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Don McLean’s “American Pie” manuscript makes over one million dollars at auction

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Don McLean's transcript for the single "American Pie" sold for over one million dollars at auction yesterday [April 7, 2015]. A 16-page transcript featuring the song's lyrics, plus notes from the writer and an extra verse which was never recorded, was auctioned by Christie's in New York. The trans...

Don McLean‘s transcript for the single “American Pie” sold for over one million dollars at auction yesterday [April 7, 2015].

A 16-page transcript featuring the song’s lyrics, plus notes from the writer and an extra verse which was never recorded, was auctioned by Christie’s in New York.

The transcript sold for $1.2m (£806,000) with the new owner now having access to the meaning behind McLean’s 1971 hit.

The buyer’s identity has not been divulged.

In an interview with Reuters published before the auction, McLean confirmed that “The writing and the lyrics will divulge everything there is to divulge.”

Explaining his decision to sell the manuscript, McLean told Christie’s: “I thought it would be interesting as I reach age 70 to release this work product on the song ‘American Pie’ so that anyone who might be interested will learn that this song was not a parlor game. It was an indescribable photograph of America that I tried to capture in words and music and then was fortunate enough through the help of others to make a successful recording.”

Click here to read our feature on the making of “American Pie”

Bob Dylan announces European summer tour dates

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Bob Dylan has confirmed a 19 date European tour for summer 2015. The tour begins on June 20 at Nord Mole Open Air in Mainz, Germany. Dylan also visits Slovenia, Austria, Italy, Spain, France and Switzerland before ending up back in Germany on July 16 for the Stimmen Festival in Lörrach. No UK ...

Bob Dylan has confirmed a 19 date European tour for summer 2015.

The tour begins on June 20 at Nord Mole Open Air in Mainz, Germany. Dylan also visits Slovenia, Austria, Italy, Spain, France and Switzerland before ending up back in Germany on July 16 for the Stimmen Festival in Lörrach.

No UK shows are currently scheduled.

Meanwhile, Dylan resumes touring this coming Friday [April 10, 2015] in Atlanta. It’s his first show since he closed his five night stint at New York’s Beacon Theatre on December 3, 2014.

Most recently, Dylan was the latest recipient of the MusiCares Person of the Year accolade. Dylan gave a 30-minute acceptance speech at the event in February, at which artists including Bruce Springsteen, Neil Young, Jack White and Beck performed. A DVD of the show has been signed off by Dylan.

Bob Dylan’s European tour dates are:

June 20, Nord Mole Open Air, Mainz, Germany

June 21, Sparkassen – Carré, Tübingen, Germany

June 23, Brose Arena, Bamberg, Germany

June 25, Arena Stožice, Ljubljana, Slovenia

June 26, Ottakringer Arena Wiesen, Wiesen, Austria

June 27, Aria di Friuli Venezia Giulia, Udine, Italy

June 29, Terme di Caracalla, Rome, Italy

July 1, Lucca Summer Festival, Lucca, Italy

July 2, Pala Alpitour, Torino, Italy

July 4, Festival Jardins de Pedralbes, Barcelona, Spain

July 5, Pabellón Principe Felipe, Zaragoza, Spain

July 6, Barclaycard Center, Madrid, Spain

July 8, Palacio Municipal De Los Deportes, Granada, Spain

July 9, Teatro de la Axerquia, Córdoba, Spain

July 11, Velodromo Anoeta, San Sebastian, Spain

July 12, Festival Pause Guitare, Albi, France

July 13, Festival De Poupet, Saint-Malô-du-Bois, France

July 15, Moon & Stars Festival, Locarno, Switzerland

July 16, Stimmen Festival, Lörrach, Germany

Ticket details can be found here.

The 12th Uncut Playlist Of 2015

Over the past week or so, I've finally got round to reading Marcus O'Dair's authorised biography of Robert Wyatt, "Different Every Time", which I'm enjoying very much. This morning I was looking at some discussion of Wyatt's myriad guest appearances, and a quote from Chris Cutler kind of jumped out....

Over the past week or so, I’ve finally got round to reading Marcus O’Dair’s authorised biography of Robert Wyatt, “Different Every Time”, which I’m enjoying very much. This morning I was looking at some discussion of Wyatt’s myriad guest appearances, and a quote from Chris Cutler kind of jumped out.

“Robert’s voice could be called limited,” O’Dair quotes Cutler as saying, “in the sense that, I suspect, he can only sing that way. It’s the voice he’s been given. If you have a voice like Beyonce, the sky’s the limit, but you’re also in the middle of the bell curve of voices, hundreds of which sound just like yours. So you’re trapped in a continuum of sameness until listeners can hardly tell who’s who any more. That’s not a problem for ‘limited’ voices, like Robert’s or Dagmar [Krause]’s, or Dylan’s. or Blind Lemon Jefferson’s.”

“Continuum of sameness”; it’s a neat phrase, and it’s useful to note that Cutler doesn’t use it as a blanket criticism of singers like Beyonce, rather as a way of praising distinctive voices that are harder to assimilate. Looking at the list of music I’ve played in the Uncut office before and after Easter, it seems salient, as there are a couple of tribute albums on there dedicated to two great idiosyncratic voices; Shirley Collins and Karen Dalton.

The Dalton project, on Tompkins Square, is especially interesting, featuring as it does 11 lyrics written by Dalton – who never released any of her own songs – and repurposed by the likes of Sharon Van Etten, Lucinda Williams, Josephine Foster and (my personal favourite at the moment) Julia Holter.

I’ll try and link to some of this as soon as I can. In the meantime, plenty to enjoy here, hopefully: a new Meg Baird track, a solo guitar yoga jam from Arbouretum’s Dave Heumann, something fresh from George Clinton and Sly Stone, and the beautiful new Jamie xx track, at once poignant and uplifting. Have a listen, and see what you think (The Idris Muhammad track it samples is pretty amazing too, incidentally)…

Follow me on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

1 Bitchin Bajas – Transporteur (Hands In The Dark)

2 Sun Araw – Heavy Deeds (Not Not Fun)

3 Kendrick Lamar – To Pimp A Butterfly (Polydor)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6AhXSoKa8xw

4 Death – N.E.W. (Drag City)

5 The Catenary Wires – Red Red Skies (Elefant)

6 Various Artists – Shirley Inspired (Earth)

7 Sufjan Stevens – Carrie & Lowell (Asthmatic Kitty)

8 Dave Heumann – Yoga Guitar At Patterson 21/3/15 (www.soundcloud.com)

9 Dälek – From Filthy Tongue Of Gods And Griots (Ici D’Ailleurs)

10 The Weather Station – Loyalty (Paradise Of Bachelors)

11 Rob St John – Surface Tension (Surface Tension)

Read my review here

12 Library Of Sands – Shapes Of Rain (Wild Sages)

13 Library Of Sands – Magenta Mists In The Mountain (Wild Sages)

14 Cankun – Only The Sun Is Full Of Gold (Hands In The Dark/Not Not Fun)

15 Various Artists – Remembering Mountains: Unheard Songs By Karen Dalton (Tompkins Square)

16 Bert Jansch & John Renbourn – Bert & John (Transatlantic)

17 Black Mountain – Black Mountain: 10th Anniversary Deluxe Edition (Dead Oceans)

18 Leon Bridges – Coming Home (Columbia)

19 Delia Gonzalez – In Remembrance (DFA)

20 Leftfield – Universal Everything (Infectious)

21 Jamie xx – Loud Places (Featuring Romy) (Young Turks)

22 Meg Baird – Don’t Weigh Down The Light (Wichita/Drag City)

23 Funkadelic & Soul Clap (Featuring Sly Stone) – In Da Kar (Soul Clap)

https://soundcloud.com/gillespetersonworldwide/funkadelic-soul-clap-peep-this-feat-nick-monaco-g-koop-greg-paulus

24 King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – Quarters (Heavenly/Castle Face)

25 FFS – FFS (Domino)

The Making Of… Don McLean’s “American Pie”

Today [April 7, 2015], Don McLean's original 16-page manuscript for his 1971 single is due to be auctioned at Christie's in New York, where it is expected to fetch $1.5m (£1m). What better time, then, to dig into the Uncut archives for this Making Of... piece from November, 2012 [Take 186], where ...

Today [April 7, 2015], Don McLean’s original 16-page manuscript for his 1971 single is due to be auctioned at Christie’s in New York, where it is expected to fetch $1.5m (£1m).

What better time, then, to dig into the Uncut archives for this Making Of… piece from November, 2012 [Take 186], where McLean along with guitarist David Spinozza, bassist Rob Stoner, producer Ed Freeman and engineer Tom Flye tell us the story of this evergreen hit…

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070415MkgOfPie

“’American Pie’ is a death song, really,” says Don McLean today. “Friends of mine who’d died in Vietnam were being brought back. There were flag-draped coffins, assassinations. Rock’n’roll and Buddy Holly had saved my mortal soul, as the song says. Holly’s plane crash in 1959 foreshadowed a series of deaths, from my father’s two years later when I was 15, which shattered my life, through to Kennedy’s. I came from a conservative, white middle-class background, and all this destroyed my belief in everything I had been taught.”

Don McLean was a regular on the New York folk circuit in the late Sixties. Taken under his wing by Pete Seeger, McLean released one album, Tapestry, in late 1970, which sold modestly. In March the following year, he debuted “American Pie”, in Ambler, Pennsylvania, while opening for Laura Nyro. Inspired by his childhood memories of reading the news of Buddy Holly’s death on February 3, 1959 in a newspaper, the song’s six verses then went on to deliver a coded history of rock’n’roll, from the optimism of the 1950s through to darkness at the end of the Sixties.

“The whole time we were doing it, we thought it was an album cut, because it was just too long,” remembers bassist Rob Stoner. Despite it’s epic length – 8 minutes 33 seconds – it became one of the biggest hits of the 1970s. “It was a summation of music, politics, life in America: everything,” says McLean.

DON MCLEAN: I was living in a little gate-house in Cold Spring, New York on the Hudson River, and I was upstairs in the room that I used to write songs in. I started singing this slow, opening part that was about Buddy Holly. It was just so pretty. It was like it came in on my radio. And I thought, “God, that’s nice.” For a long time I just had that. Then I made up this nutty chorus that I liked, and it’s really fairly pornographic – you know, “American Pie”. “Miss American Pie…” And then I had this idea start to develop about politics and music, that they flow together, parallel through history. I could definitely see it in the ‘50s and ‘60s. I decided to project that forward and create a kind of rock’n’roll dream.

ED FREEMAN: I had only produced 2 or 3 albums, so I was pretty green. But Don searched me out, on the basis of the first record I had made.

MCLEAN: Ed produced a record called Bird On A Wire by one of my favourite artists, Tim Hardin, and I thought it was the best Hardin album I’d heard. So I wanted Ed for this record. Unfortunately, he did not particularly like what I was doing. And I found him to be a condescending and insecure guy. So we did not get along.

FREEMAN: My taste at the time was much more towards authentic folk music, and I found him to be very commercial and self-consciously poetic. At the beginning, I wasn’t a fan.

MCLEAN: I knew that this guy had something that I wanted, and I was going to get it, but I didn’t have any idea how much bullshit I was going to have to go through.

Bob Burns, Lynyrd Skynyrd drummer, dies aged 64

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Bob Burns, a founding member of Lynyrd Skynyrd, has died aged 64. Burns was killed in a car crash on Friday, April 3 when his car left the road, striking a mailbox and a tree in Georgia, reports BBC News. Burns played in the group from 1966 to 1974, alongside vocalist Ronnie Van Zant, bassist Larr...

Bob Burns, a founding member of Lynyrd Skynyrd, has died aged 64.

Burns was killed in a car crash on Friday, April 3 when his car left the road, striking a mailbox and a tree in Georgia, reports BBC News.

Burns played in the group from 1966 to 1974, alongside vocalist Ronnie Van Zant, bassist Larry Junstrom and guitarists Gary Rossington and Allen Collins.

He performed on Lynyrd Skynyrd’s first two albums, which included two of the band’s biggest hits, “Sweet Home Alabama” and “Free Bird”.

In 2006, Burns rejoined Lynyrd Skynyrd onstage at the band’s Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame induction ceremony performance.

Rossington, the only original member still in the band, wrote on Facebook, “Well, today I’m at a loss for words, but I just remember Bob being a funny guy. He used to do skits for us and make us laugh all the time, he was hilarious!”

“Ironically, since we played Jacksonville yesterday, Dale, my daughter and I, went by the cemetery to see some of the guys in the band and my parents’ grave sites.

“On the way back, we went by Bob Burns’ old house. It was there in the carport where we used to first start to practice with Skynyrd.

“My heart goes out to his family and God bless him and them in this sad time. He was a great, great drummer.”

BB King hospitalised

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BB King has been hospitalised, according to a report on the Los Angeles Times. King's daughter, Claudette, confirmed that her father was suffering from dehydration caused by his Type 2 diabetes. The Guardian says that King has been suffering from the condition for 20 years. In October 2014, Kin...

BB King has been hospitalised, according to a report on the Los Angeles Times.

King’s daughter, Claudette, confirmed that her father was suffering from dehydration caused by his Type 2 diabetes.

The Guardian says that King has been suffering from the condition for 20 years.

In October 2014, King fell ill during a show and cancelled the remaining eight performances of a tour, owing to dehydration and exhaustion.

Frank Zappa’s final album gets release date

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Frank Zappa's last studio album, Dance Me This, is scheduled for release this summer. Recorded before the artist’s death in 1993, Dance Me This is available to pre-order from Zappa's website. The Guardian reports the album will be released on June 1, 2015. The Guardian also cites an interview w...

Frank Zappa‘s last studio album, Dance Me This, is scheduled for release this summer.

Recorded before the artist’s death in 1993, Dance Me This is available to pre-order from Zappa’s website.

The Guardian reports the album will be released on June 1, 2015.

The Guardian also cites an interview with Guitarist Magazine, which ran a few months before Zappa’s death, where he describes Dance Me This as “a Synclavier album… which is designed to be used by modern dance groups. It’s probably not going to come out until next year.”

Jambase quotes from an email, reportedly from the Zappa family, which explains the album “is the last title FZ finished in 1993 along with Trance-Fusion; the last chapter in his Master Work, Civilization, Phase III; and of course, The Rage & The Fury, The Music Of Edgard Varèse.”

 

Joni Mitchell latest: health “continues to improve” after collapse

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Joni Mitchell's health continues to improve, according to the latest statement posted [April 3, 2015] on her website. Mitchell collapsed while at her Bel Air home on March 31, 2015. She was taken to a nearby hospital, where she has remained ever since. According to the most recent update on her we...

Joni Mitchell‘s health continues to improve, according to the latest statement posted [April 3, 2015] on her website.

Mitchell collapsed while at her Bel Air home on March 31, 2015. She was taken to a nearby hospital, where she has remained ever since.

According to the most recent update on her website, “Joni remains under observation in the hospital and is resting comfortably. We are encouraged by her progress and she continues to improve and get stronger each day.”

A web page has also been created to aggregate all the Facebook and Twitter messages sent to the singer. It can be found by clicking here.

Bryan Ferry: “David Bowie rang and said, ‘I’ve just done an album like yours…’”

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Bryan Ferry takes us through his solo catalogue in the new Uncut, dated May 2015 and out now. From 1973 debut These Foolish Things right up to last year’s Avonmore, the Roxy Music singer and songwriter recalls the writing and recording of his best albums, remembering sessions with Nile Rodgers, D...

Bryan Ferry takes us through his solo catalogue in the new Uncut, dated May 2015 and out now.

From 1973 debut These Foolish Things right up to last year’s Avonmore, the Roxy Music singer and songwriter recalls the writing and recording of his best albums, remembering sessions with Nile Rodgers, David Gilmour and more in locations ranging from west London to Bette Midler’s loft in Tribeca, New York City.

Ferry even responds to the rumours that Bowie’s Pin Ups concept was inspired by his own covers album, These Foolish Things, recorded just before Bowie’s.

David Bowie actually telephoned me,” he says. “We must have done the [Finsbury Park] Rainbow show with him before that, and the Greyhound in Croydon, another show where Roxy supported Bowie. David rang me cheerfully one day and said, ‘Just to let you know, I’ve just done an album like yours.’

“But it wasn’t really, it was a covers LP, but all from the ’60s, whereas mine was a more comprehensive take on pop, just lots of different people who were interesting to me, writers like Goffin & King, Leiber & Stoller, The Rolling Stones, Smokey Robinson, of course, and Dylan.”

The new Uncut is out now

Leonard Cohen’s 20 Best Songs

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Family, friends and fans reveal the man’s greatest work. Anthems! Hallelujahs! “I’m just paying my rent every day in the Tower of Song!” From November 2014’s issue of Uncut (Take 210). Interviews by Michael Bonner, Nick Hasted and Graeme Thomson __________________________ ‘‘He’s ...

Family, friends and fans reveal the man’s greatest work. Anthems! Hallelujahs! “I’m just paying my rent every day in the Tower of Song!” From November 2014’s issue of Uncut (Take 210). Interviews by Michael Bonner, Nick Hasted and Graeme Thomson
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‘‘He’s always working,” says Adam Cohen of his father, Leonard. “It’s an isolated process – he went to monastic lengths. He told me, ‘When you’re exhausted and you’ve spent hours and days more than you thought you ever would on a song, that’s when you know the actual work has begun.’ That’s a wonderful emblem of his devotion, discipline and dedication. There has never been a molecule of wavering. He’s solely unconcerned with songs he’s already written. His only preoccupation is the new songs he’s trying to finish.”

Cohen’s willingness to keep looking forward is estimable, especially after assembling a body of work as exquisite and meticulously crafted as his. As he celebrates his 80th birthday, however, we have chosen to look back at some of his greatest songs. For this, we’ve asked a panel of collaborators past and present, friends and family, and some famous fans to talk about their favourite of his many great songs. Along the way, we have truffled out some extraordinary revelations, concerning the procurement of budget-price synthesisers, the drinking of “strange concoctions” and sage advice he dispensed to a then-upcoming musician over the dinner table. We have also been given a glimpse into the working practices behind Cohen’s new album, Popular Problems, by one of his latest conspirators, Patrick Leonard. “The things that stick with me are the moments of creation,” he tells us…

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20 COME HEALING
Old Ideas, 2012
The opening track from Cohen’s first studio album in eight years: a plea that the heavens might hear his “penitential hymn”.

PATRICK LEONARD [producer, co-writer]: I’m driving to Leonard’s now, where we’re mastering the new record, Popular Problems. He writes every day, and there’s always new stuff. Some of the songs on this record were written as we were mixing. We worked at his place, and I worked at my place with musicians, then we camped out at the studio for the last month, getting it finished. It took half a year, but in real time, three months. Which is somewhat extraordinary, in that the songs weren’t written when we started. Like Old Ideas, we were never really in a studio. We hang out as we work, just me and him at his house, so it’s always relaxed. And the way the record sounds is a reflection of how it was done. The moments where he hands me Old Ideas’ “Come Healing” in the kitchen and recites it for me, and I go across to the studio and I don’t even sit down, as I already know what it is. That song feels like it should be in church somewhere and I’ve written the music in three minutes. Because the lyrics and intent are so rich. It’s in there already.

David Bowie – the inside story of The Man Who Fell To Earth

To mark the passing of director Nic Roeg, please enjoy this feature from Uncut's Take 103 issue [December 2005] on the making of The Man Who Fell To Earth _____________________ It is January 26, 1975 and, at his London home, film director Nicolas Roeg is transfixed. On his TV screen, a pale, hol...

To mark the passing of director Nic Roeg, please enjoy this feature from Uncut’s Take 103 issue [December 2005] on the making of The Man Who Fell To Earth

_____________________

uncut_tmwfte_cover

It is January 26, 1975 and, at his London home, film director Nicolas Roeg is transfixed. On his TV screen, a pale, hollow-cheeked English rock star is staring out from behind paranoid, sunken eyes. As part of their Omnibus strand, the BBC are showing a fly-on-the-wall documentary made by young film-maker Alan Yentob. Tracking its subject across America, Cracked Actor offers an insight into the strange life of Britain’s leading music icon, David Bowie. Immediately, Roeg knows: he’s found his man.

Since arriving in the US in April ’74, Bowie had been shedding skins at a furious rate. Having killed off Ziggy Stardust at the Hammersmith Odeon the previous summer, he’d begun his journey from the Orwellian nightmare-scape of Diamond Dogs to the zoot-suited white soul of Young Americans. When Yentob’s crew arrived in Philadelphia to film studio sessions that August, they found a man in transition. Ditching the elaborate stage rig of his Diamond Dogs Revue, Bowie worked up a new look and set-list tailored to his current obsession with the music of Black America, renaming it The Philly Dogs Tour.

Painfully thin and lost in a blizzard of coke, Bowie was filmed in the back of a limo either flinching in drugged panic from police sirens or sipping from cartons of milk. Yentob captured a lad going slowly insane. But this was no average rock casualty – articulate and sensitive, he was cracking under the strain of the fame he’d once craved.

At one point, an insect fell in his cup. “There’s a fly floating around in my milk and it’s a foreign body,” he slurred, distractedly. “That’s kind of how I felt: a foreign body. And I couldn’t help but soak it up.” Bowie confessed to Yentob much later that he watched the film “again and again”. When the BBC man pressed him as to why, he replied: “Because it told the truth.”

Back home, Roeg was convinced he’d found the alien lead for his new sci-fi epic, The Man Who Fell To Earth. “I didn’t want an ‘actor’,” he later explained, “but someone who had the possibility of being unique.”

David Bowie unveils his new project, Lazarus

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David Bowie is co-writing a new stage work based on The Man Who Fell To Earth. Called Lazarus, according to The New York Times, the project is a collaboration with Irish playwright Edna Walsh. The play will feature new songs by Bowie, as well as new arrangements of older songs. Broadway.com repo...

David Bowie is co-writing a new stage work based on The Man Who Fell To Earth.

Called Lazarus, according to The New York Times, the project is a collaboration with Irish playwright Edna Walsh.

The play will feature new songs by Bowie, as well as new arrangements of older songs.

Broadway.com reports the production, to be directed by Ivo van Hove, will open later this year at the New York Theater Workshop.

Click here to read the inside story of The Man Who Fell To Earth

James C. Nicola, the artistic director of New York Theater Workshop, said Lazarus been in secret development for some years.

He explained that Bowie been seeking to do a theatrical work inspired by Walter Tevis’s original novel The Man Who Fell to Earth, and brought the idea to van Hove, who subsequently approached  the New York theater.

“It’s going to be a play with characters and songs — I’m calling it music theater, but I don’t really know what it’s going to be like, I just have incredible trust in their creative vision,” Nicola said. “I’m really excited about it. These are three very different sensibilities to be colliding.”

Mr. Nicola said that the show would not be a straight retelling of the story as it appears in Tevis’ book and Nic Roeg‘s film, but would feature some of the same characters.

While We’re Young

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The writer and director Noah Baumbach’s collaboration with Ben Stiller, which began with 2010’s Greenberg, continues with While We’re Young. In Greenberg, Stiller played a prickly fortysomething who starts an affair with a younger woman; here he plays another fortysomething who is similarly sm...

The writer and director Noah Baumbach’s collaboration with Ben Stiller, which began with 2010’s Greenberg, continues with While We’re Young. In Greenberg, Stiller played a prickly fortysomething who starts an affair with a younger woman; here he plays another fortysomething who is similarly smitten by a youthful protagonist. Both films are preoccupied with the pull of youth and the challenges of aging; but while Greenberg was quite a sad comedy about missed opportunities and personal failure, While We’re Young is often played for broader laughs: it’s less Woody Allen and more Judd Apatow, perhaps.

Stiller and Naomi Watts play documentary filmmakers whose marriage is significantly altered by a new friendship with a twentysomething couple (Adam Driver and Amanda Seyfried). Josh (Stiller), who has spent eight years working on a sprawling, unfocussed film project, is flattered by the attention of Jamie (Driver), who presents himself as a fan of Josh’s early work. Jamie and his wife, Darby (Seyfrield), are loft-dwelling hipsters whose retro embrace of vinyl, board games, typewriters and a VHS collection is wittily contrasted with the older couple’s reliance on current technology.

One of the best scenes in Greenberg found Stiller’s character attending a house party with a much younger demographic. “You’re so sincere and interested in things,” he cooed, while championing Duran Duran’s “The Chauffeur” as the perfect cocaine song. This difficult, often cringeworthy courtship between the generations is very much the crux of While We’re Young.

Incidentally, Stiller, Watts and Driver are all terrific; though unusually for such a strong writer of female characters, Baumbach slightly undersells Seyfrield’s crticial role in the film. The dynamic between Stiller and Watts, especially, is strong: he is tightly wound and neurotic, while she is much looser. It’s Watts’ best work for a while. Props, too, to Beastie Boy Adam Horowitz, who plays one half of Stiller and Watts’ baby-obsessed best friends.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Hear an unreleased version of the Rolling Stones’ “Wild Horses”

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The Rolling Stones have shared an unreleased version of "Wild Horses" from their forthcoming deluxe reissue of Sticky Fingers. Rolling Stones Sticky Fingers deluxe edition The track is one of a number of rarities confirmed for the reissue. Meanwhile, Mick Jagger has revealed that the Stones are c...

The Rolling Stones have shared an unreleased version of “Wild Horses” from their forthcoming deluxe reissue of Sticky Fingers.

Rolling Stones Sticky Fingers deluxe edition
Rolling Stones Sticky Fingers deluxe edition

The track is one of a number of rarities confirmed for the reissue.

Meanwhile, Mick Jagger has revealed that the Stones are considering playing Sticky Fingers in its entirety on their upcoming North American tour. “It’s a really great album,” Jagger explained. “But it has a lot of slow songs. Normally in a show we’d just do one or two ballads. Sticky Fingers has about five slow songs. I’m just worried that it might be problematic in stadiums. Maybe we’d play it and everyone would say, ‘Great,’ but maybe they’ll get restless and start going to get drinks.”

In praise of Robert Altman

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At the end of last year, I came across a story in the Los Angeles Times, which reported that the apartment occupied by Elliot Gould’s Philip Marlowe in Robert Altman's great 1973 film The Long Goodbye was available for rent. One bedroom, one bathroom, private parking, hardwood floors and a terrace...

At the end of last year, I came across a story in the Los Angeles Times, which reported that the apartment occupied by Elliot Gould’s Philip Marlowe in Robert Altman‘s great 1973 film The Long Goodbye was available for rent. One bedroom, one bathroom, private parking, hardwood floors and a terrace, with access via a private elevator, it was on the market for around £1,790 a month.

“At the end of a cul de sac near the Hollywood Bowl, park your car in a garage carved into the hill,” wrote the original advertisment for the apartment on Craigslist. “Walk through a gated tunnel to a private elevator where you’ll be taken up 6 stories through the hill to the top of a Tuscan tower. Nestled in a quiet walk street enclave high above the bustle of Hollywood Blvd.”

Long Goodbye poster
Long Goodbye poster

The Long Goodbye is probably my favourite Altman film; a smart update of Chandler’s novel reworking through the prism of the Seventies. And, of course, Gould was on excellent form as Marlowe’s sardonic private investigator, Philip Marlowe.

Of course, The Long Goodbye was given a boost recently when it was cited as an influence on Paul Thomas Anderson‘s film, Inherent Vice. This goodwill directed towards Altman and his films continues in Ron Mann’s affectionate new documentary about the filmmaker.

Remarkably, for a filmmaker whose preferred style of movie making was loose and digressive, Mann’s tribute to Altman is a remarkably straightforward bit of business. That’s not to demerit the film unduly, but the narrative moves in workmanlike fashion when it should ideally amble along, occasionally pausing to truffle out some interesting minor detail. Certainly, Ron Mann’s film is at its best when exploring Altman’s nascent career: his time as an airman during the last war and his apprenticeship in network television.

An early supporter was Alfred Hitchcock, who invited him to direct episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents… during the 1950s. His formative attempts at moviemaking were compromised: for instance, he was fired from Countdown, about a space mission to the moon, before it was even finished. Admittedly, much of Altman’s initial forays into filmmaking are less well-told than, say, the stories of M*A*S*H or Nashville.

It would be nice to dig a little deeper, too, into Brewster McCloud, California Split and 3 Woman. Along the way, Mann assembles an impressive list of former collaborators to offer confirmation to Altman’s skills – James Caan, Julianne Moore and Bruce Willis among them. But their testimonies are warm rather than necessarily illuminating. At its most infuriating, Mann’s film is crushingly literal: “Bob loved to throw a party,” his widow Kathryn Reed Altman tells us in voiceover. – cut to an early, unreleased Altman short called… The Party.

If nothing else, Mann’s film might at least inspire you to revisit some of Altman’s best, from his Seventies’ heyday.

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ALTMAN OPENS IN THE UK ON FRIDAY, APRIL 3

Mick Jagger: Rolling Stones may play Sticky Fingers in full on tour

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Mick Jagger has revealed that the Rolling Stones are considering playing their Sticky Fingers album in its entirety on their coming North American tour. Speaking to Rolling Stone, Jagger confirmed that the band are discussing the possibility: "We're floating the idea of playing the whole album," he...

Mick Jagger has revealed that the Rolling Stones are considering playing their Sticky Fingers album in its entirety on their coming North American tour.

Speaking to Rolling Stone, Jagger confirmed that the band are discussing the possibility: “We’re floating the idea of playing the whole album,” he admitted. “At the very least, we’ll play the songs we don’t normally play.”

The Stones’ North American tour begins on May 24, the day before a deluxe reissue of Sticky Fingers is released.

Rolling Stones Sticky Fingers deluxe edition
Rolling Stones Sticky Fingers deluxe edition

Rolling Stone point of that a number of the album’s tracks – “Brown Sugar,” “Wild Horses,” “Can’t You Hear Me Knocking,” “Bitch” and “Dead Flowers” – are already key parts of the Stones’ live set.

Click here to read the Rolling Stones 40 Best Songs as chosen by an all-star cast

“It’s a really great album,” Jagger explained. “But it has a lot of slow songs. Normally in a show we’d just do one or two ballads. Sticky Fingers has about five slow songs. I’m just worried that it might be problematic in stadiums. Maybe we’d play it and everyone would say, ‘Great,’ but maybe they’ll get restless and start going to get drinks.”

Tour rehearsals begin in a few weeks and the group will use that time to figure out the feasibility of playing the album in its entirety. “I’m sure we’ll have a go at it,” Jagger says. “We play a lot of the tunes and know them pretty well. I think we’ve played them all at least once. It’s not like trying to do Their Satanic Majesties Request.”

Click here to read the Rolling Stones full North American tour itinerary

Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and Yoko Ono lead tributes to Cynthia Lennon

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Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and Yoko Ono had paid tribute to Cynthia Lennon, who died yesterday [April 1, 2015] aged 75. Writing on his website, McCartney said, "The news of Cynthia’s passing is very sad. She was a lovely lady who I’ve known since our early days together in Liverpool. She was a...

Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and Yoko Ono had paid tribute to Cynthia Lennon, who died yesterday [April 1, 2015] aged 75.

Writing on his website, McCartney said, “The news of Cynthia’s passing is very sad. She was a lovely lady who I’ve known since our early days together in Liverpool. She was a good mother to Julian and will be missed by us all, but I will always have great memories of our times together.”

Starr, meanwhile, posted his condolences on Twitter, sending “peace and love” to her surviving son, Julian Lennon.

Yoko Ono, who married John Lennon in 1969, also sent “love and support” to her step-son, posting a photograph of herself with her own son, Sean, alongside Cynthia and Julian Lennon.

Writing on ImaginePeace.com, Ono also said, “I’m very saddened by Cynthia’s death. She was a great person and a wonderful mother to Julian. She had such a strong zest for life and I felt proud how we two women stood firm in the Beatles family. Please join me in sending love and support to Julian at this very sad time.”

The news of Cynthia Lennon’s death was announced yesterday by her son, Julian.

A statement posted on his website said, “Cynthia Lennon passed away today at her home in Mallorca, Spain following a short but brave battle with cancer.

“Her son Julian Lennon was at her bedside throughout. The family are thankful for your prayers.

“Please respect their privacy at this difficult time.”

May Pang and broadcaster Bob Harris have also paid tribute.

Cynthia Lennon dies aged 75

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Cynthia Lennon has died aged 75. In a statement posted on Julian Lennon's website said, "Cynthia Lennon passed away today at her home in Mallorca, Spain following a short but brave battle with cancer. "Her son Julian Lennon was at her bedside throughout. The family are thankful for your prayers. ...

Cynthia Lennon has died aged 75.

In a statement posted on Julian Lennon’s website said, “Cynthia Lennon passed away today at her home in Mallorca, Spain following a short but brave battle with cancer.

“Her son Julian Lennon was at her bedside throughout. The family are thankful for your prayers.

“Please respect their privacy at this difficult time.”

Born Cynthia Powell, she married John Lennon on August, 23 1962, when she was 22.

Their only child, Julian, who was born in 1963.

They divorced in 1968. She later wrote two books about their relationship: 1980’s A Twist Of Lennon and in 2005, John.

Among the tributes paid so far, Ringo Starr Tweeted “God bless Cynthia”.

Mark Knopfler – Tracker

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The prospect of a new solo album by Mark Knopfler is one of nature’s less effective ways of setting the pulse racing. Knopfler is to hype what rain is to fire. Operating a full octave below ‘low-key’, by now the primary ingredients of his music – rootsy work-outs, bluesy growlers, wry shuffl...

The prospect of a new solo album by Mark Knopfler is one of nature’s less effective ways of setting the pulse racing. Knopfler is to hype what rain is to fire. Operating a full octave below ‘low-key’, by now the primary ingredients of his music – rootsy work-outs, bluesy growlers, wry shuffles, country and Celtic touches – are reassuringly fixed.

There are, however, gradations to his doggedly unflashy craft. The 2012 double album, Privateering, was a genial 20-track sprawl through Knopfler’s arsenal, running wide rather than terribly deep, leaning heavily on sturdy blues. Tracker, while never deviating far from established expectations, possesses a different quality. An album threaded with themes of transience and ruminations on time and memory, it’s richly melodic, lyrically involving, and boasts an unhurried elegance and quiet intensity which elevates it to the ranks of Knopfler’s most affecting work.

Befitting an album by a well-read member of rock’s awkward squad, two of Tracker’s highlights are character studies of literary outsiders. On “Basil”, which begins in a haze of mandolins before proceeding towards a stately “Brothers In Arms” ache, Knopfler summons up the ghost of North-east modernist poet Basil Bunting, best known for his 1965 epic Briggflatts, whom he encountered while working as copy boy at the Newcastle Evening Chronicle. The distance between the pair – one, a cocky teen with the world at his feet; the other, a disillusioned poet with compromised ambitions – is laid out with sharp-eyed empathy, Knopfler peppering his recollections with details of “five cigarettes and two silver half-crowns”, and the unforgettable triumph of “kissing a Gateshead girl”.

“Beryl” is a more muscular pen portrait, revisiting another cornerstone of Knopfler’s legacy. Having stolen the intro – three raps on the hi-hat and a single snare shot – from “Sultans Of Swing”, it duly pilfers that song’s key, tempo and stripped down, bar-band boogie as well. It’s a fitting setting for a bristling homage to the late Liverpool writer Beryl Bainbridge, awarded a posthumous honour by the Booker Prize committee but unfairly overlooked while alive, according to Knopfler, who chides: “It’s too late, ya dabblers, it’s all too late”.

If a chippy class warrior still resides within this 65-year-old multi-millionaire, so does an unabashed music fan. The easy, undemanding groove of “Broken Bones” nods heavenwards to JJ Cale, an enduring influence who died in 2013. More significantly, perhaps, much of Tracker was written during a period of sustained touring with Bob Dylan. Though their association dates back to 1979, Knopfler’s radar remains alert for incoming traffic. “Lights Of Taormina”, a charmingly weathered reflection from the Sicilian town, sounds like a campfire version of “Just Like Tom Thumb Blues”. “River Towns”, meanwhile, has the steady roll of latter-day Dylan, and a protagonist “looking in the mirror at the face that I deserve” to boot. They’re two of several excellent, emotive songs written from the perspective of rootless men. The elliptical “Silver Eagle” frames a moment of transient tenderness recalled from a bus rolling through America; “Mighty Man” honours the itinerant escapades of a scarred Irish navvy, aptly framed by a reinterpretation of the traditional standard “She Moved Through The Fair”; “Wherever I Go”, a graceful country ballad sung with Rth Muoody from The Wailin’ Jennys, finds two souls crossing paths briefly on the road, their emotional bond undiluted by physical distance.

It’s serious stuff, but beautifully realised. There’s room for some nifty musical footwork on the wryly nostalgic “Laughs And Jokes And Drinks And Smokes”, which sounds like Dave Brubeck’s “Take Five” uprooted to some ’baccy-stained folk club. The incongruous “Skydiver”, meanwhile, is a reminder that Knopfler knows his pop coordinates. A Ray Davies-esque study of a carefree gambler, its nifty descending chord sequences are lit up by cascading harmonies.

It adds up to a little more than just another solid Mark Knopfler offering. His eighth solo album will no doubt satisfy dedicated fans, but for those lulled into inattentiveness somewhere along the way, Tracker also makes an excellent case for re-engagement.

Q&A
MARK KNOPFLER
There seems to be a real unity of themes on this record.
It has to do with time and memory, that’s a big part of it. As you get older you view time differently, it becomes more of a reverse telescope. I also end up here and there with Northern themes. They’re part of my background and they do inform the songs.

What prompted you to write about Beryl Bainbridge and Basil Bunting?
I’d be standing right behind Basil as a copy boy, and it was clear that he didn’t want to be there. He was writing Briggflatts then, which is a meditation on time and abandoned love. I was 15, and at that age the world is a rosy promise, whereas I think he was seeing it from the other side. The road ahead was shorter than the one he left behind. Beryl also had to do with time, because back then there was an Oxbridge prejudice. She was self-deprecating, a working class Liverpool girl who never went to university. Maybe she realised how mighty she was, but she didn’t want to make a thing about it.

How was touring with Dylan?
It definitely helped me produce a couple of songs: “Lights of Taormina” and “Silver Eagle”, I wouldn’t have written that otherwise. I was back touring on buses again and I started writing about from that perspective.
INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Joni Mitchell hospitalised

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Joni Mitchell has been hospitalized. According to a report on Rolling Stone, the emergency services were called to Mitchell's Los Angeles home yesterday [March 31, 2015] to assist an unconscious female. Since then, a statement published on her website has said, "She regained consciousness on the a...

Joni Mitchell has been hospitalized.

According to a report on Rolling Stone, the emergency services were called to Mitchell’s Los Angeles home yesterday [March 31, 2015] to assist an unconscious female.

Since then, a statement published on her website has said, “She regained consciousness on the ambulance ride to an L.A. area hospital.”

The latest report, carried on Mitchell’s official Twitter feed, has confirmed that she is in intensive care in hospital but “is awake and in good spirits”.