children”, frustrated by a technical problem, leaving a flustered Brand struggling to keep the throng happy (“it’s the machines, I tell you, they’re against us. You’ve all seen Terminator 2!”) but it was only minutes before the Mancunian’s rapturous return.

Oasis Exhibition To Open In London

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Oasis are the subject of a new photo exihibition due to open on November 13. In celebration of the new Oasis Best of collection “Stop the Clocks”, an exclusive collection of images taken by Jill Furmanovsky will be on show at FOPP’s flagship store on London’s Tottenham Court Road. Rockarchive have selected images for the exhibition from Furmanovsky’s Oasis collection “Was There Then.” She captured Oasis candidly from their beginnings in Manchester key events in their career such as Maine Road in 1995 and to America. All images at the exhibition will be available for sale for the first time as limited edition signed prints. For sizes and pricing information, you can get in touch with fopp@rockarchive.com As previously reported, Oasis are releasing a retrospective 18 track best of “Stop The Clocks” on November 20. Uncut would like to know what your favourite Oasis track is… You can tell us by clicking here

Oasis are the subject of a new photo exihibition due to open on November 13.

In celebration of the new Oasis Best of collection “Stop the Clocks”, an

exclusive collection of images taken by Jill Furmanovsky will be on show at FOPP’s flagship store on London’s Tottenham Court Road.

Rockarchive have selected images for the exhibition from Furmanovsky’s Oasis collection “Was There Then.”

She captured Oasis candidly from their beginnings in Manchester key events in their career such as Maine Road in 1995 and to America.

All images at the exhibition will be available for sale for the first time as limited edition signed prints.

For sizes and pricing information, you can get in touch with fopp@rockarchive.com

As previously reported, Oasis are releasing a retrospective 18 track best of “Stop The Clocks” on November 20.

Uncut would like to know what your favourite Oasis track is…

You can tell us by clicking here

New White Stripes Album On Its Way

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Jack White, who is currently with side project The Raconteurs with Brendan Benson, has let slip that he is also working on new material for his original band The White Stripes, with Meg White. The singer/guitarist has told Uncut that his time is now split 50/50 between the two bands. White told Uncut, "My brain now has two options for songs that I write, and it's a really nice luxury to have as a songwriter." White went on to say, "I have so many songs now for another White Stripes record. Meg and I are working on songs during breaks from touring with the Raconteurs." This will be the follow up to 2005’s hugely successful “Get Behind Me Satan.” To read the full feature on ‘how to write a rock song’ by Jack White, get the December issue of Uncut, out now.

Jack White, who is currently with side project The Raconteurs with Brendan Benson, has let slip that he is also working on new material for his original band The White Stripes, with Meg White.

The singer/guitarist has told Uncut that his time is now split 50/50 between the two bands.

White told Uncut, “My brain now has two options for songs that I write, and it’s a really nice luxury to have as a songwriter.”

White went on to say, “I have so many songs now for another White Stripes record. Meg and I are working on songs during breaks from touring with the Raconteurs.”

This will be the follow up to 2005’s hugely successful “Get Behind Me Satan.”

To read the full feature on ‘how to write a rock song’ by Jack White, get the December issue of Uncut, out now.

Notorious Rock Groupie Dies

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Former rock groupie Jo Jo Laine, ex-wife of The Moody Blues and Wings guitarist Denny Lane, has died of liver cancer at the age of 54. Laine announced she was ill in May 2006 when she vowed to battle the disease, but unfortunately she died on Sunday October 29 in a London hospital from complications after a fall at home. The former model, actress and singer was very well known on the rock scene in the 1960s and 1970s, and was romantically linked to Jim Morrison, Jimi Hendrix and Rod Stewart. She performed with her own band, Jo Jo Laine & The Firm, until 1985 when Led Zepellin’s Jimmy Page established The Firm from the same musicians. Laine also recorded with Wings and Sting and Andy Summers of The Police, performing on singles "Hulk" and "Dancing Man". An album of her diverse musical output will be available next year entitled “The Best of Jo Jo Laine” To check out Jo Jo Laine’s Jimi Hendrix and The Beatles Fansite – Click here

Former rock groupie Jo Jo Laine, ex-wife of The Moody Blues and Wings guitarist Denny Lane, has died of liver cancer at the age of 54.

Laine announced she was ill in May 2006 when she vowed to battle the disease, but unfortunately she died on Sunday October 29 in a London hospital from complications after a fall at home.

The former model, actress and singer was very well known on the rock scene in the 1960s and 1970s, and was romantically linked to Jim Morrison, Jimi Hendrix and Rod Stewart.

She performed with her own band, Jo Jo Laine & The Firm, until 1985 when Led Zepellin’s Jimmy Page established The Firm from the same musicians.

Laine also recorded with Wings and Sting and Andy Summers of The Police, performing on singles “Hulk” and “Dancing Man”.

An album of her diverse musical output will be available next year entitled “The Best of Jo Jo Laine”

To check out Jo Jo Laine’s Jimi Hendrix and The Beatles Fansite – Click here

Inspiral Carpets Announce UK Tour

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Madchester favourites Inspiral Carpets are to play a series of UK dates next March. Following up their highly successful comeback shows in 2003 – which included three sold-out Manchester shows as well as appearances at Glastonbury, V Festival and T-in the Park - the Inspiral Carpets are back again. Together with the Happy Mondays and The Stone Roses, the Inspiral Carpets brought psychedelic indie-guitar "Madchester" kicking and screaming into the mainstream. The band will draw on material from their Top 20 albums including "Life" (1990), "The Beast Inside" (1991), "Revenge Of The Goldfish" (1992) and "Devil Hopping" (1994) at the shows. Catch the band live at the following venues: Birmingham Academy 2 (March 2) Glasgow ABC (3) Lincoln Engine Shed (4) Norwich Waterfront (5) Brighton Concorde (7) Leeds University Stylus (8) Manchester Academy (9) London Shepherd’s Bush Empire (10) Tickets for the Inspiral’s go on sale tomorrow morning at 9am To buy tickets – Go to Nme.com/Gigs here

Madchester favourites Inspiral Carpets are to play a series of UK dates next March.

Following up their highly successful comeback shows in 2003 – which included three sold-out Manchester shows as well as appearances at Glastonbury, V Festival and T-in the Park – the Inspiral Carpets are back again.

Together with the Happy Mondays and The Stone Roses, the Inspiral Carpets brought psychedelic indie-guitar “Madchester” kicking and screaming into the mainstream.

The band will draw on material from their Top 20 albums including “Life” (1990), “The Beast Inside” (1991), “Revenge Of The Goldfish” (1992) and “Devil Hopping” (1994) at the shows.

Catch the band live at the following venues:

Birmingham Academy 2 (March 2)

Glasgow ABC (3)

Lincoln Engine Shed (4)

Norwich Waterfront (5)

Brighton Concorde (7)

Leeds University Stylus (8)

Manchester Academy (9)

London Shepherd’s Bush Empire (10)

Tickets for the Inspiral’s go on sale tomorrow morning at 9am

To buy tickets – Go to Nme.com/Gigs here

The Rolling Stones To Be Directed By Martin Scorsese

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Martin Scorsese has been given the go-ahead to direct a concert movie about the Rolling Stones. As previously reported, the Stones were on the New York leg of their Bigger Bang world tour and were filmed as they performed at former US president Bill Clinton’s 60th birthday party. Filming was also due to take place at the band’s small club date at New York’s Beacon Theatre, but that date as well as others scheduled to take place this month have been postponed. Mick Jagger has been given doctor’s orders to rest his throat after gaining an infection. The singer has to be especially cautious after a bout of laryngitis in July. Footage from the concerts was expected to form a major part of the film, along with behind-the-scenes moments, interviews and historical footage of the band. Scorsese has yet to talk publicly about making the film. Scorsese has enlisted the help of Albert Maysles who along with his brother David, were behind the classic film footage of the Rolling Stones- when they played in front of 300,000 people at Altamont Speedway in 1969- for the documentary “Gimme Shelter.” Scorsese’s previous music-related films include1978’s “The Last Waltz”, the farewell gig by The Band and 2005’s highly acclaimed “No Direction Home” documenting Bob Dylan. Mick Jagger, Ronnie Wood, Charlie Watts and Keith Richards are all equal executive producers of the new film, and it is expected to be released mid-2007 through Paramount/ Fortissmo.

Martin Scorsese has been given the go-ahead to direct a concert movie about the Rolling Stones.

As previously reported, the Stones were on the New York leg of their Bigger Bang world tour and were filmed as they performed at former US president Bill Clinton’s 60th birthday party.

Filming was also due to take place at the band’s small club date at New York’s Beacon Theatre, but that date as well as others scheduled to take place this month have been postponed.

Mick Jagger has been given doctor’s orders to rest his throat after gaining an infection. The singer has to be especially cautious after a bout of laryngitis in July.

Footage from the concerts was expected to form a major part of the film, along with behind-the-scenes moments, interviews and historical footage of the band. Scorsese has yet to talk publicly about making the film.

Scorsese has enlisted the help of Albert Maysles who along with his brother David, were behind the classic film footage of the Rolling Stones- when they played in front of 300,000 people at Altamont Speedway in 1969- for the documentary “Gimme Shelter.”

Scorsese’s previous music-related films include1978’s “The Last Waltz”, the farewell gig by The Band and 2005’s highly acclaimed “No Direction Home” documenting Bob Dylan.

Mick Jagger, Ronnie Wood, Charlie Watts and Keith Richards are all equal executive producers of the new film, and it is expected to be released mid-2007 through Paramount/ Fortissmo.

The Cure To Release Live DVD

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The Cure will complete another busy year of touring with the release of a live DVD in December, made with a little help from their fans. “Festival 2005” follows the '80s gothic rockers on their nine-date European tour last year when band members, crew and some lucky competition-winner fans were given hand-held cameras to capture each night’s action. The finished film, co-mixed by frontman Robert Smith, features professionally shot footage mixed with the fans’ hand-held clips. The career-spanning 30-track set list includes live favourites such as “Disintegration”, “A Forest” and “Just Like Heaven”. This is not the first time a concert film has been made by fans of a band. “Awesome: I f****** Shot That” is the feature length film of New York rappers The Beastie Boys 2004 Madison Square Garden. The concert filmed by 50 fans was released earlier this year. “Festival 2005” is out on Suretone/Geffen Records on December 5.

The Cure will complete another busy year of touring with the release of a live DVD in December, made with a little help from their fans.

“Festival 2005” follows the ’80s gothic rockers on their nine-date European tour last year when band members, crew and some lucky competition-winner fans were given hand-held cameras to capture each night’s action.

The finished film, co-mixed by frontman Robert Smith, features professionally shot footage mixed with the fans’ hand-held clips.

The career-spanning 30-track set list includes live favourites such as “Disintegration”, “A Forest” and “Just Like Heaven”.

This is not the first time a concert film has been made by fans of a band.

“Awesome: I f****** Shot That” is the feature length film of New York rappers The Beastie Boys 2004 Madison Square Garden.

The concert filmed by 50 fans was released earlier this year.

“Festival 2005” is out on Suretone/Geffen Records on December 5.

Sufjan Stevens Turns Film Critic On Eve of UK dates

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Hugely talented musician Sufjan Stevens, who famously promised to write an album for all 50 American states and whose album “Come On Feel The Illinoise” was released to great acclaim last year, has taken on yet another role. In celebration of Halloween this week, the singer has spoken about what films he loves at this time of the year. Posting on his record label’s website www.asthmatickitty.com, Stevens explains his love of the horror genre. He explains, “I grew up on horror films. I saw 'The Exorcist' when I was five. Disney’s 'The Black Hole' struck me as light fare, even though my older brother left the theatre crying.” He picks classic zombie movie “Night of the Living Dead” as his number one scary flick, which despite its “bad acting, cheap make-up and clumsy camera work” still makes him “sick to my stomach”. Stevens’ most recent film pick is the environmental documentary “An Inconvenient Truth”. He describes presenter Al Gore as “Darth Vader with a Power Point presentation. Yikes.” “The Avalanche”, an album compiled from outtakes of “Come On Feel The Illinoise”, is in the Top 10 of our favourite 50 albums of 2006. Find out what the other 49 great albums of the year were, in the December edition of Uncut, out now. The Brooklyn-based artist kicks off the British leg of his European tour in support of “The Avalanche” at Manchester Academy 2 tonight (November 2). He plays London Barbican Arts Centre tomorrow. To read Sufjan Stevens full list of favourite scary movies – Click here

Hugely talented musician Sufjan Stevens, who famously promised to write an album for all 50 American states and whose album “Come On Feel The Illinoise” was released to great acclaim last year, has taken on yet another role.

In celebration of Halloween this week, the singer has spoken about what films he loves at this time of the year.

Posting on his record label’s website www.asthmatickitty.com, Stevens explains his love of the horror genre.

He explains, “I grew up on horror films. I saw ‘The Exorcist’ when I was five. Disney’s ‘The Black Hole’ struck me as light fare, even though my older brother left the theatre crying.”

He picks classic zombie movie “Night of the Living Dead” as his number one scary flick, which despite its “bad acting, cheap make-up and clumsy camera work” still makes him “sick to my stomach”.

Stevens’ most recent film pick is the environmental documentary “An Inconvenient Truth”. He describes presenter Al Gore as “Darth Vader with a Power Point presentation. Yikes.”

“The Avalanche”, an album compiled from outtakes of “Come On Feel The Illinoise”, is in the Top 10 of our favourite 50 albums of 2006.

Find out what the other 49 great albums of the year were, in the December edition of Uncut, out now.

The Brooklyn-based artist kicks off the British leg of his European tour in support of “The Avalanche” at Manchester Academy 2 tonight (November 2).

He plays London Barbican Arts Centre tomorrow.

To read Sufjan Stevens full list of favourite scary movies – Click here

Bob Dylan and Dave Stewart get Funkadelic

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Key Parliament-Funkadelic member and co-founder of Bootsy Collin’s Rubber Band, Gary ‘Mudbone’ Cooper is back on tour in support of his debut solo album “Fresh Mud” Uncut described the debut release as “a rollicking affair that mashes up blues with funk, hip hop and gospel” and it also includes contributions from some diverse musicians. Bob Dylan adds his blues piano playing talents to a track called “Home” and another pianist, Jools Holland also helps out on the album. Ex-Eurythmic Dave Stewart co-wrote forthcoming funk-gospel single “Freedom’s Coming.” The single is released on November 26 to raise awareness for Nelson Mandela’s “46664” initiative. Other contributors on the album are original Funkadelic bassist Billy “Bass” Nelson and Jamaican ‘rap queen’ Nadirah X – they will also play live with Mudbone on his UK shows. Mudbone will strut his funky stuff next month after supporting P!ink on a national arena tour. He will play: London Metro (December 4) Birmingham Barfly (6) Cardiff Barfly (7) Brighton Pressure Point (8) Manchester Roadhouse (12) Glasgow ABC 2 (13) Nottingham Rock City (14) For more information about the album and shows– Click here to go to Mudbone’s website

Key Parliament-Funkadelic member and co-founder of Bootsy Collin’s Rubber Band, Gary ‘Mudbone’ Cooper is back on tour in support of his debut solo album “Fresh Mud”

Uncut described the debut release as “a rollicking affair that mashes up blues with funk, hip hop and gospel” and it also includes contributions from some diverse musicians.

Bob Dylan adds his blues piano playing talents to a track called “Home” and another pianist, Jools Holland also helps out on the album.

Ex-Eurythmic Dave Stewart co-wrote forthcoming funk-gospel single “Freedom’s Coming.” The single is released on November 26 to raise awareness for Nelson Mandela’s “46664” initiative.

Other contributors on the album are original Funkadelic bassist Billy “Bass” Nelson and Jamaican ‘rap queen’ Nadirah X – they will also play live with Mudbone on his UK shows.

Mudbone will strut his funky stuff next month after supporting P!ink on a national arena tour. He will play:

London Metro (December 4)

Birmingham Barfly (6)

Cardiff Barfly (7)

Brighton Pressure Point (8)

Manchester Roadhouse (12)

Glasgow ABC 2 (13)

Nottingham Rock City (14)

For more information about the album and shows– Click here to go to Mudbone’s website

Hank Williams’ Stolen Lyrics Located

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Hank Williams’ stolen notebook containing up to 20 unpublished songs, and worth an estimated £130,000, has been found in the hands of two memorabilia collectors in Tennessee. The book, which contains lyrics written between 1947 and 1949, has been missing for nearly 60 years. Owners of the notebook, Sony/ATV Publishing, only realised the country legend’s book was missing in September this year when a news report in the Chicago Sun-Times alleged that Steven Shutts and Robert Reynolds, memorabilia collectors had it. The pair, who run a travelling exhibition called the “Honky Tonk Hall of Fame”, are not accused of stealing the book but could be charged by Sony/ATV Publishing for possessing stolen goods. Hank Williams, a huge influence on Bob Dylan, died in 1953 after achieving fame with songs like “Your Cheating Heart”.

Hank Williams’ stolen notebook containing up to 20 unpublished songs, and worth an estimated £130,000, has been found in the hands of two memorabilia collectors in Tennessee.

The book, which contains lyrics written between 1947 and 1949, has been missing for nearly 60 years.

Owners of the notebook, Sony/ATV Publishing, only realised the country legend’s book was missing in September this year when a news report in the Chicago Sun-Times alleged that Steven Shutts and Robert Reynolds, memorabilia collectors had it.

The pair, who run a travelling exhibition called the “Honky Tonk Hall of Fame”, are not accused of stealing the book but could be charged by Sony/ATV Publishing for possessing stolen goods.

Hank Williams, a huge influence on Bob Dylan, died in 1953 after achieving fame with songs like “Your Cheating Heart”.

Magic Numbers – Those The Brokes

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Of the words that spring to mind when you think of The Magic Numbers - country, cartoon, cuddly, harmony, heavenly, hammock - none have remotely negative connotations. Detractors are put off by this perceived bonhomie, and are unlikely to be converted by the quartet’s second album, recorded in Woodstock and produced by the band’s Romeo and Michele Stodart. Yet if The Magic Numbers ditched all aspects of their music apart from the middle-eights, they’d probably have the saddest album in the world right here. The opening "This Is A Song"’s lengthy piano and bells intro is pure Christmas. The lyric is a love triangle, once again - so happy, so sad. But after the second chorus it dips into one of the melancholy mid-sections that characterise the Magic Numbers’ work, as predictable in its own rather complex way as Nirvana. And as with their very best songs, the vocal interplay is heartstopping, a waterfall of harmonies reminiscent of the coda to the Go Betweens' "Cattle And Cane". As befitting a group who have spent two years on the road, though, there are a couple of rock shockers on Those The Brokes, chiefly "Runnin' Out", driving along recklessly, careering down chicanes of minor chords where you least expect them. "Burn all the money you earn," suggests a sly Romeo Stodart. "There's a chance you might learn who you are." Elsewhere, "Boy", with its strings, harps, and wheezing melodica, is steeped in the American baroque soul of Teddy Randazzo and Thom Bell. You half expect a mandolin player to burst in, with a beseeching look on his face, and go down on one knee. "Take A Chance" rather lets the side down, sounding like an out-take from the first album. Quite how this ended up as the curtain-raising single is a mystery. The other problem, and it's a big one, is the bone-dry production: "Those The Brokes" sounds, in places, like it was recorded in a fridge. Rather than producing themselves, they could benefit from a wise head adding a touch of reverb, a sting of echo. Otherwise The Magic Numbers will never make the stone classic they are, on this evidence, most capable of. By Vivian Mackay

Of the words that spring to mind when you think of The Magic Numbers – country, cartoon, cuddly, harmony, heavenly, hammock – none have remotely negative connotations. Detractors are put off by this perceived bonhomie, and are unlikely to be converted by the quartet’s second album, recorded in Woodstock and produced by the band’s Romeo and Michele Stodart. Yet if The Magic Numbers ditched all aspects of their music apart from the middle-eights, they’d probably have the saddest album in the world right here.

The opening “This Is A Song”’s lengthy piano and bells intro is pure Christmas. The lyric is a love triangle, once again – so happy, so sad. But after the second chorus it dips into one of the melancholy mid-sections that characterise the Magic Numbers’ work, as predictable in its own rather complex way as Nirvana. And as with their very best songs, the vocal interplay is heartstopping, a waterfall of harmonies reminiscent of the coda to the Go Betweens’ “Cattle And Cane”.

As befitting a group who have spent two years on the road, though, there are a couple of rock shockers on Those The Brokes, chiefly “Runnin’ Out”, driving along recklessly, careering down chicanes of minor chords where you least expect them. “Burn all the money you earn,” suggests a sly Romeo Stodart. “There’s a chance you might learn who you are.” Elsewhere, “Boy”, with its strings, harps, and wheezing melodica, is steeped in the American baroque soul of Teddy Randazzo and Thom Bell. You half expect a mandolin player to burst in, with a beseeching look on his face, and go down on one knee.

“Take A Chance” rather lets the side down, sounding like an out-take from the first album. Quite how this ended up as the curtain-raising single is a mystery. The other problem, and it’s a big one, is the bone-dry production: “Those The Brokes” sounds, in places, like it was recorded in a fridge. Rather than producing themselves, they could benefit from a wise head adding a touch of reverb, a sting of echo. Otherwise The Magic Numbers will never make the stone classic they are, on this evidence, most capable of.

By Vivian Mackay

Long Blondes – Someone To Drive You Home

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The long-running press campaign on the Long Blondes’ behalf spoke to a cherished critical fantasy. If we’re determined to run with BritPop II - with the Kaiser Chiefs as Blur, and the Monkeys as Oasis - then can we at least have a new Pulp? The Blondes certainly seemed to fit the bill: rakish heirs to Sheffield’s shabby chic, classy aspirants to the standards of Bacharach, articulate pop swots in a stage school world. But with their debut album, the campaign promises end and the reckoning begins. "I just want to be a sweetheart!" yelps Kate Jackson, invoking Edie Sedgwick and Anna Karina on opening track "Lust In The Movies". She’s a fabulous frontwoman, with no time to play anyone’s muse. Across 12 tracks she casts herself as desperate housewife ("Company Of Women"), louche agony aunt ("Once And Never Again") and jealous also-ran ("You Could Have Both") and fair tears up the scenery: urgent, passionate, determinedly defiant. So much so that her bravura performance threatens to overwhelm the band. At times here it feels like Debbie Harry took a wrong turn on the way to Studio 54 and wound up with Shed 7. Like Human League and Pulp before them, the Blondes aim to skip lightly from the kitchen sink to the sublime, but they often struggle to make the leap. In this context, "Giddy Stratospheres" – along with "Weekend Without Make-Up" one of the strongest songs here – seems like harsh self-diagnosis: "She’ll never take you higher than her attic room". Within the context of Razorlight or Kasabian, "Someone To Drive You Home" is clearly the work of lively, stylish minds. What’s frustrating is that they are evidently aiming so much higher. To make good on their ambitions it may be that they need to hook up with a properly ruthless pop producer, one who can coax them out of their indie-pop dowdiness - like Blondie needed Mike Chapman, like ABC needed Horn. Otherwise, the Long Blondes may have to be content to be this season’s Elastica. By Stephen Trousse

The long-running press campaign on the Long Blondes’ behalf spoke to a cherished critical fantasy. If we’re determined to run with BritPop II – with the Kaiser Chiefs as Blur, and the Monkeys as Oasis – then can we at least have a new Pulp? The Blondes certainly seemed to fit the bill: rakish heirs to Sheffield’s shabby chic, classy aspirants to the standards of Bacharach, articulate pop swots in a stage school world.

But with their debut album, the campaign promises end and the reckoning begins. “I just want to be a sweetheart!” yelps Kate Jackson, invoking Edie Sedgwick and Anna Karina on opening track “Lust In The Movies”. She’s a fabulous frontwoman, with no time to play anyone’s muse. Across 12 tracks she casts herself as desperate housewife (“Company Of Women”), louche agony aunt (“Once And Never Again”) and jealous also-ran (“You Could Have Both”) and fair tears up the scenery: urgent, passionate, determinedly defiant.

So much so that her bravura performance threatens to overwhelm the band. At times here it feels like Debbie Harry took a wrong turn on the way to Studio 54 and wound up with Shed 7. Like Human League and Pulp before them, the Blondes aim to skip lightly from the kitchen sink to the sublime, but they often struggle to make the leap. In this context, “Giddy Stratospheres” – along with “Weekend Without Make-Up” one of the strongest songs here – seems like harsh self-diagnosis: “She’ll never take you higher than her attic room”.

Within the context of Razorlight or Kasabian, “Someone To Drive You Home” is clearly the work of lively, stylish minds. What’s frustrating is that they are evidently aiming so much higher. To make good on their ambitions it may be that they need to hook up with a properly ruthless pop producer, one who can coax them out of their indie-pop dowdiness – like Blondie needed Mike Chapman, like ABC needed Horn. Otherwise, the Long Blondes may have to be content to be this season’s Elastica.

By Stephen Trousse

Joanna Newsom – Ys

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All classic records deserve their own creation myth, and Joanna Newsom’s second album has a pretty good one. The story begins, for our purposes, in a small studio in Los Angeles. Steve Albini, working with characteristic crisp precision, has been hired to record Newsom’s voice and harp, to capture the movement of air and her callused fingers across the strings. Newsom has brought five songs to the sessions: the shortest, "Cosmia", lasts for seven minutes and the longest, "Only Skin", stretches to nearly 17. None of the five have choruses as such. Instead, they are great fervid torrents of words that elide close nature observations with a visceral sexuality – recalling, perhaps, Walt Whitman’s epic 19th Century poem, Leaves Of Grass. The exact meanings may be cloaked in allegory and metaphor, but these are intensely personal songs that have been given an intimate, focused treatment. Newsom’s ultimate vision for the record is much more expansive, though. The Californian’s debut, 2004’s "The Milk-Eyed Mender", presented a striking talent, but one which was habitually bundled in with Devendra Banhart’s acid-folk caravan, or dismissed as a shrill, medieval Björk. In fact, Newsom is anything but whimsical and naïve, and she studied classical composition at college (amusingly, she seems faintly ashamed of being unable to read 35 musical parts on a score at once). Inspired by Van Dyke Parks’ 1968 baroque marvel, "Song Cycle", she convinces Parks to work on orchestral arrangements which will orbit her harp and voice. Newsom and Parks collaborate for six months, preparing the score. When the rich instrumentation is added, it chases Newsom and her harp across wild terrain, gusting around her melodies, emphasising the high drama of these five remarkable songs. Still, though, the project continues. Jim O’Rourke fastidiously mixes the recordings, surely aware of their kinship with the work of Judee Sill, one of his heroes. A cover painting in the style of the Pre-Raphaelites is commissioned, with an inscrutable Newsom holding a sickle and a cosmia moth. A title is found: "Ys", pronounced "Ees", the name of a mythical Breton city that was flooded as punishment for the decadence of its inhabitants. Certainly, "Ys" is a lavish album, and it’s easy to assume that Newsom has been excessively decadent herself. Conceived on such a vast scale, the potential for self-indulgence is massive. There’s a risk, too, of prog folly: Pre-Raphaelite homages loaded with obscure symbolism can easily look like Marillion covers; a brisk Googling reveals Ys to be the name of an online fantasy game. But for the 56 minutes that "Ys" lasts, all the doubts evaporate. Every elaboration has a purpose, every labyrinthine melodic detour feels necessary rather than contrived. Tempting as it is to fixate on the gilded reputations of her associates, this is unequivocally Newsom’s album. It’s her ambition, her saturated images, her bloodied stamina behind it all. Uncut’s editor compares "Ys" to Nico’s "Marble Index", for its astonishing single-mindedness, the sense – notwithstanding those collaborators, that orchestra – that this is a hermetic, determinedly personal trip. What’s immediately arresting is Newsom’s wholehearted engagement with life and love: vivid, fleshly, rapturous. Not for her the vagueness of most supposedly pastoral songwriters. If anything, the meticulous evocations of nature are closer to another 19th Century American writer, Henry David Thoreau. Newsom also has lovely taste in words – "sassafras", "meteoroid", "hydrocephalitic", "spelunking", "inchoate" – and she savours every one. The environment, spiritual and physical love are intertwined. "Push me back into a tree," she demands in "Sawdust And Diamonds", the one track where voice and harp are unadorned by Parks’ curlicues. There’s an earthiness here, too, which proves Newsom is nothing like the winsome damsel who critics have previously fetishised. That some of these ecstasies may be directed towards her boyfriend, Bill ‘Smog’ Callahan, adds an extra frisson to the backstory - how striking the contrast between this unabashed passion and the devious, novelistic lyrics of Smog. Newsom’s narratives could not be more different: "When I cut your hair, and leave the birds all the trimmings, I am the happiest woman amongst all women," she sings in "Only Skin" (her vocals, incidentally, are much less mannered than on "The Milk-Eyed Mender"). Even when she tackles mortality, she does so with vigour: "Life is thundering blissful towards death," she incants, later in the same song. Once you’re hooked, "Ys" reveals a new highlight with every listen. Today, two passages stand out. The first comes near the end of "Emily", after around 11 minutes: as Newsom’s voice fades away, the strings become sombre and staccato, and she seems awed, meditative, stunned by the enormity of what she has created. The second is 13 and a half minutes into "Only Skin", a song extraordinary even in this company. A banjo and Bill Callahan’s lugubrious baritone shadow Newsom, by now multi-tracked and moving with a seasick roll that recalls Kate Bush on "Army Dreamers". "If the love of a woman or two, dear, could move you to such heights," she concludes, "then all I can do is do, my darling, right by you." All we can do, of course, is play it again and again. What began as Joanna Newsom’s obsession can easily become a listener’s obsession, too. By John Mulvey

All classic records deserve their own creation myth, and Joanna Newsom’s second album has a pretty good one. The story begins, for our purposes, in a small studio in Los Angeles. Steve Albini, working with characteristic crisp precision, has been hired to record Newsom’s voice and harp, to capture the movement of air and her callused fingers across the strings. Newsom has brought five songs to the sessions: the shortest, “Cosmia”, lasts for seven minutes and the longest, “Only Skin”, stretches to nearly 17.

None of the five have choruses as such. Instead, they are great fervid torrents of words that elide close nature observations with a visceral sexuality – recalling, perhaps, Walt Whitman’s epic 19th Century poem, Leaves Of Grass. The exact meanings may be cloaked in allegory and metaphor, but these are intensely personal songs that have been given an intimate, focused treatment.

Newsom’s ultimate vision for the record is much more expansive, though. The Californian’s debut, 2004’s “The Milk-Eyed Mender”, presented a striking talent, but one which was habitually bundled in with Devendra Banhart’s acid-folk caravan, or dismissed as a shrill, medieval Björk. In fact, Newsom is anything but whimsical and naïve, and she studied classical composition at college (amusingly, she seems faintly ashamed of being unable to read 35 musical parts on a score at once). Inspired by Van Dyke Parks’ 1968 baroque marvel, “Song Cycle”, she convinces Parks to work on orchestral arrangements which will orbit her harp and voice.

Newsom and Parks collaborate for six months, preparing the score. When the rich instrumentation is added, it chases Newsom and her harp across wild terrain, gusting around her melodies, emphasising the high drama of these five remarkable songs.

Still, though, the project continues. Jim O’Rourke fastidiously mixes the recordings, surely aware of their kinship with the work of Judee Sill, one of his heroes. A cover painting in the style of the Pre-Raphaelites is commissioned, with an inscrutable Newsom holding a sickle and a cosmia moth. A title is found: “Ys”, pronounced “Ees”, the name of a mythical Breton city that was flooded as punishment for the decadence of its inhabitants.

Certainly, “Ys” is a lavish album, and it’s easy to assume that Newsom has been excessively decadent herself. Conceived on such a vast scale, the potential for self-indulgence is massive. There’s a risk, too, of prog folly: Pre-Raphaelite homages loaded with obscure symbolism can easily look like Marillion covers; a brisk Googling reveals Ys to be the name of an online fantasy game.

But for the 56 minutes that “Ys” lasts, all the doubts evaporate. Every elaboration has a purpose, every labyrinthine melodic detour feels necessary rather than contrived. Tempting as it is to fixate on the gilded reputations of her associates, this is unequivocally Newsom’s album. It’s her ambition, her saturated images, her bloodied stamina behind it all. Uncut’s editor compares “Ys” to Nico’s “Marble Index”, for its astonishing single-mindedness, the sense – notwithstanding those collaborators, that orchestra – that this is a hermetic, determinedly personal trip.

What’s immediately arresting is Newsom’s wholehearted engagement with life and love: vivid, fleshly, rapturous. Not for her the vagueness of most supposedly pastoral songwriters. If anything, the meticulous evocations of nature are closer to another 19th Century American writer, Henry David Thoreau. Newsom also has lovely taste in words – “sassafras”, “meteoroid”, “hydrocephalitic”, “spelunking”, “inchoate” – and she savours every one.

The environment, spiritual and physical love are intertwined. “Push me back into a tree,” she demands in “Sawdust And Diamonds”, the one track where voice and harp are unadorned by Parks’ curlicues. There’s an earthiness here, too, which proves Newsom is nothing like the winsome damsel who critics have previously fetishised. That some of these ecstasies may be directed towards her boyfriend, Bill ‘Smog’ Callahan, adds an extra frisson to the backstory – how striking the contrast between this unabashed passion and the devious, novelistic lyrics of Smog.

Newsom’s narratives could not be more different: “When I cut your hair, and leave the birds all the trimmings, I am the happiest woman amongst all women,” she sings in “Only Skin” (her vocals, incidentally, are much less mannered than on “The Milk-Eyed Mender”). Even when she tackles mortality, she does so with vigour: “Life is thundering blissful towards death,” she incants, later in the same song.

Once you’re hooked, “Ys” reveals a new highlight with every listen. Today, two passages stand out. The first comes near the end of “Emily”, after around 11 minutes: as Newsom’s voice fades away, the strings become sombre and staccato, and she seems awed, meditative, stunned by the enormity of what she has created. The second is 13 and a half minutes into “Only Skin”, a song extraordinary even in this company. A banjo and Bill Callahan’s lugubrious baritone shadow Newsom, by now multi-tracked and moving with a seasick roll that recalls Kate Bush on “Army Dreamers”.

“If the love of a woman or two, dear, could move you to such heights,” she concludes, “then all I can do is do, my darling, right by you.” All we can do, of course, is play it again and again. What began as Joanna Newsom’s obsession can easily become a listener’s obsession, too.

By John Mulvey

Paul Weller – Hit Parade

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Despite his persistent refusal to rest on past laurels, segments of Weller's career have been repeatedly anthologised. This latest, and grandest, overview (available in both box set and single disc versions) documents the full range of his stylistic and artistic vision. Each stage of Weller's 30-year career, from the first flush of punchy punk modernism with The Jam, to the glorious, full circle revivalism of last year's As Is Now, is covered. Overall, it's a tribute to his artistic tenacity, with perceptive and insightful songwriting the link between respective epochs. In this context, even his Style Council adventures in jazz, muzak and house have merit, a necessary period of experimentation and indulgence before the equally necessary sharpening of resources that came with the solo years. By Gavin Martin

Despite his persistent refusal to rest on past laurels, segments of Weller’s career have been repeatedly anthologised. This latest, and grandest, overview (available in both box set and single disc versions) documents the full range of his stylistic and artistic vision. Each stage of Weller’s 30-year career, from the first flush of punchy punk modernism with The Jam, to the glorious, full circle revivalism of last year’s As Is Now, is covered. Overall, it’s a tribute to his artistic tenacity, with perceptive and insightful songwriting the link between respective epochs. In this context, even his Style Council adventures in jazz, muzak and house have merit, a necessary period of experimentation and indulgence before the equally necessary sharpening of resources that came with the solo years.

By Gavin Martin

‘The Doors’ Announce Special Gigs

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Riders On The Storm, featuring surviving original Doors members Robbie Krieger and Ray Manzarek, have announced that they will play some special shows at the end of the year, in celebration of the band’s 40th anniversary. Vocal duties for Riders On The Storm are handled by The Cult’s Ian Astbury. The band formed in 2002 after The Doors VH1 Storytellers series, when he collaborated with the band to great success. Riders On the Storm will play Camden’s Roundhouse on December 30 and 31. It has been 38 years since The Doors played their only UK gig at the historic venue. The band will play classic songs from their 40-year-old catalogue including “Light My Fire”, “Break On Though”, and “LA Woman.” The Roundhouse gigs form the basis of a UK tour, the full dates are: Clyde Auditorium Glasgow (December 29) Camden Roundhouse London (30 & 31) Civic Wolverhampton (January 2) Apollo Manchester (3) For ticket availability - click here

Riders On The Storm, featuring surviving original Doors members Robbie Krieger and Ray Manzarek, have announced that they will play some special shows at the end of the year, in celebration of the band’s 40th anniversary.

Vocal duties for Riders On The Storm are handled by The Cult’s Ian Astbury.

The band formed in 2002 after The Doors VH1 Storytellers series, when he collaborated with the band to great success.

Riders On the Storm will play Camden’s Roundhouse on December 30 and 31. It has been 38 years since The Doors played their only UK gig at the historic venue.

The band will play classic songs from their 40-year-old catalogue including “Light My Fire”, “Break On Though”, and “LA Woman.”

The Roundhouse gigs form the basis of a UK tour, the full dates are:

Clyde Auditorium Glasgow (December 29)

Camden Roundhouse London (30 & 31)

Civic Wolverhampton (January 2)

Apollo Manchester (3)

For ticket availability – click here

U2 Name New Track

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U2 have posted the track names, including one totally brand new one, that will appear on their forthcoming Best Of compilation 'U218 Singles'. The track listing has been posted online on U2.com after speculation on the internet became rife as to what they would include. As previously reported, “U218 Singles” is out on November 20, and features 16 of the band's classic singles, plus two new tracks – one is the joint single with US rockers Green Day, “The Saints Are Coming”, the other a completely brand new song entitled “Window In The Skies.” ?? U218’s full track listing is: 'Beautiful Day'? 'I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For' 'Pride (In The Name Of Love)'? 'With Or Without You'? 'Vertigo'? 'New Year's Day'? 'Mysterious Ways'? 'Stuck In A Moment You Can't Get Out Of'? 'Where The Streets Have No Name'? 'Sweetest Thing' 'Sunday Bloody Sunday'? 'One'? 'Desire'? 'Walk On'? 'Elevation'? 'Sometimes You Can't Make It On Your Own' ?'The Saints Are Coming'? ‘Window In The Skies’? “The Saints Are Coming” - U2’s collaboration with Green Day to raise money for the Hurricane Katrina relief fund - is released on November 6.

U2 have posted the track names, including one totally brand new one, that will appear on their forthcoming Best Of compilation ‘U218 Singles’.

The track listing has been posted online on U2.com after speculation on the internet became rife as to what they would include.

As previously reported, “U218 Singles” is out on November 20, and features 16 of the band’s classic singles, plus two new tracks – one is the joint single with US rockers Green Day, “The Saints Are Coming”, the other a completely brand new song entitled “Window In The Skies.” ??

U218’s full track listing is:

‘Beautiful Day’?

‘I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For’

‘Pride (In The Name Of Love)’?

‘With Or Without You’?

‘Vertigo’?

‘New Year’s Day’?

‘Mysterious Ways’?

‘Stuck In A Moment You Can’t Get Out Of’?

‘Where The Streets Have No Name’?

‘Sweetest Thing’

‘Sunday Bloody Sunday’?

‘One’?

‘Desire’?

‘Walk On’?

‘Elevation’?

‘Sometimes You Can’t Make It On Your Own’

?’The Saints Are Coming’?

‘Window In The Skies’?

“The Saints Are Coming” – U2’s collaboration with Green Day to raise money for the Hurricane Katrina relief fund – is released on November 6.

On The Road With Dylan!

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HOW THE ALARM CAME TO TOUR WITH BOB… “We played the whole of that summer, about 30 dates. We were being managed by Elliott Roberts – who’s managed Neil Young and Bob Dylan – and Jeff Kramer, Elliott’s assistant. At the end of the tour Jeff became Bob’s manager. We were invited on the tour cos Elliott and Jeff had been telling Bob about The Alarm, that we came from Wales and played acoustic guitars and had this element of folk rock which was buried in there somewhere, and he liked what he was told about us and what he heard, and he invited us on the tour. There was no real fee – our fee was negotiable. There was definitely haggling over the fees, especially as we were managed by the same guy. We took what we got. But we would’ve played for nothing because to play with Dylan was such a great honour for us.” THE FIRST NIGHT… “The first night of the tour was in California, in the Concord Pavilion not too far from San Francisco, on Tuesday, June 7 1988. Neil Young came onstage. I can’t remember what he played, maybe ‘Like A Rolling Stone’ or ‘All Along The Watchtower’. I’d never seen Bob Dylan before, but the reason I played the acoustic guitar and the harmonica in The Alarm was because of Dylan. To be on tour with him was beyond fantasy for me. I was so awed to be at the gig, and I had a backstage pass, but just to make sure I experienced it in the way I wanted to do as a Bob Dylan fanatic, I bought tickets too and I sat in the front row and watched the gig. It was brilliant to be there. I remember being quite awed going onstage for the first time because we’d never really played to an audience that was that sort of analytical. They weren’t going to be standing up and pogoing up and down like they’d done when we played with U2 and Simple Minds and Big Country. Our reaction had always been very physical. This was the first tour we’d played where the audience were sitting down throughout the show. It changed us as a band. We started bringing out more of the folk element, which took us on to the Change album. I like do think he was coming on and we’d shaken the audience up a bit, appealed to their baser instincts.” MAKING FRIENDS WITH DYLAN… “We put an acoustic section in the set, and he started coming out to the side of the stage to watch us. I think he was digging it. He was enjoying the contrasts. I think he liked having these young bands. He started to become a bit intrigued by us. He probably thought we were like young pups with lots of enthusiasm. I got to know him. He liked to converse about the culture of Wales and to talk about poets he was aware of from Wales, the obvious one being Dylan Thomas. Because our tour was being run by the same people running Bob’s, we were all booked into the same hotel. It was quite a funky tour. It wasn’t what you’d imagine. He didn’t like staying in fancy hotels. He’s got an aversion to air conditioning. He prefers to stay in hotels where he can open the windows. There’s those classic 60s pictures of him diving into swimming pools – well, he was definitely in the swimming phase. We were often staying in those 1970s American motels that had the swimming pool outside and the little reception and the sort of rooms his vehicle could be driven up to so we could walk up to his room and no one would see him. We’d be swimming in the pool and the next minute he’d come out and dive in and do a few lengths and that’s where some of our conversations took place, just in the pool. He’s quite a secretive person and doesn’t really open up, but he’s a very pleasant man when you do have the time of day with him and when his guard is down a little bit. He became more relaxed with us. He was great, a really nice guy. He didn’t do soundchecks at that time. If he came in while we were playing, he’d come up on the side of the desk and have a look.” DYLAN’S SECRECY… “There was this guy Victor Malmudes who was just Bob’s mate. We never were quite sure what he did. One day Bob didn’t come down for his usual swim. Victor said, ‘He’s got a bit of a cold.’ The next day we were by the pool and Bob comes down for a swim and Nigel Twist [Alarm drummer] said, ‘How are you feeling today, Bob?’ He goes, ‘What do you mean?’ Twist said, ‘Victor said you had a cold.’ Bob said, ‘Did he?’ and that was it. He carried on swimming. That evening Victor was sent home off the tour for giving away personal information. He was banished for three days, and then he came back.” ON THE ROAD… “All sorts of people were coming to the shows. Jack Nicholson came to the Greek Theatre in LA. President Carter turned up at the gig in Atlanta. He was sat in the front of the gig. Behind him were all the executive people of Atlanta, and they all brought their dinner to the show. We [Alarm and Dylan camps] all got on fantastically well on the tour. It was a summer tour, most of the shows were outdoors and we were having barbeques and playing soccer in the field behind the stage, and I think Bob Dylan just enjoyed the carnival atmosphere we brought to proceedings. We did treat it as a holiday. It rubbed off on the crew and the people around him.” SINGING ONSTAGE WITH DYLAN… “One night Elliott comes into the dressing room before our show in Santa Barbara and said, ‘Bob wants you to come up onstage and play guitar on “Knocking On Heaven’s Door”.’ GE Smith, who was playing guitar for him on that tour, said to me, ‘Bob won’t introduce you, but you’ll hear the chords and that’s your cue to come onstage.’ I was stood at the side of the stage terrified. I heard the opening chords, walked out and then a couple of seconds later the drums have kicked in and there I am onstage. In the second verse Dylan calls me forward and asks me to take the second verse, pushing me forward – ‘Get on the microphone, start singing.’ Then he came on the microphone beside me and there I am cheek to cheek with Bob Dylan. It was pretty amazing duetting the song with him. It was a great climax to the show. The next night in San Diego, which was the last night for us, he said how much he’d really enjoyed having us and he said, ‘I really enjoyed singing with you last night. Why don’t you do “Heaven’s Door” with me tonight?’ GE said it was the same deal. I was stood in the wings waiting to come on and I thought, ‘This is something else – it’s in a minor key.’ And then he sang the first line and he’d totally rewritten the song, and it was in D minor. The first night I’d played it, it was the classic G, D, A minor, G, D, C. Now we’re playing D Minor, F and C, some really weird version that was almost unrecognisable. I think he likes to challenge everybody that he meets, to see whether you can stay with him or collapse under the pressure.”

HOW THE ALARM CAME TO TOUR WITH BOB…

“We played the whole of that summer, about 30 dates. We were being managed by Elliott Roberts – who’s managed Neil Young and Bob Dylan – and Jeff Kramer, Elliott’s assistant. At the end of the tour Jeff became Bob’s manager. We were invited on the tour cos Elliott and Jeff had been telling Bob about The Alarm, that we came from Wales and played acoustic guitars and had this element of folk rock which was buried in there somewhere, and he liked what he was told about us and what he heard, and he invited us on the tour. There was no real fee – our fee was negotiable. There was definitely haggling over the fees, especially as we were managed by the same guy. We took what we got. But we would’ve played for nothing because to play with Dylan was such a great honour for us.”

THE FIRST NIGHT…

“The first night of the tour was in California, in the Concord Pavilion not too far from San Francisco, on Tuesday, June 7 1988. Neil Young came onstage. I can’t remember what he played, maybe ‘Like A Rolling Stone’ or ‘All Along The Watchtower’. I’d never seen Bob Dylan before, but the reason I played the acoustic guitar and the harmonica in The Alarm was because of Dylan. To be on tour with him was beyond fantasy for me. I was so awed to be at the gig, and I had a backstage pass, but just to make sure I experienced it in the way I wanted to do as a Bob Dylan fanatic, I bought tickets too and I sat in the front row and watched the gig. It was brilliant to be there. I remember being quite awed going onstage for the first time because we’d never really played to an audience that was that sort of analytical. They weren’t going to be standing up and pogoing up and down like they’d done when we played with U2 and Simple Minds and Big Country. Our reaction had always been very physical. This was the first tour we’d played where the audience were sitting down throughout the show. It changed us as a band. We started bringing out more of the folk element, which took us on to the Change album. I like do think he was coming on and we’d shaken the audience up a bit, appealed to their baser instincts.”

MAKING FRIENDS WITH DYLAN…

“We put an acoustic section in the set, and he started coming out to the side of the stage to watch us. I think he was digging it. He was enjoying the contrasts. I think he liked having these young bands. He started to become a bit intrigued by us. He probably thought we were like young pups with lots of enthusiasm. I got to know him. He liked to converse about the culture of Wales and to talk about poets he was aware of from Wales, the obvious one being Dylan Thomas. Because our tour was being run by the same people running Bob’s, we were all booked into the same hotel. It was quite a funky tour. It wasn’t what you’d imagine. He didn’t like staying in fancy hotels. He’s got an aversion to air conditioning. He prefers to stay in hotels where he can open the windows. There’s those classic 60s pictures of him diving into swimming pools – well, he was definitely in the swimming phase. We were often staying in those 1970s American motels that had the swimming pool outside and the little reception and the sort of rooms his vehicle could be driven up to so we could walk up to his room and no one would see him. We’d be swimming in the pool and the next minute he’d come out and dive in and do a few lengths and that’s where some of our conversations took place, just in the pool. He’s quite a secretive person and doesn’t really open up, but he’s a very pleasant man when you do have the time of day with him and when his guard is down a little bit. He became more relaxed with us. He was great, a really nice guy. He didn’t do soundchecks at that time. If he came in while we were playing, he’d come up on the side of the desk and have a look.”

DYLAN’S SECRECY…

“There was this guy Victor Malmudes who was just Bob’s mate. We never were quite sure what he did. One day Bob didn’t come down for his usual swim. Victor said, ‘He’s got a bit of a cold.’ The next day we were by the pool and Bob comes down for a swim and Nigel Twist [Alarm drummer] said, ‘How are you feeling today, Bob?’ He goes, ‘What do you mean?’ Twist said, ‘Victor said you had a cold.’ Bob said, ‘Did he?’ and that was it. He carried on swimming. That evening Victor was sent home off the tour for giving away personal information. He was banished for three days, and then he came back.”

ON THE ROAD…

“All sorts of people were coming to the shows. Jack Nicholson came to the Greek Theatre in LA. President Carter turned up at the gig in Atlanta. He was sat in the front of the gig. Behind him were all the executive people of Atlanta, and they all brought their dinner to the show. We [Alarm and Dylan camps] all got on fantastically well on the tour. It was a summer tour, most of the shows were outdoors and we were having barbeques and playing soccer in the field behind the stage, and I think Bob Dylan just enjoyed the carnival atmosphere we brought to proceedings. We did treat it as a holiday. It rubbed off on the crew and the people around him.”

SINGING ONSTAGE WITH DYLAN…

“One night Elliott comes into the dressing room before our show in Santa Barbara and said, ‘Bob wants you to come up onstage and play guitar on “Knocking On Heaven’s Door”.’ GE Smith, who was playing guitar for him on that tour, said to me, ‘Bob won’t introduce you, but you’ll hear the chords and that’s your cue to come onstage.’ I was stood at the side of the stage terrified. I heard the opening chords, walked out and then a couple of seconds later the drums have kicked in and there I am onstage. In the second verse Dylan calls me forward and asks me to take the second verse, pushing me forward – ‘Get on the microphone, start singing.’ Then he came on the microphone beside me and there I am cheek to cheek with Bob Dylan. It was pretty amazing duetting the song with him. It was a great climax to the show. The next night in San Diego, which was the last night for us, he said how much he’d really enjoyed having us and he said, ‘I really enjoyed singing with you last night. Why don’t you do “Heaven’s Door” with me tonight?’ GE said it was the same deal. I was stood in the wings waiting to come on and I thought, ‘This is something else – it’s in a minor key.’ And then he sang the first line and he’d totally rewritten the song, and it was in D minor. The first night I’d played it, it was the classic G, D, A minor, G, D, C. Now we’re playing D Minor, F and C, some really weird version that was almost unrecognisable. I think he likes to challenge everybody that he meets, to see whether you can stay with him or collapse under the pressure.”

Is SAW III The Scariest Film ever?

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"Saw III", the third Halloween horror film involving kidnapping and brutal games has been causing several UK movie goers to faint. Reported today on the BBC news website, the Cineworld complex in Stevenage, Hertfordshire had to call on ambulance services three times last Friday (October 27)- the film's opening night - to help with three separate incidents of fainting during a showing of "Saw III". One woman was taken to hospital whilst two others were treated onsite by medics. It has also been reported that a man collapsed at a cinema in Peterborough, also on Friday"due to the films content." The blood-filled film directed by Darren Lynn Bousman has an 18-rating for "strong grisly violence and gore, sequences of terror and torture, nudity and language." A spokesman for the East of England Ambulance Service warns simply, "If you know you're squeamish, don't go." The gory movie is number one at both the UK and North American box offices. To watch a trailer for the controversial film and make up your own mind – Click here for the Saw III website

“Saw III”, the third Halloween horror film involving kidnapping and brutal games has been causing several UK movie goers to faint.

Reported today on the BBC news website, the Cineworld complex in Stevenage, Hertfordshire had to call on ambulance services three times last Friday (October 27)- the film’s opening night – to help with three separate incidents of fainting during a showing of “Saw III”.

One woman was taken to hospital whilst two others were treated onsite by medics.

It has also been reported that a man collapsed at a cinema in Peterborough, also on Friday”due to the films content.”

The blood-filled film directed by Darren Lynn Bousman has an 18-rating for “strong grisly violence and gore, sequences of terror and torture, nudity and language.”

A spokesman for the East of England Ambulance Service warns simply, “If you know you’re squeamish, don’t go.”

The gory movie is number one at both the UK and North American box offices.

To watch a trailer for the controversial film and make up your own mind – Click here for the Saw III website