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Seal – Live At The Point

Back in the early 1990s, Seal had edge, dreadlocks and songs. Shot on tour after his debut album had just won him a clutch of Brit awards, he looks armed and dangerous during an explosive set that includes a positively homicidal version of "Hey Joe". What on earth went wrong?

Back in the early 1990s, Seal had edge, dreadlocks and songs. Shot on tour after his debut album had just won him a clutch of Brit awards, he looks armed and dangerous during an explosive set that includes a positively homicidal version of “Hey Joe”. What on earth went wrong?

Various Artists – Rhapsody In Black

No lip-syncing, backing tracks or gimmicks?only consummate talent on these 'live' late-'50s clips from Canadian TV. Cab Calloway ("Minnie The Moocher") is at his most bizarre, Nat King Cole ("Stay With Love") is finger-poppin' smooth and Sammy Davis Jr ("Gypsy In My Soul/Perdido") is a human dynamo, while the gem in this collection is Duke Ellington working in a quintet setting.

No lip-syncing, backing tracks or gimmicks?only consummate talent on these ‘live’ late-’50s clips from Canadian TV. Cab Calloway (“Minnie The Moocher”) is at his most bizarre, Nat King Cole (“Stay With Love”) is finger-poppin’ smooth and Sammy Davis Jr (“Gypsy In My Soul/Perdido”) is a human dynamo, while the gem in this collection is Duke Ellington working in a quintet setting.

Tori Amos – Welcome To Sunny Florida

Tori has chosen a surprisingly conventional in-concert format for her first-ever DVD. Recorded in Florida last year, it's an intense performance, the songs drawn mostly from her recent Scarlet's Walk album, augmented by old favourites such as "Cornflake Girl" and "Professional Widow".

Tori has chosen a surprisingly conventional in-concert format for her first-ever DVD. Recorded in Florida last year, it’s an intense performance, the songs drawn mostly from her recent Scarlet’s Walk album, augmented by old favourites such as “Cornflake Girl” and “Professional Widow”.

Moloko – 11,000 Clicks

Shot at Brixton Academy at the end of Moloko's 2003 tour, this is a limp wander through the band's hits which even Roisin Murphy can't lift. There's none of the inter-band tension that a year on the road might have generated, and they even manage to mangle "Sing It Back". For devotees only.

Shot at Brixton Academy at the end of Moloko’s 2003 tour, this is a limp wander through the band’s hits which even Roisin Murphy can’t lift. There’s none of the inter-band tension that a year on the road might have generated, and they even manage to mangle “Sing It Back”. For devotees only.

The Creation – Red With Purple Flashes

Sadly not long-lost footage from the '60s but film from a brace of reunion gigs in the mid-'90s by the rediscovered pop-art cult heroes. There's lots of playing the guitar with a violin bow (something the band's Eddie Phillips invented way before Jimmy Page). But the transformation from razor-sharp teenage mods to middle-aged beer bellies is cruel on the eye.

Sadly not long-lost footage from the ’60s but film from a brace of reunion gigs in the mid-’90s by the rediscovered pop-art cult heroes. There’s lots of playing the guitar with a violin bow (something the band’s Eddie Phillips invented way before Jimmy Page). But the transformation from razor-sharp teenage mods to middle-aged beer bellies is cruel on the eye.

The Cramps – Live At Napa State Mental Hospital

Yes, on tuesday, June 13, 1978, voodoo rockabilly avatars The Cramps (in their greatest line-up, Lux Interior and Poison Ivy backed by Nick Knox and Byron Gregory) rolled into the recreation room of California's Napa State Mental Hospital, to play for the residents. Don't ask how this was ever allowed. Just give thanks someone had a camera. Captured in black and white on rudimentary home video equipment, the 20 minutes of footage here?for 25 years a bootleg (un)holy grail?ranks alongside music's most sacred artifacts, up there with Johnny Cash's prison shows, James Brown's Apollo stands, Dylan's electric storms of '66. "Somebody told me you people are crazy," says Lux, setting the tone while "The Way I Walk" fires up. "But I'm not sure about that." As assembled patients, stirred by the sound, begin to shimmy, invade the stage, steal the mic, scream their souls out and try to escape, you might wonder how politically correct this is. But notice how the band treat this audience: exactly the same way they treat every other audience. The wildest night. The band may have sounded (fractionally) better on occasion, but they've never been so completely... cramped. The very stuff, people, of legend.

Yes, on tuesday, June 13, 1978, voodoo rockabilly avatars The Cramps (in their greatest line-up, Lux Interior and Poison Ivy backed by Nick Knox and Byron Gregory) rolled into the recreation room of California’s Napa State Mental Hospital, to play for the residents. Don’t ask how this was ever allowed. Just give thanks someone had a camera.

Captured in black and white on rudimentary home video equipment, the 20 minutes of footage here?for 25 years a bootleg (un)holy grail?ranks alongside music’s most sacred artifacts, up there with Johnny Cash’s prison shows, James Brown’s Apollo stands, Dylan’s electric storms of ’66.

“Somebody told me you people are crazy,” says Lux, setting the tone while “The Way I Walk” fires up. “But I’m not sure about that.” As assembled patients, stirred by the sound, begin to shimmy, invade the stage, steal the mic, scream their souls out and try to escape, you might wonder how politically correct this is. But notice how the band treat this audience: exactly the same way they treat every other audience. The wildest night. The band may have sounded (fractionally) better on occasion, but they’ve never been so completely… cramped. The very stuff, people, of legend.

Live And Dangerous

First released in CD form in 1992, Fragments Of A Rainy Season marked a crucial, pivotal point in the life and career of our greatest living Welshman. After years of alcohol and drug addiction had turned his life into a full-blown shambles, Cale swapped whiskey and cocaine for regular games of squas...

First released in CD form in 1992, Fragments Of A Rainy Season marked a crucial, pivotal point in the life and career of our greatest living Welshman. After years of alcohol and drug addiction had turned his life into a full-blown shambles, Cale swapped whiskey and cocaine for regular games of squash and full-time commitment to parenthood in the early ’90s. Far from blunting his creative edge, sobriety and responsibility appeared to free him up to take greater risks in the studio, and brought the kind of focus that enabled him to hone his live act down to something like perfection. Gone were the days when he would stand on stage and scream at plants, decapitate chickens or harangue audiences. Through the ’90s to the present, Cale’s live performances have been less concerned with theatrical confrontation and mostly concerned with drilling into the real heart-meat of the songs in his back catalogue.

Recorded in Brussels in 1992, Fragments presents Cale in his most effective live guise. That’s to say: alone at piano or acoustic guitar, oozing a presence that brings to mind both rootless, romantically doomed Graham Greene hero and near-berserk Methodist minister. As live resum

Matchbox 20 – Show: A Night In The Life Of Matchbox 20

While Matchbox 20 have been a byword for AOR, director Hamish Hamilton's concert film has a sense of scale and occasion that makes Rob Thomas and friends look like a group with something almost thrilling to say. Caught in Atlanta during their 2003 tour, the band build a head of steam banging through hits like "Push", "3 AM" and "Bent".

While Matchbox 20 have been a byword for AOR, director Hamish Hamilton’s concert film has a sense of scale and occasion that makes Rob Thomas and friends look like a group with something almost thrilling to say. Caught in Atlanta during their 2003 tour, the band build a head of steam banging through hits like “Push”, “3 AM” and “Bent”.

A Quiff Of Nostalgia

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Morrissey THE M.E.N.ARENA, MANCHESTER Saturday May 22, 2004 As an entrance, it's unbeatable. A synth drone and a disembodied voice in the dark, in eerie helium-Scouse. A litany of Morrissey horrors from the decade he once dubbed the "19 Haties": from the Royal Family and Stock, Aitken & Waterman to "gut-wrenching disappointment" and "racist" ("Imperfect List" by Big Hard Excellent Fish). Then he saunters on, Armani'd to the hilt and framed by 12ft-high Morrissey letters flashed in red Vegas bulbs, and launches into Sinatra's "My Way". It could just as easily be "All Of Me". Or "I Believe". As comebacks go, it makes Lazarus look lame. To the facts. The man's first hometown gig in 12 years. A 15,000-strong crowd that sold out in just over an hour. Back in the UK Top 10 for the first time in a decade with "Irish Blood, English Heart". New album You Are The Quarry?his first since 1997?on the eve of topping the charts after years without a deal. Oh, and his 45th birthday. It doesn't take a leap of romantic imagination to believe that all the tangled strands of Morrissey's life finally come together on such a night. As ever, though, it's not quite so straightforward. For all his perceived victimisation?a siege mentality borne of 1992's critical backlash, further entrenched in LA exile by collapsed record companies and bitter court cases?post-millennium Moz remains hard to love. There's a preening narcissism, a touch of the precious, to the way he handles the adoration tonight. He's evidently moved by the terrace chants, but there's also a sense of the expected, too, like anything less just won't do. We're in superstar territory and he presumes you know it. There's even a point near the close (straight after the gorgeous "I'm Not Sorry" from the new album, complete with depth-charge blips) where, the throng having failed to spontaneously erupt into "Happy Birthday", he decides to mention it himself. When they do start up, the mock humility ("Who? ME?") sums him up tonight: a big hunk o' '68 Elvis, a Johnnie Ray teardrop, a titter of Frankie Howerd. Despite a midway sag?"Let Me Kiss You", "Jack The Ripper" and Raymonde's "No One Can Hold A Candle To You" indicate a workmanlike band rather than an inspired one?the show is extraordinary. Of the robust new weaponry, "First Of The Gang To Die" and "Irish Blood, English Heart" are the howitzers, especially the latter, with its sniping riposte to those who branded him a bigot after the notorious Union Jack incident at Madstock '92. For the record, he does unfurl the flag tonight, but it's an Irish tricolour. "How Can Anybody Possibly Know How I Feel?" typifies the embattled approach, flexing with tartly mischievous wisdom. After a glorious "I Know it's Gonna Happen Someday", he offers: "I can't believe I'm 29. Where did the years go? WHY did the years go?" Of course, the great paradox of the stadium-busting Morrissey of '04 is evident whenever he treads Smiths turf. There?and on early solo volleys circa "Everyday Is Like Sunday", here prefixed by The New York Dolls' "Subway Train"?he was writing for himself, but expressing the damp desire of an entire generation of teenage flotsam. Today it's much the same, but how many can relate to the English-as-Eccles ex-pat in Carole Lombard's Hollywood gaff, singing of gold discs, spiteful critics and custody of his millions? As inspired as You Are The Quarry may be, it's often an exclusive experience. "The Headmaster Ritual" is the first Smiths song he covers tonight. Truly stupendous it is, too, Boz Boorer picking out Marr's circular arpeggios admirably. Morrissey gives a wry smile afterwards: "The past never dies." The quasi-rockabilly of "Rubber Ring" swings neatly, "A Rush And A Push And The Land Is Ours" slaps hard and, by the time he finishes with "Shoplifters Of The World Unite", there's a discernible peeling back of the years. In contrast to the pristine-suited measure of his entrance, he's now unbuttoned, tucked half-in, half-out and dripping with abandon. Sidling back on for an encore of "There Is A Light That Never Goes Out", he nearly tears the roof off the sucker. "Thanks," he says, for once sounding entirely natural. "You've made a happy man very old. Whatever happens now, please don't forget me."

Morrissey

THE M.E.N.ARENA, MANCHESTER

Saturday May 22, 2004

As an entrance, it’s unbeatable. A synth drone and a disembodied voice in the dark, in eerie helium-Scouse. A litany of Morrissey horrors from the decade he once dubbed the “19 Haties”: from the Royal Family and Stock, Aitken & Waterman to “gut-wrenching disappointment” and “racist” (“Imperfect List” by Big Hard Excellent Fish). Then he saunters on, Armani’d to the hilt and framed by 12ft-high Morrissey letters flashed in red Vegas bulbs, and launches into Sinatra’s “My Way”. It could just as easily be “All Of Me”. Or “I Believe”. As comebacks go, it makes Lazarus look lame.

To the facts. The man’s first hometown gig in 12 years. A 15,000-strong crowd that sold out in just over an hour. Back in the UK Top 10 for the first time in a decade with “Irish Blood, English Heart”. New album You Are The Quarry?his first since 1997?on the eve of topping the charts after years without a deal. Oh, and his 45th birthday. It doesn’t take a leap of romantic imagination to believe that all the tangled strands of Morrissey’s life finally come together on such a night. As ever, though, it’s not quite so straightforward.

For all his perceived victimisation?a siege mentality borne of 1992’s critical backlash, further entrenched in LA exile by collapsed record companies and bitter court cases?post-millennium Moz remains hard to love. There’s a preening narcissism, a touch of the precious, to the way he handles the adoration tonight. He’s evidently moved by the terrace chants, but there’s also a sense of the expected, too, like anything less just won’t do. We’re in superstar territory and he presumes you know it. There’s even a point near the close (straight after the gorgeous “I’m Not Sorry” from the new album, complete with depth-charge blips) where, the throng having failed to spontaneously erupt into “Happy Birthday”, he decides to mention it himself. When they do start up, the mock humility (“Who? ME?”) sums him up tonight: a big hunk o’ ’68 Elvis, a Johnnie Ray teardrop, a titter of Frankie Howerd.

Despite a midway sag?”Let Me Kiss You”, “Jack The Ripper” and Raymonde’s “No One Can Hold A Candle To You” indicate a workmanlike band rather than an inspired one?the show is extraordinary. Of the robust new weaponry, “First Of The Gang To Die” and “Irish Blood, English Heart” are the howitzers, especially the latter, with its sniping riposte to those who branded him a bigot after the notorious Union Jack incident at Madstock ’92. For the record, he does unfurl the flag tonight, but it’s an Irish tricolour. “How Can Anybody Possibly Know How I Feel?” typifies the embattled approach, flexing with tartly mischievous wisdom. After a glorious “I Know it’s Gonna Happen Someday”, he offers: “I can’t believe I’m 29. Where did the years go? WHY did the years go?”

Of course, the great paradox of the stadium-busting Morrissey of ’04 is evident whenever he treads Smiths turf. There?and on early solo volleys circa “Everyday Is Like Sunday”, here prefixed by The New York Dolls’ “Subway Train”?he was writing for himself, but expressing the damp desire of an entire generation of teenage flotsam. Today it’s much the same, but how many can relate to the English-as-Eccles ex-pat in Carole Lombard’s Hollywood gaff, singing of gold discs, spiteful critics and custody of his millions? As inspired as You Are The Quarry may be, it’s often an exclusive experience.

“The Headmaster Ritual” is the first Smiths song he covers tonight. Truly stupendous it is, too, Boz Boorer picking out Marr’s circular arpeggios admirably. Morrissey gives a wry smile afterwards: “The past never dies.” The quasi-rockabilly of “Rubber Ring” swings neatly, “A Rush And A Push And The Land Is Ours” slaps hard and, by the time he finishes with “Shoplifters Of The World Unite”, there’s a discernible peeling back of the years. In contrast to the pristine-suited measure of his entrance, he’s now unbuttoned, tucked half-in, half-out and dripping with abandon.

Sidling back on for an encore of “There Is A Light That Never Goes Out”, he nearly tears the roof off the sucker. “Thanks,” he says, for once sounding entirely natural. “You’ve made a happy man very old. Whatever happens now, please don’t forget me.”

Jesse Malin – Shepherds Bush Empire, London

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The timing of this show is somewhat odd, coming as it does nearly a month before the release of Malin's second album, The Heat. The audience doesn't know the new songs and Jesse chides them for their reserve when he plays the unfamiliar material. He admits it's his own fault, though. The album was meant to be out now, but was delayed when he added two extra tracks. So sensibly, for much of the night he concentrates on the gritty, streetwise vignettes from his much-acclaimed debut, The Fine Art Of Self Destruction. Dressed in an ill-fitting bum-freezer jacket with an acoustic guitar slung round his neck, he gives us "Wendy" and "Downliner" in quick succession as his four-piece band ("from New York," as he helpfully tells us) sets up a fine old racket behind him. By the time he gets to "Hotel Columbia", a classic road song from the new album, the jacket is off and so is the shirt, as he strips down to sleeveless Springsteen-style singlet. A long preamble about his punk credentials seems to be going nowhere before he tells us that Neil Young is "the most fuckin' punk rock person in the world" and launches into an improbable version of "Helpless", which he dedicates to Tony Blair. He captures Neil's distressed choirboy tone to perfection, but is soon back to a New York snarl on "Arrested" and the brilliant "Mona Lisa" from the new record. He returns for an encore and delivers a potent acoustic "Solitaire" from Fine Art. He's been complaining all night that we haven't made enough noise and finally, to his obvious delight, most of the crowd joins in. Suitably encouraged, he concludes with a couple more everybody knows?Springsteen's "Hungry Heart" (recorded especially for Uncut, which raises a big cheer when he mentions it) and a stirring version of Costello's "Oliver's Army". He needs to come back soon, when the songs on The Heat have permeated our consciousness, and he surely won't find London quite so reticent.

The timing of this show is somewhat odd, coming as it does nearly a month before the release of Malin’s second album, The Heat. The audience doesn’t know the new songs and Jesse chides them for their reserve when he plays the unfamiliar material. He admits it’s his own fault, though. The album was meant to be out now, but was delayed when he added two extra tracks. So sensibly, for much of the night he concentrates on the gritty, streetwise vignettes from his much-acclaimed debut, The Fine Art Of Self Destruction.

Dressed in an ill-fitting bum-freezer jacket with an acoustic guitar slung round his neck, he gives us “Wendy” and “Downliner” in quick succession as his four-piece band (“from New York,” as he helpfully tells us) sets up a fine old racket behind him. By the time he gets to “Hotel Columbia”, a classic road song from the new album, the jacket is off and so is the shirt, as he strips down to sleeveless Springsteen-style singlet. A long preamble about his punk credentials seems to be going nowhere before he tells us that Neil Young is “the most fuckin’ punk rock person in the world” and launches into an improbable version of “Helpless”, which he dedicates to Tony Blair. He captures Neil’s distressed choirboy tone to perfection, but is soon back to a New York snarl on “Arrested” and the brilliant “Mona Lisa” from the new record.

He returns for an encore and delivers a potent acoustic “Solitaire” from Fine Art. He’s been complaining all night that we haven’t made enough noise and finally, to his obvious delight, most of the crowd joins in. Suitably encouraged, he concludes with a couple more everybody knows?Springsteen’s “Hungry Heart” (recorded especially for Uncut, which raises a big cheer when he mentions it) and a stirring version of Costello’s “Oliver’s Army”. He needs to come back soon, when the songs on The Heat have permeated our consciousness, and he surely won’t find London quite so reticent.

Americana Beauties

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American Music Club/Richmond Fontaine QUEEN ELIZABETH HALL LONDON Sunday May 23, 2004 Richmond Fontaine take to the stage looking like they've walked out of Bob Rafelson's Five Easy Pieces. Led by Willy Vlautin, the kind of West Coast human tumbleweed usually found roaming bars and used bookstores from Tijuana to Seattle, sporting a US Army jacket and ripped jeans, a prized book of Raymond Carver stories tucked safely away in a dirty dufflebag, Richmond Fontaine make surging, impassioned American guitar music about life and how not to live it. Tonight, they don't put a foot wrong, underscoring the much deserved fuss over their latest, breakthrough album, Post To Wire, surely the best Americana discovery since Whiskeytown unveiled their blue zenith, Strangers Almanac. As if we weren't punch-drunk enough after Fontaine, next up are the newly reformed American Music Club, back after a 10-year hiatus. Any fears of hammy reunion syndrome are gone by the first glorious chorus of "Johnny Mathis' Feet", Mark Eitzel singing his heart out, flanked by ace dresser Vudi, one of the most underrated guitarists of the post-punk era, fellow original members Tim Mooney and Dan Pearson and new recruit Marc Capelle?a kind of theatrical, jittery Liberace-on-speed, handling keyboards and trumpet. The superb songs premiered from the forthcoming new album are alternately beefy doomsday waltzes or hook-laden atmospheric offbeat pop nuggets projected against that trademark wall of sound. Of the oldies, there are many: "Gary's Song", "Nightwatchman", "Firefly", "Outside This Bar", "If I Had A Hammer", "Why Won't You Stay?" and a furious, peaking "Sick Of Food". Everybody knows by now that Mark Eitzel is one of the most gifted songwriters of his generation. Solo, he's good. But with AMC, he really soars, the magic and the chemistry and the history giving him wings. Tonight wasn't just a reunion show. It was all about Mark Eitzel going home. This band belongs together, as their stunning, incendiary set illustrated. For many of us, it was a homecoming, too, like seeing an old friend for the first time in a decade whose absence had left a gaping hole in our lives. After the show, all I could think was that the Pixies are going to have to leap through hoops to top this (see page 148). Welcome back, guys

American Music Club/Richmond Fontaine

QUEEN ELIZABETH HALL LONDON

Sunday May 23, 2004

Richmond Fontaine take to the stage looking like they’ve walked out of Bob Rafelson’s Five Easy Pieces. Led by Willy Vlautin, the kind of West Coast human tumbleweed usually found roaming bars and used bookstores from Tijuana to Seattle, sporting a US Army jacket and ripped jeans, a prized book of Raymond Carver stories tucked safely away in a dirty dufflebag, Richmond Fontaine make surging, impassioned American guitar music about life and how not to live it.

Tonight, they don’t put a foot wrong, underscoring the much deserved fuss over their latest, breakthrough album, Post To Wire, surely the best Americana discovery since Whiskeytown unveiled their blue zenith, Strangers Almanac.

As if we weren’t punch-drunk enough after Fontaine, next up are the newly reformed American Music Club, back after a 10-year hiatus. Any fears of hammy reunion syndrome are gone by the first glorious chorus of “Johnny Mathis’ Feet”, Mark Eitzel singing his heart out, flanked by ace dresser Vudi, one of the most underrated guitarists of the post-punk era, fellow original members Tim Mooney and Dan Pearson and new recruit Marc Capelle?a kind of theatrical, jittery Liberace-on-speed, handling keyboards and trumpet.

The superb songs premiered from the forthcoming new album are alternately beefy doomsday waltzes or hook-laden atmospheric offbeat pop nuggets projected against that trademark wall of sound. Of the oldies, there are many: “Gary’s Song”, “Nightwatchman”, “Firefly”, “Outside This Bar”, “If I Had A Hammer”, “Why Won’t You Stay?” and a furious, peaking “Sick Of Food”. Everybody knows by now that Mark Eitzel is one of the most gifted songwriters of his generation. Solo, he’s good. But with AMC, he really soars, the magic and the chemistry and the history giving him wings. Tonight wasn’t just a reunion show. It was all about Mark Eitzel going home. This band belongs together, as their stunning, incendiary set illustrated. For many of us, it was a homecoming, too, like seeing an old friend for the first time in a decade whose absence had left a gaping hole in our lives. After the show, all I could think was that the Pixies are going to have to leap through hoops to top this (see page 148). Welcome back, guys

That Old Black Magic

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Pixies BRIXTON ACADEMY, LONDON Thursday June 3 and Saturday June 5, 2004 All you really want to know is whether they were any good or not, right? Eleven years since they split up, hitting these shores on the back of a sell-out reunion tour, our expectations were almost unreasonably high. Do they ...

Pixies

BRIXTON ACADEMY, LONDON

Thursday June 3 and Saturday June 5, 2004

All you really want to know is whether they were any good or not, right? Eleven years since they split up, hitting these shores on the back of a sell-out reunion tour, our expectations were almost unreasonably high. Do they pull it off? Hell, yes.

Uncut catches Boston’s finest on the second and, two days later, the final night of their four-date residency at Brixton Academy, and on both occasions they blow the roof off and tear the stars from the sky. They parachute in, play 25 songs, then fly out again 90 minutes later; no frills, no set to speak of, no polite between-song banter. They just race headlong through one of the most impressive and influential back catalogues rock music has ever produced, a trailblazing, eyeball-slicing mix of punk, snarling surf guitar, deviant dynamics and dark-as-fuck lyrics.

And anything other than a greatest hits set would have been a disappointment, if not downright rude. Certainly, everything you’d want is here?”Monkey Gone To Heaven”, “Gouge Away”, “Where Is My Mind?”, “Debaser”, “Wave Of Mutilation”, the list goes on?but seeing them on two different nights, it’s pretty striking how changes in the running order affect the emphasis of the material. So, on the Thursday, “Here Comes Your Man” arrives early in the evening, a neat, crowd-pleasing moment?but on Saturday, as part of the closing encore, it becomes a roaring, jubilant adieu.

The past 11 years have treated the band reasonably well. But, perhaps tellingly, there’s not much visible camaraderie between the four members; they keep their distance, rarely establishing any eye-contact. Black Francis looks a little heavier, Joey Santiago a little thinner on top, Dave Lovering almost resembles a travelling snake-oil salesman or a member of Neil Young’s road crew circa 1975 with his straggly long hair and goatee beard. Only Kim Deal seems to have escaped the passing of time unscathed. The bulk of the sets are drawn from the classic opening salvo of Come On Pilgrim/Surfer Rosa and Doolittle. As if acknowledging that their creative edge was dimming by the time they made Bossanova and Trompe Le Monde, they play only four songs from those last two albums on the nights Uncut sees them, most notably their ferocious Jesus & Mary Chain cover “Head On”, which opens the Saturday show.

Apart from Thursday’s slow-build reworking of “Nimrod’s Son”, which sounds like it was intended for the soundtrack of a Vincent Gallo movie, there are no great changes from the songs as they appear on record. Everything is swathed in white noise, Frank’s trademark howl wrenched from the deepest recesses of his soul, only Kim’s honey-dripping harmonies providing any light here. Everything burns, pretty much.

Some may find Francis’ “We’re only in it for the money” admittances grating?particularly when you realise, on top of the

James Brown – Star Time

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When papa found the brand new bag called The One?the funk beat wherein the first accent hits at the start of the bar?he revolutionised African-American dance music. The next 10 years ('65-'75) were spent honing the most propulsive grooves ever laid down on tape: "Cold Sweat", "Mother Popcorn", "Sex Machine" and their kind. Prior to his golden decade, Brown and the crack unit that was the Famous Flames were an impassioned rhythm'n'gospel line-up. Everything from 1955's throat-shredding "Please, Please, Please" to the specious Afrika Bambaataa collaboration "Unity" is here on Star Time. No home's complete without it.

When papa found the brand new bag called The One?the funk beat wherein the first accent hits at the start of the bar?he revolutionised African-American dance music. The next 10 years (’65-’75) were spent honing the most propulsive grooves ever laid down on tape: “Cold Sweat”, “Mother Popcorn”, “Sex Machine” and their kind.

Prior to his golden decade, Brown and the crack unit that was the Famous Flames were an impassioned rhythm’n’gospel line-up. Everything from 1955’s throat-shredding “Please, Please, Please” to the specious Afrika Bambaataa collaboration “Unity” is here on Star Time. No home’s complete without it.

The Shadows – The Essential Collection

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Ask any '60s British guitar hero who influenced them most and two names recur. One is Howlin Wolf's guitanst Hubert Sumlin. The other is Hank B Marvin. The Shadows' role as pioneers was fleetingly brief and The Essential Collection stretches out the story to 1979, when really all you want is the pre-1963 stuff. Despite how swiftly Beatledom rendered Hank's style obsolete, his tremelo-heavy playing on the likes of "Apache", "Guitar Tango" and "FBI" still retains the capacity to thrill. But what fool decided to include '70s cabaret dross such as "Don't Cry For Me Argentina" and "Bridge Over Troubled Water"?

Ask any ’60s British guitar hero who influenced them most and two names recur. One is Howlin Wolf’s guitanst Hubert Sumlin. The other is Hank B Marvin. The Shadows’ role as pioneers was fleetingly brief and The Essential Collection stretches out the story to 1979, when really all you want is the pre-1963 stuff.

Despite how swiftly Beatledom rendered Hank’s style obsolete, his tremelo-heavy playing on the likes of “Apache”, “Guitar Tango” and “FBI” still retains the capacity to thrill. But what fool decided to include ’70s cabaret dross such as “Don’t Cry For Me Argentina” and “Bridge Over Troubled Water”?

Anthony Newley – Love Is A Now & Then Thing

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Without the kitchen-sink double-whammy of Newley's Stop The World musical and The Strange World Of Gurney Slade TV series, the rich vein of 'English' pop songwriting (Kinks/ Bowie/Blur/Pulp etc) would not have pulsed so strongly. Newley also had the most unique interpretive vocal talent of the last century. No one did cheeky or chirpy better, but his morose "wee small hours" balladeering is a near-perfect dismal pleasure. From 1960 and '64 these two suicide-songbook extravaganzas, luxuriating in orchestral gorgeousness, recall the twilight resignation of Sinatra's "Only The Lonely" but with added Clown-Grimaldi grimace accentuated by East End vowels. Notably, "Winter Of My Discontent" finds Newley intoning "The world is full of... [dramatic pause] DISSONANCE!" I'm not joking. Neither was Newley. A clown's white-face has rarely been so profound stained.

Without the kitchen-sink double-whammy of Newley’s Stop The World musical and The Strange World Of Gurney Slade TV series, the rich vein of ‘English’ pop songwriting (Kinks/ Bowie/Blur/Pulp etc) would not have pulsed so strongly. Newley also had the most unique interpretive vocal talent of the last century. No one did cheeky or chirpy better, but his morose “wee small hours” balladeering is a near-perfect dismal pleasure.

From 1960 and ’64 these two suicide-songbook extravaganzas, luxuriating in orchestral gorgeousness, recall the twilight resignation of Sinatra’s “Only The Lonely” but with added Clown-Grimaldi grimace accentuated by East End vowels. Notably, “Winter Of My Discontent” finds Newley intoning

“The world is full of… [dramatic pause] DISSONANCE!” I’m not joking. Neither was Newley.

A clown’s white-face has rarely been so profound stained.

The Butterfield Blues Band – The Resurrection Of Pigboy Crabshaw

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The '67 departure of BB Band axe dude Bloomfield gave fellow Windy City man Elvin Bishop the chance to revamp Paul Butterfield's seminal blues entity. Where Bloomfield had been rooted in South Side/Muddy Waters grit, Bishop leaned more to the R&B/blues ballad/rock'n' soul feel of Albert King and Bobby "Blue"Bland. Hence the covers on The Resurrection Of Pigboy Crabshaw of "Born Under A Bad Sign"and "I Pity The Fool". Augmenting the Memphis feel of both LPs is a tight, spurting horn section led by future sax deity David Sanborn Guesting on organ on In My Own Dream is the great Al Kooper.

The ’67 departure of BB Band axe dude Bloomfield gave fellow Windy City man Elvin Bishop the chance to revamp Paul Butterfield’s seminal blues entity. Where Bloomfield had been rooted in South Side/Muddy Waters grit, Bishop leaned more to the R&B/blues ballad/rock’n’ soul feel of Albert King and Bobby “Blue”Bland. Hence the covers on The Resurrection Of Pigboy Crabshaw of “Born Under A Bad Sign”and “I Pity The Fool”. Augmenting the Memphis feel of both LPs is a tight, spurting horn section led by future sax deity David Sanborn Guesting on organ on In My Own Dream is the great Al Kooper.

Slow Dazzle

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In 1994, a mormon couple from Duluth, Minnesota formed a band that would soon become known as the slowest, quietest and most doleful in America. To most musicians, the rigid aesthetic parameters that Alan Sparhawk, Mimi Parker (and bassist Zak Sally) imposed on themselves would have been impossible ...

In 1994, a mormon couple from Duluth, Minnesota formed a band that would soon become known as the slowest, quietest and most doleful in America. To most musicians, the rigid aesthetic parameters that Alan Sparhawk, Mimi Parker (and bassist Zak Sally) imposed on themselves would have been impossible to sustain for long. Yet a decade later, Low remain an immutable fixture on the musical landscape: still, pure, minimal, and not quite as stern as they sometimes appear.

It would be a mistake to paint A Lifetime Of Temporary Relief as packed with great gags. Fundamentally this is sombre and beautiful music that takes the stark crawls of Galaxie 500 and Codeine and extrapolates them into a surprisingly fulfilling career. Over 10 years, three CDs and 55 tracks, no note is wasted. Songs progress with meticulous sloth, savouring the possibilities of every chord and rustle of brush against drum. Sparhawk and Parker have warm lullaby voices when they harmonise but, in isolation, they can sound wonderfully desolate.

Over the duration of an album, Low’s exploration of such a melancholy, theoretically limited palette has always been compelling. Four hours of it in one sitting, however, is a tad too much for even the most dedicated fan. A Lifetime is satisfying as an encyclopaedia of Low, to be dipped into now and again. That way you can fish out the likes of first demo “Lullaby”, 10 minutes of tremulous grandeur that seems to bring time to a precarious halt; or “I Remember”, an unexpectedly successful sidestep into glacial, Cure-ish synth-pop.

There’s also a great covers album dispersed throughout this box, which highlights Low’s fine taste and the adaptability of their formula. Clearly, most decent songs can survive being played very slowly, including “Blowin’ In The Wind” and The Smiths’ “Last Night I Dreamt That Somebody Loved Me”. Secreted at the end of Disc Two, three unlisted live tracks derive from a Halloween gig when the band recast their songs as glue-encrusted thrashabouts

The Dillards – Pickin’ And Fiddlin’

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When Douglas and Rodney Dillard's quartet hit LA in 1963, they blew everyone's minds. Playing bluegrass with fuck-you rock'n'roll attitude, they wasted the competition at clubs like the Troubadour. 1965's Pickin' And Fiddlin' was so-titled because red-hot violinist Byron Berline entered the fray, sawing brilliantly away on a selection of rags, reels and hornpipes. With Doug's departure for his Fantastic Expedition with Gene Clark, the more conservative Rodney oversaw late '68's Wheatstraw Suite, a surprisingly bold mix of acoustic trad and electric contemporary (including Beatles and Nilsson covers) that influenced the whole LA country rock clique. 1970's Copperfields was more of the same, only slightly less so.

When Douglas and Rodney Dillard’s quartet hit LA in 1963, they blew everyone’s minds. Playing bluegrass with fuck-you rock’n’roll attitude, they wasted the competition at clubs like the Troubadour. 1965’s Pickin’ And Fiddlin’ was so-titled because red-hot violinist Byron Berline entered the fray, sawing brilliantly away on a selection of rags, reels and hornpipes. With Doug’s departure for his Fantastic Expedition with Gene Clark, the more conservative Rodney oversaw late ’68’s Wheatstraw Suite, a surprisingly bold mix of acoustic trad and electric contemporary (including Beatles and Nilsson covers) that influenced the whole LA country rock clique. 1970’s Copperfields was more of the same, only slightly less so.

Ian McNabb – Potency—The Best Of Ian McNabb

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It's hard to understand why the solo work of Ian McNabb has fallen into such neglect. As Potency proves, over more than a decade he's been making quality pop characterised by lyrical maturity and an old-fashioned respect for melody. Highlights among the 15 tracks taken from seven albums include "Potency" itself and "You Must Be Prepared To Dream" from the cracking 1994 album he made with Crazy Horse, the vivid "Great Dreams Of Heaven" and the wonderfully titled "If Love Was Like Guitars". It's available as a single CD, but there's a limited edition for true fans with a second CD containing 15 B-sides and rarities.

It’s hard to understand why the solo work of Ian McNabb has fallen into such neglect. As Potency proves, over more than a decade he’s been making quality pop characterised by lyrical maturity and an old-fashioned respect for melody. Highlights among the 15 tracks taken from seven albums include “Potency” itself and “You Must Be Prepared To Dream” from the cracking 1994 album he made with Crazy Horse, the vivid “Great Dreams Of Heaven” and the wonderfully titled “If Love Was Like Guitars”. It’s available as a single CD, but there’s a limited edition for true fans with a second CD containing 15 B-sides and rarities.

Moby Grape – Legendary Grape

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In 1989, four-fifths of the original Moby Grape (minus the troubled Skip Spence) reconvened to record 10 new songs. Credited to The Melvilles?due to the long-running legal dispute over use of their name?it's now bolstered by another 10 unissued tracks. There's way too much heads-down boogie for a band whose greatest recording?1967's Moby Grape?so nonchalantly tore up the 12-bar rulebook, but there are echoes of greatness in the sunburst attack of revived oldie "All My Life" and the ringing arpeggios of "Changing". Proof that at their wistful best?as on re-recorded classic "8:05", all lightly buttered harmonies and gentle strum?they remained untouchable.

In 1989, four-fifths of the original Moby Grape (minus the troubled Skip Spence) reconvened to record 10 new songs. Credited to The Melvilles?due to the long-running legal dispute over use of their name?it’s now bolstered by another 10 unissued tracks. There’s way too much heads-down boogie for a band whose greatest recording?1967’s Moby Grape?so nonchalantly tore up the 12-bar rulebook, but there are echoes of greatness in the sunburst attack of revived oldie “All My Life” and the ringing arpeggios of “Changing”. Proof that at their wistful best?as on re-recorded classic “8:05”, all lightly buttered harmonies and gentle strum?they remained untouchable.