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The Jesus And Mary Chain confirm festival appearance

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The band join headliners Muse at Portugese festival... The Jesus And Mary Chain have confirmed they are among the latest additions to this year's NOS Alive festival in Portugal. The festival, which confirmed Muse as its first headline act last year, has announced a number of new artists today (January 19) including Jessie Ware and Mercury Prize winners Young Fathers. NOS Alive was formerly known as Optimus Alive and is held in the centre of Lisbon between July 9-11. Tickets for NOS Alive 2015 are onsale here now. A three-day pass plus camping costs £110 while single day passes can be bought for under £50. The Jesus And Mary Chain are also due to play additional Psychocandy shows in the UK during February.

The band join headliners Muse at Portugese festival…

The Jesus And Mary Chain have confirmed they are among the latest additions to this year’s NOS Alive festival in Portugal.

The festival, which confirmed Muse as its first headline act last year, has announced a number of new artists today (January 19) including Jessie Ware and Mercury Prize winners Young Fathers. NOS Alive was formerly known as Optimus Alive and is held in the centre of Lisbon between July 9-11.

Tickets for NOS Alive 2015 are onsale here now. A three-day pass plus camping costs £110 while single day passes can be bought for under £50.

The Jesus And Mary Chain are also due to play additional Psychocandy shows in the UK during February.

Reviewed! Natalie Prass’ outstanding debut album

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March 2013, Richmond, Virginia. Matthew E White's Big Inner album has become a minor word-of-mouth sensation: a country-soul fantasia, saturated with lavish horn and string arrangements, mostly recorded in the attic of his Richmond house (You can read my 2013 interview with Matthew E White here). Today, though, White and the other core members of his Spacebomb musical collective are gathered in his dining room, previewing a few of their other productions. There is a glossy single by Howard Ivans, redolent of upscale '80s soul. Another ornately deranged piece of work, a child's nightmare as if scored by Zappa, will be eventually credited to Grandma Sparrow & His Piddletractor Orchestra. Then, there are a clutch of songs by a singer-songwriter called Natalie Prass, a schoolfriend of White’s from Virginia Beach who currently lives in Nashville. Prass' voice is mostly calm, and she sings of heartbreak with undemonstrative candour, leaving the grand romantic gestures to the instrumentation which surrounds her. Horns and strings seem to be in constant dramatic motion, but the extravagances are always anchored by the steady funk of the rhythm section, by a nonchalant pianist. It is ambitious music, even compared with Big Inner - references to Gamble & Huff, Charles Stephney and Curtis Mayfield’s kinetic arrangements seem apposite - and it also sounds rich with potential; if Feist can sell a million records, then why shouldn't Natalie Prass? The Spacebomb quartet are a generally discreet crew, but as string arranger Trey Pollard gleefully conducts along to the iPod, it's clear they know what treasure they have. The question is: what are they going to do with it? For a long time, the simple answer appears to be, very little. A couple of Prass' tracks sneak out on A Spacebomb Family Sampler, a bonus disc bundled with the copies of Big Inner that are sold by Rough Trade around Christmas 2013. The Howard Ivans single and Grandma Sparrow album are released in the first half of 2014, but the only traces of Prass are the odd Youtube clip of a folk singer with an acoustic guitar; beguiling enough, if not exactly representative of the scope that White recently described to Uncut. "She has the charisma, singing style and vibe of Diana Ross," he says, "this really wonderful, sensitive voice with a lot of strength behind it. But she writes like [New Orleans songwriter] Earl King. I think she’s brilliant." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h50Q47W80ao As it turns out, Prass has been busying herself recording a couple more albums' worth of material, and playing keyboards in Jenny Lewis' band. It was only at the end of last summer that a single emerged. "Bird Of Prey" found Prass exercising her best Ms Ross coo over a limber piano and bass groove that owed much to G-funk, or at least the '70s records that Dr Dre once sampled. The string and horn arrangements (by Pollard and White respectively) were rococo, rapturous, but they never overwhelmed Prass' lightly expressed tale of separation: "You, you don’t leave me no choice/But to run away." The b-side was a smoked cover of Janet Jackson's "Any Time, Any Place". For some of us who heard it, there wasn't a better single released in 2014. Now, to begin the new year, Spacebomb – via the Caroline label - have finally deigned to release Natalie Prass, some three years after it was recorded. As the singer herself notes, this is broadly timeless music, and the delay hasn't made it an anomaly in 2015. "It’s important to find the right context, the right time, the right team and the right way to get music to listeners," says White. "Releasing records is a skill, just like making records is a skill. We’re a really small label, and we wanted to have the right things in place to support a record that we felt was really worth supporting." Natalie Prass features “Bird Of Prey” and eight other tracks. One song, “Your Fool”, appears twice: as a delicate, catchy vamp that elicits those Feist comparisons; and as “Reprise”, an abstracted instrumental flurry, over which Prass reads the lyrics with the measure – though not quite the stentorian gravity – of Isaac Hayes. If the music is predominantly rooted in the lusher end of ‘70s soul, there are a couple of flighty, beatless confections, “Christy” and “It Is You”. The former is a tale of infidelity that became weirdly prophetic when Prass broke up with her boyfriend and co-writer Kyle Ryan Hurlbut during the recording of the album. Designed as a homage to the Brazilian singer Gal Costa and one of Spacebomb’s abiding heroes Rogério Duprat, the orchestrator of Tropicalia, you might also spot (inadvertent) similarities with the work of Dory Previn and, perhaps, Joanna Newsom’s collaboration with Van Dyke Parks, Ys. “It Is You”, meanwhile, is a preposterous recreation of vintage Disney scores; so much so that one imagines Prass singing it to animated songbirds perched on her arm, chipmunks and raccoons clustered adoringly at her feet. Artful, whimsical, a little cloying - and easily enough avoided, sat as it is at the end of the 40-minute album. Before that, there are a clutch of gorgeously-rendered pop-soul songs that climax with “Violently”, the apotheosis of Pratt and Spacebomb’s style. It begins with an easy grace and strong Muscle Shoals vibes, the offhand excellence of pianist Daniel Clarke, a vet of sessions with kd lang and Ryan Adams, very much to the fore. Gradually, the layers of orchestration accumulate, and Prass’ words, at least, ramp up the intensity. “I just want to know you violently,” she sings, “I’ve had enough of talking politely/The red is there, it’s all over me.” Rarely, though, has a singer delivered such a vigorous message with such stillness. Ardent discretion is Prass’ trump card, that and the way she allows her musicians to do the impassioned heavy lifting. Who needs belligerent melisma when you have, on “Violently”, a jazz drummer like Pinson Chanselle playing escalating, cymbal-heavy fills that do the same job with so much more elegance? “This record is a community,” says Prass; a community, it seems, clever enough to share out even the most meaningful emotional responsibilities. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey Q&A: NATALIE PRASS When did you start recording the album? 2012. I sent Matthew E White a bunch of songs and he was very thorough at discussing exactly what we were going to do. One of his main strengths is planning - he really helped me put everything together. We recorded it in about a month. We mixed it later, mastered it later, but tracked everything all at once. Have you been frustrated that it’s been on the shelf for so long? It’s been very emotional, but you can’t worry about that too much now. What’s great is that it’s such a classic-sounding record. I wanted to write music that could be from any time. But of course, I wanted it to come out when I was 25, not 28. You must have written a lot of music in the meantime? Oh yeah, I've recorded two more records… What else am I gonna do? I did one in Burlington, Vermont with my friend, Seth Kaufman, who played on Lana del Rey’s new record and with Ray Lamontagne. And then I recorded another record in Nashville, where I played everything. I don’t know what’s going to happen with those. I don’t know if I'll release them as full-lengths. I’m constantly writing and I like to be busy, but I know this record needed to come out first. In Nashville, you can make a record like this, but everybody wants a ton of money if they're any good. This record would’ve cost 70 grand or something, maybe more. It wouldn’t have been possible. Is this the kind of record that you always wanted to make? Yeah. The music I grew up listening to - that I still listen to and will never tire of - has this kind of community sound. Sometimes it’s better if the singer-songwriter doesn’t have to play everything and doesn’t have to produce. Sometimes more ideas come to life when many people have all these great ideas and talents. Matt [White] will tell you he wouldn’t be able to make his records by himself, it’s a whole bunch of people bringing what they’ve studied for years. Even though I love being in charge - these are my ideas - sometimes it’s better to open up and let people help with what you’re trying to do. Everyone has their moments on this record. This record is a community. Can you be specific about the music that inspired you? I grew up listening to Motown; my dad is a huge Motown fan. The very first female voice I ever fell in love with was Diana Ross. The first CD I ever bought with my own money, in second grade, was by The Supremes. I’ve always been a huge Dionne Warwick fan, I really connect with that kind of delivery and overall musical vibe. I love Sly And The Family Stone, Gal Costa. Those are the ladies I’ve been studying. Finding my voice, finding my singing style took a lot of exploring, and those girls, they had a huge part in how I wanted to deliver my songs. When you’re a singer and growing up in Virginia Beach, where both Matt and I grew up, it’s a navy town and it’s a tourist town, and there’s not much culture there. So many amazing people came out of this weird beach town, and I think it’s because we all had to work a little harder to find stuff. We didn’t have anything. We just had to keep going. I didn’t even know girls could play electric guitar. The very first time I ever saw a female playing an electric guitar was Jenny Lewis, when she was in Rilo Kiley. I was in ninth grade and now I’m in her band, it’s kinda cool. I thought girls played acoustic guitar and piano, girls didn’t rock out. Do you feel like you’ve emotionally moved on? Because a lot of the songs feel very emotionally specific to what was now a long time ago. I co-wrote ‘Christy’ with Kyle Ryan Hurlbut, the guy I was dating. And at the time, the song didn’t have any sort of narrative to my personal experience. But then a couple of years later that song sort of came true. And the girl’s name is almost ‘Christy’. We split up in the middle of recording the album. I didn’t have lyrics for ‘Why Don’t You Believe In Me?’: I wrote the lyrics the night before we recorded it, and that’s obviously about Kyle. The songs became even more personal, took on new meaning. It’s pretty crazy. ‘Is It You?’ is very Disney… Yeah. but I feel this style is beyond Disney, it’s the style ingrained in us when we’re growing up. Everybody knows that style of music and that kind of writing, but no-one really does it. I got kind of obsessed with ‘He Needs Me’ by Harry Nilsson from the Popeye movie and I started writing a whole bunch of music like that. Not everyone’s gonna like it, there’s gonna be a lot of people confused maybe, but I feel like it's music that's undeniably in your blood. I like it closing up the record, for sure. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mE5Z3Q_ZO-4 “I was blown away…”: Matthew E White on Natalie Prass “I’ve known Natalie a long time. Natalie and I, we’re both from Virginia Beach. I met Natalie at a Battle Of The Bands when she was in 8th grade and I was in junior high school. I was playing harmonica and she was playing pop music. We both left Virginia Beach and we both take work seriously, but I hadn’t heard her in a long time. So when she played some of her songs for me I was really blown away. She’s an incredibly fresh, exciting talent. “We’re a really small label and Big Inner took us on a crazy ride. It took us some time to learn from Big Inner and tighten up things. This is just a good time: it makes sense for Spacebomb, and it makes sense for Natalie. There are so many records that we have on our shelf, incredible records that never end up heard. And there are so many records that are out in the world that are complete shit. To me, it’s very clear that the common denominator for people hearing music is not always the music, it’s the people behind the scenes getting that music into the right people’s hands, getting it magnified and reflected in the right way. I don’t say that to come down on anybody, it’s just this is the reality we’re in, so it’s important to match an artist and a piece of art with the team that will support it appropriately. As a small business, it takes a while to get the right things in place. That’s how good Natalie’s record is.” Picture: Ryan Patterson

March 2013, Richmond, Virginia. Matthew E White’s Big Inner album has become a minor word-of-mouth sensation: a country-soul fantasia, saturated with lavish horn and string arrangements, mostly recorded in the attic of his Richmond house (You can read my 2013 interview with Matthew E White here).

Today, though, White and the other core members of his Spacebomb musical collective are gathered in his dining room, previewing a few of their other productions. There is a glossy single by Howard Ivans, redolent of upscale ’80s soul. Another ornately deranged piece of work, a child’s nightmare as if scored by Zappa, will be eventually credited to Grandma Sparrow & His Piddletractor Orchestra.

Then, there are a clutch of songs by a singer-songwriter called Natalie Prass, a schoolfriend of White’s from Virginia Beach who currently lives in Nashville. Prass’ voice is mostly calm, and she sings of heartbreak with undemonstrative candour, leaving the grand romantic gestures to the instrumentation which surrounds her. Horns and strings seem to be in constant dramatic motion, but the extravagances are always anchored by the steady funk of the rhythm section, by a nonchalant pianist.

It is ambitious music, even compared with Big Inner – references to Gamble & Huff, Charles Stephney and Curtis Mayfield’s kinetic arrangements seem apposite – and it also sounds rich with potential; if Feist can sell a million records, then why shouldn’t Natalie Prass? The Spacebomb quartet are a generally discreet crew, but as string arranger Trey Pollard gleefully conducts along to the iPod, it’s clear they know what treasure they have. The question is: what are they going to do with it?

For a long time, the simple answer appears to be, very little. A couple of Prass’ tracks sneak out on A Spacebomb Family Sampler, a bonus disc bundled with the copies of Big Inner that are sold by Rough Trade around Christmas 2013. The Howard Ivans single and Grandma Sparrow album are released in the first half of 2014, but the only traces of Prass are the odd Youtube clip of a folk singer with an acoustic guitar; beguiling enough, if not exactly representative of the scope that White recently described to Uncut. “She has the charisma, singing style and vibe of Diana Ross,” he says, “this really wonderful, sensitive voice with a lot of strength behind it. But she writes like [New Orleans songwriter] Earl King. I think she’s brilliant.”

As it turns out, Prass has been busying herself recording a couple more albums’ worth of material, and playing keyboards in Jenny Lewis’ band. It was only at the end of last summer that a single emerged. “Bird Of Prey” found Prass exercising her best Ms Ross coo over a limber piano and bass groove that owed much to G-funk, or at least the ’70s records that Dr Dre once sampled. The string and horn arrangements (by Pollard and White respectively) were rococo, rapturous, but they never overwhelmed Prass’ lightly expressed tale of separation: “You, you don’t leave me no choice/But to run away.” The b-side was a smoked cover of Janet Jackson’s “Any Time, Any Place”. For some of us who heard it, there wasn’t a better single released in 2014.

Now, to begin the new year, Spacebomb – via the Caroline label – have finally deigned to release Natalie Prass, some three years after it was recorded. As the singer herself notes, this is broadly timeless music, and the delay hasn’t made it an anomaly in 2015. “It’s important to find the right context, the right time, the right team and the right way to get music to listeners,” says White. “Releasing records is a skill, just like making records is a skill. We’re a really small label, and we wanted to have the right things in place to support a record that we felt was really worth supporting.”

Natalie Prass features “Bird Of Prey” and eight other tracks. One song, “Your Fool”, appears twice: as a delicate, catchy vamp that elicits those Feist comparisons; and as “Reprise”, an abstracted instrumental flurry, over which Prass reads the lyrics with the measure – though not quite the stentorian gravity – of Isaac Hayes. If the music is predominantly rooted in the lusher end of ‘70s soul, there are a couple of flighty, beatless confections, “Christy” and “It Is You”. The former is a tale of infidelity that became weirdly prophetic when Prass broke up with her boyfriend and co-writer Kyle Ryan Hurlbut during the recording of the album. Designed as a homage to the Brazilian singer Gal Costa and one of Spacebomb’s abiding heroes Rogério Duprat, the orchestrator of Tropicalia, you might also spot (inadvertent) similarities with the work of Dory Previn and, perhaps, Joanna Newsom’s collaboration with Van Dyke Parks, Ys.

“It Is You”, meanwhile, is a preposterous recreation of vintage Disney scores; so much so that one imagines Prass singing it to animated songbirds perched on her arm, chipmunks and raccoons clustered adoringly at her feet. Artful, whimsical, a little cloying – and easily enough avoided, sat as it is at the end of the 40-minute album.

Before that, there are a clutch of gorgeously-rendered pop-soul songs that climax with “Violently”, the apotheosis of Pratt and Spacebomb’s style. It begins with an easy grace and strong Muscle Shoals vibes, the offhand excellence of pianist Daniel Clarke, a vet of sessions with kd lang and Ryan Adams, very much to the fore. Gradually, the layers of orchestration accumulate, and Prass’ words, at least, ramp up the intensity. “I just want to know you violently,” she sings, “I’ve had enough of talking politely/The red is there, it’s all over me.”

Rarely, though, has a singer delivered such a vigorous message with such stillness. Ardent discretion is Prass’ trump card, that and the way she allows her musicians to do the impassioned heavy lifting. Who needs belligerent melisma when you have, on “Violently”, a jazz drummer like Pinson Chanselle playing escalating, cymbal-heavy fills that do the same job with so much more elegance? “This record is a community,” says Prass; a community, it seems, clever enough to share out even the most meaningful emotional responsibilities.

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

Q&A: NATALIE PRASS

When did you start recording the album?

2012. I sent Matthew E White a bunch of songs and he was very thorough at discussing exactly what we were going to do. One of his main strengths is planning – he really helped me put everything together. We recorded it in about a month. We mixed it later, mastered it later, but tracked everything all at once.

Have you been frustrated that it’s been on the shelf for so long?

It’s been very emotional, but you can’t worry about that too much now. What’s great is that it’s such a classic-sounding record. I wanted to write music that could be from any time. But of course, I wanted it to come out when I was 25, not 28.

You must have written a lot of music in the meantime?

Oh yeah, I’ve recorded two more records… What else am I gonna do? I did one in Burlington, Vermont with my friend, Seth Kaufman, who played on Lana del Rey’s new record and with Ray Lamontagne. And then I recorded another record in Nashville, where I played everything. I don’t know what’s going to happen with those. I don’t know if I’ll release them as full-lengths. I’m constantly writing and I like to be busy, but I know this record needed to come out first.

In Nashville, you can make a record like this, but everybody wants a ton of money if they’re any good. This record would’ve cost 70 grand or something, maybe more. It wouldn’t have been possible.

Is this the kind of record that you always wanted to make?

Yeah. The music I grew up listening to – that I still listen to and will never tire of – has this kind of community sound. Sometimes it’s better if the singer-songwriter doesn’t have to play everything and doesn’t have to produce. Sometimes more ideas come to life when many people have all these great ideas and talents. Matt [White] will tell you he wouldn’t be able to make his records by himself, it’s a whole bunch of people bringing what they’ve studied for years. Even though I love being in charge – these are my ideas – sometimes it’s better to open up and let people help with what you’re trying to do. Everyone has their moments on this record. This record is a community.

Can you be specific about the music that inspired you?

I grew up listening to Motown; my dad is a huge Motown fan. The very first female voice I ever fell in love with was Diana Ross. The first CD I ever bought with my own money, in second grade, was by The Supremes. I’ve always been a huge Dionne Warwick fan, I really connect with that kind of delivery and overall musical vibe. I love Sly And The Family Stone, Gal Costa. Those are the ladies I’ve been studying. Finding my voice, finding my singing style took a lot of exploring, and those girls, they had a huge part in how I wanted to deliver my songs.

When you’re a singer and growing up in Virginia Beach, where both Matt and I grew up, it’s a navy town and it’s a tourist town, and there’s not much culture there. So many amazing people came out of this weird beach town, and I think it’s because we all had to work a little harder to find stuff. We didn’t have anything. We just had to keep going. I didn’t even know girls could play electric guitar. The very first time I ever saw a female playing an electric guitar was Jenny Lewis, when she was in Rilo Kiley. I was in ninth grade and now I’m in her band, it’s kinda cool. I thought girls played acoustic guitar and piano, girls didn’t rock out.

Do you feel like you’ve emotionally moved on? Because a lot of the songs feel very emotionally specific to what was now a long time ago.

I co-wrote ‘Christy’ with Kyle Ryan Hurlbut, the guy I was dating. And at the time, the song didn’t have any sort of narrative to my personal experience. But then a couple of years later that song sort of came true. And the girl’s name is almost ‘Christy’. We split up in the middle of recording the album. I didn’t have lyrics for ‘Why Don’t You Believe In Me?’: I wrote the lyrics the night before we recorded it, and that’s obviously about Kyle. The songs became even more personal, took on new meaning. It’s pretty crazy.

‘Is It You?’ is very Disney…

Yeah. but I feel this style is beyond Disney, it’s the style ingrained in us when we’re growing up. Everybody knows that style of music and that kind of writing, but no-one really does it. I got kind of obsessed with ‘He Needs Me’ by Harry Nilsson from the Popeye movie and I started writing a whole bunch of music like that. Not everyone’s gonna like it, there’s gonna be a lot of people confused maybe, but I feel like it’s music that’s undeniably in your blood. I like it closing up the record, for sure.

“I was blown away…”: Matthew E White on Natalie Prass

“I’ve known Natalie a long time. Natalie and I, we’re both from Virginia Beach. I met Natalie at a Battle Of The Bands when she was in 8th grade and I was in junior high school. I was playing harmonica and she was playing pop music. We both left Virginia Beach and we both take work seriously, but I hadn’t heard her in a long time. So when she played some of her songs for me I was really blown away. She’s an incredibly fresh, exciting talent.

“We’re a really small label and Big Inner took us on a crazy ride. It took us some time to learn from Big Inner and tighten up things. This is just a good time: it makes sense for Spacebomb, and it makes sense for Natalie. There are so many records that we have on our shelf, incredible records that never end up heard. And there are so many records that are out in the world that are complete shit. To me, it’s very clear that the common denominator for people hearing music is not always the music, it’s the people behind the scenes getting that music into the right people’s hands, getting it magnified and reflected in the right way. I don’t say that to come down on anybody, it’s just this is the reality we’re in, so it’s important to match an artist and a piece of art with the team that will support it appropriately. As a small business, it takes a while to get the right things in place. That’s how good Natalie’s record is.”

Picture: Ryan Patterson

Watch Prince’s new video for “Marz”

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Track taken from the album Plectrumelectrum... Prince has released a new video for the song, "Marz". The short track is taken from the album Plectrumelectrum – recorded by Prince with his band 3RDEYEGIRL – and the video is a seventies throwback piece, featuring blurry colours, psychedelic imagery and simulated static. Scroll down to watch. Posting the video online represents something of a turnaround from Prince after he removed a host of content from YouTube in November, leaving just three video – an interview and two clips of the track "Breakfast Can Wait". Prince's Twitter and Facebook accounts were also deleted with no explanation as to why. He had previously taken to Facebook to take part in a Q&A session with fans, during which he only answered one question. Replying to a post that asked about sound frequencies, Prince responded by posting a link to an article entitled 'Here's Why You Should Convert Your Music to 432hz'. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c1wsn4ug0tc

Track taken from the album Plectrumelectrum…

Prince has released a new video for the song, “Marz”.

The short track is taken from the album Plectrumelectrum – recorded by Prince with his band 3RDEYEGIRL – and the video is a seventies throwback piece, featuring blurry colours, psychedelic imagery and simulated static. Scroll down to watch.

Posting the video online represents something of a turnaround from Prince after he removed a host of content from YouTube in November, leaving just three video – an interview and two clips of the track “Breakfast Can Wait”.

Prince’s Twitter and Facebook accounts were also deleted with no explanation as to why. He had previously taken to Facebook to take part in a Q&A session with fans, during which he only answered one question. Replying to a post that asked about sound frequencies, Prince responded by posting a link to an article entitled ‘Here’s Why You Should Convert Your Music to 432hz’.

Bob Dylan streams new studio track, “Stay With Me”

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Bob Dylan has premiered a new track from his forthcoming studio album, Shadows In The Night. The song, "Stay With Me", is currently streaming on the NPR site. Shadows In The Night, which is released on February 3, contains songs popularised by Frank Sinatra. The bulk of the material on the album ...

Bob Dylan has premiered a new track from his forthcoming studio album, Shadows In The Night.

The song, “Stay With Me“, is currently streaming on the NPR site.

Shadows In The Night, which is released on February 3, contains songs popularised by Frank Sinatra.

The bulk of the material on the album was recorded by Sinatra while he was signed to Columbia Records during the 1950s.

However, “Stay With Me” was written by Jerome Moross (music) and Carolyn Leigh (lyrics) for the 1963 film, The Cardinal.

You can watch Dylan perform the song live at the Dolby Theatre, los Angeles on October 26, 2014.

Dylan previously released “Full Moon, Empty Arms” from Shadows in The Night last May.

Watch Bruce Springsteen perform at New Jersey benefit concert

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Singer appeared on stage to celebrate concert's 15th anniversary… Bruce Springsteen performed at the annual Light Of Day benefit concert in Asbury Park, New Jersey, on Saturday (January 16) and played until 2am. Springsteen is a frequent guest at the concert, which aims to raise money for Parkinson's disease and takes its name from one of Springsteen's own songs. This year marked the event's 15th anniversary. "15 years," Springsteen said to the crowd, as he joined 17 other acts, including Southside Johnny, Richie "LaBamba" Rosenberg, Garland Jeffreys, John Eddie, Willie Nile, and Joe Grushecky on stage to celebrate the birthday of Light Of Day organiser Bob Benjamin, who was diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease in 1996. "Having all of these musicians in a room like this is a wonderful thing. Bobby, it's a gift you give us every year." Saturday marked Springsteen's 11th appearance at the event. He took to the stage around 10pm to join Willie Nile for a guest vocal on "One Guitar", and reemerged throughout the night to play 20 songs in total, a performance that lasted until 2am. You can watch recordings from the night below. Concert promoter Tony Pallagrosi told Billboard: "I think that was the first standing ovation of the night, and that was really moving. I was brought to tears that night, and I know Bob was, and the other folks that were there in the organisation realised just how far we've come in 15 years. "To me, it was very important because that was where all the important people who have something to do with live music and touring were, and to be honoured in front of those people, the people that we rely on to keep live music alive in general, to have them honor us was the most important honor we ever received - to be honored by your peers." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0jaM4BFkM0Q http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KVXWsen8Lzo http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wePNhihLJwY

Singer appeared on stage to celebrate concert’s 15th anniversary…

Bruce Springsteen performed at the annual Light Of Day benefit concert in Asbury Park, New Jersey, on Saturday (January 16) and played until 2am.

Springsteen is a frequent guest at the concert, which aims to raise money for Parkinson’s disease and takes its name from one of Springsteen’s own songs. This year marked the event’s 15th anniversary.

“15 years,” Springsteen said to the crowd, as he joined 17 other acts, including Southside Johnny, Richie “LaBamba” Rosenberg, Garland Jeffreys, John Eddie, Willie Nile, and Joe Grushecky on stage to celebrate the birthday of Light Of Day organiser Bob Benjamin, who was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease in 1996. “Having all of these musicians in a room like this is a wonderful thing. Bobby, it’s a gift you give us every year.”

Saturday marked Springsteen’s 11th appearance at the event. He took to the stage around 10pm to join Willie Nile for a guest vocal on “One Guitar”, and reemerged throughout the night to play 20 songs in total, a performance that lasted until 2am. You can watch recordings from the night below.

Concert promoter Tony Pallagrosi told Billboard: “I think that was the first standing ovation of the night, and that was really moving. I was brought to tears that night, and I know Bob was, and the other folks that were there in the organisation realised just how far we’ve come in 15 years.

“To me, it was very important because that was where all the important people who have something to do with live music and touring were, and to be honoured in front of those people, the people that we rely on to keep live music alive in general, to have them honor us was the most important honor we ever received – to be honored by your peers.”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0jaM4BFkM0Q

Watch Robert De Niro and Leonardo DiCaprio team up with Martin Scorsese for The Audition…

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You might wonder what it would take for Martin Scorsese to work with Robert De Niro again. Aside from a brief appearance together – vocally, at least – in A Shark’s Tale, it has been twenty years since their last major collaboration, Casino. Perhaps they might revisit some of their most famous...

You might wonder what it would take for Martin Scorsese to work with Robert De Niro again. Aside from a brief appearance together – vocally, at least – in A Shark’s Tale, it has been twenty years since their last major collaboration, Casino. Perhaps they might revisit some of their most famous creations – catch up with Travis Bickle or Rupert Pupkin, perhaps. Or instead devise one masterful late-period collaboration: their oft-discussed Sinatra picture, perhaps.

As it transpires, they have worked together again recently. But not as you might imagine for a sweeping, three-hour epic packed full of swearing, shooting, rock music and some gruesome business involving a biro and a hapless menial. In fact, what has brought them back together is more of a surprise than you might expect.

The pair have reunited for a short film. The Audition is essentially an advertisement for two new entertainment resorts, Studio City in Macau, China and City of Dreams in Manila, Philippines. Such is the weight of the leisure group operating both sites that they can attract not only Scorsese and De Niro to front their ad campaign but also Leonardo Di Caprio and Brad Pitt as well as Boardwalk Empire script writer Terrence Winter and producer Brett Ratner. According to reports online, De Niro, DiCaprio and Pitt made $13 million for the two-day shoot, a figure that has since been denied by the group’s owners.

In itself, the trailer for The Audition (which will take the form of a short film) is pretty funny, working in favour of the actors’ comic strengths. Playing themselves, De Niro and DiCaprio both arrive at the Macau casino to discover they’re both in the running for the same role in Scorsese’s latest picture. It looks great – Scorsese’s camera swooping elegantly across the floor of the casino, panoramic shots of the exterior of the complex lit up at night, and the whole thing shot in a rich, golden colour palette.

It’s hard to know what to make of The Audition, to be honest. On one hand, it’s great fun to see De Niro square off against DiCaprio; incidentally the former still holds the number for the most collaborations with Scorsese (8 to DiCaprio’s 5), while this is the first time the two have appeared on screen together since Marvin’s Room in 1996. But once the excitement of watching the trailer is over, what are we to think about their motives for this collaboration? Have they been encouraged to work together again for purely financial gain? Or is genuine artistic merit drawing them together for the first time in two decades? More importantly, what on earth would Travis say..?

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

Blake Mills – Heigh Ho

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“Phenomenal” (says E Clapton) guitarist fashions an instant classic... The title of a song on Blake Mills’ subtly brilliant new album could describe the 28-year-old artist’s career so far: “Just Out Of View”. Outside of his elite musical circle, Mills’ name will register primarily among close readers of album credits; in 2014 alone, he played guitar on LPs from Benmont Tench, Lili Haydn, Neil Diamond, Dan Wilson, Ed Sheeran, Sky Ferreira, Carlene Carter, the Belle Brigade and Conor Oberst. He’s also making a name for himself as a producer, though what will be his highest-profile project to date – the Alabama Shakes’ second album – hasn’t come out yet. A Malibu kid, Mills got guitar tips from Dickey Betts’ son Duane, a neighbour, before forming Simon Dawes with his schoolmate Taylor Goldsmith in 2005. As that band morphed into Dawes, Mills struck out on his own, touring with Jenny Lewis, Lucinda Williams, Band Of Horses and Julian Casablancas, while doing sessions with a diverse assortment of acts including Weezer, the Avett Brothers, Norah Jones and Kid Rock; he cut his first album, Break Mirrors, in 2010, but few heard it. Two years later, Mills turned his focus to production, working with Jesca Hoop, Sara Watkins, Sky Ferreira and Billy Gibbons, as well as accompanying and opening for Fiona Apple on their Anything We Want tour. And his jam sessions at Venice’s Mollusk Surf Shop continue to be a hub of an intergenerational SoCal musical community. Though Mills has built an impressive CV in a relatively short time, the music he’s made up to now doesn’t fully prepare the listener for a close encounter with Heigh Ho. From moment to moment on this sublime record, you might think you’re listening to some just-discovered gem from Randy Newman (“Cry To Laugh” could be an outtake from Nilsson Sings Newman), Ry Cooder (“Gold Coast Sinkin’”), Jackson Browne (“Half Asleep”, “Before It Fell”) or Lowell George (“Curable Disease”). But Mills isn’t a revivalist, nor is he bound by genre; he simply draws from his expansive palette, mixing colours and textures to give each song precisely what it needs to come across as directly as possible on an album that is less a collection of tracks than a series of captured moments. Opener “Am I Unworthy” sets the tone; the song itself resembles a Muscle Shoals soul ballad from late ’60s, but it’s radically understated at first, as Mills delivers the ardent but troubled lyric (“What if I’m unworthy of the power I hold over you?”) in a subdued tone, with just the hint of an ache, like a self-questioning lover trying to not to lose control. At first, the only other sound is his guitar, riffing and tapping rhythmically at the same time. At the mid-point, Jim Keltner’s rumbling drums appear just before Mills’ guitar erupts in a tormented solo, joined by Rob Moose’s swelling string section at its climax. The meaty middle of the album is the three-song sequence of “Seven”, “Don’t Tell Our Friends About Me” and “Gold Coast Sinkin’”. The first is Mills’ take on the traditional Nashville turnaround – “It’s the seventh song on the record that always makes me cry/It’s been seven years since we caught each other’s eye” – presented as a Gram & Emmylou-style duet with Fiona Apple, who’s never sounded warmer or more empathetic. She provides a counter- vocal on the overtly confessional “Don’t Tell Our Friends About Us”, Heigh Ho’s most structurally and psychologically intricate song, as Mills follows the title refrain in the proper chorus with a coda, admitting “I know I fucked up” eight times leading up to a falsetto “but please”, resolving into the title phrase. The track also offers a zesty dialogue between Mills and Jon Brion, both on small tiples guitars. “Gold Coast Sinkin’” provides a release from accumulated emotional freight, ambling catlike across the spacious sonic topography, punctuated by the growling of a wickedly distorted guitar. Heigh Ho is distinguished by its beauty, dynamism, naturalness and economy; every note and word comes across with utter clarity because there’s nothing extraneous between the music and the listener. Mills has attained a particular kind of perfection – he’s made a timeless California album, that demands to be treasured right alongside the auteurist masterpieces it so thrillingly evokes. Bud Scoppa Q&A Blake Mills Do you feel like you’re part of a Los Angeles musical community? Definitely. There’s always been a rapport between musicians who push each other to do something new, and those musicians tend to find each other. Your album strikes me as carrying on a rich legacy. When you fall in love with something, it enters your vocabulary, and you have to find an appropriate way to use that stuff where it’s not just emulation. So making Heigh Ho was really an exercise in trying to make the right decisions rather than following any genre, and the through line is a sense of personal honesty. If it emulates other records that are also works of honesty, then I take that as a very generous compliment. I love the way you’ve stripped everything down to its essence. Popular music is becoming less and less dynamic, because people are compressing everything to make it sound louder than the next thing. That’s not a musical idea to me – it’s fast-food music; nature doesn’t work like that, and my favourite music doesn’t sound like that. So I tried to make a record that sounds more like how these songs are supposed to be. It may be a quixotic effort, but I feel like it’s important to be on the side of history where you do something that feels honest and right because you believe in it – and whether or not it’s wildly inappropriate for the times doesn’t come into the equation. INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

“Phenomenal” (says E Clapton) guitarist fashions an instant classic…

The title of a song on Blake Mills’ subtly brilliant new album could describe the 28-year-old artist’s career so far: “Just Out Of View”. Outside of his elite musical circle, Mills’ name will register primarily among close readers of album credits; in 2014 alone, he played guitar on LPs from Benmont Tench, Lili Haydn, Neil Diamond, Dan Wilson, Ed Sheeran, Sky Ferreira, Carlene Carter, the Belle Brigade and Conor Oberst. He’s also making a name for himself as a producer, though what will be his highest-profile project to date – the Alabama Shakes’ second album – hasn’t come out yet.

A Malibu kid, Mills got guitar tips from Dickey Betts’ son Duane, a neighbour, before forming Simon Dawes with his schoolmate Taylor Goldsmith in 2005. As that band morphed into Dawes, Mills struck out on his own, touring with Jenny Lewis, Lucinda Williams, Band Of Horses and Julian Casablancas, while doing sessions with a diverse assortment of acts including Weezer, the Avett Brothers, Norah Jones and Kid Rock; he cut his first album, Break Mirrors, in 2010, but few heard it. Two years later, Mills turned his focus to production, working with Jesca Hoop, Sara Watkins, Sky Ferreira and Billy Gibbons, as well as accompanying and opening for Fiona Apple on their Anything We Want tour. And his jam sessions at Venice’s Mollusk Surf Shop continue to be a hub of an intergenerational SoCal musical community.

Though Mills has built an impressive CV in a relatively short time, the music he’s made up to now doesn’t fully prepare the listener for a close encounter with Heigh Ho. From moment to moment on this sublime record, you might think you’re listening to some just-discovered gem from Randy Newman (“Cry To Laugh” could be an outtake from Nilsson Sings Newman), Ry Cooder (“Gold Coast Sinkin’”), Jackson Browne (“Half Asleep”, “Before It Fell”) or Lowell George (“Curable Disease”). But Mills isn’t a revivalist, nor is he bound by genre; he simply draws from his expansive palette, mixing colours and textures to give each song precisely what it needs to come across as directly as possible on an album that is less a collection of tracks than a series of captured moments.

Opener “Am I Unworthy” sets the tone; the song itself resembles a Muscle Shoals soul ballad from late ’60s, but it’s radically understated at first, as Mills delivers the ardent but troubled lyric (“What if I’m unworthy of the power I hold over you?”) in a subdued tone, with just the hint of an ache, like a self-questioning lover trying to not to lose control. At first, the only other sound is his guitar, riffing and tapping rhythmically at the same time. At the mid-point, Jim Keltner’s rumbling drums appear just before Mills’ guitar erupts in a tormented solo, joined by Rob Moose’s swelling string section at its climax.

The meaty middle of the album is the three-song sequence of “Seven”, “Don’t Tell Our Friends About Me” and “Gold Coast Sinkin’”. The first is Mills’ take on the traditional Nashville turnaround – “It’s the seventh song on the record that always makes me cry/It’s been seven years since we caught each other’s eye” – presented as a Gram & Emmylou-style duet with Fiona Apple, who’s never sounded warmer or more empathetic. She provides a counter- vocal on the overtly confessional “Don’t Tell Our Friends About Us”, Heigh Ho’s most structurally and psychologically intricate song, as Mills follows the title refrain in the proper chorus with a coda, admitting “I know I fucked up” eight times leading up to a falsetto “but please”, resolving into the title phrase. The track also offers a zesty dialogue between Mills and Jon Brion, both on small tiples guitars. “Gold Coast Sinkin’” provides a release from accumulated emotional freight, ambling catlike across the spacious sonic topography, punctuated by the growling of a wickedly distorted guitar.

Heigh Ho is distinguished by its beauty, dynamism, naturalness and economy; every note and word comes across with utter clarity because there’s nothing extraneous between the music and the listener. Mills has attained a particular kind of perfection – he’s made a timeless California album, that demands to be treasured right alongside the auteurist masterpieces it so thrillingly evokes.

Bud Scoppa

Q&A

Blake Mills

Do you feel like you’re part of a Los Angeles musical community?

Definitely. There’s always been a rapport between musicians who push each other to do something new, and those musicians tend to

find each other.

Your album strikes me as carrying on a rich legacy.

When you fall in love with something, it enters your vocabulary, and you have to find an appropriate way to use that stuff where it’s not just emulation. So making Heigh Ho was really an exercise in trying to make the right decisions rather than following any genre, and the through line is a sense of personal honesty. If it emulates other records that are also works of honesty, then I take that as a very generous compliment.

I love the way you’ve stripped everything down to its essence.

Popular music is becoming less and less dynamic, because people are compressing everything to make it sound louder than the next thing. That’s not a musical idea to me – it’s fast-food music; nature doesn’t work like that, and my favourite music doesn’t sound like that. So I tried to make

a record that sounds more like how these songs are supposed to be. It may be a quixotic effort, but I feel like it’s important to be on the side of history where you do something that feels honest and right because you believe in it – and whether or not it’s wildly inappropriate for the times doesn’t come into the equation.

INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

Dallas Taylor, CSNY drummer, dies at 66

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Dallas Taylor died on Sunday [January 19] of unknown causes in a Los Angeles hospital. He was 66. Taylor [pictured, right] was best known for his association with Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, but his credits also include Van Morrison and Paul Butterfield's band. News of Taylor's death was rep...

Dallas Taylor died on Sunday [January 19] of unknown causes in a Los Angeles hospital. He was 66.

Taylor [pictured, right] was best known for his association with Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, but his credits also include Van Morrison and Paul Butterfield’s band.

News of Taylor’s death was reported by his partner, Patti McGovern Taylor, on Facebook. She wrote: “To me he was just a Good Man, a Good Friend, a Good Father, a Good Grandfather or Pop Pop, a Great Drummer and much beloved by many.”

Born in Denver, Taylor moved to California in 1967, where his band Clear Light signed to Elektra Records.

In the late 1960s, he met Stephen Stills. In 1969, Taylor was invited to drum with Crosby, Stills & Nash on their debut album. He stayed with the band as they added Neil Young to the line-up and performed with them at Woodstock and on their Déjà Vu album.

After CSNY, Taylor played in Stills’ band, Manassas. He also performed with Van Morrison at the 1974 Montreux Jazz Festival.

In 1990, he underwent a liver transplant. After leaving music, he worked as a drug and alcohol interventionist in Los Angeles.

Among those paying tribute were former Guns N’ Roses drummer Matt Sorum and Brian Jonestown Massacre’s Anton Newcome, who said he owes his life to Taylor for helping him with drug dependency.

Taylor’s death comes soon after the passing of Tim Drummond, who played bass with CSNY, Neil Young and Bob Dylan.

The Grateful Dead reunite for farewell concerts

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Shows coincide with band's 50th anniversary... The Grateful Dead have announced they are to reunite to celebrate their 50th anniversary with three gigs. The shows, dubbed Fare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful Dead, will take place at Chicago's Soldier Field on July 3, 4 and 5, nearly 20 years to the day of the last-ever Grateful Dead concert, which took place at the same venue. “It is with respect and gratitude that we reconvene the Dead one last time to celebrate - not merely the band's legacy, but also the community that we’ve been playing to, and with, for fifty years," said bassist Phil Lesh in a statement. "Wave that flag, wave it wide and high…" Lesh will be joined by guitarist Bob Weir and percussionists Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann. Speaking to Billboard, Bob Weir confirmed, "These will be the last shows with the four of us together." They will be joined by Phish's Trey Anastasio along with pianist Bruce Hornsby and keyboardist Jeff Chimenti. The band will perform two sets of music each night. You can find more information about ticket availability here.

Shows coincide with band’s 50th anniversary…

The Grateful Dead have announced they are to reunite to celebrate their 50th anniversary with three gigs.

The shows, dubbed Fare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful Dead, will take place at Chicago’s Soldier Field on July 3, 4 and 5, nearly 20 years to the day of the last-ever Grateful Dead concert, which took place at the same venue.

“It is with respect and gratitude that we reconvene the Dead one last time to celebrate – not merely the band’s legacy, but also the community that we’ve been playing to, and with, for fifty years,” said bassist Phil Lesh in a statement. “Wave that flag, wave it wide and high…”

Lesh will be joined by guitarist Bob Weir and percussionists Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann. Speaking to Billboard, Bob Weir confirmed, “These will be the last shows with the four of us together.”

They will be joined by Phish’s Trey Anastasio along with pianist Bruce Hornsby and keyboardist Jeff Chimenti.

The band will perform two sets of music each night.

You can find more information about ticket availability here.

Whiplash

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Jazz drumming; with shouting... No, not a drama about the travails of personal injury lawyers, instead Damien Chazelle’s film charts the sadomasochistic relationship between aspiring 19-year-old drummer (Miles Teller) and his authoritarian professor (JK Simmons) who runs a jazz ensemble at a swish New York conservatory. Whiplash takes its title from a piece by jazz composer Hank Levy, which here the two principals wield in battle against each other. Simmons’ black-clad, bullet-headed Fletcher dispenses emotional and physical brutality against Teller’s Andrew Nieman, driving his pupil with the lacerating skills of an army drill sergeant. The sullen Nieman, for his part, is weirdly complicit in this: it becomes apparent that he is concerned not so much about an appreciation of music, but about pure, competitive ambition. Andrew doesn’t appear to listen to music himself, nor does he jam or otherwise engage with his fellow students; there are no rambling, discursive chats over beers or coffee about favourite recordings or artists. At this point in the run-up to awards season, Simmons performance – like those by Michael Keaton in Birdman and Steve Carell in Foxcatcher – is time-honoured Oscar bait. Indeed, judging by yesterday's nominations, it's paid dividends. A warm and likeable character actor in films like Juno and the Coens’ Burn After Reading, he raises his game here, playing the seething, snarling Fletcher with tremendous focus and commitment. Fletcher’s rehearsal room is a snake pit, where a late appearance or a bum note will end in a litany of profane abuse from Fletcher; or perhaps dismissal from the group. Whiplash doesn’t especially offer any insight into either music or the nature of genius; it’s a rather dark film about the all-consuming nature ambition and a particular brand of ruthless perfectionism. It’s the antithesis of aspiration Glee!-style shows about fame academy kids who just… wanna… sing! You suspect they wouldn’t last five minutes in the blood and sweat of Fletcher’s rehearsal room. Michael Bonner

Jazz drumming; with shouting…

No, not a drama about the travails of personal injury lawyers, instead Damien Chazelle’s film charts the sadomasochistic relationship between aspiring 19-year-old drummer (Miles Teller) and his authoritarian professor (JK Simmons) who runs a jazz ensemble at a swish New York conservatory. Whiplash takes its title from a piece by jazz composer Hank Levy, which here the two principals wield in battle against each other.

Simmons’ black-clad, bullet-headed Fletcher dispenses emotional and physical brutality against Teller’s Andrew Nieman, driving his pupil with the lacerating skills of an army drill sergeant. The sullen Nieman, for his part, is weirdly complicit in this: it becomes apparent that he is concerned not so much about an appreciation of music, but about pure, competitive ambition. Andrew doesn’t appear to listen to music himself, nor does he jam or otherwise engage with his fellow students; there are no rambling, discursive chats over beers or coffee about favourite recordings or artists.

At this point in the run-up to awards season, Simmons performance – like those by Michael Keaton in Birdman and Steve Carell in Foxcatcher – is time-honoured Oscar bait. Indeed, judging by yesterday’s nominations, it’s paid dividends. A warm and likeable character actor in films like Juno and the Coens’ Burn After Reading, he raises his game here, playing the seething, snarling Fletcher with tremendous focus and commitment. Fletcher’s rehearsal room is a snake pit, where a late appearance or a bum note will end in a litany of profane abuse from Fletcher; or perhaps dismissal from the group.

Whiplash doesn’t especially offer any insight into either music or the nature of genius; it’s a rather dark film about the all-consuming nature ambition and a particular brand of ruthless perfectionism. It’s the antithesis of aspiration Glee!-style shows about fame academy kids who just… wanna… sing! You suspect they wouldn’t last five minutes in the blood and sweat of Fletcher’s rehearsal room.

Michael Bonner

Mark Knopfler announces new album + tour dates

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Eighth solo album due in March... Mark Knopfler has released details of his new studio album, Tracker. The 11-track album will be released on March 16 on Universal. Tracker has been produced by Knopfler and Guy Fletcher and was recorded at British Grove Studios in London. The band features Mark Knopfler on guitars, Guy Fletcher on keyboards, John McCusker on fiddle, Mike McGoldrick on whistle and flute, Glenn Worf on bass and Ian Thomas on drums. Guest musicians include Ruth Moody (from The Wailin’ Jennys) on vocals, Nigel Hitchcock on saxophone and Phil Cunningham on accordion. Knopfler says: “The album title Tracker arrived out of me trying to find my way over the decades. Out of me tracking time - looking at people, places and things from my past, and out of the process of tracking as in recording tracks in the studio." Knopfler also revealed that "The [Tracker] songs ‘Lights Of Taormina’ and ‘Silver Eagle’ came into being partly through my trips in Europe and the US with Bob Dylan." Scroll down to hear the track, "Beryl", about author Beryl Bainbridge. Tracker will be available on CD, double vinyl, deluxe CD with four bonus tracks, and a box set. The track listing for the standard CD is: Laughs And Jokes And Drinks And Smokes Basil River Towns Skydiver Mighty Man Broken Bones Long Cool Girl Lights of Taormina Silver Eagle Beryl Wherever I Go [featuring Ruth Moody] Knopfler will also tour in May. The UK dates are: May 16, Manchester; Phones 4U Arena May 17, Sheffield; Motorpoint Arena May 19, Glasgow; The SSE Hydro May 20, Newcastle; Metro Radio Arena May 22, London; The O2 May 23, Birmingham; LG Arena/

Eighth solo album due in March…

Mark Knopfler has released details of his new studio album, Tracker.

The 11-track album will be released on March 16 on Universal.

Tracker has been produced by Knopfler and Guy Fletcher and was recorded at British Grove Studios in London. The band features Mark Knopfler on guitars, Guy Fletcher on keyboards, John McCusker on fiddle, Mike McGoldrick on whistle and flute, Glenn Worf on bass and Ian Thomas on drums. Guest musicians include Ruth Moody (from The Wailin’ Jennys) on vocals, Nigel Hitchcock on saxophone and Phil Cunningham on accordion.

Knopfler says: “The album title Tracker arrived out of me trying to find my way over the decades. Out of me tracking time – looking at people, places and things from my past, and out of the process of tracking as in recording tracks in the studio.”

Knopfler also revealed that “The [Tracker] songs ‘Lights Of Taormina’ and ‘Silver Eagle’ came into being partly through my trips in Europe and the US with Bob Dylan.”

Scroll down to hear the track, “Beryl”, about author Beryl Bainbridge.

Tracker will be available on CD, double vinyl, deluxe CD with four bonus tracks, and a box set.

The track listing for the standard CD is:

Laughs And Jokes And Drinks And Smokes

Basil

River Towns

Skydiver

Mighty Man

Broken Bones

Long Cool Girl

Lights of Taormina

Silver Eagle

Beryl

Wherever I Go [featuring Ruth Moody]

Knopfler will also tour in May. The UK dates are:

May 16, Manchester; Phones 4U Arena

May 17, Sheffield; Motorpoint Arena

May 19, Glasgow; The SSE Hydro

May 20, Newcastle; Metro Radio Arena

May 22, London; The O2

May 23, Birmingham; LG Arena/

New Joe Strummer documentary announced

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It's Strummer: The Exile Years... A new documentary about Joe Strummer is in the works. The film, called I Need A Dodge! Joe Strummer On The Run, focusses on Strummer's self-imposed exile in Granada in 1985/6, following the demise of The Clash Mark Two. The film is directed by Nick Hall and will be released by Cadiz Music in April 2015. It will receive its UK premiere at a Cadiz Music Presents Rock N Roll Cinema event held at KOKO, Camden, on March 25, 2015. As well as a screening of the film, the evening will also offer an all-star band [with very special guests] playing The Clash and Joe Strummer songs. Tickets are £20. For each ticket bought, £2.00 will be donated to a legacy project to erect a life size bronze statue of Strummer.

It’s Strummer: The Exile Years…

A new documentary about Joe Strummer is in the works.

The film, called I Need A Dodge! Joe Strummer On The Run, focusses on Strummer’s self-imposed exile in Granada in 1985/6, following the demise of The Clash Mark Two.

The film is directed by Nick Hall and will be released by Cadiz Music in April 2015.

It will receive its UK premiere at a Cadiz Music Presents Rock N Roll Cinema event held at KOKO, Camden, on March 25, 2015.

As well as a screening of the film, the evening will also offer an all-star band [with very special guests] playing The Clash and Joe Strummer songs. Tickets are £20.

For each ticket bought, £2.00 will be donated to a legacy project to erect a life size bronze statue of Strummer.

The 2nd Uncut Playlist Of 2015

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Some fantastic new additions here, though it's been tough these past couple of days to navigate away from the playlist that Caribou posted on Youtube: 1,000 tracks that you're advised to play on shuffle. I keep getting Wire and J Dilla every time I dig in, but it's really a constant source of familiar pleasures and usefully contextualised new discoveries. If you can tear yourself away, lots to enjoy below, I'd hope. Personal highlights: the first full track to emerge from Matthew E White's "Fresh Blood"; my favourite Sufjan album since "Seven Swans"; a very useful comp of latterday Cope; and the amazing second set from Sam Lee.. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Chilly Gonzales - Chambers (Gentle Threat) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=weCqLpSfo1g 2 Panoram - Background Story (Wandering Eye) 3 Sam Lee & Friends - The Fade In Time (Nest Collective) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ss24LSJqcqY 4 Julian Cope - Trip Advizer (Head Heritage) 5 Matthew E White - Fresh Blood (Spacebomb/Domino) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mE5Z3Q_ZO-4 6 Amorphous Androgynous - A monstrous Psychedelic Bubble Exploding In Your Mind - The Wizards Of Oz (Monstrous Bubble Recordings/Festival) 7 Eric Caboor & David Kauffman - Songs From Suicide Bridge (Light In The Attic) 8 Florian Fricke/Popol Vuh - Kailash (Soul Jazz) 9 Sufjan Stevens - Carrie & Lowell (Asthmatic Kitty) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vj9s0U2U2o 10 Wand - Golem (In The Red) 11 Ryley Walker - Primrose Green (Dead Oceans) 12 Michael Price - Entanglement (Erased Tapes) 13 Thee Satisfaction - EarthEE (Sub Pop) 14 Mount Eerie - Sauna (PW Elverum & Sun) 15 Pearson Sound - Pearson Sound (Hessle Audio) 16 Steve Gunn & The Black Twig Pickers - Seasonal Hire (Thrill Jockey) 17 Moon Duo - Shadow Of The Sun (Sacred Bones) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gFhKRt5g7LU 18 Tobias Jesso Jr - Goon (True Panther Sounds) 19 Various Artists - The Longest Mixtape - 1000 Songs For You 20 Janek Schaefer - Inner Space Memorial In Wonderland (Dekorder) 21 Janek Schaefer - Unfolding Luxury Beyond The City Of Dreams (Dekorder) 22 [REDACTED] 23 Michael Chapman - Window (Light In The Attic) 24 Chastity Belt - Time to Go Home (Hardly Art)

Some fantastic new additions here, though it’s been tough these past couple of days to navigate away from the playlist that Caribou posted on Youtube: 1,000 tracks that you’re advised to play on shuffle. I keep getting Wire and J Dilla every time I dig in, but it’s really a constant source of familiar pleasures and usefully contextualised new discoveries.

If you can tear yourself away, lots to enjoy below, I’d hope. Personal highlights: the first full track to emerge from Matthew E White’s “Fresh Blood”; my favourite Sufjan album since “Seven Swans”; a very useful comp of latterday Cope; and the amazing second set from Sam Lee..

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

1 Chilly Gonzales – Chambers (Gentle Threat)

2 Panoram – Background Story (Wandering Eye)

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

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

4 Julian Cope – Trip Advizer (Head Heritage)

5 Matthew E White – Fresh Blood (Spacebomb/Domino)

6 Amorphous Androgynous – A monstrous Psychedelic Bubble Exploding In Your Mind – The Wizards Of Oz (Monstrous Bubble Recordings/Festival)

7 Eric Caboor & David Kauffman – Songs From Suicide Bridge (Light In The Attic)

8 Florian Fricke/Popol Vuh – Kailash (Soul Jazz)

9 Sufjan Stevens – Carrie & Lowell (Asthmatic Kitty)

10 Wand – Golem (In The Red)

11 Ryley Walker – Primrose Green (Dead Oceans)

12 Michael Price – Entanglement (Erased Tapes)

13 Thee Satisfaction – EarthEE (Sub Pop)

14 Mount Eerie – Sauna (PW Elverum & Sun)

15 Pearson Sound – Pearson Sound (Hessle Audio)

16 Steve Gunn & The Black Twig Pickers – Seasonal Hire (Thrill Jockey)

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

18 Tobias Jesso Jr – Goon (True Panther Sounds)

19 Various Artists – The Longest Mixtape – 1000 Songs For You

20 Janek Schaefer – Inner Space Memorial In Wonderland (Dekorder)

21 Janek Schaefer – Unfolding Luxury Beyond The City Of Dreams (Dekorder)

22 [REDACTED]

23 Michael Chapman – Window (Light In The Attic)

24 Chastity Belt – Time to Go Home (Hardly Art)

Kim Fowley dies aged 75

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The Runaways producer had been battling cancer... Kim Fowley, the producer, songwriter, musician, manager and impresario, has died aged 75. Fowley, who is best known for as the svengali behind the all-girl rock band the Runaways, had been receiving treatment for cancer. Born in 1939 in California, Fowley's father Douglas was an actor whose credits included Singin' In The Rain. During the 1960s, Fowley worked as a producer and music publisher. His first credit was the novelty song "Alley Oop", co-written with Gary S Paxton under the name the Hollywood Argyles, which reached No #1 on the charts in 1960. He relocated to England during the mid-Sixties, working with PJ Proby, Cat Stevens, Soft Machine and an early version of Slade. As MC, he introduced John Lennon and the Plastic Ono Band on stage at the Toronto Rock Festival and can be heard on the band's Live Peace in Toronto album. In the 1970s, Fowley's credits included Alice Cooper, KISS and Jonathan Richman And The Modern Lovers. In 1975, Fowley helped form the Runaways. He produced the band's 1976 self-titled debut and co-wrote with Joan Jett the band's biggest hit, "Cherry Bomb". He worked with the band until 1977. Fowley continued to be active in music. He worked on Steven Van Zandt's radio show, Underground Garage, and most recently collaborated with Ariel Pink for his recent Pom Pom album. "Kim Fowley is a big loss to me," Van Zandt said in a statement on Thursday. "A good friend. One of a kind. He'd been everywhere, done everything, knew everybody. He was working in the Underground Garage until last week. We should all have as full a life. I wanted DJs that could tell stories first person. He was the ultimate realization of that concept. Rock Gypsy DNA. Reinventing himself whenever he felt restless. Which was always. One of the great characters of all time. Irreplaceable."

The Runaways producer had been battling cancer…

Kim Fowley, the producer, songwriter, musician, manager and impresario, has died aged 75.

Fowley, who is best known for as the svengali behind the all-girl rock band the Runaways, had been receiving treatment for cancer.

Born in 1939 in California, Fowley’s father Douglas was an actor whose credits included Singin’ In The Rain. During the 1960s, Fowley worked as a producer and music publisher. His first credit was the novelty song “Alley Oop”, co-written with Gary S Paxton under the name the Hollywood Argyles, which reached No #1 on the charts in 1960. He relocated to England during the mid-Sixties, working with PJ Proby, Cat Stevens, Soft Machine and an early version of Slade. As MC, he introduced John Lennon and the Plastic Ono Band on stage at the Toronto Rock Festival and can be heard on the band’s Live Peace in Toronto album.

In the 1970s, Fowley’s credits included Alice Cooper, KISS and Jonathan Richman And The Modern Lovers.

In 1975, Fowley helped form the Runaways. He produced the band’s 1976 self-titled debut and co-wrote with Joan Jett the band’s biggest hit, “Cherry Bomb”. He worked with the band until 1977.

Fowley continued to be active in music. He worked on Steven Van Zandt‘s radio show, Underground Garage, and most recently collaborated with Ariel Pink for his recent Pom Pom album.

“Kim Fowley is a big loss to me,” Van Zandt said in a statement on Thursday. “A good friend. One of a kind. He’d been everywhere, done everything, knew everybody. He was working in the Underground Garage until last week. We should all have as full a life. I wanted DJs that could tell stories first person. He was the ultimate realization of that concept. Rock Gypsy DNA. Reinventing himself whenever he felt restless. Which was always. One of the great characters of all time. Irreplaceable.”

Black Crowes’ Rich Robinson: “The band has broken up”

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The band haven't released any new material since 2009... The Black Crowes have split up, according to a statement released by founding member, guitarist Rich Robinson. Writes Robinson, "It is with great disappointment and regret that after having the privilege of writing and performing the music of The Black Crowes over the last 24 years, I find myself in the position of saying that the band has broken up." His statement continues, "I hold my time with the Black Crowes with the utmost respect and sincerest appreciation. It is a huge swath of my life's body of work. I couldn't be more proud of what we accomplished and deeply moved by the relationships people created and maintained with my music. That alone is the greatest honor of being a musician. I love my brother and respect his talent but his present demand that I must give up my equal share of the band and that our drummer for 28 years and original partner, Steve Gorman, relinquish 100% of his share, reducing him to a salaried employee, is not something I could agree to." Robinson concludes, "There are so many people who have helped and supported us along the way. I want to give a heartfelt thank you to all of our fans, our friends behind the scenes, and to everyone who was a part of The Black Crowes.” The Black Crowes were formed in Georgia in 1989 by Chris and Rich Robinson. The band's debut album, 1990's Shake Your Money Maker, yielded multiple hit singles including their cover of Otis Redding's "Hard To Handle". Their follow up, The Southern Harmony And Musical Companion reached No #1 in America. Among their catalogue is the live album, Live At The Greek: Excess All Areas, recorded with Jimmy Page. The Black Crowes have not released new material since 2009's Before the Frost...Until the Freeze. Chris Robinson, who continues to perform with The Chris Robinson Brotherhood, has yet to comment.

The band haven’t released any new material since 2009…

The Black Crowes have split up, according to a statement released by founding member, guitarist Rich Robinson.

Writes Robinson, “It is with great disappointment and regret that after having the privilege of writing and performing the music of The Black Crowes over the last 24 years, I find myself in the position of saying that the band has broken up.”

His statement continues, “I hold my time with the Black Crowes with the utmost respect and sincerest appreciation. It is a huge swath of my life’s body of work. I couldn’t be more proud of what we accomplished and deeply moved by the relationships people created and maintained with my music. That alone is the greatest honor of being a musician. I love my brother and respect his talent but his present demand that I must give up my equal share of the band and that our drummer for 28 years and original partner, Steve Gorman, relinquish 100% of his share, reducing him to a salaried employee, is not something I could agree to.”

Robinson concludes, “There are so many people who have helped and supported us along the way. I want to give a heartfelt thank you to all of our fans, our friends behind the scenes, and to everyone who was a part of The Black Crowes.”

The Black Crowes were formed in Georgia in 1989 by Chris and Rich Robinson. The band’s debut album, 1990’s Shake Your Money Maker, yielded multiple hit singles including their cover of Otis Redding’s “Hard To Handle”. Their follow up, The Southern Harmony And Musical Companion reached No #1 in America.

Among their catalogue is the live album, Live At The Greek: Excess All Areas, recorded with Jimmy Page.

The Black Crowes have not released new material since 2009’s Before the Frost…Until the Freeze.

Chris Robinson, who continues to perform with The Chris Robinson Brotherhood, has yet to comment.

The Decemberists’ Colin Meloy: “I feel like I’m constantly trying to destroy this band”

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Colin Meloy grew up with “Paul Westerberg in one ear and Morrissey in the other”. As hyper-literate frontman of The Decemberists, he has made rock currency out of landlocked sailors, Loyalist death squads and Japanese folk tales. In this piece from the Uncut archive (March 2011 issue, Take 166),...

Colin Meloy grew up with “Paul Westerberg in one ear and Morrissey in the other”. As hyper-literate frontman of The Decemberists, he has made rock currency out of landlocked sailors, Loyalist death squads and Japanese folk tales. In this piece from the Uncut archive (March 2011 issue, Take 166), we visit Meloy in Oregon to hear about the band’s improbably successful prog-folk concept album, and their straightahead REM homage co-starring Peter Buck… Words: Andrew Mueller

____________________

The speakers next to Colin Meloy’s computer monitor perch on blocks of wood. A handwritten inscription on the left reads “First Thought”, answered on the right by “Best Thought”. It’s not difficult to understand why Meloy instituted a reminder of this wisdom here, in the office/studio next to his house in the forest-covered hills north of Portland. His group, The Decemberists, named for a group of 19th-century Russian mutineers, pursue an unusually capricious muse. Lurking in The Decemberists’ discography are an EP based on a seventh-century Irish epic (2004’s “The Tain”), an album extrapolated from a Japanese folk tale and Shakespeare’s The Tempest (2006’s The Crane Wife) and an unabashed concept album (2009’s The Hazards Of Love). The Decemberists are probably the only band on Earth for whom making, as they just have, a country-rock record in a barn seems an act of wilful perversity.

“For sure,” nods Meloy, asked whether the relative simplicity of The Decemberists’ fine sixth album, The King Is Dead, is a reaction to the giddying flights that have preceded it. “Hazards Of Love especially was such a cerebral record, almost an academic thing where I was taking archetypes from old folk songs with the idea that if you fused them into this narrative it would make sense. It became a bit of a research project. I came out the other end thinking I’d rather do something a little less out of my brain.”

This, you sense quickly, would have been a struggle for Meloy. It’s not that he’s an unlikely rock star – he’s a charismatic performer, a confident singer – but it’s reasonable to suggest that he’d have been a likelier literary editor, or museum curator, or rock critic (he has written a book, about The Replacements’ album Let It Be, for Continuum’s 33 1/3 series). Meloy’s knowledge of music is vast, but his appreciation more analytical than visceral: he seems the sort who thinks things, rather than feels them.

____________________

Gillian Welch, who sings on The King Is Dead, says: “He’s like the really cool English professor at school. You know, he’s hip and probably throws great parties, but mostly he likes to sit around and talk about books.” The more Meloy talks, the more you understand why he moved up here from downtown Portland a couple of years ago. It’s remote, lofty, detached.

“I have,” he smiles, “quasi-agoraphobic tendencies.”

Meloy lives with his wife, the illustrator Carson Ellis, their four-year-old son, Henry – known as Hank. Meloy’s office/studio is in the downstairs part of the garage (Ellis works upstairs). It’s sparse, but welcoming. There are leather couches, a television, a piano, a drumkit, a framed poster of the recently voguish WWII admonishment “Keep Calm And Carry On”. Guitars adorn the walls, two acoustic, two electric – one of the latter, surprisingly, a Flying V, preferred weapon of the unreconstructed headbanger (“Because that’s what Bob Mould played in Hüsker Dü,” explains Meloy.) Squinting through the pines beyond the window, there’s a view of the Willamette River, which must slightly nourish Meloy’s recurrent fascination with the sea, evinced by the (Ellis-designed) tattoo of a clipper at full sail on his forearm, and by a model of something similar atop the piano.

Meloy grew up in Helena, Montana – about as landlocked as one can be on the North American continent.

“Yeah,” he says. “If you grew up in Montana, to go to the ocean was mindblowing. For anyone with a remotely imaginative predilection, that vast expanse of water really gets your head going. The Oregon coast in particular is pretty dramatic. When I moved to Portland, the ocean started cropping up in songs a lot.”

But in pre-internet times, becoming an alternative rock nerd can’t have been easy in Montana’s tiny capital.

“I had an uncle, 11 or 12 years my senior,” explains Meloy. “He went to school in Eugene, and he would send me mixtapes of music he was discovering. That was my lifeline. I remember him showing up at our house with Scritti Politti’s Cupid & Psyche ’85 and saying ‘This is like Wham!, but for smart people.’”

Meloy remembers one tape in particular, on which his uncle had compiled some local bands from Oregon, and in the space at the end included The Replacements’ “I Will Dare”, REM’s version of The Clique’s “Superman”, Hüsker Dü’s “Hardly Getting Over It” and The Smiths’ “The Queen Is Dead”.

“Those four songs,” says Meloy, “were the beginning of everything, for me.”

Meloy cheerfully admits that the title of The King Is Dead is a hat-tip to The Smiths. Later, driving to the photoshoot, he tells a typically wry story about being hopelessly starstruck when introducing himself to Johnny Marr, in Portland’s IKEA outlet, of all places.

Meloy learnt guitar from a Helena stoner whose lessons consisted of telling him to play along to The Jesus & Mary Chain’s “Psychocandy”. He formed his first band, the alt.country Tarkio, at college in Missoula, Montana. Tellingly, they titled an EP “Sea Songs For Landlocked Sailors”.

“Even though I was a massive Anglophile since I was about 14, I was channelling a lot of Americana,” he recalls. “Uncle Tupelo, Wilco, Son Volt, Gillian Welch’s first record. I was writing a lot in that style, but when I moved out here, I completely reacted against it.”

And how. Since forming after Meloy relocated to Portland in 2000, The Decemberists negotiated a path of singular strangeness. Early outings Castaways & Cutouts (2002) and Her Majesty (2003) were feverish, hyperliterate folk that suggested the more pastoral moments of XTC or The Waterboys rewritten by David Foster Wallace. Their third album, Picaresque (2005), collected rollicking sea-shanties, sumptuous pop, what sounded like excerpts from between-the-wars operettas – and still sounded an exercise in sanity compared to The Crane Wife, a dazzlingly eccentric work that included two ten-minute-plus epics and a nursery rhyme about a 1970s Loyalist death squad. “The Shankhill Butchers” might, to some in Northern Ireland, have seemed a bit, well, soon.

“It did,” Meloy nods. “We got emails from relatives of their victims, asking how I’d have felt if it had been my family.”

Did he write back?

“No. But I felt like their response was perfectly reasonable. What was interesting to me about that story was the fairytaleness of it, the fact that parents would use the Shankhill Butchers as bogeymen. It’s why Holocaust fiction is interesting, because it’s one of those times when humanity dissolves, and you see where folk tales come from.”

Meloy’s pursuit of this curiosity reached a fabulously deranged apotheosis on The Hazards Of Love, a full-blown prog-folk opera, replete with enchanted forests, shape-shifting fauna, and a musical palette that strode purposefully into the realm of Jethro Tull. It sounds like a record made by people wearing capes. It’s marvellous. It is also, Meloy would surely acknowledge, preposterous.

“Oh, absolutely,” he beams. “I mean, how could you make a concept album after about 1981 otherwise? The stuff of ours that is considered proggy, I think are our funniest records. They are done with a bit of a sense of humour. Hazards Of Love was, in a way, kind of a fuck-you.”

What, as in “You thought The Crane Wife was pretentious? Try this”?

“Yeah,” he says. “There was sort of a self-destructive thing at work, that sense of, well, if I can truly do whatever I want to do, then this is what I want to do. And I want to make something which will be potentially offensive to people, and confounding to the label, and certainly to my bandmates. I think it came out of a darker time. I was quite cynical about things, having just put out our first major-label record [The Decemberists signed to Capitol before The Crane Wife], even though our label had been nothing but sweet to us. I think there was a part of me that wanted to sink the ship.”

That’s a pretty quixotic act of vengeance.

“It is,” he laughs. “They’ll be sorry that they… gave me money, and a career. I think I misdirect anger and frustration, and I think that record is maybe one giant misdirection. It had a lot to do with discovering with that, okay, I’ve started living this lifelong dream that I could make a living making music. I also came to grips with the fact that it’s not always great. I hate being on the road – you get sick of your bandmates, sick of the people you work with, sick of yourself. And then you hate yourself for having wanted it, and for not wanting it.”

If Meloy wanted to condemn himself to terminal obscurity, he seemed to be going the right way about it. But The Decemberists have returned from their friends’ barn in Oregon’s Happy Valley with an album of catchy, radio-friendly orthodox country rock tunes, embellished by guests Welch, Laura Veirs and Peter Buck. Meloy asked Buck along upon noticing that some tracks he’d written for The King Is Dead were, to put it charitably, especially affectionate homages to REM.

“The hard part,” he says, lifting a guitar from the wall, “was keeping a straight face while sitting down with Peter, and saying right, well, this one goes…” He plays the riff from “Calamity Song”, which could be mistaken for the riff from REM’s “Talk About The Passion”.

“Might sound familiar to him, right?”

Buck confirms Meloy’s guilelessness about helping himself to the works of his heroes, even when they’re in the room: “Colin would say: ‘This one’s very REM, 1987,’ and I’d go: ‘Yeah, I can see that. How near or how far away do you need it to be?’”

The songs on The King Is Dead are playful and confessional, but one stands out for its transparency: “Rise To Me”, a gorgeous ballad of solidarity, addressed to his son.

“It is,” says Meloy, and pauses. “My son – and, you’re the first journalist I’ve talked to about this – is autistic. So that song is about mine and Carson’s challenges. Thankfully, Hank is high-functioning. He taught himself to read when he was three, and he can tell you the Greek and Roman pantheon of gods, but can’t use a door handle, and has trouble looking people in the eye – this would all be recognised by any parent with experience of autism.”

As would, presumably, the lines “Hey Henry, can you hear me?/Let me see those eyes/This distance between us/Can seem a mountain size”.

“Yeah. I don’t want to sensationalise it, but I would hate it if anyone thought that song was me singing: ‘Go get ’em, kid.’”

For all that, The King Is Dead sounds like an album that was written to be played live. Meloy sounds unenthused.

“I didn’t like touring from the very moment we climbed into a van,” he says.

Was it that weird combination of constant overstimulation and chronic boredom?

“Exactly that,” he nods. “It’ll melt your brain.”

But aren’t you on the cusp of the big-time?

“Maybe,” he allows. “But if you grow up loving Hüsker Dü, The Replacements, Robyn Hitchcock… I didn’t listen to stadium rock, so I never thought about playing arenas. The holy places for me were the 40 Watt in Athens, or 1st Avenue in Minneapolis, so to play those places quite quickly was weirdly anti-climactic.”

Could that have something to do with the college rock part of his roots, with its institutional disdain for success?

“Maybe,” he says. “It’s like growing up in a broken home with bad parents. I grew up with Paul Westerberg in one ear and Morrissey in the other. I think I might be a little broken. But there are other horizons I want to explore. I think we could stand to take a big chunk of time out.”

Meloy and his wife have finished work on an illustrated chidren’s novel called Wildwood, and have signed a three-book deal.

“It’s something that Carson and I have been talking about for years, since before The Decemberists,” he says. “We started writing one book, but it was completely unpublishable. I don’t think it was even remotely appropriate. The protagonist was a 15-year-old girl who gets pregnant and gives birth to a rabbit.”

None of that in this one, then.

“None of that. I think it’s still relatively edgy. I had to fight my editor on a lot of things!”

Meloy sounds noticeably more engaged by this than he does by anything his band are doing. Are The Decemberists done?

“No,” he says, uncertainly. “I don’t think I’ll ever be able to get away from it. That said, I feel like I’m constantly trying to destroy it. I increasingly enjoy isolation, and you couldn’t pick a less favourable environment than touring if you are that way. You know, we’re about to go and meet the band, and they’re the sweetest, kindest people. You’re gonna think ‘Man, this guy’s a dick.’”

____________________

After a photo session in an abandoned Masonic temple, The Decemberists repair to an oyster bar. Earlier, Meloy had described his role in The Decemberists as that of a “hopefully benign dictator” – an assessment confirmed by Tucker Martine, who has produced their last three albums:

“Colin definitely has clear ideas going in,” says Martine. “But if he hears something more interesting going on, he’s quick to recognise it.”

Certainly, John Moen (drums), Nate Query (bass), Jenny Conlee (keyboards, accordion) and Chris Funk (guitar) seem far from mere hod-carriers to Meloy’s sonic architect. They’re four lively but easily complementary personalities, with firm opinions about the artists their guest should be hearing and the whiskies he should be drinking – although Funk’s entries in my commandeered notebook (Eagle Rare 10, George T Stagg, Black Maple Hill Farms) could be either, or both.

All have other attachments in Portland’s fertile music scene. Moen plays in Perhapst and Boston Spaceships, the latter the post-Guided By Voices vehicle of Robert Pollard. Query, Conlee and Funk are three-fifths of gloomy bluegrass outfit Black Prairie. Right now, though, Funk and Conlee are due in the latter’s basement for a rehearsal of their Pogues tribute group, Kmria (“All I contributed was the name,” says Meloy. “It’s a acronym of that line from Ulysses, ‘Kiss My Royal Irish Arse’.”) I’m hospitably invited, then happily deafened. Aside from the two Decemberists, Kmria include local songwriter Casey Neill, Eels drummer Derek Brown, and REM/Young Fresh Fellows/Minus 5 guitarist Scott McCaughey. Though Meloy has returned to his retreat in the hills, something of what makes his band special is discernible. Like The Decemberists, Kmria are serious, but they’re not that serious. There’s joy here, as well, a love of music as generous as it is learned.

Earlier, I’d called Meloy on his repeated use of the phrase “the old main drag” in a new Decemberists song, “Down By The Water”. An odd choice of language for an American, surely a borrowing from The Pogues.

“Yes,” he’d said. “Well, there are main drags in America. There was one in Helena. But I think I was conflating that song with my memories of the one in Helena. Jenny also inadvertently steals a Pogues melody in that song. We’re a very referential, and reverential, band.”

John Carpenter: “Why would I be a musical influence? I can barely play!”

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Director John Carpenter discusses his forthcoming debut solo album in an interview in the new issue of Uncut, dated February 2015 and out now. Carpenter, who has in the past soundtracked many of his own films, including Halloween and Assault On Precinct 13, releases Lost Themes on February 3. “Why would I be a musical influence?” he says. “I can barely play! “This album is for the movie that’s playing in your head. So turn down the lights, put the album on and let that movie inside you go. I’ll be the music for it. I want to turn everybody crazy…” Find the full interview with John Carpenter in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

Director John Carpenter discusses his forthcoming debut solo album in an interview in the new issue of Uncut, dated February 2015 and out now.

Carpenter, who has in the past soundtracked many of his own films, including Halloween and Assault On Precinct 13, releases Lost Themes on February 3.

“Why would I be a musical influence?” he says. “I can barely play!

“This album is for the movie that’s playing in your head. So turn down the lights, put the album on and let that movie inside you go. I’ll be the music for it. I want to turn everybody crazy…”

Find the full interview with John Carpenter in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

And the 2015 Oscar nominations are…

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Here we go, folks. Hot off the press, it's this year's Oscar nominations. First impressions: it's an incredibly predictable set of nominations this year. American Sniper, Birdman, Boyhood, The Grand Budapest Hotel, The Imitation Game and The Theory Of Everything essentially dominating the key categories. There's a bit more flexibility in the Best Actress category, but still, we're looking at one of the most unsurprising lists for a long time. That said, I am pleased, however, that Wes Anderson's The Grand Budapest Hotel has made it to the Best Picture and Best Director list - as well as Best Original Screenplay. A vindication, of sorts, for topping our Uncut's 20 Best Films Of 2014 list last year... But I fear it'll be muscled out on the night. It's also good to see Richard Linklater and his remarkable Boyhood in there, Emma Stone's Best Supporting Actress nod - she's certainly the best thing in the otherwise meretricious Birdman - and Mark Ruffalo for Foxcatcher. I don't want to get too down on this list, but having just written about American Sniper for the new issue of Uncut, I can't think of a film I've liked less in recent years that's made it to the Best Picture shortlist. Otherwise, the British are coming - yay - as the multiple nominations for The Theory Of Everything (a good film) and The Imitation Game (not such a good film) demonstrate. Anyway, all will be revealed on February 22... Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner. BEST PICTURE American Sniper Birdman Boyhood The Grand Budapest Hotel The Imitation Game Selma The Theory Of Everything Whiplash BEST DIRECTOR Alexandro G. Iñárritu, “Birdman” Richard Linklater, “Boyhood” Bennett Miller, “Foxcatcher” Wes Anderson, “The Grand Budapest Hotel” Morten Tyldum, “The Imitation Game” BEST ACTOR Steve Carell, “Foxcatcher” Bradley Cooper, “American Sniper” Benedict Cumberbatch, “The Imitation Game” Michael Keaton, “Birdman” Eddie Redmayne, “The Theory Of Everything” BEST ACTRESS Marion Cotillard, “Two Days One Night” Felicity Jones, “The Theory Of Everything” Julianne Moore, “Still Alive” Rosamund Pike, “Gone Girl” Reece Witherspoon, “Wild” BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Birdman Boyhood Foxcatcher The Grand Budapest Hotel Nightcrawler BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY American Sniper The Imitation Game Inherent Vice The Theory of Everything Whiplash BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Patricia Arquette, “Boyhood” Keira Knightley, “The Imitation Game” Emma Stone, “Birdman” Meryl Streep, “Into The Woods” Laura Dern, “Wild” BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Robert Duvall, “The Judge” Ethan Hawke, “Boyhood” Ed Norton, “Birdman” Mark Ruffalo, “Foxcatcher” JK Simmons, “Whiplash” BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM “Ida” “Leviathan” “Tangerines” “Timbuktu” “Wild Tales”

Here we go, folks. Hot off the press, it’s this year’s Oscar nominations. First impressions: it’s an incredibly predictable set of nominations this year.

American Sniper, Birdman, Boyhood, The Grand Budapest Hotel, The Imitation Game and The Theory Of Everything essentially dominating the key categories. There’s a bit more flexibility in the Best Actress category, but still, we’re looking at one of the most unsurprising lists for a long time.

That said, I am pleased, however, that Wes Anderson‘s The Grand Budapest Hotel has made it to the Best Picture and Best Director list – as well as Best Original Screenplay. A vindication, of sorts, for topping our Uncut’s 20 Best Films Of 2014 list last year…

But I fear it’ll be muscled out on the night. It’s also good to see Richard Linklater and his remarkable Boyhood in there, Emma Stone’s Best Supporting Actress nod – she’s certainly the best thing in the otherwise meretricious Birdman – and Mark Ruffalo for Foxcatcher. I don’t want to get too down on this list, but having just written about American Sniper for the new issue of Uncut, I can’t think of a film I’ve liked less in recent years that’s made it to the Best Picture shortlist. Otherwise, the British are coming – yay – as the multiple nominations for The Theory Of Everything (a good film) and The Imitation Game (not such a good film) demonstrate.

Anyway, all will be revealed on February 22…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

BEST PICTURE

American Sniper

Birdman

Boyhood

The Grand Budapest Hotel

The Imitation Game

Selma

The Theory Of Everything

Whiplash

BEST DIRECTOR

Alexandro G. Iñárritu, “Birdman”

Richard Linklater, “Boyhood”

Bennett Miller, “Foxcatcher”

Wes Anderson, “The Grand Budapest Hotel”

Morten Tyldum, “The Imitation Game”

BEST ACTOR

Steve Carell, “Foxcatcher”

Bradley Cooper, “American Sniper”

Benedict Cumberbatch, “The Imitation Game”

Michael Keaton, “Birdman”

Eddie Redmayne, “The Theory Of Everything”

BEST ACTRESS

Marion Cotillard, “Two Days One Night”

Felicity Jones, “The Theory Of Everything”

Julianne Moore, “Still Alive”

Rosamund Pike, “Gone Girl”

Reece Witherspoon, “Wild”

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

Birdman

Boyhood

Foxcatcher

The Grand Budapest Hotel

Nightcrawler

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

American Sniper

The Imitation Game

Inherent Vice

The Theory of Everything

Whiplash

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

Patricia Arquette, “Boyhood”

Keira Knightley, “The Imitation Game”

Emma Stone, “Birdman”

Meryl Streep, “Into The Woods”

Laura Dern, “Wild”

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

Robert Duvall, “The Judge”

Ethan Hawke, “Boyhood”

Ed Norton, “Birdman”

Mark Ruffalo, “Foxcatcher”

JK Simmons, “Whiplash”

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

“Ida”

“Leviathan”

“Tangerines”

“Timbuktu”

“Wild Tales”

Nick Mason annoyed Apple got away “scot free” with U2 album release

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All iTunes users were given album for free in September 2014… Nick Mason has said he is suprised Apple got away "scot free" following the controversial release of U2's latest album on iTunes. Songs Of Innocence by the Irish band was automatically downloaded onto all Apple subscribers' iTunes accounts when it was released last September. In a new interview with GQ, Mason says that while the move certainly "backfired" for U2, he thinks Apple should also take some accountability. "It's made everyone think again about how they want their music delivered, given or sold. [...]it highlights a vital aspect to the whole idea of music in the 21st century," Mason said. 'What's also interesting is that Apple seem to have got off scot-free. No-one's blaming them. Apple has done great things, but it has also contributed to the devaluation process." Mason also has reservations about Spotify and streaming services in general. He said: "iTunes is already beginning to look rather passé, and instead it's Spotify that looks like the future. What we need is another two or three billion people using it, then it would make more sense for musicians. At the moment, the pay-out, particularly for unknowns and only slightly-knowns is… pathetic."

All iTunes users were given album for free in September 2014…

Nick Mason has said he is suprised Apple got away “scot free” following the controversial release of U2‘s latest album on iTunes.

Songs Of Innocence by the Irish band was automatically downloaded onto all Apple subscribers’ iTunes accounts when it was released last September. In a new interview with GQ, Mason says that while the move certainly “backfired” for U2, he thinks Apple should also take some accountability.

“It’s made everyone think again about how they want their music delivered, given or sold. […]it highlights a vital aspect to the whole idea of music in the 21st century,” Mason said. ‘What’s also interesting is that Apple seem to have got off scot-free. No-one’s blaming them. Apple has done great things, but it has also contributed to the devaluation process.”

Mason also has reservations about Spotify and streaming services in general. He said: “iTunes is already beginning to look rather passé, and instead it’s Spotify that looks like the future. What we need is another two or three billion people using it, then it would make more sense for musicians. At the moment, the pay-out, particularly for unknowns and only slightly-knowns is… pathetic.”

New vinyl subscription service launches

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A new service called VYNL is launching which will offer subscribers the chance to receive albums through the post. The American-based company, who are funded via Kickstarter, will use hashtags to help subscribers form a queue, then send them three records every month based on the hashtags they chose. They will then have the option to purchase an album for $8-$12, and send back the rejects in a pre-paid carboard mailer. The service costs $15 a month and will be rolled out across the US in March, reports Rolling Stone. It is not the first vinyl subscription service in operation: Vinyl, Please Me costs $23 to $27 a month. It sends subscribers a record and pairs each one with a commissioned art print and cocktail recipe suited to that album's style.

A new service called VYNL is launching which will offer subscribers the chance to receive albums through the post.

The American-based company, who are funded via Kickstarter, will use hashtags to help subscribers form a queue, then send them three records every month based on the hashtags they chose.

They will then have the option to purchase an album for $8-$12, and send back the rejects in a pre-paid carboard mailer.

The service costs $15 a month and will be rolled out across the US in March, reports Rolling Stone.

It is not the first vinyl subscription service in operation: Vinyl, Please Me costs $23 to $27 a month. It sends subscribers a record and pairs each one with a commissioned art print and cocktail recipe suited to that album’s style.