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Chuck Berry – Rock And Roll Music

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It’s impossible to overestimate Chuck Berry’s mammoth influence on rock’n’roll, indeed on western culture at large. Irrespective of the bizarre way his 60-year career has played out, his music, poetry and early spirit cast an enormous shadow on everything rock’n’roll was, is, even what i...

It’s impossible to overestimate Chuck Berry’s mammoth influence on rock’n’roll, indeed on western culture at large. Irrespective of the bizarre way his 60-year career has played out, his music, poetry and early spirit cast an enormous shadow on everything rock’n’roll was, is, even what it might still be. Berry had it all. A fine singer, arranger and melodist, well-versed in pop, jazz, country, boogie and blues, he was adept at assimilating everything, formulating it anew for young ears.

His sly wordplay – compact but complex narratives and deft character sketches – reflected the hopes and aspirations, trials and tribulations of school-age (and beyond) persons. Berry was the portent of a new kind of adulthood, and those rolling, roiling and over-boiling guitar arpeggios, carried the listener into ecstatic new realms, signaling more than just a watershed. After “Roll Over Beethoven” Sinatra was on the ropes, Mitch Miller in the ditch. The music, especially once the formative Rolling Stones, Beatles and Beach Boys paid their debts, swiftly became canonical, overshadowing mightily the oft-troubled figure that created it.

At the same time in a bitter twist of irony, Berry himself – brilliant yet paranoid, outrageously vilified in Jim Crow America – struggled to command his chaotic, if quasar-like career. Despite some notable exceptions, dime-store nostalgia, artistic redundancy and cavalier performances would dominate his career post-1965. While Berry’s been endlessly anthologised, Bear’s 16-disc, 21-hour monster represents the first effort at beginning-to-(presumably)-end documentation, foisting the brilliant early rocker against the bland pop vocalist, raucous, brain-rattling riffage against excruciating Latin balladry and “exotic” pop excursions, and finally to the diminishing return of countless remakes, remodels and, well, “My Ding-A-Ling”. Its formula invites liberal use of the skip button, yet countless rare treasures await: instrumentals galore, with extraordinary Berry/Johnnie Johnson guitar-piano interplay; superb, little-noticed Berry compositions both early (“Dear Dad”) and late (“Tulane”); the virtually forgotten Rock It, his final studio LP from 1979. His momentous, oh-so-brief 1964 post-prison comeback – “Nadine”, “Promised Land” and, eventually, his finest LP, St Louis To Liverpool – may stand as his definitive work.

As tangible as this set is – the life’s work of a musical giant – it’s the intangibles, the pure joy of Berry’s finest work, that rule the day. There was a sense of freedom flying out of those guitar solos; of possibility, optimism, adventure. Human aspirations transcending time and generations lie within those rhythms. It’s simply some of the most glorious pop music ever produced.
Luke Torn

Guitar owned by Johnny Ramone sells at auction for £47,950

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Red 1965 Mosrite Ventures V1 guitar was sold in Boston... A guitar owned by Johnny Ramone sold at auction in Boston for $71,875 (£47,950) this week. The red 1965 Mosrite Ventures V1 guitar was one of nine Mosrite guitars owned by Ramone in his career, with Billboard reporting that the guitar was sold to Ramone's friend and former Ramones band driver Gene Frawley. Boston-based auction RR Auction confirmed details of their sale, adding that the guitar was used by Ramone throughout the 1980s, until he sold it in 1990. The guitar is signed on the body in black marker, "Best always, Johnny Ramone, 5/22/90." "One of just nine Mosrite guitars owned by Johnny Ramone known to exist – it is not surprising that it was able to achieve such an impressive figure," RR Auction Executive VP Bobby Livingston said in a statement. Tommy Ramone died in July last year. His death marked the passing of the last founding member of The Ramones.

Red 1965 Mosrite Ventures V1 guitar was sold in Boston…

A guitar owned by Johnny Ramone sold at auction in Boston for $71,875 (£47,950) this week.

The red 1965 Mosrite Ventures V1 guitar was one of nine Mosrite guitars owned by Ramone in his career, with Billboard reporting that the guitar was sold to Ramone’s friend and former Ramones band driver Gene Frawley.

Boston-based auction RR Auction confirmed details of their sale, adding that the guitar was used by Ramone throughout the 1980s, until he sold it in 1990. The guitar is signed on the body in black marker, “Best always, Johnny Ramone, 5/22/90.”

“One of just nine Mosrite guitars owned by Johnny Ramone known to exist – it is not surprising that it was able to achieve such an impressive figure,” RR Auction Executive VP Bobby Livingston said in a statement.

Tommy Ramone died in July last year. His death marked the passing of the last founding member of The Ramones.

Bob Dylan gifts 50,000 copies of his new album

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Shadows In The Night is made up of songs made famous by Frank Sinatra... Bob Dylan is set to give away 50,000 copies of his new album. As Wondering Sound reports, Dylan will gift 50,000 randomly selected readers of the magazine put out by AARP - an organisation for Americans over the age of 50 - with a CD of Shadows In The Night. Dylan's new album is due to be released on February 3 via Columbia Records. Songs on the ten-track album include renditions of "Full Moon And Empty Arms", "Stay With Me", and "What I'll Do". In an interview with AARP magazine, Dylan spoke about his ambitions outside of music, stating: "If I had to do it all over again, I'd be a schoolteacher," adding that he "probably" would have taught Roman history or theology. Shadows In The Night will be Dylan's 36th Studio recording and his first release 2012's Tempest. The Shadows In The Night tracklisting is: 'I’m A Fool To Want You' 'The Night We Called It A Day' 'Stay With Me' 'Autumn Leaves' 'Why Try To Change Me Now' 'Some Enchanted Evening' 'Full Moon And Empty Arms' 'Where Are You' 'What’ll I Do' 'That Lucky Old Sun'

Shadows In The Night is made up of songs made famous by Frank Sinatra…

Bob Dylan is set to give away 50,000 copies of his new album.

As Wondering Sound reports, Dylan will gift 50,000 randomly selected readers of the magazine put out by AARP – an organisation for Americans over the age of 50 – with a CD of Shadows In The Night.

Dylan’s new album is due to be released on February 3 via Columbia Records. Songs on the ten-track album include renditions of “Full Moon And Empty Arms”, “Stay With Me”, and “What I’ll Do”.

In an interview with AARP magazine, Dylan spoke about his ambitions outside of music, stating: “If I had to do it all over again, I’d be a schoolteacher,” adding that he “probably” would have taught Roman history or theology.

Shadows In The Night will be Dylan’s 36th Studio recording and his first release 2012’s Tempest.

The Shadows In The Night tracklisting is:

‘I’m A Fool To Want You’

‘The Night We Called It A Day’

‘Stay With Me’

‘Autumn Leaves’

‘Why Try To Change Me Now’

‘Some Enchanted Evening’

‘Full Moon And Empty Arms’

‘Where Are You’

‘What’ll I Do’

‘That Lucky Old Sun’

The War On Drugs, Sufjan Stevens and Tame Impala for End Of The Road festival

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Stevens will play his first ever UK festival show this September... Tame Impala, Sufjan Stevens and The War On Drugs have been confirmed as headliners for this year's End Of The Road festival. The Wiltshere festival takes place between September 4-6 at Larmer Tree Gardens with Tame Impala to headline the Friday night of the three day event. Sufjan Stevens will play his first ever UK festival show on September 5. The artist, who releases new album Carrie & Lowell in March, has only played one festival in his career and his End Of The Road date will mark his only European live show of 2015. The War On Drugs - whose Lost In The Dream was named Uncut's Album Of The Year 2014 - will close the festival on Sunday, September 6. Other bands and acts on the bill include Future Islands, Pond, Fat White Family, Sleaford Mods, Django Django and Natalie Prass. Uncut will be hosting a stage at the festival again this year; check back here for updates. You can find more details about tickets and line-up at the festival's website. End Of The Road festival line-up: Sufjan Stevens Tame Impala The War on Drugs Future Islands Django Django Pond Alvvays Fuzz The Unthanks Fat White Family Sleaford Mods Ought King Khan & The BBQ Show Jessica Pratt Natalie Prass Torres BC Camplight Fumaça Preta Sam Amidon Happyness Hinds Jane Weaver Juan Wauters Lisa O’Neill Ultimate Painting The Drink The Black Tambourines Charlie Cunningham

Stevens will play his first ever UK festival show this September…

Tame Impala, Sufjan Stevens and The War On Drugs have been confirmed as headliners for this year’s End Of The Road festival.

The Wiltshere festival takes place between September 4-6 at Larmer Tree Gardens with Tame Impala to headline the Friday night of the three day event.

Sufjan Stevens will play his first ever UK festival show on September 5. The artist, who releases new album Carrie & Lowell in March, has only played one festival in his career and his End Of The Road date will mark his only European live show of 2015.

The War On Drugs – whose Lost In The Dream was named Uncut’s Album Of The Year 2014 – will close the festival on Sunday, September 6.

Other bands and acts on the bill include Future Islands, Pond, Fat White Family, Sleaford Mods, Django Django and Natalie Prass.

Uncut will be hosting a stage at the festival again this year; check back here for updates.

You can find more details about tickets and line-up at the festival’s website.

End Of The Road festival line-up:

Sufjan Stevens

Tame Impala

The War on Drugs

Future Islands

Django Django

Pond

Alvvays

Fuzz

The Unthanks

Fat White Family

Sleaford Mods

Ought

King Khan & The BBQ Show

Jessica Pratt

Natalie Prass

Torres

BC Camplight

Fumaça Preta

Sam Amidon

Happyness

Hinds Jane Weaver

Juan Wauters

Lisa O’Neill

Ultimate Painting

The Drink

The Black Tambourines

Charlie Cunningham

This month in Uncut

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The Smiths, The War On Drugs, Kraftwerk and Bob Dylan all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated March 2015, and out tomorrow (January 27). Morrissey is on the front cover, and inside we celebrate the 30th anniversary of Meat Is Murder with an in-depth, inside look at the making of the record. ...

The Smiths, The War On Drugs, Kraftwerk and Bob Dylan all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated March 2015, and out tomorrow (January 27).

Morrissey is on the front cover, and inside we celebrate the 30th anniversary of Meat Is Murder with an in-depth, inside look at the making of the record.

With help from band members, close associates and contemporaries – even Neil Kinnock – we learn about awkward moments in Little Chefs, car races with OMD and the use of sausages as an offensive weapon… “We were unmanageable!”

Adam Granduciel discusses The War On Drugs’ 2014, a rollercoaster of a year which saw their third album, Lost In The Dream, achieve huge acclaim. The frontman even looks forward to the band’s next album, and finally talks at length about the little matter of Mark Kozelek

Elsewhere, Kraftwerk members and associates tell the full story of Autobahn, a record that changed the world’s idea of Germany and revolutionised electronic music.

Bob Dylan’s Shadows In The Night, a collection of Frank Sinatra covers, gets the full Uncut analysis in our reviews section, while we also look at Sinatra’s dealings with rock, a genre he once called “brutal, ugly, degenerate, vicious…”

Also in the issue, Allan Jones pays tribute to the late Joe Cocker, we examine Tim Buckley’s overlooked final years, and put your questions to the master of soundtracks, Ennio Morricone, who discusses Sergio Leone, Quentin Tarantino and Morrissey.

Steve Cropper takes us through 10 of the greatest songs he played on and co-wrote – from Stax cuts from Wilson Pickett, Otis Redding and Booker T & The MG’s, to later work with John Lennon, Big Star, Neil Young and the Blues Brothers – while Phosphorescent’s Matthew Houck reveals eight records that have soundtracked his life.

Tim Burgess recalls The Charlatans’ storied career in our ‘album by album’ piece this month, while Devo describe the inspirations behind their gleefully warped classic, Jocko Homo – from witnessing the tragic Kent State shootings to jamming with David Bowie in Cologne…

This month’s 40-page reviews section includes Dylan, Led Zeppelin, Emmylou Harris, Slowdive, Father John Misty, The Pretty Things, The Pop Group, The Unthanks and more, while the Instant Karma section at the front of the magazine features Clive Langer, Man and Blake Mills, among others.

Meanwhile, our free CD, Fresh Meat, includes tracks from Phosphorescent, Father John Misty, Duke Garwood, Rhiannon Giddens, Dutch Uncles, The Unthanks and more.

The new Uncut, dated March 2015, is out tomorrow (January 27).

Mark Lanegan: “If Brian Eno wanted to make a record, I’d clear some time in my calendar”

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Mark Lanegan answers your questions in the new issue of Uncut, dated February 2015, and out now. The solo artist and former member of Screaming Trees and Queens Of The Stone Age discusses topics such as his career as a repo man, pheasant and trotter pies and working with Josh Homme and Kurt Cobai...

Mark Lanegan answers your questions in the new issue of Uncut, dated February 2015, and out now.

The solo artist and former member of Screaming Trees and Queens Of The Stone Age discusses topics such as his career as a repo man, pheasant and trotter pies and working with Josh Homme and Kurt Cobain.

“If Brian Eno wanted to make a record, I’d definitely clear some time in my calendar,” says Lanegan when asked who he’d still be keen to collaborate with. “John Cale, too. Those guys consistently make great records, always doing their own thing.

“What do I look for in a collaborator? Pretty much anyone who asks me to do something [laughs]. If it’s something I’m into already, and I can see my part in it, I’ll say yes. In fact, if I don’t, it’s usually because I don’t have time, but I rarely get asked to do stuff I don’t think is cool.”

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

American Sniper

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In 2013, The New Yorker ran a here about Chris Kyle, a decorated sniper in the US Army. The story detailed Kyle’s extraordinary war record, but also explored the debilitating post-traumatic stress disorder both he and other veterans experienced back home. The bulk of The New Yorker story takes up ...

In 2013, The New Yorker ran a here about Chris Kyle, a decorated sniper in the US Army. The story detailed Kyle’s extraordinary war record, but also explored the debilitating post-traumatic stress disorder both he and other veterans experienced back home. The bulk of The New Yorker story takes up roughly the last ten minutes of Clint Eastwood’s new film, which is principally concerned with building Kyle up an All-American Hero: a patriot for whom the words “God, country, family” are all consuming. Kyle – played by a beefed up Bradley Cooper – is told from an early age that he has “a hell of a gift” with a gun. At the dinner table, the impressionable Kyle is told by his father that “there are three types of men in this world: sheep, wolves and sheepdogs.” To be a man, he must grow up to be a sheepdog. After watching the 1998 attacks on the US Embassy in Dar Es Salaam on television, Kyle enlists. Before he knows it, he is in Fallujah, racking up a body count.

Where to start? In the last week or so, American Sniper has become a phenomenon. First, there were unexpected Oscar nominations for Best Picture and Best Actor. This news was followed by its remarkable box office takings over the extended Martin Luther King holiday, where it took $89.5m US. As Gant’s assiduous stats-crunching illustrates, American Sniper has significantly struck a chord in Red-state America – in the way that, for instance, other films that have dealt with Iraq war never did (as Charles points out, The Hurt Locker only took $17m US in the States). Evidently, there is a substantial proportion of the American population who have responded to Eastwood’s morally absolutist depiction of war.

Essentially, American Sniper plays out like a two-hour report on Fox News. This is an excitable, macho depiction of war, with much manly banter yelled over gunfire. Kyle’s fellow Navy SEALS are pencil-thin sketches, but at least they fare better than the women in American Sniper who are presented either as timid, unfaithful or duplicitous. At best, they are grieving wives and mothers; at worst, they are devious insurgents who send their children out onto the streets with concealed grenades in order to kill American soldiers. The most significant female character in American Sniper is Kyle’s wife Taya, played by Sienna Miller, who is largely reduced to crying or simpering.

It is possible to admire the vigour and discipline with which Eastwood shoots the scenes of conflict – but all the same, this is simplistic, reductive movie making. The Iraqis are seen either through Kyle’s sniper-sight or, at close range, are revealed to be treacherous bad guys. The dialogue is clunky, predominantly expository: “Even when you’re here, you’re not here,” complains Taya. All of this has been done before – and much better – in The Hurt Locker.
Michael Bonner

The 3rd Uncut Playlist Of 2015

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Still at that stage of the year where I nearly type 2014 every time instead of 2015, but time moves on - swifter, perhaps, than Bjork for one would've liked this week, given how an unauthorised leak forced the release of "Vulnicura" a couple of months ahead of schedule. A very good album, though - her best since "Vespertine", possibly - and one accompanied by this exceptional Bjork interview at Pitchfork. It's another rich harvest here this week, and I'd especially like to highlight the new album from Dean McPhee, a track from which previews below. The next Uncut arrives in UK shops next Tuesday, and perhaps to your home a little earlier than that if you subscribe. I'll make some fuss about it next week, but in the meantime, dig in… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Dean McPhee - Fatima's Hand (Hood Faire) 2 [REDACTED] 3 Goran Kajfeš Subtropic Arkestra - The Reason Why Vol 2 (Headspin) 4 Lightning Bolt - Fantasy Empire (Thrill Jockey) 5 Chilly Gonzales - Chambers (Gentle Threat) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=weCqLpSfo1g 6 The Aphex Twin - Computer Controlled Acoustic Instruments Pt2 EP (Warp) 7 Bob Dylan - Stay With Me (Columbia) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tt1BBubMHzM 8 Cat's Eyes - The Duke Of Burgundy: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (Caroline) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DOptp0XqTg8 9 Waxahatchee - Ivy Trip (Wichita) 10 Sam Lee & Friends - The Fade In Time (Nest Collective) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ss24LSJqcqY 11 75 Dollar Bill - Wooden Bag (Other Music) 12 Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe & Ariel Kalma - FRKWYS Vol. 12: We Know Each Other Somehow (RVNG INTL) 13 Will Butler - Policy (Merge) 14 John T Gast - Excerpts (Planet Mu) 15 Houndstooth - No News From Home (No Quarter) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BeWV0eVeldM 16 The Silence - The Silence (Drag City) 17 Various Artists - Imaginational Anthems 7 (Tompkins Square) 18 Bjork - Vulnicura (One Little Indian) 19 Palmbomen II - Palmbomen II (RVNG INTL) 20 King Khan & The BBQ Show - Bad News Boys (In The Red) 22 Various Artists - Hanoi Masters: War Is A Wound, Peace Is A Scar (Glitterbeat) 22 Polar Bear - Same As You (Leaf) 23 Ryley Walker - Primrose Green (Dead Oceans) 24 Sufjan Stevens - Carrie & Lowell (Asthmatic Kitty) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vj9s0U2U2o 25 Moon Duo - Shadow Of The Sun (Sacred Bones)

Still at that stage of the year where I nearly type 2014 every time instead of 2015, but time moves on – swifter, perhaps, than Bjork for one would’ve liked this week, given how an unauthorised leak forced the release of “Vulnicura” a couple of months ahead of schedule.

A very good album, though – her best since “Vespertine”, possibly – and one accompanied by this exceptional Bjork interview at Pitchfork. It’s another rich harvest here this week, and I’d especially like to highlight the new album from Dean McPhee, a track from which previews below.

The next Uncut arrives in UK shops next Tuesday, and perhaps to your home a little earlier than that if you subscribe. I’ll make some fuss about it next week, but in the meantime, dig in…

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

1 Dean McPhee – Fatima’s Hand (Hood Faire)

2 [REDACTED]

3 Goran Kajfeš Subtropic Arkestra – The Reason Why Vol 2 (Headspin)

4 Lightning Bolt – Fantasy Empire (Thrill Jockey)

5 Chilly Gonzales – Chambers (Gentle Threat)

6 The Aphex Twin – Computer Controlled Acoustic Instruments Pt2 EP (Warp)

7 Bob Dylan – Stay With Me (Columbia)

8 Cat’s Eyes – The Duke Of Burgundy: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (Caroline)

9 Waxahatchee – Ivy Trip (Wichita)

10 Sam Lee & Friends – The Fade In Time (Nest Collective)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ss24LSJqcqY

11 75 Dollar Bill – Wooden Bag (Other Music)

12 Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe & Ariel Kalma – FRKWYS Vol. 12: We Know Each Other Somehow (RVNG INTL)

13 Will Butler – Policy (Merge)

14 John T Gast – Excerpts (Planet Mu)

15 Houndstooth – No News From Home (No Quarter)

16 The Silence – The Silence (Drag City)

17 Various Artists – Imaginational Anthems 7 (Tompkins Square)

18 Bjork – Vulnicura (One Little Indian)

19 Palmbomen II – Palmbomen II (RVNG INTL)

20 King Khan & The BBQ Show – Bad News Boys (In The Red)

22 Various Artists – Hanoi Masters: War Is A Wound, Peace Is A Scar (Glitterbeat)

22 Polar Bear – Same As You (Leaf)

23 Ryley Walker – Primrose Green (Dead Oceans)

24 Sufjan Stevens – Carrie & Lowell (Asthmatic Kitty)

25 Moon Duo – Shadow Of The Sun (Sacred Bones)

The Sonics to release first new LP in 48 years

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This Is the Sonics is the band's first new material since 1967... The Sonics are set to release their first album of new material since 1967. This Is the Sonics will come out on March 31 and follows the band's reformation in 2007. The new album will feature a single, "Bad Betty". The song originally appeared in a different version on a split seven-inch single with Mudhoney released on Record Store Day last year. The band released their debut album Here Are The Sonics in 1965. That same year, they released "Have Love Will Travel", which is their best known song. Their second album, Boom, was released in 1966 with Introducing The Sonics in 1967. The new album comes from three original members of the group, Jerry Roslie on vocals and keys, Larry Parypa on vocals and guitar and multi-instrumentalist Rob Lind. The record was produced in Seattle by Jim Diamond.

This Is the Sonics is the band’s first new material since 1967…

The Sonics are set to release their first album of new material since 1967.

This Is the Sonics will come out on March 31 and follows the band’s reformation in 2007.

The new album will feature a single, “Bad Betty“. The song originally appeared in a different version on a split seven-inch single with Mudhoney released on Record Store Day last year.

The band released their debut album Here Are The Sonics in 1965. That same year, they released “Have Love Will Travel”, which is their best known song. Their second album, Boom, was released in 1966 with Introducing The Sonics in 1967.

The new album comes from three original members of the group, Jerry Roslie on vocals and keys, Larry Parypa on vocals and guitar and multi-instrumentalist Rob Lind. The record was produced in Seattle by Jim Diamond.

Aphex Twin reveals new song ‘Diskhat ALL Prepared1mixed [snr2mix]’ – listen

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Producer offers free download of track taken from forthcoming new EP... Aphex Twin has offered new song "Diskhat ALL Prepared1mixed [snr2mix]" as a free download. Scroll down to hear the song. The version uploaded to Aphex Twin's Soundcloud is an alternate mix to that which appears on the forthcoming EP, Computer Controlled Acoustic Instruments PT2/ As reported, that EP will be released on January 23. The tracklisting for 'Computer Controlled Acoustic Instruments PT2' is as follows: 'Diskhat ALL Prepared1mixed' 'snar2' 'diskhat1' 'piano un1 arpej' 'DISKPREPT4' 'hat 2b 2012b' 'disk aud1_12' '0035 1-Audio' 'disk prep calrec2 barn dance [slo]' 'DISKPREPT1' 'diskhat2' 'piano un10 it happened' 'hat5c 0001 rec-4'

Producer offers free download of track taken from forthcoming new EP…

Aphex Twin has offered new song “Diskhat ALL Prepared1mixed [snr2mix]” as a free download. Scroll down to hear the song.

The version uploaded to Aphex Twin’s Soundcloud is an alternate mix to that which appears on the forthcoming EP, Computer Controlled Acoustic Instruments PT2/ As reported, that EP will be released on January 23.

The tracklisting for ‘Computer Controlled Acoustic Instruments PT2’ is as follows:

‘Diskhat ALL Prepared1mixed’

‘snar2’

‘diskhat1’

‘piano un1 arpej’

‘DISKPREPT4’

‘hat 2b 2012b’

‘disk aud1_12’

‘0035 1-Audio’

‘disk prep calrec2 barn dance [slo]’

‘DISKPREPT1’

‘diskhat2’

‘piano un10 it happened’

‘hat5c 0001 rec-4’

Bob Dylan: “The government is not going to create jobs”

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Dylan speaks ahead of new album release... Bob Dylan has spoke out about unemployment and the underprivileged in a new interview. Speaking to AARP, Dylan claimed, "The government's not going to create jobs. It doesn't have to. People have to create jobs, and these big billionaires are the ones who can do it. "We don’t see that happening," he continued. "We see crime and inner cities exploding with people who have nothing to do, turning to drink and drugs. They could all have work created for them by all these hotshot billionaires. For sure that would create lot of happiness. Now, I’m not saying they have to — I’m not talking about communism — but what do they do with their money? Do they use it in virtuous ways?" In the interview, Dylan also discussed his ambitions outside of music, stating: "If I had to do it all over again, I'd be a schoolteacher," adding that he "probably" would have taught Roman history or theology. He also spoke at length about his new album, Shadows In The Night. The record, which is due for release on February 2, features 10 songs popularised by Frank Sinatra. "When you start doing these songs, Frank's got to be on your mind," Dylan explained. "Because he is the mountain. That's the mountain you have to climb, even if you only get part of the way there." Dylan also praised Frank Sinatra as a singer. "Frank sang to you — not at you," he said. "I never wanted to be a singer that sings at somebody. I've always wanted to sing to somebody. "Nobody touches him," Dylan said. "Not me or anyone else." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tt1BBubMHzM

Dylan speaks ahead of new album release…

Bob Dylan has spoke out about unemployment and the underprivileged in a new interview.

Speaking to AARP, Dylan claimed, “The government’s not going to create jobs. It doesn’t have to. People have to create jobs, and these big billionaires are the ones who can do it.

“We don’t see that happening,” he continued. “We see crime and inner cities exploding with people who have nothing to do, turning to drink and drugs. They could all have work created for them by all these hotshot billionaires. For sure that would create lot of happiness. Now, I’m not saying they have to — I’m not talking about communism — but what do they do with their money? Do they use it in virtuous ways?”

In the interview, Dylan also discussed his ambitions outside of music, stating: “If I had to do it all over again, I’d be a schoolteacher,” adding that he “probably” would have taught Roman history or theology.

He also spoke at length about his new album, Shadows In The Night. The record, which is due for release on February 2, features 10 songs popularised by Frank Sinatra.

“When you start doing these songs, Frank’s got to be on your mind,” Dylan explained. “Because he is the mountain. That’s the mountain you have to climb, even if you only get part of the way there.”

Dylan also praised Frank Sinatra as a singer. “Frank sang to you — not at you,” he said. “I never wanted to be a singer that sings at somebody. I’ve always wanted to sing to somebody.

“Nobody touches him,” Dylan said. “Not me or anyone else.”

Ty Segall: “If a show’s going ridiculous, you’ve got to take it to the next level…”

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In our January 2013 issue (Take 188), we met Ty Segall, the garage rock wunderkind wreaking fuzz-addled havoc with the canon. For a few years now, he's sat at the heart of a thrilling new California psych scene, and regularly features in Uncut’s albums of the year list – once with three entries!...

In our January 2013 issue (Take 188), we met Ty Segall, the garage rock wunderkind wreaking fuzz-addled havoc with the canon. For a few years now, he’s sat at the heart of a thrilling new California psych scene, and regularly features in Uncut’s albums of the year list – once with three entries! How did he become unstoppable, and whatever will he do next?… “Man, I really need to surf more. I’ve been too busy.” Words: Louis Pattison

_________________

“Guitar solos were not cool when I was 17. Classic rock: not cool. At high school, there was always this weird tribal thing – like, you’re wearing a Stooges T-shirt so you’re not allowed to put a Led Zeppelin record on. But for me, I was always like, is it good? For me, that’s it.”

Meet Ty Segall – Californian, 25 years old, baby-faced handsome, with dirty-blond locks that give him the air of a cherub that slipped off a cloud and somehow landed in a rock band. But don’t be fooled by his laconic exterior: few artists in 2012 have left their mark quite like Segall.

This year, he’s released three full-length albums. First, back in April, there was Hair, a gorgeous psych record made with Tim Presley of fellow Cali rockers White Fence. Then there was July’s Slaughterhouse, 11 tracks of distortion-wracked space-rock credited to the Ty Segall Band (on two slabs of 10-inch vinyl). And finally, released in October, Twins – a blend of sun-baked Californian songwriting and cranked-up fuzz that might just be his best yet. Each exceptional, each very different. “A general rule for recording,” says Segall, “is that I’ll hopefully never make the same album twice.”

Given his astonishing work rate, that itself is quite a task. In the 10 years he’s been making music, Segall’s chalked up eight solo albums and crashed through the ranks of almost as many bands – a luridly named bunch like The Traditional Fools, Epsilons, Party Fowl and The Perverts – all the while chasing his own singular vision of garage-rock nirvana. “My favourite thing is a pop song that has a surprising element of noise to it,” he says. “That’s what’s cool to me.”

“We came up in the ’90s with grunge, and as we got older, we got more into the garage of the ’60s,” says Cole Alexander of Black Lips. “Ty is one of the only guys to legitimately bridge the gap between these two genres and generations. Coming from my age perspective, it feels like something you and your grandparents can rock out to that your parents might not get.”

Take a plunge into Ty Segall’s back catalogue and you hear a tension that, to this day, remains unresolved. On one hand, a deep respect for the rock canon; on the other, an urge to slather songs in distortion and shake them to breaking point. It’s rock’n’roll treated not like a museum, but like a playpen. “If you play rock, you shouldn’t fight influence,” Segall says. “It’s impossible these days not to have these things show on your sleeve… so why not make the drums try to sound like a Kinks record, if that’s what you like?”

“Ty really wears his references on his shoulder,” says Jennifer Herrema, formerly of Royal Trux, now fronting hard rockers Black Bananas. “But more and more, bands can reference really literally, because people don’t know this music any more. And he just does a masterful job of putting things together. Take his song ‘The Hill’ – from the get go it sounds like Fairport, then goes into ‘Good Day Sunshine’ by The Beatles, and straight into ‘SF Sorrow Is Born’ by The Pretty Things. It’s a musical history trip – and he’s always changing up what he does. He’s not staying stuck, he’s definitely keeping himself excited.”

_________________

Segall was born in 1987 in Laguna Beach, down the coast from LA. He was seven when Kurt Cobain died. He still remembers playing “Smells Like Teen Spirit” on his first boombox. He started playing drums at the age of 13, got his first guitar at 15 and that same year formed his first group, The Love This, and reached out to a kid at his high school he knew could play sax. “I was stoked, as I’d seen them play before and they were great,” says Mikal Cronin, today Segall’s sideman in the Ty Segall Band. “So I guess that’s when we started hanging out.”

The pair were natural collaborators. “Ty approaches music making intuitively and at a rapid pace, though at the same time works hard and carefully to make sure it’s exactly how he wants it,” confirms Cronin. “We have different influences, goals and ideas about what we want to accomplish musically – these days it seems I’m into pop while he’s into ‘making it fucking loud’. But there’s a solid foundation that we share.”

After The Love This split, Segall and Cronin formed Epsilons, an outfit more reflective of where their taste was heading: “We were into garage rock, ’77 punk, MC5, The Sonics. Horrible lyrics – very high school – but it was fun.”

In the ’60s, Laguna Beach was a counterculture hotspot, the place of Timothy Leary’s 1968 arrest for marijuana possession and home to the Brotherhood Of Eternal Love – a commune of LSD evangelists who spoke of “psychedelic revolution” and sold acid through local healthfood stores and juice bars. By the ’80s, only a few remained. “I remember being really young, and seeing all these weird characters around, old acid heads, art people,” says Segall. “But then the money came.”

The gentrification accelerated in 2004 with the broadcast of MTV’s Laguna Beach, an early example of “constructed reality” TV which followed the lives of some of the city’s most entitled teens. “There was a girl whose dad invented the frozen burrito who persuaded her dad to move to Laguna Beach just so she could appear on TV,” remembers Segall. “Fucking frozen burritos, man.”

Luckily, he had a ticket out of town, enrolling on a media course in ’Frisco. Education wasn’t for him. “Honestly, I wanted to learn recording engineering, and I neglected to do my research ’cos I wanted to get to San Francisco so badly.”

Arriving in San Francisco, Segall discovered the city was in the throes of its very own rock renaissance, groups like Sic Alps, Thee Oh Sees and White Fence playing music that, for all its rough-house manner and liberal application of distortion, still sounded distinctly, psychedelically Californian.

“We speak a similar language musically,” explains White Fence’s Tim Presley of the current San Francisco sensibility. “We don’t breathe the same air as New York, or London, that’s a whole other story. We honour these links between Buck Owens to Quicksilver Messenger Service to Moby Grape to Love to the Germs to Thee Oh Sees and then right back to Kim Fowley. It’s the music we harvest here at home. We’re just carrying the torch.”

Ty fell in with The Traditional Fools, a surf-punk band inspired by Billy Childish, Red Kross, and “all that surf-punk and skateboarding music that came out of Orange Country in the ’70s and ’80s.” While playing with the Fools he met Thee Oh Sees frontman John Dwyer, a fulcrum of the San Fran scene. Ty passed him a demo CD of his solo recordings. “He asked me to play a show, then go on tour, then he was, like, let me put out your record.” In 2008, Dwyer released Ty’s self-titled debut on his label, Castle Face.

For Segall, this was a small revelation. Recording solo was his making, with LPs like 2009’s Lemons and 2010’s Melted giving him the space to extend his songwriting muscles. But the LP where things really started happening was 2011’s Goodbye Bread. “It was the first record where I had an idea of what I wanted to do, a strong approach,” Segall confirms. “Melted is rad – a total party record. But Goodbye Bread was the one where I was like, I can stand by this for a long time.”

Recorded meticulously over five months in his friend Eric Bauer’s basement, Goodbye Bread is perhaps Segall’s most Californian record – albeit one with a cynical heart, songs like “I Can’t Feel It” and “California Commercial” a sour retort to Governor Schwarzenegger’s attempt to market the state as some kind of leisure paradise. In the video to the title track, Ty sits alone at the heart of a party, carnival queens and nude models cavorting around him as he breaths soft riddle-like lyrics: “Who plays the game we all play/Won’t you play me today?/And who sings the song when we’re gone/Won’t you sing along?”

Goodbye Bread was born, explains Segall, out of a period of personal unhappiness: “It was a weird time for me. I had a lot of problems with the Californian lifestyle. Any place of beauty and affluence, you can get a little lost there. It’s a Never Never Land, and people never grow up. Just because there’s beaches and palm trees, it doesn’t mean everything is fine.”

The easy reading of “Goodbye Bread” itself concerns money, or the lack of – the artist accepting his lot of a life of penury. Segall, though, encourages a less specific reading. “It’s what you want it to be. It can mean money, but it’s more of an existential song for me – the point of it all.”

If you saw Ty Segall on tour in the UK this summer, you’ll know such existential ponderings were thin on the ground. Those chaotic shows saw him giving an airing to this year’s Slaughterhouse, the album he recorded with his live band: on bass, Cronin; on guitar, Charlie Moothart, also of past Segall bands Epsilons and The Perverts; and Emily Rose Epstein, who has played drums with Segall since they met at college. Slaughterhouse is the most ripping of Ty’s recent run – a quality he attributes to its collaborative nature. “Our main shared influences are heavy psych, ’77 punk, early ’80s hardcore,” says Segall. “So it ended up a much heavier, faster record. It’s so rewarding to collaborate and come up with something you could never make on your own.”

Slaughterhouse also features a couple of covers – Fred Neil’s “That’s The Bag I’m In”, Bo Diddley’s 1956 classic “Diddy Wah Diddy” – mangled almost beyond recognition. Worth mentioning, because the ill treatment of rock standards is something of a Ty Segall trademark. In London, they encored with a caveman take on AC/DC’s “Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap”. In Manchester, they put the set to rest with a cover of Black Sabbath’s “Paranoid”, played not once, but three times. “That used to be a common occurrence,” adds Segall. “If a show’s going ridiculous, you’ve got to take it to the next level. To own it. It’s fun to cover a song you’re not supposed to. You shouldn’t be allowed to cover Black Sabbath. That’s why you have to do it three times in a row.”

And are you faithful to it? Or do you desecrate it? “Oh, we try to destroy it,” he grins. “As much as we can.”

Ty’s new album Twins, his second for Drag City, began with a fairly simple starting point. “The main idea I had was that I wanted to put fuzz pedal in every song,” says Ty. “I play a Fuzz War, made by a company called Death By Audio – it totally destroys, like a ray gun.”

For all this, Twins is as melodic and nuanced a record that Segall has made so far. Thematically, he says, it’s about “a split personality, and whatever that means to everybody or anybody.”

Certainly, this is a record with many faces. “The Hill”, he explains, began as a mellow folk song, “then I added fuzz pedal, and woah – so much better! But when I transferred it from folk song to rocker, me just singing harmony didn’t do it justice, so I asked Brigid Dawson [of Thee Oh Sees]. She came over, we laid it down in about two hours, and it was just perfect.”

He finds the essence of Twins easiest to explain by way of its cover – a picture of his face, by Annabel Mehran, who also shot the sleeve of Joanna Newsom’s Have One On Me. “We were taking pictures in this club, and found this flexible reflective panel. The image is me shot through this panel as it’s bent – my face exploding out to the side. It was perfect. It just feels like the record.”

_________________

Uncut catches up with Segall again, where he’s at home in San Francisco, loading up the trailer for a three-week US tour co-headlining with Thee Oh Sees. The prospect is both exciting and daunting; ideally, they wouldn’t be touring so hard, but the band have packed in their day jobs and keeping on the road is the only way to make rent. On the bright side, they’re visiting places they’ve never played – a long stretch of the Midwest, then down South, before heading back to Europe. And, says Segall, it’s great to be seeing some of his favourite bands play every night. “I’m such good friends with Thee Oh Sees, but for me they’re just the best live band in the world. Hawkwind, The Stooges, Blue Cheer – they’re in that company.”

When he isn’t on the road or making music, Ty continues, he grabs his board and hits the beach. “Surfing is like a religious experience. So is rock’n’roll, but playing in a band is more like being at a gospel church, everyone freaking out. Surfing is like praying by yourself, just you and the waves.” He shakes his head, sounds a little pained. “Man, I really need to surf more. I’ve been too busy. I miss it a lot.”

So can we expect another three albums in 2013? Segall reckons not. “I have a couple of ideas, but I don’t think I’m gonna have a record out for at least a year. I’m going to concentrate on one thing for as long as I can,” he laughs. “We’ll see what happens.”

Perhaps that long-neglected surfboard will even see some action.

Ask Phil Manzanera!

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With a new solo album and a Roxy Music box set coming in March, Phil Manzanera is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular An Audience With… feature. So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the legendary guitarist and producer? What are his favourite memories of early Roxy Music tours? Who are his guitar heroes? How did he become involved with Pink Floyd's The Endless River? Send up your questions by noon, Tuesday, January 27 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com. The best questions, and Phil's answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

With a new solo album and a Roxy Music box set coming in March, Phil Manzanera is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the legendary guitarist and producer?

What are his favourite memories of early Roxy Music tours?

Who are his guitar heroes?

How did he become involved with Pink Floyd’s The Endless River?

Send up your questions by noon, Tuesday, January 27 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com. The best questions, and Phil’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

Jack White gets his own baseball card

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Jack White has been immortalised in his own baseball card. The Detroit Free Press reports that White's card will appear in the 2015 Topps Series 1 baseball cards set. On the card - pictured above - White is shown wearing a retro Detroit Tigers jersey. The photograph was taken during an appearance...

Jack White has been immortalised in his own baseball card.

The Detroit Free Press reports that White’s card will appear in the 2015 Topps Series 1 baseball cards set.

On the card – pictured above – White is shown wearing a retro Detroit Tigers jersey.

The photograph was taken during an appearance at the team’s Comerica Park ground in July, when he threw out the first pitch for a game.

White’s appearance at the game coincided with his two shows in Detroit.

You can watch White at Comerica Park below.

It’s unclear how limited the White cards will be, but you can find more details about the Topps series here.

Pixies – Doolittle 25

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Slicing up eyeballs: the definitive version of an all-time classic... The 1989 American tour pairing Pixies with Happy Mondays might have initially seemed like a bit of a mismatch: the uptight Massachusetts misfits and the mad-fer-it Manc scallywags. Yet not only were firm friendships forged (as the photos of Kim Deal goofing around in New York with Shaun Ryder and Bez attest); in their own ways, both bands were instrumental in demolishing the ’80s’ tedious dual narrative of excess and austerity. Suddenly, “alternative” didn’t have to mean dogmatic opposition to the mainstream – it could simply be about whooping it up on your own terms. Well, hallelujah and rock a my soul. Albums don’t come much more whooped-up than Doolittle. Sure, its jittery tales of death, dismemberment, sexual frustration and religious confusion aren’t exactly party tunes in the Pills N Thrills… sense. But Charles “Black Francis” Thompson always had the good grace to vent his id in the form of phenomenally catchy, skin-scorching pop songs. And you’re not meant to get hung up on the thematics in any case. “Eighty per cent of it’s baloney,” admitted Charles to Melody Maker in 1988. “It’s the T.Rex thing of ‘if it sounds cool…’” And boy, did Doolittle sound cool, barrelling unstoppably through a netherworld of eyeball-slicing maniacs, suicide surfers, underwater gods and six-foot tattooed girls inspiring outbursts of frothing Spanglish. The third release is meant to be the difficult one. True to form, Pixies had virtually exhausted their initial cache of songs from the legendary ‘Purple Tape’ on 1987’s Come On Pilgrim and the following year’s Surfer Rosa (save for the ultimate rainy-day ace-up-the-sleeve of “Here Comes Your Man”). Next, the almost impossible task of quickly penning a whole new – and better – album, in the midst of the gathering hysteria whipped up by the first two. Yet Charles only seemed to thrive on the pressure. Throughout Doolittle, his ability to switch from virginal croon to lecherous leer to primal yelp at the drop of a hat is breathtaking; Joey Santiago’s white-hot guitar knocks you sideways for much the same reason. And if Kim was smarting from having most of her songs rejected (countryish death waltz “Silver” was her only co-write) you’d never tell, her emphatic basslines and droll counter-melodies proving absolutely essential to the potion. Doolittle has been such a constant presence in our lives over the past quarter-century, especially since Pixies reformed in 2004, that a reappraisal isn’t really necessary. What this re-release does provide, however, is a fascinating insight into how some of the group’s most enduring songs came together. A rough set of demos taped during rehearsals in early 1988 reveal that “Debaser”’s references to Buñuel’s surrealist touchstone Un Chien Andalou were an inspired late addition, while “Wave Of Mutilation” was carefully extracted from the carcass of another song entirely. Pixies had already proved on Surfer Rosa that they could write tightly structured songs packed with hair-raising dynamic shifts, and by the time they came to demo Doolittle properly in a tiny studio beneath a hair salon in the Boston suburbs in September ’88, most of the songs were greased up and ready to roll. Yet producer Gil Norton’s influence on the end product can’t be underestimated: without recourse to expensive studio trickery (he estimated that Doolittle cost no more than $30,000 to make), the likes of “Monkey Gone To Heaven” and “Debaser” were buffed hard into imperishable rock anthems. Who would have guessed, for instance, that what really made “Debaser” groove was the crucial addition of a tambourine? Doolittle’s one downside is the absence of a sequel to “Gigantic”. Increased dysfunctionality within the band meant that Kim’s only lead vocal of the period (apart from “Silver”’s queasy duet) was on the listless “Into The White” from the B-side of “Here Comes Your Man” – which, according to producer Paul Q Kolderie, she had to be cajoled into singing. In a more democratic band, some of the songs that ended up on The Breeders’ Pod might have found a home here, but to be fair, it’s not as if Doolittle is carrying any flab. The lyrics may have been baloney but, even at 25 years remove, Doolittle’s lively morsels still taste startlingly fresh. CD2 features the six B-sides from “Monkey Gone To Heaven” and “Here Comes Your Man” (including the eerie ‘UK Surf” version of “Wave Of Mutilation”) along with two Peel Sessions dated October ’88 and May ’89 – although all but two of those session tracks were previously released on Pixies At The BBC. CD3 comprises the album demos, plus intriguing nascent versions of “Debaser”, “Wave Of Mutilation”, “Hey” and three others, as well as the ‘Purple Tape’ version of “Here Comes Your Man”. Sam Richards

Slicing up eyeballs: the definitive version of an all-time classic…

The 1989 American tour pairing Pixies with Happy Mondays might have initially seemed like a bit of a mismatch: the uptight Massachusetts misfits and the mad-fer-it Manc scallywags. Yet not only were firm friendships forged (as the photos of Kim Deal goofing around in New York with Shaun Ryder and Bez attest); in their own ways, both bands were instrumental in demolishing the ’80s’ tedious dual narrative of excess and austerity. Suddenly, “alternative” didn’t have to mean dogmatic opposition to the mainstream – it could simply be about whooping it up on your own terms. Well, hallelujah and rock a my soul.

Albums don’t come much more whooped-up than Doolittle. Sure, its jittery tales of death, dismemberment, sexual frustration and religious confusion aren’t exactly party tunes in the Pills N Thrills… sense. But Charles “Black Francis” Thompson always had the good grace to vent his id in the form of phenomenally catchy, skin-scorching pop songs. And you’re not meant to get hung up on the thematics in any case. “Eighty per cent of it’s baloney,” admitted Charles to Melody Maker in 1988. “It’s the T.Rex thing of ‘if it sounds cool…’” And boy, did Doolittle sound cool, barrelling unstoppably through a netherworld of eyeball-slicing maniacs, suicide surfers, underwater gods and six-foot tattooed girls inspiring outbursts of frothing Spanglish.

The third release is meant to be the difficult one. True to form, Pixies had virtually exhausted their initial cache of songs from the legendary ‘Purple Tape’ on 1987’s Come On Pilgrim and the following year’s Surfer Rosa (save for the ultimate rainy-day ace-up-the-sleeve of “Here Comes Your Man”). Next, the almost impossible task of quickly penning a whole new – and better – album, in the midst of the gathering hysteria whipped up by the first two. Yet Charles only seemed to thrive on the pressure.

Throughout Doolittle, his ability to switch from virginal croon to lecherous leer to primal yelp at the drop of a hat is breathtaking; Joey Santiago’s white-hot guitar knocks you sideways for much the same reason. And if Kim was smarting from having most of her songs rejected (countryish death waltz “Silver” was her only co-write) you’d never tell, her emphatic basslines and droll counter-melodies proving absolutely essential to the potion.

Doolittle has been such a constant presence in our lives over the past quarter-century, especially since Pixies reformed in 2004, that a reappraisal isn’t really necessary. What this re-release does provide, however, is a fascinating insight into how some of the group’s most enduring songs came together. A rough set of demos taped during rehearsals in early 1988 reveal that “Debaser”’s references to Buñuel’s surrealist touchstone Un Chien Andalou were an inspired late addition, while “Wave Of Mutilation” was carefully extracted from the carcass of another song entirely. Pixies had already proved on Surfer Rosa that they could write tightly structured songs packed with hair-raising dynamic shifts, and by the time they came to demo Doolittle properly in a tiny studio beneath a hair salon in the Boston suburbs in September ’88, most of the songs were greased up and ready to roll. Yet producer Gil Norton’s influence on the end product can’t be underestimated: without recourse to expensive studio trickery (he estimated that Doolittle cost no more than $30,000 to make), the likes of “Monkey Gone To Heaven” and “Debaser” were buffed hard into imperishable rock anthems. Who would have guessed, for instance, that what really made “Debaser” groove was the crucial addition of a tambourine?

Doolittle’s one downside is the absence of a sequel to “Gigantic”. Increased dysfunctionality within the band meant that Kim’s only lead vocal of the period (apart from “Silver”’s queasy duet) was on the listless “Into The White” from the B-side of “Here Comes Your Man” – which, according to producer Paul Q Kolderie, she had to be cajoled into singing. In a more democratic band, some of the songs that ended up on The Breeders’ Pod might have found a home here, but to be fair, it’s not as if Doolittle is carrying any flab. The lyrics may have been baloney but, even at 25 years remove, Doolittle’s lively morsels still taste startlingly fresh.

CD2 features the six B-sides from “Monkey Gone To Heaven” and “Here Comes Your Man” (including the eerie ‘UK Surf” version of “Wave Of Mutilation”) along with two Peel Sessions dated October ’88 and May ’89 – although all but two of those session tracks were previously released on Pixies At The BBC. CD3 comprises the album demos, plus intriguing nascent versions of “Debaser”, “Wave Of Mutilation”, “Hey” and three others, as well as the ‘Purple Tape’ version of “Here Comes Your Man”.

Sam Richards

The Specials’ announce details of Special Edition albums

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Photos, extra tracks, sleevenotes included... The Specials are to reissue their three studio albums as Special Editions. The Specials, More Specials and In The Studio will be accompanied by rare bonus material, non-album singles, EPs and b-sides, sleevenotes and previously unseen photographs. The reissues - which have been approved by founder member Jerry Dammers - will be released on March 30 through 2 Tone Records/Warners Catalogue. The tracklistings are: SPECIALS (2 CD Special Edition) CD 1: 1. Gangsters 2. A Message To You, Rudy 3. Do The Dog 4. It’s Up To You 5. Nite Klub 6. Doesn’t Make It Alright 7. Concrete Jungle 8. Too Hot 9. Monkey Man 10. (Dawning Of A) New Era 11. Blank Expression 12. Stupid Marriage 13. Too Much Too Young 14. Little Bitch 15. You’re Wondering Now CD 2: EXTRA SPECIALS Too Much Too Young EP (live) by The Special AKA: 1. Too Much Too Young 2. Guns Of Navarone 3. Skinhead Symphony a) Long Shot Kick The Bucket b) Liquidator c) Skinhead Moon Stomp BBC In Concert At the Paris Theatre (15/12/79) by The Specials: 1. (Dawning Of A) New Era 2. Do The Dog 3. Rat Race 4. Blank Expression 5. Rude Buoys Outa Jail 6. Concrete Jungle 7. Too Much Too Young 8. Guns Of Navarone 9. Nite Klub 10. Gangsters 11. Medley: a) Long Shot Kick The Bucket b) Skinhead Moonstomp MORE SPECIALS (2 CD Special Edition) CD 1: 1. Enjoy Yourself (It’s Later Than You Think) 2. Man At C&A 3. Hey, Little Rich Girl 4. Do Nothing 5. Pearl’s Café 6. Sock It To ‘Em J.B. 7. Stereotypes/Stereotypes - Pt. 2 8. Holiday Fortnight 9. I Can’t Stand It 10.International Jet Set 11.Enjoy Yourself (Reprise) CD 2: MORE EXTRA SPECIALS Singles, b-sides and rarities by The Specials: 1. Rat Race 2. Rude Buoys Outa Jail 3. Stereotypes Pts.1 & 2 (John Peel session) 4. International Jet Set (single version) 5. Rude Boys Outa Jail (version) (featuring Neville Staples aka Judge Roughneck) 6. - Do Nothing (single version) (featuring Rico with the Ice Rink String Sounds) 7. Maggie’s Farm 8. Raquel 9. Why? (extended version) 10. Friday Night, Saturday Morning 11. Ghost Town (full version) 12. Sea Cruise (John Peel session) (featuring Rico) 13. You’re Wondering Now (Kid Jensen session) IN THE STUDIO (2 CD Special Edition) CD1: 1. Bright Lights 2. Lonely Crowd 3. What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend 4. House Bound 5. Night On The Tiles 6. Nelson Mandela 7. War Crimes 8. Racist Friend 9. Alcohol 10. Break Down The Door CD2: Rarities by The Special AKA: 1. The Boiler ( Rhoda and The Special AKA ) 2. You Just Can’t Get A Break 3. Jungle Music ( Rico and The Special AKA ) BBC Peel Session 12/09/83 by The Special AKA: 4. Lonely Crowd 5. Alcohol 6. Bright Lights Instrumentals by The Special AKA: 7. Break Down The Door 8. Racist Friend 9. War Crimes 10. Theme From The Boiler 11. Bright Lights 12. Nelson Mandela

Photos, extra tracks, sleevenotes included…

The Specials are to reissue their three studio albums as Special Editions.

The Specials, More Specials and In The Studio will be accompanied by rare bonus material, non-album singles, EPs and b-sides, sleevenotes and previously unseen photographs.

The reissues – which have been approved by founder member Jerry Dammers – will be released on March 30 through 2 Tone Records/Warners Catalogue.

The tracklistings are:

SPECIALS (2 CD Special Edition)

CD 1:

1. Gangsters

2. A Message To You, Rudy

3. Do The Dog

4. It’s Up To You

5. Nite Klub

6. Doesn’t Make It Alright

7. Concrete Jungle

8. Too Hot

9. Monkey Man

10. (Dawning Of A) New Era

11. Blank Expression

12. Stupid Marriage

13. Too Much Too Young

14. Little Bitch

15. You’re Wondering Now

CD 2: EXTRA SPECIALS

Too Much Too Young EP (live) by The Special AKA:

1. Too Much Too Young

2. Guns Of Navarone

3. Skinhead Symphony

a) Long Shot Kick The Bucket

b) Liquidator

c) Skinhead Moon Stomp

BBC In Concert At the Paris Theatre (15/12/79) by The Specials:

1. (Dawning Of A) New Era

2. Do The Dog

3. Rat Race

4. Blank Expression

5. Rude Buoys Outa Jail

6. Concrete Jungle

7. Too Much Too Young

8. Guns Of Navarone

9. Nite Klub

10. Gangsters

11. Medley:

a) Long Shot Kick The Bucket

b) Skinhead Moonstomp

MORE SPECIALS (2 CD Special Edition)

CD 1:

1. Enjoy Yourself (It’s Later Than You Think)

2. Man At C&A

3. Hey, Little Rich Girl

4. Do Nothing

5. Pearl’s Café

6. Sock It To ‘Em J.B.

7. Stereotypes/Stereotypes – Pt. 2

8. Holiday Fortnight

9. I Can’t Stand It

10.International Jet Set

11.Enjoy Yourself (Reprise)

CD 2: MORE EXTRA SPECIALS

Singles, b-sides and rarities by The Specials:

1. Rat Race

2. Rude Buoys Outa Jail

3. Stereotypes Pts.1 & 2 (John Peel session)

4. International Jet Set (single version)

5. Rude Boys Outa Jail (version) (featuring Neville Staples aka Judge Roughneck)

6. – Do Nothing (single version) (featuring Rico with the Ice Rink String Sounds)

7. Maggie’s Farm

8. Raquel

9. Why? (extended version)

10. Friday Night, Saturday Morning

11. Ghost Town (full version)

12. Sea Cruise (John Peel session) (featuring Rico)

13. You’re Wondering Now (Kid Jensen session)

IN THE STUDIO (2 CD Special Edition)

CD1:

1. Bright Lights

2. Lonely Crowd

3. What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend

4. House Bound

5. Night On The Tiles

6. Nelson Mandela

7. War Crimes

8. Racist Friend

9. Alcohol

10. Break Down The Door

CD2:

Rarities by The Special AKA:

1. The Boiler ( Rhoda and The Special AKA )

2. You Just Can’t Get A Break

3. Jungle Music ( Rico and The Special AKA )

BBC Peel Session 12/09/83 by The Special AKA:

4. Lonely Crowd

5. Alcohol

6. Bright Lights

Instrumentals by The Special AKA:

7. Break Down The Door

8. Racist Friend

9. War Crimes

10. Theme From The Boiler

11. Bright Lights

12. Nelson Mandela

Read the tracklisting for The Grateful Dead’s new Best Of… compilation

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Best Of... kicks off 50th anniversary celebrations... The Grateful Dead have announced details of a new compilation album. The Best Of The Grateful Dead will be released by Rhino on March 30 on CD. The set will also be available digitally. The 32-track, career-spanning, two-disc collection also kicks off the band's 50th anniversary celebrations. The Dead will also be the subject of a forthcoming documentary, produced by Martin Scorsese. Last week, the band announced details of three anniversary concerts - dubbed Fare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful Dead - which will take place at Chicago's Soldier Field on July 3, 4 and 5. The tracklisting for The Best Of The Grateful Dead is: Disc One “The Golden Road (To Unlimited Devotion)” “Cream Puff War” “Born Cross-Eyed” “Dark Star” (Single Version) “St. Stephen” “China Cat Sunflower” “Uncle John’s Band” “Easy Wind” “Casey Jones” “Truckin’” “Box Of Rain” “Sugar Magnolia” “Friend Of The Devil” “Ripple” “Eyes Of The World” “Unbroken Chain” “Scarlet Begonias” “The Music Never Stopped” “Estimated Prophet” Disc Two “Terrapin Station” “Shakedown Street” “I Need A Miracle” “Fire On The Mountain” “Feel Like A Stranger” “Far From Me” “Touch Of Grey” “Hell In A Bucket” “Throwing Stones” “Black Muddy River” “Blow Away” “Foolish Heart” “Standing On The Moon”

Best Of… kicks off 50th anniversary celebrations…

The Grateful Dead have announced details of a new compilation album.

The Best Of The Grateful Dead will be released by Rhino on March 30 on CD. The set will also be available digitally.

The 32-track, career-spanning, two-disc collection also kicks off the band’s 50th anniversary celebrations.

The Dead will also be the subject of a forthcoming documentary, produced by Martin Scorsese.

Last week, the band announced details of three anniversary concerts – dubbed Fare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful Dead – which will take place at Chicago’s Soldier Field on July 3, 4 and 5.

The tracklisting for The Best Of The Grateful Dead is:

Disc One

“The Golden Road (To Unlimited Devotion)”

“Cream Puff War”

“Born Cross-Eyed”

“Dark Star” (Single Version)

“St. Stephen”

“China Cat Sunflower”

“Uncle John’s Band”

“Easy Wind”

“Casey Jones”

“Truckin’”

“Box Of Rain”

“Sugar Magnolia”

“Friend Of The Devil”

“Ripple”

“Eyes Of The World”

“Unbroken Chain”

“Scarlet Begonias”

“The Music Never Stopped”

“Estimated Prophet”

Disc Two

“Terrapin Station”

“Shakedown Street”

“I Need A Miracle”

“Fire On The Mountain”

“Feel Like A Stranger”

“Far From Me”

“Touch Of Grey”

“Hell In A Bucket”

“Throwing Stones”

“Black Muddy River”

“Blow Away”

“Foolish Heart”

“Standing On The Moon”

Björk rush releases digital version of new album, Vulnicura

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The LP is now available to purchase on iTunes... Björk has rush released the digital version of her new album, Vulnicura. The follow up to 2011's Biophilia is now on sale via iTunes, two months ahead of its supposed release date. The CD and vinyl versions of the album will still come out in March as originally planned. The LP's artwork is pictured above. The singer took to Facebook to tell fans about the making of the record earlier this evening, calling it a "heartbreak album". She wrote: "I guess I found in my lap one year into writing it a complete heartbreak album. Kinda surprised how thoroughly I had documented this in pretty much accurate emotional chronology... Like 3 songs before a break up and three after. So the anthropologist in me sneaked in and I decided to share them as such. First I was worried it would be too self indulgent but then I felt it might make it even more universal. And hopefully the songs could be a help, a crutch to others and prove how biological this process is: the wound and the healing of the wound. Psychologically and physically. It has a stubborn clock attached to it." She continued, discussing her work with Arca and The Haxan Cloak on the release. "And then a magic thing happened to me: as I lost one thing something else entered. Alejandro contacted me late summer 2013 and was interested in working with me. It was perfect timing. To make beats to the songs would have taken me 3 years (like on Vespertine) but this enchanted Arca would visit me repeatedly and only few months later we had a whole album!!!" she wrote. "It is one of the most enjoyable collaboration I have had! I then went ahead and wrote string and choir arrangements and recorded them in Iceland. Towards the end of the album I started looking around for a mixing engineer and was introduced by a mutual friend of ours, Robin Carolan to The Haxan Cloak. He mixed the album and also made a beat for one half of 'Family'. Together with Chris Elms the engineer we kinda formed a band during the mixing process and this is the album we made!!!" Arca - aka Alejandro Ghersi - has in the past contributed to Kanye West's Yeezus and collaborated with FKA Twigs. The Haxan Cloak, aka Bobby Krlic, released his own self-titled debut in 2011 and then put out a follow-up, Excavation, in 2013. He also worked with US band The Body on their 2014 release I Shall Die Here. The Vulnicura tracklisting is as follows: 'Stonemilker' 'Lionsong' 'History Of Touches' 'Black Lake' 'Family' 'Notget' 'Atom Dance' 'Mouth Mantra' 'Quicksand'

The LP is now available to purchase on iTunes…

Björk has rush released the digital version of her new album, Vulnicura.

The follow up to 2011’s Biophilia is now on sale via iTunes, two months ahead of its supposed release date. The CD and vinyl versions of the album will still come out in March as originally planned. The LP’s artwork is pictured above.

The singer took to Facebook to tell fans about the making of the record earlier this evening, calling it a “heartbreak album”. She wrote: “I guess I found in my lap one year into writing it a complete heartbreak album. Kinda surprised how thoroughly I had documented this in pretty much accurate emotional chronology… Like 3 songs before a break up and three after. So the anthropologist in me sneaked in and I decided to share them as such. First I was worried it would be too self indulgent but then I felt it might make it even more universal. And hopefully the songs could be a help, a crutch to others and prove how biological this process is: the wound and the healing of the wound. Psychologically and physically. It has a stubborn clock attached to it.”

She continued, discussing her work with Arca and The Haxan Cloak on the release. “And then a magic thing happened to me: as I lost one thing something else entered. Alejandro contacted me late summer 2013 and was interested in working with me. It was perfect timing. To make beats to the songs would have taken me 3 years (like on Vespertine) but this enchanted Arca would visit me repeatedly and only few months later we had a whole album!!!” she wrote.

“It is one of the most enjoyable collaboration I have had! I then went ahead and wrote string and choir arrangements and recorded them in Iceland. Towards the end of the album I started looking around for a mixing engineer and was introduced by a mutual friend of ours, Robin Carolan to The Haxan Cloak. He mixed the album and also made a beat for one half of ‘Family’. Together with Chris Elms the engineer we kinda formed a band during the mixing process and this is the album we made!!!”

Arca – aka Alejandro Ghersi – has in the past contributed to Kanye West’s Yeezus and collaborated with FKA Twigs. The Haxan Cloak, aka Bobby Krlic, released his own self-titled debut in 2011 and then put out a follow-up, Excavation, in 2013. He also worked with US band The Body on their 2014 release I Shall Die Here.

The Vulnicura tracklisting is as follows:

‘Stonemilker’

‘Lionsong’

‘History Of Touches’

‘Black Lake’

‘Family’

‘Notget’

‘Atom Dance’

‘Mouth Mantra’

‘Quicksand’

Reviewed! PJ Harvey: January 20, 2015, 1300-1345

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1240: By the entrance to Somerset House on Waterloo Bridge, there is a shop called Knytta, where one can "create your own unique jumper and see it made in front of you." It is near here, on a bright and invigorating January day, that about 40 people wait to be summoned down into the basement. PJ Ha...

1240: By the entrance to Somerset House on Waterloo Bridge, there is a shop called Knytta, where one can “create your own unique jumper and see it made in front of you.”

It is near here, on a bright and invigorating January day, that about 40 people wait to be summoned down into the basement. PJ Harvey’s “Recording In Progress” project started on Friday, with publicity and early reports suggesting a kind of art installation, where Harvey and her band work on an album as a rock analogue to a Marina Abramovic performance piece: sealed behind glass, unable to see the fans watching, with self-consciously suppressed excitement on the other side.

1245: We are admitted, past a glowing door sculpture, into a grand anteroom, smelling of paint. Here you can buy postcards (£1.50), signed posters (£25; not a bad deal), and photographs by Harvey collaborator Seamus Murphy (£300). Lyric sheets are £50 each. Here, also, handing in phones, cameras and any other electronic recording devices is a necessary protocol: PJ Harvey’s openness, reasonably enough, has its limits.

To emphasise the aesthetic of an art event, rather than a musical one, there are programmes, containing an interview with Harvey by Michael Morris, co-director of Artangel. They talk a good deal about the significance of place, and the history of Somerset House: about how Oliver Cromwell’s body lay in state there; about how the stone it was built from comes from the Jurassic coast, near Harvey’s birthplace; about how the Thames runs underneath the building. There is some discussion, not for the first time regarding Harvey, of “water and death”, and Morris – who had heard demos of the songs at time of writing – reveals the putative album to be a “much broader, more geopolitical record than Let England Shake”.

“This cycle of songs considers the major issues of our time,” he notes, “social inequality and injustice, the politics of poverty, anxiety and paranoia about terrorism and the way that hate breeds hate among generations in opposition.” Money, it will transpire, gets everywhere.

1300: Artangel curators lead us behind a restaurant and down into the lower levels of Somerset House, towards a room that was, in a previous life, the Inland Revenue’s staff gymnasium. Eventually, we reach a door that reveals steps down towards the gymnasium/studio itself. Feedback and martial drums greet us: suspicions that the musicians might be eating their lunches prove surprisingly unfounded.

At the bottom of the steps is a glass case displaying instruments. Then, turning left, we are in the viewing gallery. Two sides of the studio are glass (though the performers cannot see out), and it is easy to wander around and catch them – Harvey, producer Flood, John Parish, Terry Edwards, drummer Kendrick Rowe and two techs/engineers, plus a photographer I assume is Seamus Murphy – from a multitude of angles. There is a heraldic crest for PJ Harvey on the wall and on a marching band bass drum, the shield supported by a goat and a two-headed dog.

Edwards is playing flute, heavily distorted. Parish is hunched over a National Steel guitar. Rowe is stood up, playing two snares. Flood is sat on a white sofa. Harvey, meanwhile, is surrounded by saxophones, dulcimers and a small mixer, blowing her nose.

1303: The song restarts, and this time Harvey is singing: “God sent you” seems to be a frequent refrain. Framed copies of lyrics in progress are mounted around the walls, though none seem to correspond with what I can make out she’s singing. The number of musicians is sparse, but the sound is dense and frictional; “Is This Desire” might be the closest comparison, though it may also be a mistake to draw comparisons at this early stage (perhaps a reason why Artangel only issued review tickets to art critics rather than music ones).

It is, though, a short and instantly excellent song, and one whose catchiness will become apparent in the next 45 minutes. Harvey’s part ends with some virtuoso whoops. As it finishes, the audience almost starts to clap, then realises that such a response would be vulgar – and, of course, futile, since the performers cannot hear anything outside their space.

1306: Flood, who soon emerges as the dominant – or at least the most talkative – character, gives his notes on the take. He is not happy with Parish’s guitar part: “I don’t want to hear the guitar. I know it’s there for a guide.” There is some discussion of replacing it with a keyboard, but Parish eventually experiments with a lighter, less noisy strum. Nearby, is a table of beautiful hand percussion, and weathered, arcane instruments proliferate in the space – aesthetically pleasing objects in a fairly blank and functional room. Harvey is stationed well away from the glass – no-one can read her lyrics and notes over her shoulder – and is close to a gorgeous old upright piano.

1309: One of the engineers appears to be giving, under Flood’s tutelage, names to each take, and this one is “Brian Take”; a significantly demystifying moment, really. It’s at this point that the reality of what we’re seeing crystallises. It’s not like watching animals in a zoo, and it’s not much like an art installation, either. The weirdness of the setting doesn’t add any mystique to studio in-jokes, it just broadcasts them to 40 fans quietly delighted at the intimacy of their access.

Nothing here is materially that different from any other studio session I’ve attended, and it’s worth remembering that plenty of artists, especially in the past, have recorded albums in busy studios, full of friends, business associates, hangers-on and so forth. Myths that cluster round PJ Harvey often privilege the seriousness, intensity and privacy of what people assume is her working practice, but maybe that’s a naïve way of looking at a collective and often mundane endeavour.

And maybe that’s one of the critical purposes of “Recording In Progress”; to get rid of some of those assumptions, while at the same time ensuring that Harvey remains in control. A lot of her work can be seen as challenging her own shyness, in a mediated way, and using that as part of the artistic process; it’s a good way to look at “Recording In Progress”, anyhow.

1310: Harvey rubs her sides; it’s possibly chilly in there. Another take begins, and with Parish’s noise reduced, Edwards’ flute rises to the fore; looping and scuffy, reminiscent of how Florian Schneider played on an early Kraftwerk track like “Ruckzuck”. Flood approves. “Gregory take”.

1313: Another similar take. Still sounds great. Flood encourages Edwards to concentrate on the “rhythmic side of things”. Edwards says something about “distorted ska”.

1317: And again. Not bored of it yet. The strength and clarity of Harvey’s vocal is uncannily consistent and, while she allows Flood to do most of the talking, her constant alertness, the way she turns precisely to look at whoever is talking, is striking. As the session goes on, what initially appears to be passivity slowly reveals itself to be a more quiet, considered, collaborative, discreetly authoritative way of working.

This time, Flood is interested in working on the beats. “Let me experiment,” says Parish, wryly. Flood talks about loops, and tells Harvey “I’m even singing a bassline in my head.”

1322: A tech rigs up another snare for Parish, then he and Rowe play for a while together. I walk around to the other side of the room and copy down what appear to be song titles on a wallchart: “River Anacostia”, “Medicinals”, “Chain Of Keys”, “Near The Memorials To Vietnam And Lincoln”, “A Dog Called Money”, “The Ministry Of Social Affairs”, “The Age Of The Dollar”, “The Community Of Hope”, “The Wheel”, “Homo Sappy Blues”, “Imagine This”, “The Ministry Of Defence”, “The Boy”, “A Line In The Sand”, “Dollar Dollar”, “I’ll Be Waiting”, “The Orange Monkey”, “Guilty”.

1326: Parish and Rowe play their interlocking martial rhythms over the top of a recorded take. While her recorded voice plays, she pulls comically aggressive faces at Flood and bends her knees in time to the beat. Flood is increasingly taken with the rhythm and wants to do another overdub.

1329: Another dual drummer take. I wander over to the window. About 20 feet above, I can just see people heading over Waterloo Bridge.

1331: PJ Harvey yawns.

1332: Flood instructs Parish and Rowe to switch kits and both play Parish’s part. This time, Edwards nonchalantly picks up a melodica and honks along, disconsolately. Flood is impressed, and gives him a thumbs-up. “Are you playing a note or just breathing?” Edwards honks again, disconsolately. “It’s nicely out of tune,” he says.

1335: We’re off again. Harvey fiddles with her mixer as Edwards’ melodica wanders back into the mix. She picks up a sheet from her music stand and makes a note. “It’s starting to sound pretty interesting now,” she says, approvingly. “How’s the song going?” asks Flood. “I don’t know where the song is,” she laughs.

Flood, though, is energised, even if he hasn’t moved from the sofa, and is keen on how things are “atonal but tonal”, and how it’s important for him that it avoids slipping into the blues. There is a suggestion Harvey adds a bass clarinet line.

1340: Instead of the clarinet, Harvey picks up her tenor saxophone while the tech fixes her mic. She begins to warm up.

1341: Terry Edwards stares directly into the glass with an air of profound suspicion. It becomes apparent, though, that he’s adjusting his headphones in the mirror. Flood hunches over a guitar while Harvey blows experimentally, eventually matching her tone to that of Edwards’ melodica.

1345: The band are on the verge of running again, when the sound cuts out, and we’re ushered out of the studio space.

“You’ll witness something that is passing in real time,” Harvey says in the programme interview, “and I feel that the best part of any creation is the creating itself. That is when it’s most vital, most exciting…”

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

Jack White accused of abandoning Detroit music scene

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British producer Kevin Nixon said musician just "passed through"... Jack White and Eminem have been accused of abandoning the city of Detroit by British producer Kevin Nixon. In an interview with The Times, Nixon – who managed Kula Shaker and the late Kirsty MacColl – criticised the stars' lack of long-term support for their home city, as well as their reluctance to celebrate its music scene. "The music industry more than other neglected Detroit," he said. "So many musicians have left here to start careers somewhere else. The record company executives from New York or LA just fly right over." Nixon, who moved to Detroit with his wife Sarah Clayman last year to found the Detroit Institute of Music Education, added of White and Eminem: "They just passed though. They didn't build a movement. That's why I decided to bring the music industry here." Last month, Eminem revealed an extended remix to 'Detroit Vs Everybody', a track featured on the Shady Records compilation released in 2014. The extended remix ran to 16-minutes in length and featured guest verses from a variety of Detroit rappers, including Black Milk, Guilty Simpson, Sino, Marv Won, Payroll, Hydro, Big Gov, Boldy James, Kid Vishis, Big Herk, Icewear Vezzo, Detroit Che, and Calicoe. Meanwhile, it was recently reported that a never-before-released White Stripes live album and DVD is set to be released. The package will focus on the band's 2005 tour of South America and comes as part of the Third Man Records subscriber-only service, The Vault. It will include the double LP Under Amazonian Lights, which was recorded live in Manaus, Brazil on June 1, 2005, as well as a DVD featuring footage recorded at the gig at Teatro Amazonas Opera House. Jack White will also be headlining this year's Coachella Festival in California. The event takes place across two weekends in April.

British producer Kevin Nixon said musician just “passed through”…

Jack White and Eminem have been accused of abandoning the city of Detroit by British producer Kevin Nixon.

In an interview with The Times, Nixon – who managed Kula Shaker and the late Kirsty MacColl – criticised the stars’ lack of long-term support for their home city, as well as their reluctance to celebrate its music scene. “The music industry more than other neglected Detroit,” he said. “So many musicians have left here to start careers somewhere else. The record company executives from New York or LA just fly right over.”

Nixon, who moved to Detroit with his wife Sarah Clayman last year to found the Detroit Institute of Music Education, added of White and Eminem: “They just passed though. They didn’t build a movement. That’s why I decided to bring the music industry here.”

Last month, Eminem revealed an extended remix to ‘Detroit Vs Everybody’, a track featured on the Shady Records compilation released in 2014. The extended remix ran to 16-minutes in length and featured guest verses from a variety of Detroit rappers, including Black Milk, Guilty Simpson, Sino, Marv Won, Payroll, Hydro, Big Gov, Boldy James, Kid Vishis, Big Herk, Icewear Vezzo, Detroit Che, and Calicoe.

Meanwhile, it was recently reported that a never-before-released White Stripes live album and DVD is set to be released. The package will focus on the band’s 2005 tour of South America and comes as part of the Third Man Records subscriber-only service, The Vault. It will include the double LP Under Amazonian Lights, which was recorded live in Manaus, Brazil on June 1, 2005, as well as a DVD featuring footage recorded at the gig at Teatro Amazonas Opera House.

Jack White will also be headlining this year’s Coachella Festival in California. The event takes place across two weekends in April.