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Classic Tom Waits animated video set for restoration

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An animated Tom Waits music video is set to be restored for its 35th anniversary. Tom Waits For No One was made in 1979 and featured rotoscoping technology to capture the singer's movements before they were animated. In the video - which sees the singer performing his track "The One That Got Away" from his 1976 album Small Change - the cartoon Waits is seduced on a Hollywood street by a female dancer. It was directed by John Lamb. Scroll down to watch the original video. A Kickstarter appeal will launch later this month in order to help raise funds for the restoration of the video for an exhibition in Los Angeles in March 2015. Funds will go towards the transfer of "the original live action footage of Tom Waits and the video pencil test to a contemporary format to be projected throughout the gallery; restoration and framing of original animation cels for display; and restoration of the Lyon Lamb Video Rotoscope used in the film’s production." For more information on the project, visit tomwaitsfornoone.squarespace.com. Meanwhile, Uncut's Ultimate Music Guide to Tom Waits is in shops now. You can find more information about it here. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jCNDZY4vXPs

An animated Tom Waits music video is set to be restored for its 35th anniversary.

Tom Waits For No One was made in 1979 and featured rotoscoping technology to capture the singer’s movements before they were animated. In the video – which sees the singer performing his track “The One That Got Away” from his 1976 album Small Change – the cartoon Waits is seduced on a Hollywood street by a female dancer. It was directed by John Lamb. Scroll down to watch the original video.

A Kickstarter appeal will launch later this month in order to help raise funds for the restoration of the video for an exhibition in Los Angeles in March 2015. Funds will go towards the transfer of “the original live action footage of Tom Waits and the video pencil test to a contemporary format to be projected throughout the gallery; restoration and framing of original animation cels for display; and restoration of the Lyon Lamb Video Rotoscope used in the film’s production.” For more information on the project, visit tomwaitsfornoone.squarespace.com.

Meanwhile, Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to Tom Waits is in shops now. You can find more information about it here.

Keith Richards hints at June 2015 release for solo record

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Keith Richards has spoken about a forthcoming solo album, suggesting the record could be released in June 2015. Stating that the record is already "finished", the guitarist goes on to say that he "doesn't want to put it out while The [Rolling] Stones are still working", slating a tentative June 201...

Keith Richards has spoken about a forthcoming solo album, suggesting the record could be released in June 2015.

Stating that the record is already “finished”, the guitarist goes on to say that he “doesn’t want to put it out while The [Rolling] Stones are still working”, slating a tentative June 2015 date for the release.

The record would be Richards’ first solo effort since 1992 album Main Offender.

In the interview with Billboard, Richards also talks about plans for the band, who will tour Australia and New Zealand throughout October and November.

When asked if they will continue to tour after these dates, Richard replies, “They’ve got South America lined up in February, Buenos Aires, Peru. And after that, I know what the Stones tours are like, they tend to get extended.” Richards also said it “sounds like that” when questioned as to whether The Rolling Stones could potentially tour throughout 2015.

As well as working on a solo record, Richards opens up about Gus & Me: The Story Of My Granddad And My First Guitar – his children’s book released today (September 9).

Speaking about the decision to write the book, his second after 2010 memoir Life, Richards admitted, “The initial idea did come from the publishers, so you know, ‘Maybe Keith can sell a few more books.’ That’s their business after all. Nine times out of 10 I would have said forget about it. I’m not going there. But because of the circumstances and having another grandchild, everything was sort of falling into place. I said, ‘Damn it. Go for it.'”

On the subject of writing a follow-up to Life, Richards says he will “save it for later”. “There’s been plenty of talk about doing volume two [to Life] because a lot of stuff got left out. I may save that for a little later,” he begins. “I had no intention of doing Life, but they kept bugging me, ‘C’mon, you’ve got to tell the story. Here’s a lot of money.’ OK, twist my arm. And I found out I could articulate things pretty well [and] tell a good story.”

Various Artists – Front Line: Sounds Of Reality

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Five CD, 91 track bonanza from reggae’s golden age... In February 1978 the Punky Reggae Party that Bob Marley would shortly celebrate in song was just getting going. To help fuel it came a mission to Jamaica comprised of several London faces; Sex Pistols’ frontman John Lydon, DJ and film maker ...

Five CD, 91 track bonanza from reggae’s golden age…

In February 1978 the Punky Reggae Party that Bob Marley would shortly celebrate in song was just getting going. To help fuel it came a mission to Jamaica comprised of several London faces; Sex Pistols’ frontman John Lydon, DJ and film maker Don Letts, photographer Dennis Morris and journalist Vivien Goldman, a quartet met at Kingston airport by Virgin boss Richard Branson in a vintage Rolls Royce to carry them to the Sheraton hotel, where Branson had booked an entire floor. The mission statement was simple; to sign up as much of the island’s musical talent as possible. For the next fortnight the Sheraton was besieged by singers and players eager for a contract.

Such was the birth of Virgin’s Front Line label, launched that summer with a torrent of albums by some of reggae’s finest acts; harmony trios like Culture, The Mighty Diamonds and The Gladiators, ‘toasters’ like U Roy, I Roy, Tapper Zukie and Prince Far I, and singers like Gregory Isaacs and Johnny Clarke, augmented by UK acts like Linton Johnson and Delroy Washington.

To gather so much talent was an astonishing coup, and to market it with a pizazz reserved for rock and soul acts almost as remarkable (although Island records had already overseen the ascent of Bob Marley to superstardom). The Front Line logo of a hand clenching barbed wire was a debatable calling card – the music was more often about the spiritual aspirations of Rasta or plain old romance than political struggle – but punk and reggae shared a mood of fevered, exhilarating revolution.

The five CDs here do a commendable job of sampling what Branson’s sack of cash purchased, while the accompanying booklet includes evocative photos, press clips, capsule profiles of the acts and a funny, gracious foreword from Lydon: “It was all so inspiring. I loved it and Jamaica became part of me”.

The sheer profusion of names that were signed meant an inevitably uneven quality. Amo the most enduring tracks are those by The Gladiators, who, like others, recut old hits anew that gained in clarity and force from the originals. “Looks Is Deceiving” and “Chatty Chatty Mouth” remain tough expressions of Rasta righteousness, tinged with mystery and the millennial mood of the era when the “Two Sevens Clash” (ie1977) as Culture put it. That particular track isn’t here, but the latter trio’s anthem “Natty Never Get Weary” is still brightly engaging. The brilliance and purity of the singing on display here is often breathtaking. Jamaica had inherited its vocal tastes from the likes of Marvin Gaye and harmony groups like The Impressions, and the island became the repository of the ‘soul’ tradition. The languid tones of Gregory ‘Cool Ruler’ Isaacs are emblematic – his “Let’s Dance” and “Soon Forward” are here – but the falsetto of Johnny Clarke is similarly seductive, and the purity and agility of Norman Grant, lead voice with The Twinkle Brothers was effective whether on a love call like “Don’t Want To Be Lonely” or a militant side like “Africa”.

At the other end of the vocal scale is the concrete mixer delivery of Prince Far I, one of several ‘talk-over’ DJs present. More expressive than Far I are U Roy, the pioneer of the style, and Big Youth, whose “The Upful One” lives up to its title, and the idiosyncratic Tapper Zukie, whose “She Want A Phensic” is a barbed sexual jibe. Rapping before hip-hop made its appearance, the ‘DJs’ were true traiblazers.

Rastafari’s utopian vision of Africa was often fanciful and came mixed up with biblical prophecy, but reggae’s championship of the stuggle against apartheid in South Africa was unflagging – see The Abyssinians’ “South Africa Enlistment” or Zukie’s “Tribute To Steve Biko”.

Not everything on Front Line was rightous and rootsical. The label’s biggest hit was “Uptown Top Ranking” by Althea and Donna, two uptown girls on a lark, who have a couple of likewise lightweight cuts here. Amid a sprinkling of single selections in the mix a stand-out is the smoky “Cairo” by Joyella Blade, combining passionate vocals with early synth; another in a boxful of great voices.
Neil Spencer

Q&A
DON LETTS
What was your role on that trip?

To lend moral support, because at home John was Public Enemy Number One. It was an escape from the media frenzy. Contrary to the ‘Roxy Club DJ turned white people onto reggae’ line, John already knew the music. I had never been to Jamaica. It remains the most remarkable journey of my life.

In what way?
Meeting people who were mythic, romanticised names, and finding they were people begging us for food and drink. John and I went on forays round the island, to U Roy’s sound system for example, where we got so blitzed we crashed through the whole event. Or going to Lee Perry’s studio and watching him record “Holidays In The Sun” and ”Belsen Was A Gas’ – those tapes exist somewhere!

Any other encounters?
Meeting Tapper Zukie in Reema, a dangerous area. When John asked ‘Where all these guns then?’ his posse pulled them out. It was election time, and we were told, ’Don’t hire a green or red car’ – don’t show allegaiance. Also through the late Dicky Jobson we visited Joni Mitchell, who had a house there, and she played us some music which John asked her to take off. ’What is that shit? ‘Oh That’s my latest album’- the first time I saw John turm red.

What about the music you brought back?
It’s very special, the last golden moments of roots reggae.

Any favourites?
I can’t separete them, roots and rudie. People say Jamaica is double-edged, for some a paradise, for others a pair of dice. What reggae got
from it was exposure, and it went on to colonise the planet.
INTERVIEW: NEIL SPENCER

Bob Dylan, Brian Wilson, Roger Daltrey confirmed for Paul McCartney tribute album

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Bob Dylan, Brian Wilson and Roger Daltrey are among the artists confirmed as having recorded songs for a Paul McCartney tribute album. The Art Of McCartney contains 42 tracks, with backing provided by McCartney’s long time band. Dylan has covered "Things We Said Today" and Wilson has recorded a ...

Bob Dylan, Brian Wilson and Roger Daltrey are among the artists confirmed as having recorded songs for a Paul McCartney tribute album.

The Art Of McCartney contains 42 tracks, with backing provided by McCartney’s long time band.

Dylan has covered “Things We Said Today” and Wilson has recorded a version of “Wanderlust”, while elsewhere the album also contains Willie Nelson’s “Yesterday”, Roger Daltrey’s “Helter Skelter”, B.B. King’s “On The Way” and The Cure’s “Hello Goodbye”.

The album is released on November 17 and is available in a variety of formats.

A limited run of 1,000 Deluxe Boxsets will include two pieces of specially commissioned artwork, a bespoke Höfner guitar USB with FLAC files of 34 tracks, a collectors edition DVD, and audio documentary, a 64-page 12″ hardback book, 4 black and white art cards, a triple CD and 4 x 12″ coloured vinyl. It comes with a hand-numbered certificate of authenticity.

A Strictly Limited Vinyl Boxset, featuring 4 x 12″ coloured vinyl and a 12” bound book.

A Triple Gatefold Vinyl, with 34 tracks across three 12″ albums.

A CD Casebook, with a 34 track double CD, 16-page hardback book and the Making of The Art Of McCartney DVD.

It will also be released on CD, a digital album, and an iTunes album.

Tracklisting for The Art Of McCartney is:

1. Maybe I’m Amazed – Billy Joel

2. Things We Said Today – Bob Dylan

3. Band On The Run – Heart

4. Junior’s Farm – Steve Miller

5. The Long and Winding Road – Yusuf / Cat Stevens

6. My Love – Harry Connick, Jr.

7. Wanderlust – Brian Wilson

8. Bluebird – Corinne Bailey Rae

9. Yesterday – Willie Nelson

10. Junk – Jeff Lynne

11. When I’m 64 – Barry Gibb

12. Every Night – Jamie Cullum

13. Venus and Mars/ Rock Show – KISS

14. Let Me Roll It – Paul Rodgers

15. Helter Skelter – Roger Daltrey

16. Helen Wheels – Def Leppard

17. Hello Goodbye – The Cure ft James McCartney

18. Live And Let Die – Billy Joel

19. Let It Be – Chrissie Hynde

20. Jet – Robin Zander & Rick Nielsen of Cheap Trick

21. Hi Hi Hi – Joe Elliott

22. Letting Go – Heart

23. Hey Jude – Steve Miller

24. Listen To What The Man Said – Owl City

25. Got To Get You Into My Life – Perry Farrell

26. Drive My Car – Dion

27. Lady Madonna – Allen Toussaint

28. Let ‘Em In – Dr. John

29. So Bad – Smokey Robinson

30. No More Lonely Nights – The Airborne Toxic Event

31. Eleanor Rigby – Alice Cooper

32. Come And Get It – Toots Hibbert with Sly & Robbie

33. On The Way – B. B. King

34. Birthday – Sammy Hagar

The limited edition vinyl boxset and deluxe boxset features the following eight extra tracks;

1. C Moon – Robert Smith

2. Can’t Buy Me Love – Booker T. Jones

3. P.S. I Love You – Ronnie Spector

4. All My Loving – Darlene Love

5. For No One – Ian McCulloch

6. Put It There – Peter, Bjorn & John

7. Run Devil Run – Wanda Jackson

8. Smile Away – Alice Cooper

“One way to make a duck salute!” An enigma returns…

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I received an email last week from an old college friend, with a link to the Souncloud page of Liam Hayes & Plush, and an amused/irate message along the lines of, "One of your two jobs in life was meant to be to flag me when he releases anything/makes any move out of his lair." There have been times, actually, when it's felt that I've been the only person writing about this sometimes brilliant and just as frequently elusive Chicago musician. Twenty years ago, Plush put out a debut single on Domino and Drag City called "Three Quarters Blind Eyes". It was pretty fine, a little like Big Star at their most distrait, but the b-side was something else entirely: a song called "Found A Little Baby" that marooned Hayes in a heady orchestral swirl, sounding for all the world like Dennis Wilson. I made it Single Of The Week in NME, and it still remains one of my favourite songs. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hdii-nWkjaI At this point Hayes, who had previously guested on a couple of Will Oldham and Royal Trux records, became something of an obsession, a state of affairs amplified by him revealed as a kind of obscure perfectionist, and not exactly one to immediately capitalise on a bit of low-level music press hype (two decades on, this seems to be still the case). Stories of an extravagant album circulated, but nothing turned up until 1998, when that long-awaited longplayer, "More You Becomes You", turned out to be a bunch of candlelit piano ballads. If you've ever seen the movie version of Nick Hornby's High Fidelity, you can spot Hayes playing one of those songs in the background of a scene (that film's scriptwriter, DV DeVincentis, turned up at a Plush show at Highbury Garage while he was researching the book's original setting of Holloway Road, as I dimly recall). Later, I ended up interviewing Hayes in a Putney park, where he spent at least ten minutes failing to tell me his age. It didn’t turn out to be one of my more incisive pieces. Anyway, Hayes' career has proceeded in this kind of obtuse, stop-start way ever since, a great yarn from the rock underground, rendered more poignant and strange by the ambitious vision that underpinned much of his music. Sometime in 2002, I convinced Uncut’s then-Reviews Ed to let me write a lead review of a CD I’d just bought online from a record label in Japan. According to the press release which accompanied the belated UK release for the same album in 2008, I wrote that Plush's "Fed" was “The dazzling masterpiece he [Hayes, Plush’s sole constant member] always threatened to produce.” Evidently not enough of a “dazzling masterpiece” for it to merit a UK release for six whole years. "Fed" had cost Hayes so much to make, it transpired, only a Japanese label, After Hours, could afford to initially release it (Drag City ended up putting out the stripped-back, substantially cheaper - I assume - demos as "Underfed"). Its expansive vision had taken years to realise, and involved Earth Wind & Fire’s horn arranger, amongst other deluxe personnel. At the time, I mentioned Burt Bacharach and Jimmy Webb, perhaps his early ‘70s records like “Land’s End” with those looming, portentous orchestrations, as well as some of the ambitious soul of that same period. “Having It All”, for instance, began as a diffident cousin of Marvin Gaye’s “Save The Children” - though Hayes was far too awkward a singer and songwriter to pass himself off as a conventional soulman. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nz9QZTuMeMA The story continues in that vein. "Bright Penny" came out on the same tiny British label, Broken Horse, in 2009, and somehow managed to feature the same horn arranger, Tom Tom MMLXXXIV, Morris Jennings (Curtis Mayfield’s old drummer), Bernard Reed (Jackie Wilson’s bassist), Brian Wilson’s rhythm section, John Stirratt and Pat Sansone from Wilco and so on. Often, it was easy to imagine you were listening to some overlooked artefact from the ‘70s, some collection of flamboyant gestures corralled into an album: “White Telescope” dangled precariously between sounding like a great lost Boyce & Hart song, and resembling something from some sub-Godspell children’s musical. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9OjiIYnUz-g Despite some killer fragile ballads (“I Sing Silence”, and its airy nod to the Bee Gees’ “How Deep Is Your Love?”; or the ravishing "The Goose Is Out", when Hayes urges, "Let's watch the stars in my auditorium"), it was a much more upbeat, celebratory record than Hayes had made before, perhaps because it often seemed engaged with what he’d managed to do, against the odds. The unfeasibly perky “So Much Music”, especially, emerged as a kind of defiant manifesto, noting how music “almost drove me crazy” before Hayes asserted, “No I’m never gonna give up”, then hired a host of backing singers to ram the point home. Last year, a clutch of Plush songs, old and new, turned up on the soundtrack album to a Roman Coppola movie, A Glimpse Inside The Mind Of Charles Swan III, alongside the movie’s star, Charlie Sheen, singing Jobim’s “Aguas De Marco”. A new Plush album was pronounced imminent; it even had a title, "Korp Sole Roller", and some of the songs earmarked for it - notably the Lennonish “Cried A Thousand Times” - sounded excellent, if not exactly zeitgeist-embracing commercial breakthroughs. (he did get interviewed by The New Statesman, mind…) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uQMnJXsR79w It is "Korp Sole Roller" that has now arrived, somewhat stealthily, on Bandcamp, a state of affairs that makes it look as if Hayes' career remains on an inadvertently hapless trajectory, however strong these sweet, occasionally slightly glammy songs might be ("Glimpse" has been described by one of my colleagues, Junkshop Glam Man, as sounding a little like Pilot). The sound is more streamlined, less ornate, and produced by Pat Sansone, though still possessing that slightly sun-warped take on classic pop, that odd trick of performing upbeat songs in an enigmatically mournful way. I've often spoken of Hayes as Bacharach to Will Oldham's Dylan, and that comparison remains pertinent on this generally lovely record. But playing it again today, “Cried A Thousand Times” even sounds like the closest he's come to the epiphanies of "Found A Little Baby"; have a listen... There does appear to be some further good news. In spite of the impression given by "Korp Sole Roller"'s release, Hayes appears to be moving towards a relatively unprecedented level of prominence, thanks to a new deal with the Fat Possum label. Another new album, "Slurrup", is being promised for January and, though Plush tasters have proved frankly premature in the past, there's a new song to take in. It's called "One Way Out", and it kind of rocks, excellently: "One way to make a duck salute!" Again, let me know what you think. I reckon it might be a bit premature to start plugging Hayes as an unexpected star of 2015, but nevertheless, it'd be great if a few more people got to hear him: one of the most charismatic and eccentric cult pop craftsmen of the past 20 years, you could say. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey Picture: Jim Newberry

I received an email last week from an old college friend, with a link to the Souncloud page of Liam Hayes & Plush, and an amused/irate message along the lines of, “One of your two jobs in life was meant to be to flag me when he releases anything/makes any move out of his lair.”

There have been times, actually, when it’s felt that I’ve been the only person writing about this sometimes brilliant and just as frequently elusive Chicago musician. Twenty years ago, Plush put out a debut single on Domino and Drag City called “Three Quarters Blind Eyes”. It was pretty fine, a little like Big Star at their most distrait, but the b-side was something else entirely: a song called “Found A Little Baby” that marooned Hayes in a heady orchestral swirl, sounding for all the world like Dennis Wilson. I made it Single Of The Week in NME, and it still remains one of my favourite songs.

At this point Hayes, who had previously guested on a couple of Will Oldham and Royal Trux records, became something of an obsession, a state of affairs amplified by him revealed as a kind of obscure perfectionist, and not exactly one to immediately capitalise on a bit of low-level music press hype (two decades on, this seems to be still the case). Stories of an extravagant album circulated, but nothing turned up until 1998, when that long-awaited longplayer, “More You Becomes You”, turned out to be a bunch of candlelit piano ballads. If you’ve ever seen the movie version of Nick Hornby’s High Fidelity, you can spot Hayes playing one of those songs in the background of a scene (that film’s scriptwriter, DV DeVincentis, turned up at a Plush show at Highbury Garage while he was researching the book’s original setting of Holloway Road, as I dimly recall). Later, I ended up interviewing Hayes in a Putney park, where he spent at least ten minutes failing to tell me his age. It didn’t turn out to be one of my more incisive pieces.

Anyway, Hayes’ career has proceeded in this kind of obtuse, stop-start way ever since, a great yarn from the rock underground, rendered more poignant and strange by the ambitious vision that underpinned much of his music. Sometime in 2002, I convinced Uncut’s then-Reviews Ed to let me write a lead review of a CD I’d just bought online from a record label in Japan. According to the press release which accompanied the belated UK release for the same album in 2008, I wrote that Plush’s “Fed” was “The dazzling masterpiece he [Hayes, Plush’s sole constant member] always threatened to produce.” Evidently not enough of a “dazzling masterpiece” for it to merit a UK release for six whole years.

“Fed” had cost Hayes so much to make, it transpired, only a Japanese label, After Hours, could afford to initially release it (Drag City ended up putting out the stripped-back, substantially cheaper – I assume – demos as “Underfed”). Its expansive vision had taken years to realise, and involved Earth Wind & Fire’s horn arranger, amongst other deluxe personnel. At the time, I mentioned Burt Bacharach and Jimmy Webb, perhaps his early ‘70s records like “Land’s End” with those looming, portentous orchestrations, as well as some of the ambitious soul of that same period. “Having It All”, for instance, began as a diffident cousin of Marvin Gaye’s “Save The Children” – though Hayes was far too awkward a singer and songwriter to pass himself off as a conventional soulman.

The story continues in that vein. “Bright Penny” came out on the same tiny British label, Broken Horse, in 2009, and somehow managed to feature the same horn arranger, Tom Tom MMLXXXIV, Morris Jennings (Curtis Mayfield’s old drummer), Bernard Reed (Jackie Wilson’s bassist), Brian Wilson’s rhythm section, John Stirratt and Pat Sansone from Wilco and so on. Often, it was easy to imagine you were listening to some overlooked artefact from the ‘70s, some collection of flamboyant gestures corralled into an album: “White Telescope” dangled precariously between sounding like a great lost Boyce & Hart song, and resembling something from some sub-Godspell children’s musical.

Despite some killer fragile ballads (“I Sing Silence”, and its airy nod to the Bee Gees’ “How Deep Is Your Love?”; or the ravishing “The Goose Is Out”, when Hayes urges, “Let’s watch the stars in my auditorium”), it was a much more upbeat, celebratory record than Hayes had made before, perhaps because it often seemed engaged with what he’d managed to do, against the odds. The unfeasibly perky “So Much Music”, especially, emerged as a kind of defiant manifesto, noting how music “almost drove me crazy” before Hayes asserted, “No I’m never gonna give up”, then hired a host of backing singers to ram the point home.

Last year, a clutch of Plush songs, old and new, turned up on the soundtrack album to a Roman Coppola movie, A Glimpse Inside The Mind Of Charles Swan III, alongside the movie’s star, Charlie Sheen, singing Jobim’s “Aguas De Marco”. A new Plush album was pronounced imminent; it even had a title, “Korp Sole Roller”, and some of the songs earmarked for it – notably the Lennonish “Cried A Thousand Times” – sounded excellent, if not exactly zeitgeist-embracing commercial breakthroughs. (he did get interviewed by The New Statesman, mind…)

It is “Korp Sole Roller” that has now arrived, somewhat stealthily, on Bandcamp, a state of affairs that makes it look as if Hayes’ career remains on an inadvertently hapless trajectory, however strong these sweet, occasionally slightly glammy songs might be (“Glimpse” has been described by one of my colleagues, Junkshop Glam Man, as sounding a little like Pilot). The sound is more streamlined, less ornate, and produced by Pat Sansone, though still possessing that slightly sun-warped take on classic pop, that odd trick of performing upbeat songs in an enigmatically mournful way. I’ve often spoken of Hayes as Bacharach to Will Oldham’s Dylan, and that comparison remains pertinent on this generally lovely record. But playing it again today, “Cried A Thousand Times” even sounds like the closest he’s come to the epiphanies of “Found A Little Baby”; have a listen…

There does appear to be some further good news. In spite of the impression given by “Korp Sole Roller”‘s release, Hayes appears to be moving towards a relatively unprecedented level of prominence, thanks to a new deal with the Fat Possum label. Another new album, “Slurrup”, is being promised for January and, though Plush tasters have proved frankly premature in the past, there’s a new song to take in. It’s called “One Way Out”, and it kind of rocks, excellently: “One way to make a duck salute!”

Again, let me know what you think. I reckon it might be a bit premature to start plugging Hayes as an unexpected star of 2015, but nevertheless, it’d be great if a few more people got to hear him: one of the most charismatic and eccentric cult pop craftsmen of the past 20 years, you could say.

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

Picture: Jim Newberry

Robert Plant rolls out Led Zeppelin classics and showcases new album at iTunes Festival show

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Robert Plant launched his new album lullaby and…The Ceaseless Roar with a show that also featured five Led Zeppelin classics at London’s Roundhouse as part of iTunes Festival on Monday (September 8). Plant’s 85-minute set featured four songs from his new album plus Zeppelin tracks "Thank You"...

Robert Plant launched his new album lullaby and…The Ceaseless Roar with a show that also featured five Led Zeppelin classics at London’s Roundhouse as part of iTunes Festival on Monday (September 8).

Plant’s 85-minute set featured four songs from his new album plus Zeppelin tracks “Thank You”, “Black Dog”, “Going To California”, “Babe I’m Gonna Leave You” and “Whole Lotta Love”. The 12 song-set was rounded out with the title track of No Quarter – the 1994 album Plant made with Jimmy Page – plus Bukka White’s “Fixin’ To Die Blues” from his 2002 album Dreamland and a cover of Willie Dixon’s blues standard “Spoonful”.

Dressed in paisley shirt and maroon trousers, Plant began the show with “Turn It Up” from his new album before announcing: “Let’s see what happens now” and moving into “Thank You” from Led Zeppelin II. The following track, “Spoonful”, was the first of several songs in which Plant played a handheld drum.

Plant was backed by The Sensational Space Shifters, his six-piece band who also feature on lullaby and…The Ceaseless Roar. They include multi-instrumentalists Juldeh Camara and Justin Adams, guitarist Liam ‘Skin’ Tyson, bassist Billy Fuller, drummer Dave Smith and keyboardist John Baggott.

Introducing recent single “Rainbow”, Plant recalled how Led Zeppelin played their first London show at The Roundhouse in 1968. “Time really moves on,” said Plant. “It’s just short of 46 years since I first played here. I don’t like giving my age away like that. I’m not like Tom Jones, who loves telling people how old he is: ‘Really, Tom?’ I think that should be kept under your hat. Or under your helmet, at least… In the old days, this was what was known as ‘a single’.”

In a good mood throughout the show, Plant joked with the crowd for not singing along to the call-and-response vocals on an acoustic version of “Going To California”, which originally featured on Led Zeppelin IV. Gradually singing his parts louder as encouragement, Plant jokily shouted: “Fucking hell!” at the audience’s muted response. He then described new song “Pocketful Of Golden” as: “This is the pensive side of us. It’s all pensive, really.”

Introducing “Fixin’ To Die Blues”, originally recorded in 1940 by Bukka White, Plant recalled how he was introduced to blues music after “hanging out with beatniks” as a teenager. He said: “I was lucky enough to see guys like Son House, John Estes and Sonny Boy Williamson when they came through Europe. They couldn’t believe the reception they got, as it was like they were being rediscovered. The guy who really did it for me was Bukka White – you can check him out on YouTube.” Seemingly referring to Led Zeppelin’s one-off reunion at London’s O2 in 2007, Plant added: “This is a song we’ll always play, until we split up and get back together again.”

Although the new songs were warmly received, the night’s biggest response was saved for “Whole Lotta Love” from Led Zeppelin II, which brought fans in the seats on the balcony to their feet. It closed the main set, before a one-song encore of “Little Maggie” from the new album, as fans clapped along enthusiastically.

Released on Monday (September 8), lullaby and… The Ceaseless Roar is Plant’s tenth solo album and will be accompanied by a 13-date UK and Ireland tour in November, including a return to The Roundhouse on November 12 and a homecoming show at Wolverhampton Civic Hall on November 21.

iTunes Festival runs throughout September, with previous shows this month having included Beck. Remaining iTunes Festival gigs include Elbow and Ryan Adams.

You can read our cover story interview with Robert Plant here.

Robert Plant played:

‘Turn It Up’

‘Thank You’

‘Spoonful’

‘Black Dog’

‘Rainbow’

‘Going To California’

‘No Quarter’

‘Pocketful Of Golden’

‘Babe I’m Gonna Leave You’

‘Fixin’ To Die Blues’

‘Whole Lotta Love’

‘Little Maggie’

Robert Plant will play:

Newport Centre (November 9)

Bournemouth O2 Academy (10)

London Roundhouse (12)

Hull City Hall (14)

Glasgow O2 Academy (15)

Leeds O2 Academy (17)

Newcastle O2 Academy (18)

Cambridge Corn Exchange (20)

Wolverhampton Civic Hall (21)

Belfast Ulster Hall (23)

Dublin Olympia (24)

Blackpool Tower (26)

Llandudno Venue Cymru Arena (27)

David Bowie announces new 8-minute single to accompany career spanning compilation

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David Bowie will release career-spanning greatest hits album Nothing Has Changed in November, with a brand new song "Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime)" included on the tracklist. The new song - which has a running time of 7 minutes and 40 seconds - was recorded this year and produced by Tony Visconti. ...

David Bowie will release career-spanning greatest hits album Nothing Has Changed in November, with a brand new song “Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime)” included on the tracklist.

The new song – which has a running time of 7 minutes and 40 seconds – was recorded this year and produced by Tony Visconti. It is the only new material to be included on Nothing Has Changed, which begins with Bowie’s first single “Liza Jane” and includes material from the subsequent decades, including “Life On Mars?”, “Fashion” and “Let’s Dance”.

Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime)“, will be released as a limited edition 10″ single and digital download on November 17, the same day as the album.

The 10” will also feature another exclusive 2014 recording on the B-side: “Tis A Pity She’s A Whore“.

Nothing Has Changed also features the previously unreleased “Let Me Sleep Beside You” from the Toy album sessions. The download only “Your Turn To Drive” will also be making its debut on CD for Nothing Has Changed alongside a 2001 re-recording of the 1971 outtake, “Shadow Man“.

The tracklist to the album is.

3CD Deluxe Edition/ Digital Download

CD 1:

‘Sue (or In A Season Of Crime)’

‘Where Are We Now?’

‘Love Is Lost (Hello Steve Reich Mix by James Murphy for the DFA Edit)’

‘The Stars (Are Out Tonight)’

‘New Killer Star (radio edit)’

‘Everyone Says ‘Hi’ (edit)’

‘Slow Burn (radio edit)’

‘Let Me Sleep Beside You’

‘Your Turn To Drive’

‘Shadow Man’

‘Seven (Marius De Vries mix)’

‘Survive (Marius De Vries mix)’

‘Thursday’s Child (radio edit)’

‘I’m Afraid Of Americans (V1) (clean edit)’

‘Little Wonder (edit)’

‘Hallo Spaceboy (PSB Remix) (with The Pet Shop Boys)’

‘Heart’s Filthy Lesson (radio edit)’

‘Strangers When We Meet (single version)’

CD 2:

‘Buddha Of Suburbia’

‘Jump They Say (radio edit)’

‘Time Will Crawl’ (MM remix)

‘Absolute Beginners (single version) (5.35)

‘Dancing In The Street’ (with Mick Jagger)

‘Loving The Alien (single remix)’

‘This Is Not America’ (with The Pat Metheny Group)

‘Blue Jean’

‘Modern Love (single version)’

‘China Girl (single version)’

‘Let’s Dance (single version)’

‘Fashion (single version)’

‘Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps) (single version)’

‘Ashes To Ashes (single version)’

‘Under Pressure (with Queen)’

‘Boys Keep Swinging’

”Heroes’ (single version)’

‘Sound And Vision’

‘Golden Years (single version)’

‘Wild Is The Wind (2010 Harry Maslin Mix)’

CD 3:

‘Fame’

‘Young Americans (2007 Tony Visconti mix single edit)’

‘Diamond Dogs’

‘Rebel Rebel’

‘Sorrow’

‘Drive-In Saturday’

‘All The Young Dudes’

‘The Jean Genie (original single mix)’

‘Moonage Daydream’

‘Ziggy Stardust’

‘Starman (original single mix)’

‘Life On Mars? (2003 Ken Scott Mix)’

‘Oh! You Pretty Things’

‘Changes’

‘The Man Who Sold The World’

‘Space Oddity’

‘In The Heat Of The Morning’

‘Silly Boy Blue’

‘Can’t Help Thinking About Me’

‘You’ve Got A Habit Of Leaving’

‘Liza Jane’

2CD Edition/ Digital Download

CD 1:

‘Space Oddity’

‘The Man Who Sold The World’

‘Changes’

‘Oh! You Pretty Things’

‘Life On Mars?’

‘Starman (original single mix)’

‘Ziggy Stardust’

‘Moonage Daydream’

‘The Jean Genie (original single mix)’

‘All The Young Dudes’

‘Drive-In Saturday’

‘Sorrow’

‘Rebel Rebel’

‘Young Americans (original single edit)’

‘Fame’

‘Golden Years (single version)’

‘Sound And Vision’

”Heroes’ (single version)’

‘Boys Keep Swinging’

‘Fashion (single version)’

‘Ashes To Ashes (single version)’

CD 2:

‘Under Pressure’ (with Queen)

‘Let’s Dance (single version)’

‘China Girl (single version)’

‘Modern Love (single version)’

‘Blue Jean’

‘This Is Not America’ (with The Pat Metheny Group)

‘Dancing In The Street’ (with Mick Jagger)

‘Absolute Beginners (edit)’

‘Jump They Say (radio edit)’

‘Hallo Spaceboy’ (Pet Shop Boys remix) (with The Pet Shop Boys)

‘Little Wonder (edit)’

‘I’m Afraid Of Americans V1 (clean edit)’

‘Thursday’s Child (radio edit)’

‘Everyone Says ‘Hi’ ‘

‘New Killer Star (radio edit)’

‘Love Is Lost (Hello Steve Reich Mix by James Murphy for the DFA Edit)’

‘Where Are We Now?’

‘Sue (or In A Season Of Crime)’

Robyn Hitchcock – The Man Upstairs

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Ferry aid: Roxy covers and much more from eternal Soft Boy... “What’s supposed to happen is you get slower and less vivid,” Robyn Hitchcock tells Uncut, matter-of-factly measuring out the career path that awaits all 60-something songwriters. “You get deeper and a bit more boring. Your colours dim and I assume that’s what happening to me.” At 61, Hitchcock’s musical palette is fading, the Hapshash and the Coloured Coat hues of the Soft Boys and the acid brights of his REM-sponsored 80s and 90s pomp giving way to a pleasing silvered tone of late. However, if his 20th solo album, The Man Upstairs, is less excitable than the likes of Underwater Moonlight, Fegmania! and Queen Elvis, it’s a change that many Hitchcock agnostics will welcome. A largely acoustic confection of sombre originals and tastefully-selected covers, The Man Upstairs was ushered into the world by Joe Boyd, the producer who coaxed landmark works from such Hitchcock idols as the Pink Floyd, the Incredible String Band and Nick Drake in their 1960s heyday. Infinitely more Pink Moon than “Arnold Layne”, it is as stark and forbidding a work in its way as 1990’s two-bob Blood On The Tracks, Eye, albeit studiously stripped of Hitchcock’s usual flashes of Spaniard In The Works surrealism and references to seafood. A gloriously demystified version of the Doors’ “The Crystal Ship” is among its highlights, but while Hitchcock continues to see himself as an ambassador from the lost Atlantis of 1960s pop, his spirit guide here is not the leather-trousered Jim Morrison, but the elegantly tailored Bryan Ferry. That reverence is most explicit on Hitchcock’s eviscerated reading of Roxy Music’s “To Turn You On”, which rehydrates the dessicated, studio-tanned original, from 1982’s ne-plus produced Avalon, the singer’s breathless urgency and eagerness to please a captivating counterpoint to Ferry’s weary chaleur. If the gangling Hitchcock could never hope to emulate Ferry’s louche detatchment, he manages to assimilate some of his pensive poise and lovelorn pessimism elsewhere. Romance is transformed into a tense stake-out on the perfectly-chiselled “San Francisco Patrol”, his recurring motif “can’t take my eyes off you” very much the twice-shyness of the once-bitten. Hitchcock’s appraisals of the Psychedelic Furs’ “The Ghost In You” and Norwegian indie-poppers I Was A King’s “Ferries”, are further proof of his unheralded – and entirely Ferryesque - ability to spirit his way inside a song, while the ghost of Bert Jansch walks on “Trouble In Your Blood”. Second person pronouns notwithstanding, it feels very much like a self-portrait of an artist whose work – even at its most exuberant – has always hinted at something naggingly unresolved underneath. “You’ve got a well-constructed shell,” Hitchcock rumbles. “Deep inside, you’re deep in hell.” If a Jerry Hall ever broke Hitchcock’s heart, then he has been discreet enough never to name and shame them, but – as it does on his favourite late-period Roxy Music albums - some spectral, lingering, emotional thundercloud hangs over The Man Upstairs. Painfully slow, and daubed with a harpy warble backing vocal from Anne Lise Frøkedal, closer “Recalling The Truth” harks back to that infinitely distant yet eternally resonant emotional big bang - “a window of bliss, that opens just once for the price of a kiss”. That window may have been slammed in Hitchcock’s face forever ago, but as much as it pines for lost and irretrievable things, The Man Upstairs is another faltering step closer to self-realisation from the man once introduced witheringly in his days as a folk club wannabe as “Cambridge’s answer to music”. “You hide from yourself but you’re tracking you down,” Hitchcock intones with a certain grim certainty on “Recalling The Truth”. The chase is getting slower maybe, with the light fading around him, but those autumn tones may have been what suited him best all along. Jim Wirth Q&A Robyn Hitchcock What was the appeal of making an album with Joe Boyd? Basically it’s the teenage Robyn getting the chance to do what he would have loved to think he was going to do in the future. The idea mixing originals and covers was totally Joe. He said: ‘Why don’t you make a record like Judy Collins did?’ And I thought: ‘Brilliant – let’s do Introducing Robyn Hitchcock - he’s this promising newcomer. He writes a few of his own songs but he knows the classics - here we go with this one from Bryan Ferry.’ You obviously adore Bryan Ferry. I am the opposite of him in so many ways. I feel like a shadow of Bryan Ferry. I have almost unconditional love for Bryan Ferry. I met him once. I poured a cup of tea for him in a hotel in Norway after a festival. Instantly, he is a man you want to genuflect to and pour out a cup of tea for. He said thank you my boy and tipped me a florin. I’ve still got it framed on my wall. Your work has got a lot less cluttered. Is that a conscious thing? I’ve just been chiselled away by life. The acid rain of existence etches you away. My earlier songs were a reaction to the shock of existence; I just couldn’t accept that I was. I’d just look around at my fellow creatures and think: ‘Fuck, this is not working.’ When you’re young and you have your life ahead of you, you can hang your head deep in mourning and look with loathing at the foibles of humanity, but after a certain age you’ve just got to get up and boogie. INTERVIEW BY JIM WIRTH

Ferry aid: Roxy covers and much more from eternal Soft Boy…

“What’s supposed to happen is you get slower and less vivid,” Robyn Hitchcock tells Uncut, matter-of-factly measuring out the career path that awaits all 60-something songwriters. “You get deeper and a bit more boring. Your colours dim and I assume that’s what happening to me.”

At 61, Hitchcock’s musical palette is fading, the Hapshash and the Coloured Coat hues of the Soft Boys and the acid brights of his REM-sponsored 80s and 90s pomp giving way to a pleasing silvered tone of late. However, if his 20th solo album, The Man Upstairs, is less excitable than the likes of Underwater Moonlight, Fegmania! and Queen Elvis, it’s a change that many Hitchcock agnostics will welcome.

A largely acoustic confection of sombre originals and tastefully-selected covers, The Man Upstairs was ushered into the world by Joe Boyd, the producer who coaxed landmark works from such Hitchcock idols as the Pink Floyd, the Incredible String Band and Nick Drake in their 1960s heyday. Infinitely more Pink Moon than “Arnold Layne”, it is as stark and forbidding a work in its way as 1990’s two-bob Blood On The Tracks, Eye, albeit studiously stripped of Hitchcock’s usual flashes of Spaniard In The Works surrealism and references to seafood.

A gloriously demystified version of the Doors’ “The Crystal Ship” is among its highlights, but while Hitchcock continues to see himself as an ambassador from the lost Atlantis of 1960s pop, his spirit guide here is not the leather-trousered Jim Morrison, but the elegantly tailored Bryan Ferry.

That reverence is most explicit on Hitchcock’s eviscerated reading of Roxy Music’s “To Turn You On”, which rehydrates the dessicated, studio-tanned original, from 1982’s ne-plus produced Avalon, the singer’s breathless urgency and eagerness to please a captivating counterpoint to Ferry’s weary chaleur.

If the gangling Hitchcock could never hope to emulate Ferry’s louche detatchment, he manages to assimilate some of his pensive poise and lovelorn pessimism elsewhere. Romance is transformed into a tense stake-out on the perfectly-chiselled “San Francisco Patrol”, his recurring motif “can’t take my eyes off you” very much the twice-shyness of the once-bitten.

Hitchcock’s appraisals of the Psychedelic Furs’ “The Ghost In You” and Norwegian indie-poppers I Was A King’s “Ferries”, are further proof of his unheralded – and entirely Ferryesque – ability to spirit his way inside a song, while the ghost of Bert Jansch walks on “Trouble In Your Blood”. Second person pronouns notwithstanding, it feels very much like a self-portrait of an artist whose work – even at its most exuberant – has always hinted at something naggingly unresolved underneath. “You’ve got a well-constructed shell,” Hitchcock rumbles. “Deep inside, you’re deep in hell.”

If a Jerry Hall ever broke Hitchcock’s heart, then he has been discreet enough never to name and shame them, but – as it does on his favourite late-period Roxy Music albums – some spectral, lingering, emotional thundercloud hangs over The Man Upstairs. Painfully slow, and daubed with a harpy warble backing vocal from Anne Lise Frøkedal, closer “Recalling The Truth” harks back to that infinitely distant yet eternally resonant emotional big bang – “a window of bliss, that opens just once for the price of a kiss”.

That window may have been slammed in Hitchcock’s face forever ago, but as much as it pines for lost and irretrievable things, The Man Upstairs is another faltering step closer to self-realisation from the man once introduced witheringly in his days as a folk club wannabe as “Cambridge’s answer to music”.

“You hide from yourself but you’re tracking you down,” Hitchcock intones with a certain grim certainty on “Recalling The Truth”. The chase is getting slower maybe, with the light fading around him, but those autumn tones may have been what suited him best all along.

Jim Wirth

Q&A

Robyn Hitchcock

What was the appeal of making an album with Joe Boyd?

Basically it’s the teenage Robyn getting the chance to do what he would have loved to think he was going to do in the future. The idea mixing originals and covers was totally Joe. He said: ‘Why don’t you make a record like Judy Collins did?’ And I thought: ‘Brilliant – let’s do Introducing Robyn Hitchcock – he’s this promising newcomer. He writes a few of his own songs but he knows the classics – here we go with this one from Bryan Ferry.’

You obviously adore Bryan Ferry.

I am the opposite of him in so many ways. I feel like a shadow of Bryan Ferry. I have almost unconditional love for Bryan Ferry. I met him once. I poured a cup of tea for him in a hotel in Norway after a festival. Instantly, he is a man you want to genuflect to and pour out a cup of tea for. He said thank you my boy and tipped me a florin. I’ve still got it framed on my wall.

Your work has got a lot less cluttered. Is that a conscious thing?

I’ve just been chiselled away by life. The acid rain of existence etches you away. My earlier songs were a reaction to the shock of existence; I just couldn’t accept that I was. I’d just look around at my fellow creatures and think: ‘Fuck, this is not working.’ When you’re young and you have your life ahead of you, you can hang your head deep in mourning and look with loathing at the foibles of humanity, but after a certain age you’ve just got to get up and boogie.

INTERVIEW BY JIM WIRTH

‘All the old gods are long gone. But still…” An interview with Robert Plant

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Robert Plant's excellent new album lullaby and... The Ceaseless Roar goes on sale today [September 8], so it seemed like a good opportunity to post the full text of my Plant cover story from last month's Uncut... Hope you enjoy it. Recently, Robert Plant has been troubled by bees. “I’ve spent ...

Robert Plant’s excellent new album lullaby and… The Ceaseless Roar goes on sale today [September 8], so it seemed like a good opportunity to post the full text of my Plant cover story from last month’s Uncut… Hope you enjoy it.

Recently, Robert Plant has been troubled by bees. “I’ve spent the whole weekend with a colony of honey bees,” he explains. “We had to cut through the floor into the passage between the bedroom and the sitting room, looking for the queen. Hundreds and thousands of bees.”
Plant’s revelation comes during Uncut’s photo shoot on Whitcliffe Common – an expanse of steep woodland on the southern edge of Ludlow in the Shropshire hills. Admittedly, a bee infestation does not immediately spring to mind when considering the misfortunes that might befall an international rock star of Plant’s standing. But even during Led Zeppelin’s imperial phase, Plant successfully balanced life aboard the Starship with more rustic and homely pursuits, like getting it together at the fabled Bron-Yr-Aur cottage in the tranquil Dyfi Valley. These days, you’ll most likely find Plant traversing these Welsh borderlands accompanied by his loyal companion: Arthur, a lurcher. “I like the idea of Arthur carrying down through the generations,” he admits. “As a sort of touchstone.”
Plant has maintained a home in this wild and woolly region all his life, but he has been living back here permanently again since September 2013. For the last few years, he has resided in both the UK and in Austin, Texas – his base of operations from which he masterminded 2011’s Band Of Joy album. Along with Raising Sand, its multi-Grammy winning predecessor, Band Of Joy was an elegant exploration of Americana, drawing together many of Plant’s wide-ranging musical obsessions. Critically, those two albums also served to distance Plant from the long shadow cast by Zeppelin. But even on this warm day in mid-May – with the remasters of the first three albums imminent – Plant is niggled by a recent comment from Jimmy Page. His erstwhile band mate has grumped to The New York Times about being “fed up” with Plant for not committing to a reunion tour. “I’m not my brother’s keeper,” shrugs Plant. “And he, really, as a pro, should know better than that.”
From the windswept Welsh Marches to the dusty plains of Texas and beyond, Plant has spent the last five decades on a wonderfully digressive adventure. “I have to keep moving,” he confirms. “Everybody laughs at me, my kids and everybody. ‘Jeez, why?’ And I say, ‘Because it’s there to go to it.’ When you go to Essouira in Morocco, or the Welsh coast… when you go to these borderlands here, get out of the car and just sit there and take it in, it’s the very pulse of life. All the old gods are long gone but still… I don’t wanna say that they’re in the hedgerow because somebody will come and take me away. But there’s something of the old magic that’s still around.
“I got nicked for speeding in Morocco, Tuesday last,” he continues. “Two cops said I was doing whatever it was. I said, in French, ‘I don’t think so. The sun was in your eyes.’ They said, ‘It’s 500 dirham. Go and sit in the car.’ It was 45 degrees. They dealt with everybody who came through the checkpoint. Finally, they called me over into the coolness underneath a stanchion and said, ‘How much do you want to give us?’ I said, ‘How much do you think you should be taking from me?’ They held the 500 that I’d given them and said, ‘Take what you want.’ I said, ‘No, you give me what you think you should.’ They’re looking at each other going, ‘He doesn’t seem like a bad guy.’ So I said, ‘The sky is blue and everything in the world is fine.’ As soon as I said that, 300 dirham came straight back. It was great, those moments where you’re just playing with people and they’re playing with you.”
For all Plant’s splendid travels round the world – more of which later – returning home to a setting he has known since childhood has turned out to be propitious. In the company of his latest musical collaborators, The Sensational Space Shifters – a regrouping of the Strange Sensation band who accompanied him on the Dreamland and Mighty ReArranger records – Plant has recorded lullaby and… The Ceaseless Roar. It is an album, he says, that he believes to be explicitly linked to this mystical terrain itself. “It’s a blessed relief to be reconnected to a very familiar landscape I can read quite well. Having been around it for 65 years, you start to get the hang of it. Whereas the brittle, harsh limestone Texas hills were slightly hostile to me. So I came back to this. The thing is, you only need to spend a couple of minutes here. It’s formidable and beautiful. But the Shire, of course, it resonates as a name. Yet in reality, you have to study the smaller parts to make it one, composite emotional force. That’s what I’m doing. I’m thanking all the gods that I have landed safely.”

Roger Waters’ The Wall tour documentary premieres at Toronto International Film Festival

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Roger Waters has premiered his tour documentary Roger Waters: The Wall at the Toronto Film Festival. The documentary was shot by Waters himself alongside director Sean Evans and shows footage from between 2010 and 2013, when the singer was touring the album across the world. A synopsis by Toronto ...

Roger Waters has premiered his tour documentary Roger Waters: The Wall at the Toronto Film Festival.

The documentary was shot by Waters himself alongside director Sean Evans and shows footage from between 2010 and 2013, when the singer was touring the album across the world.

A synopsis by Toronto International Film Festival director Piers Handler says the following about the documentary: “Ever since The Wall was released, it has become one of the classic rock albums of all time. Its popularity continues and its message is still timely. Deeply affected by his father’s and grandfather’s deaths in the two world wars, Roger Waters has crafted a plea to tear down the walls that lead to misunderstandings and wars. This powerful performance film allows Roger to explore what The Wall still means to him as he performs it in front of tens of thousands of fans, and visits more personal places that resonate with meaning on the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of the First World War.”

The film itself runs for 133 minutes and will be shown twice more in Toronto, however a worldwide release date is yet to be confirmed. The ‘sound’ credit on the film, meanwhile, is attributed to regular Radiohead collaborator Nigel Godrich.

As the Toronto Sun reports, Waters also took part in a Q&A session after the screening, commenting on various aspects of ‘The Wall’s continued endurance. Addressing this issue, Waters stated, “I think people are sick and tired of being told that the most important thing in their life is commerce and the new this and the new that. I think people are probably ready to go now, ‘Well, all of that rhetoric lead us to lob bombs over the top of the wall, that divides society ecologically, economically, philosophically and politically, from all our fellow human beings. And we no longer want to be told by our political leaders that they are scum and that we are great. ‘So that I believe that it may be we’re no longer interested in the ‘us and them’ form of political philosophy that we’ve been fed on for the last couple of 1,000 years and that we may be ready to move into a new place.”

Roger Waters also celebrated his 71st birthday at the event.

Brian Wilson and The Strokes to pay tribute to George Harrison at George Fest

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Brian Wilson and members of The Strokes are among the artists who will pay tribute to George Harrison at tribute concert George Fest: A Night To Honour The Music Of George Harrison this month. Other artists taking part in the celebrations for the late Beatle will include members of The Flaming Li...

Brian Wilson and members of The Strokes are among the artists who will pay tribute to George Harrison at tribute concert George Fest: A Night To Honour The Music Of George Harrison this month.

Other artists taking part in the celebrations for the late Beatle will include members of The Flaming Lips, Weezer, Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Weird Al Yankovich, Brandon Flowers and Harrison’s son Dhani. Cold War Kids, Norah Jones and Velvet Revolver are also featured on the bill.

The show will take place at Los Angeles’ El Rey Theatre on September 28 and will raise money for Sweet Relief – a charity for musicians struggling to make ends meet due to illness or disability. 100% of the proceeds from the event will benefit the charity.

Aphex Twin shares first new song in 13 years – listen

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Aphex Twin has revealed his first new song in 13 years. 'mini pops (source field mix)' is the first track to be shared from Richard James' new album, 'Syro'. The record is due for release via Warp Records on September 22. You can listen to the track below. James has also spoken out about how a r...

Aphex Twin has revealed his first new song in 13 years.

‘mini pops (source field mix)’ is the first track to be shared from Richard James’ new album, ‘Syro’. The record is due for release via Warp Records on September 22. You can listen to the track below.

James has also spoken out about how a recent fan-led Kickstarter campaign made him want to release new music. Fans started the campaign to buy his recent ‘Caustic Window’ album, leading the musician to realise people were interested in hearing more new records from him.

Speaking to Rolling Stone, he said: “As much as I like to think I don’t really like fans – I mean, it’s not very healthy. You can’t be thinking about keeping other people happy, going in circles. But that was really touching, and really sweet. And I’m getting a bit older. It’s like, “Okay. People out there really, really want stuff off me, so I can’t deny it. Let’s put it out.”

‘Syro’ is the follow-up to 2001’s ‘Drukqs’ and will be released on September 22. In a recent interview, the producer said that the album wouldn’t be a one-off record, asserting that the project has him “kicked into gear”.

Prior to announcing the album, James teased fans with the possibility of a new album by flying a blimp over London bearing the Aphex Twin logo and the digits “2014”. He eventually announced the album on the deep web.

King Crimson: “Without friction you don’t get heat!”

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Robert Fripp showcases the revitalised King Crimson, complete with a brand new, three-drummer lineup, at their first show in Albany, New York, on September 9. In this feature from Uncut’s July 2012 issue (Take 182), Rob Young asks Fripp and many of his former bandmates how they gave birth to a bri...

Robert Fripp showcases the revitalised King Crimson, complete with a brand new, three-drummer lineup, at their first show in Albany, New York, on September 9. In this feature from Uncut’s July 2012 issue (Take 182), Rob Young asks Fripp and many of his former bandmates how they gave birth to a bright and extravagant series of albums and – inadvertently – to a whole new genre: prog rock. Surprising, desperate – and shocking…

Even Jimi Hendrix was taken aback!

________________

“There was something completely other surrounding this group,” Robert Fripp has said of King Crimson’s early years. “I don’t believe we went from failure to international success in nine months without help from somewhere.” Indeed, King Crimson’s status as a British rock institution has lasted a great deal longer than nine months. Although hard to keep in focus – they’ve undergone shifting lineups, stylistic switchbacks and periodic rests – Crimson has been reactivated throughout the 1980s, ‘fractalised’ into several discrete ‘ProjeKcts’ in 1997, while one incarnation was active as late as 2009. Although Fripp remarked online in December 2010 that the King Crimson switch is currently set to ‘off’, there’s a sense that the power has never definitively been disconnected.

King Crimson was formed in November 1968, out of a previous group Fripp had with two friends from his Dorset schooldays, the brothers Michael and Peter Giles. Formed in the Bournemouth area in summer 1967, the trio caught the same wave of Pythonesque, tea shoppe psych as the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band. Their album The Cheerful Insanity Of Giles, Giles & Fripp – also featuring the vocals of ex-Fairport Convention singer Judy Dyble and former Army bandsman Ian McDonald on woodwinds and saxophone, had not sold well, and their label Deram was growing impatient.

“The band was a strange outfit, I must say,” recalls Greg Lake, who had shared a guitar teacher with Fripp back in Dorset and was then in a group called The Gods. “Kind of a comedy group. But the label weren’t happy about this, because they weren’t selling any records, so they said to Robert, ‘If you want to stay on the label you’re going to have to become commercially relevant. Get a lead singer and start to make records that people could play.’ So Robert called me up and said, ‘Would you consider joining us?’ I knew Robert, he was a great player, and we got on well as great friends, and I knew Mike Giles, because he was from the same area. They were all classy players.

“Robert said, ‘Oh, just one thing: it would be good to keep the band down to a four-piece. Do you think you could play bass?’ I said, ‘No problem’ – I didn’t think about it. Four strings instead of six – how hard can that be? Of course, I very quickly learned the bass is nothing like guitar, and it’s an art form all of its own. And that came as a bit of a shock to me. I had to swot up on bass playing, which I did very rapidly.”

________________

At the time, Fripp and the Giles brothers were living in a flat on Brondesbury Road in northwest London. Ian McDonald introduced a friend, Pete Sinfield, a young starry-eyed poet who had spent a good portion of the early ’60s bumming around the North African hippy trail and had tried to start a band of his own, without success. Sinfield became the invisible fifth member, who ended up writing the lyrics, assisting with production, driving the tour van, and generally conceptually steering these four tempestuous personalities towards achieving a sonic and conceptual whole: to “diplomatically support the best idea in the room”, as he puts it.

“I was the one who wrote all the poems and had the strange bohemian background,” he says. “Robert came from a staid solicitor’s family in Dorset. He kept his paperback books in plastic bags, and mine were scattered all over the place. But for two and a half years, the combination worked.

“When Greg was asked to join, it was still stuck in Giles, Giles & Fripp land, all very clever-clever. Ian and I introduced an element of songwriting – something of weight, flamboyant Gothic weight. Greg’s talent and enthusiasm is like a big pair of bellows. There’s this small spark and he’ll puff away and suddenly he’s made it into a flame and added some harmonies to it. Mike would put some drums behind it, I’ll stick a word or two on it, and Fripp would calmly say, ‘I have an idea for that’, and drag something out of his 20,000 years of guitar practice.”

In January 1969, the as yet unnamed group installed themselves in a rehearsal space in Fulham Palace Road, and set about writing the material that would become their first album. “When we started playing it was immediately apparent there was something special,” recalls Lake, who became the group’s vocalist. Sinfield says: “Before, they couldn’t sing very well, but Greg had a beautiful tenor voice, which inspired me to give it some words for him to sing.” It was Sinfield who suggested the name, based on the character from his lyric “In The Court Of The Crimson King”. “It wasn’t Beelzebub,” he insists, “it was just sort of the dark forces of the world.” Like other band names of the time – Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath – it also just had a memorable timbre. “You get all this lovely alliteration, and you make up the character afterwards.”

________________

The group dynamics were unconventional and potentially unstable – Fripp, the notional leader (or at least the constant), only played guitar, with vocalist Lake, and later John Wetton, inevitably perceived as the ‘frontmen’. But this eccentric constitution was integral to the group’s peculiar energies. “It very quickly became apparent,” affirms Lake, “that the band was so unusual, with all these components making up this chemical. It was a chemistry: five individual people, fine musicianship, with quite an original approach to rock. The style that we really developed was what people call progressive music, but I don’t think really we were the first, because Sgt Pepper to me was a progressive record. But in any case, that was how we began, and it was apparent that the effect King Crimson would have would be to shock the audience. People would be shocked. I remember seeing Jimi Hendrix one night at the Revolution club, and he was taken aback! It’s when everybody’s listening that one fires another, and it escalates. You can be talking about milliseconds of feel-and-response time. You have to be good enough to do that, and the players in King Crimson were all good enough to do that. And that was the added power that the band had – it was like a brain, a living brain.”

Sinfield adds, “It was 25 years of experience all crammed in, and ideas and frustrations all coming out. That is bound to generate a bit of heat and excitement. Without friction you don’t get heat!”

For his part, Fripp has outlined the chief ingredients in Crimson’s formula: “Musical skill, commitment, desperation, surprise, Barry Godber’s album cover, the time of the world, technology, the Ford Transit van, a patron in Angus Hunking [Ian McDonald’s uncle, who loaned them the money to buy a vehicle, PA and Mellotron], management and record company, the unstoppable growth of the record industry between 1968 and 1978, the widespread social acceptance of drug use. But above all, it was the presence of the Good Fairy.”

The first two albums, In The Court Of The Crimson King and In The Wake Of Poseidon, feel more akin to the prevailing folk-rock and romantic pastoral psych of the moment, than the blazing progressive chow-downs of their later years (early sets included Donovan’s “Get Thy Bearings” and The Beatles’ “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds”). McDonald’s Mellotron, reeds and vibes add lush, organic texture, while Michael Giles’ drumming fills the galleon’s sails with epic, propulsive motion. Yet while the musicianship is stellar, from the long improvised coda to “Moonchild” to the Renaissance-fair ambience of “Cadence And Cascade”, you could sense a feral energy coiled inside. Witness “21st Century Schizoid Man”, the opening track on …Crimson King, which started with Sabbath-like gouging chords and boiled over into a frantic, toe-curling improvisation. It was this track, filled with Sinfield’s paranoid lyrics (“something that gathered all the madness of the world”, as he puts it), that resonated so well with Barry Godber’s unforgettable sleeve painting of a screaming, gurning face. At the Fillmore West on December 15, 1969, the last night of their US tour, they dedicated the song to Spiro Agnew.

That night proved fateful. Giles and McDonald, fearful of flying and sick of the tour grind, announced they wanted out. Lake, meanwhile, had a meeting in the hotel bar that changed his career, and altered the course of British progressive rock. “On the same bill that night was a group called The Nice, and I met Keith Emerson in the hotel after the show. He said, ‘How’s Crimson doing?’ I said, ‘Just breaking up.’ He said, ‘Well, I’m just finishing with The Nice – maybe we could form a band together?’ And that was that.” The seeds of Emerson, Lake & Palmer – and thus a whole new era of progressive rock – were sown that night.

________________

Lake briefly returned in March 1970 to provide the vocals on Crimson’s In The Wake Of Poseidon, whose sleeve painting by Tammo de Jongh was patterned with floating heads, based on the theories of personality archetypes of American psychiatrist Richard Gardner. Sinfield: “I had been interested in esoteric ideas, and mystery, magic and circuses; it was in my family. I had a grandfather who was a member of the Golden Dawn… We had a German housekeeper who was a member of [trapeze artists] The Flying Wallendas. My mother used to take me to the Magic Circle. All this was going on around me, and I read esoteric books, sci-fi…”

Poseidon was also seasoned with free jazz fragments, courtesy of pianist Keith Tippett and saxophonist Mel Collins, who continued as part of the lineup that produced Lizard (1970) and Islands (1971). This incarnation, with Ian Wallace on drums and Boz Burrell on bass and vocals, developed into an undisciplined sprawl which, coupled with Sinfield’s mellow landscapes, sat at odds with Fripp’s increasingly craggy sound. “Formentera Lady”, the opening track on Islands, marked the tipping point. “Robert works in a very strict, concrete, disciplined way,” explains Sinfield, “Boz and Mel were not the most disciplined of people… neither was I. I’d been to Spain, and was rather full of Mediterranean fields, warmth, dusty roads, sunsets… and wanted a softer, Ahmad Jamal/Miles Davis-y feel to the music, while Robert wanted to do [harder music]. I wanted something more relaxing. In that situation you start becoming disrespectful to your partner. And this was what happened. I started cutting him off, and he quite rightly got tired of that, to the point where he said, ‘One of us has got to go, and I’m not leaving.’” Having dismissed Sinfield, in spring 1972 Fripp folded away the group and sought out an entirely new cast of characters for Crimson’s next phase.

________________

Yes’ drummer at that time, Bill Bruford, was an unashamed Crimson fan and had followed the band’s progress “like a sick groupie”. When Fripp invited him to join the new lineup, tempting him with gifts of books about magic and hermetic philosophy, he bailed out of Yes like a shot. “I was aware [Crimson] had had a revolution and the blood was on the carpet and stuff, but I just read the list: percussion player Jamie Muir, who was kind of an avant gardist; John Wetton from Family who was the go-to bass player at the time; and [violinist] David Cross, who I didn’t know at all, and I said sign me up!” Wetton was yet another Bournemouth-born alumnus of Fripp’s school; pairing Bruford with Muir was an inspired choice: the latter emerged from London’s Free Improv scene alongside Derek Bailey and Evan Parker. His impressive arsenal of percussive devices, played with wild abandon, fitted perfectly into a group which was now including purely instrumental experimentation into their setlists.

“He’d come from the art world,” Bruford affirms, “and the world of new improvising, free atonal guys, and I was the new kid off the block with the fastest paradiddle in Kent. Muir wasted no time at all in pointing out to me – and this was my first great and only drum lesson really – that the music doesn’t exist to serve me; that I exist to serve the music. I’d been showing off until then.” The first recording from this ensemble was Larks’ Tongues In Aspic, a record described by another Ian MacDonald – Assistant Editor of NME – as “a challenging record, but its rewards are very substantial, even if you’d have to be an odd mixture of a person to like it all without reservation.”

That was because it was an odd mixture of a band – pitched somewhere between epic rock, total freedom and the kind of funky electric fusion perpetrated at the time by Miles Davis, Mahavishnu Orchestra and Herbie Hancock.

“‘Larks’ Tongues’ was Jamie’s phrase,” reveals Bruford, “for a diamond in a bit of roughage – apparently it’s an oriental delicacy. It implied something lovely in a whole bunch of nothing much. Which was this fragile melody in the middle of the aural roughage. Starless And Bible Black [1974] is a phrase, of course, by Dylan Thomas, that I appropriated, probably illegally – as it just seemed to be absolutely the sound that the group was making, or trying to make.”

The group, though, remained volatile, “One of those groups that if it was still there at breakfast the next morning you considered yourself lucky,” as Bruford puts it. Muir absented himself out just before the release of Larks’ Tongues…: “He went off to a monastery or something. Suddenly I was in control of all the percussion and I adopted half of Jamie’s stuff – gongs, thundersheets, metal plates…”

Wetton confidently took over the vocalist’s role, and introduced an old buddy, Richard Palmer-James, as the group’s new lyricist. “On Larks’ Tongues… they were all done to order, the three lyrics,” Wetton explains. “I sent him over a cassette – he lived in Munich by then – with the tune jotted down on piano, and voice, and back would come the lyric, absolutely finished, watertight, and printed out.”

This group sharpened their razor-edge riffage across Starless And Bible Black and Red (recorded as a trio after Cross bowed out), both worlds away from the woolly outpourings of prog peers like ELP, Genesis and Yes.

“For me that entire period smells of a Holiday Inn,” complains Bruford. “The thing became so aggressive, I think, because of endless US tours: here you are in the back of a shed. I know David Cross wasn’t happy with it, and me and Wetton turned into the ‘flying brick wall’, which you had to either duck or play with. And I kind of regret that. It took me a long time to learn to be just a whisker more subtle on the drum kit.” “We were doing endless tours of America,” adds Wetton, “and when you’re on in front of Ten Years After or Iron Butterfly, you have to hit ’em hard, and show them you’ve got some kind of muscle. In a 15,000-seat arena, there’s no room for pussyfooting.”

Wetton’s phrase is a reminder that Fripp’s sights were also pointed in different directions: his ongoing experimental collaboration with Brian Eno had begun two years earlier with No Pussyfooting, and he had produced Matching Mole and jazz outfits Centipede and Ovary Lodge. Under the influence of mystical thinkers like Gurdjieff and Ouspensky, Fripp began to abandon control of the group, with terminal results. Red, released at the close of 1974, was the last Crimson release until 1981’s wholly different Discipline. It was certainly the end of the line of evolutionary development that had begun in 1969. “This was a band with muscle, sensitivity, different colours,” mourns Wetton. “I wanted it to go on forever. But it didn’t!”

“You grope along in the dark,” adds Bruford, “with a candle and a bit of string, hoping to find your way along a dark corridor – that’s a bit like how it felt.”

Jeff Tweedy: “Rock’n’roll as a fashion and sellable lifestyle is definitely faltering”

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Jeff Tweedy sheds light on his upcoming projects in the new issue of Uncut, dated October 2014 and out now. The Wilco frontman reveals more about his new Sukierae album, made with son Spencer, his other new projects in the pipeline and the current state of rock’n’roll. “Rock’n’roll as ...

Jeff Tweedy sheds light on his upcoming projects in the new issue of Uncut, dated October 2014 and out now.

The Wilco frontman reveals more about his new Sukierae album, made with son Spencer, his other new projects in the pipeline and the current state of rock’n’roll.

“Rock’n’roll as a fashion and sellable lifestyle is definitely faltering,” Tweedy says, speaking to Uncut in his Chicago studio, The Loft.

“[But] the part of it that’s still real to me is virtually the same. It all revolves around the same core principle, that you are somehow empowering yourself, and OK with who you are.”

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

The 33rd Uncut Playlist Of 2014

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After my blog about the Aphex Twin the other week, it's a real pleasure to embed the first leaked track from "Syro" this morning. It's called "minipops 67 [120.2][source field mix]", and I think it's excellent. In haste this morning, since we have the next issue and the next Ultimate Music Guide to wrap up in the next few days. Find time to check out the Nathan Bowles track, though, and there should also be an entire new Plush album somewhere below, that's discreetly appeared on Bandcamp. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Bonnie “Prince” Billy - Singer’s Grave A Sea Of Tongues (Domino) 2 Nathan Bowles - Nansemond (Paradise Of Bachelors) 3 Various Artists - Uncut's November Free CD 4 Various Artists - Peru Bravo: Funk, Soul & Psych In Peru's Radical Decade (Strut) 5 Chris Thile & Edgar Meyer - Bass & Mandolin (Nonesuch) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=udikFO1r3Is 6 Julian Casablancas + The Voidz - Human Sadness (Cult) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8k3qB61lhk 7 Liam Hayes & Plush - Korp Sole Roller (Bandcamp) 8 [REDACTED] 9 SBTRKT - Wonder Where We Land (Young Turks) 10 Radian Versus Howe Gelb - Radian Versus Howe Gelb (Radian) 11 Maggie Bjorklund - Shaken (Bloodshot) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DNvIBBU8bL8 12 Savages & Bo Ningen - Words To The Blind (Rough Trade) 13 Heliocentrics & Melvin Van Peebles - The Last Transmission (Now Again) 14 East India Youth - Hinterland (Stolen) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k7RLZlbziYo 15 Aphex Twin - minipops 67 [120.2][source field mix] (Warp) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RUAJ8KLGqis 16 Dream Police - Hypnotized (Sacred Bones) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwymU0Kv7M8

After my blog about the Aphex Twin the other week, it’s a real pleasure to embed the first leaked track from “Syro” this morning. It’s called “minipops 67 [120.2][source field mix]”, and I think it’s excellent.

In haste this morning, since we have the next issue and the next Ultimate Music Guide to wrap up in the next few days. Find time to check out the Nathan Bowles track, though, and there should also be an entire new Plush album somewhere below, that’s discreetly appeared on Bandcamp.

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

1 Bonnie “Prince” Billy – Singer’s Grave A Sea Of Tongues (Domino)

2 Nathan Bowles – Nansemond (Paradise Of Bachelors)

3 Various Artists – Uncut’s November Free CD

4 Various Artists – Peru Bravo: Funk, Soul & Psych In Peru’s Radical Decade (Strut)

5 Chris Thile & Edgar Meyer – Bass & Mandolin (Nonesuch)

6 Julian Casablancas + The Voidz – Human Sadness (Cult)

7 Liam Hayes & Plush – Korp Sole Roller (Bandcamp)

8 [REDACTED]

9 SBTRKT – Wonder Where We Land (Young Turks)

10 Radian Versus Howe Gelb – Radian Versus Howe Gelb (Radian)

11 Maggie Bjorklund – Shaken (Bloodshot)

12 Savages & Bo Ningen – Words To The Blind (Rough Trade)

13 Heliocentrics & Melvin Van Peebles – The Last Transmission (Now Again)

14 East India Youth – Hinterland (Stolen)

15 Aphex Twin – minipops 67 [120.2][source field mix] (Warp)

16 Dream Police – Hypnotized (Sacred Bones)

Clips of lost movie starring Gram Parsons to be screened in London

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The remains of a lost movie starring Gram Parsons are set to be screened in London this month (September). Saturation 70 was filmed by writer/director Tony Foutz in 1969 and 1970, primarily at a UFO convention at Great Rock, near Joshua Tree in California, but was never completed after funding fell through. The film starred the late Byrd and Flying Burrito Brother alongside Brian Jones’ five-year-old son, Julian Jones Leitch, The Mamas & The Papas’ Michelle Phillips and ‘Nudie suit’ designer Nudie Cohn. Parsons and The Byrds' Roger McGuinn were set to provide the soundtrack for Saturation 70, reportedly using McGuinn’s Moog synth, but the film was shelved before their work began. Instead, the five minutes of remaining footage will be soundtracked by the Flying Burrito Brothers’ version of the Stones’ “Wild Horses” when it is screened at The Horse Hospital in London. Other items from the film present at the exhibition, which runs from September 6 to 27, include pages from the script and photographs from the production and behind the scenes.

The remains of a lost movie starring Gram Parsons are set to be screened in London this month (September).

Saturation 70 was filmed by writer/director Tony Foutz in 1969 and 1970, primarily at a UFO convention at Great Rock, near Joshua Tree in California, but was never completed after funding fell through.

The film starred the late Byrd and Flying Burrito Brother alongside Brian Jones’ five-year-old son, Julian Jones Leitch, The Mamas & The Papas’ Michelle Phillips and ‘Nudie suit’ designer Nudie Cohn.

Parsons and The Byrds’ Roger McGuinn were set to provide the soundtrack for Saturation 70, reportedly using McGuinn’s Moog synth, but the film was shelved before their work began.

Instead, the five minutes of remaining footage will be soundtracked by the Flying Burrito Brothers’ version of the Stones’ “Wild Horses” when it is screened at The Horse Hospital in London.

Other items from the film present at the exhibition, which runs from September 6 to 27, include pages from the script and photographs from the production and behind the scenes.

Captain Beefheart boxset, including unheard outtakes, to be released in November

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Previously unheard Captain Beefheart recordings are set to be released as part of a new boxset. Sun Zoom Spark: 1970 To 1972 features the three albums that Beefheart and the Magic Band released over that period – Lick My Decals Off, Baby, The Spotlight Kid and Clear Spot – as well as an extra disc of alternate versions. The whole limited-edition set, which will be released as four LPs, four CDs or digitally, has also been newly remastered. Sun Zoom Spark is released through Rhino on November 10, 2014. The fourth disc of outtakes is as follows: "Alice In Blunderland" - Alternate Version "Harry Irene" "I Can't Do This Unless I Can Do This/Seam Crooked Sam" "Pompadour Swamp/Suction Prints" "The Witch Doctor Life" - Instrumental Take "Two Rips In A Haystack/Kiss Me My Love" "Best Batch Yet" - (Track) Version 1 "Your Love Brought Me To Life" - Instrumental "Dirty Blue Gene" - Alternate Version 1 "Nowadays A Woman's Gotta Hit A Man" - Early Mix "Kiss Where I Kain't" "Circumstances" - Alternate Version 2 "Little Scratch" "Dirty Blue Gene" - Alternate Version 3

Previously unheard Captain Beefheart recordings are set to be released as part of a new boxset.

Sun Zoom Spark: 1970 To 1972 features the three albums that Beefheart and the Magic Band released over that period – Lick My Decals Off, Baby, The Spotlight Kid and Clear Spot – as well as an extra disc of alternate versions.

The whole limited-edition set, which will be released as four LPs, four CDs or digitally, has also been newly remastered.

Sun Zoom Spark is released through Rhino on November 10, 2014.

The fourth disc of outtakes is as follows:

“Alice In Blunderland” – Alternate Version

“Harry Irene”

“I Can’t Do This Unless I Can Do This/Seam Crooked Sam”

“Pompadour Swamp/Suction Prints”

“The Witch Doctor Life” – Instrumental Take

“Two Rips In A Haystack/Kiss Me My Love”

“Best Batch Yet” – (Track) Version 1

“Your Love Brought Me To Life” – Instrumental

“Dirty Blue Gene” – Alternate Version 1

“Nowadays A Woman’s Gotta Hit A Man” – Early Mix

“Kiss Where I Kain’t”

“Circumstances” – Alternate Version 2

“Little Scratch”

“Dirty Blue Gene” – Alternate Version 3

The Rolling Stones release six documentaries and films on Facebook

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The Rolling Stones have made some of their classic documentaries and concert films available to stream on their Facebook page. Six films can now be rented, including last year’s Sweet Summer Sun – Hyde Park Live, the career-spanning documentary Crossfire Hurricane and Live At The Checkerboard...

The Rolling Stones have made some of their classic documentaries and concert films available to stream on their Facebook page.

Six films can now be rented, including last year’s Sweet Summer Sun – Hyde Park Live, the career-spanning documentary Crossfire Hurricane and Live At The Checkerboard, filmed in 1981.

The films, which can be watched by going to the Stones’ Facebook page, are:

Sweet Summer Sun – Hyde Park Live

Crossfire Hurricane

Ladies & Gentlemen… The Rolling Stones

Some Girls

Stones In Exile

Live At The Checkerboard

The Australian and New Zealand leg of the band’s On Fire tour is due to kick off on October 25 in Adelaide, Australia. The band were originally scheduled to perform there in March, but were forced to postpone the dates due to the unexpected death of Jagger’s long-term girlfriend, L’Wren Scott.

A Most Wanted Man and God’s Pocket: some thoughts on Philip Seymour Hoffman’s final films

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The last major works by one of Hollywood's greatest modern actors. It’s been a good year for spies. The BBC have given two further outings to Bill Nighy’s elegantly crumpled Johnny Worricker as well as the gnomic utterances of Stephen Rea and his fellow spooks in A Honourable Woman. A Most Wanted Man, however, comes laced with an extra level of pathos: it is the last leading role Philip Seymour Hoffman filmed before his death in February this year (although there are two further Hunger Games instalments still to come). A Most Wanted Man brings together Hoffman with a strong supporting cast including Willem Dafoe, Robin Penn, Rachel McAdams and Daniel Brühl. The source material, too, is robust: it’s based on a 2008 novel by John Le Carré about the densely-layered counterespionage business in present day Hamburg. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RX-psY7w84E Incidentally, A Most Wanted Man arrives on the heels of God’s Pocket, which you might still find in a few cinemas. As with A Most Wanted Man, it’s also based on an early novel, this one by Pete Dexter, whose credits include Paris Trout, Mulholland Falls and The Paperboy. On the strength of this adaptation, it feels like a minor work for Dexter, though debuting director John Slattery (Mad Men’s Roger Sterling) has certainly assembled a staunch cast of actorly actors: aside from Hoffman, there’s John Turturro, Richard Jenkins, Christina Hendricks and Eddie Marsan, who portray denizens in a scuffed working class neighbourhood of South Philadelphia. Hoffman plays a thieving meat supplier who has to arrange the funeral of his despicable stepson after the boy is killed at a construction site. Slattery aims for scudded naturalism - a cinematic approximation of a Bruce Springsteen song - though it never quite hangs together successfully. I’m reminded of Out Of The Furnace from earlier this year: another high-calibre ensemble cast engaged in a story about blue collar crime that also failed to ignite. It’s worth watching for the performances – which is pretty much the case of A Most Wanted Man as well. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7qBfeRrF1nM In this le Carré adaptation, Hoffman plays Günther Bachmann, a German intelligence officer investigating the trail left by an escaped Turkish prisoner – a devout Muslim – who has arrived in the city to claim his late father’s inheritance from a German bank for purposes unknown. Bachmann is a post-9/11 iteration of George Smiley, an inscrutable long-game player. Unlike the composed Smiley, however, Bachmann is a dishevelled figure who smokes and drinks heavily. Hoffman’s work could be extremely variable: he was prone to ham, especially in films like Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master. But he’s good here, certainly, mostly because Hoffman responds to the overwhelmingly downbeat atmosphere of Le Carré’s material and dials down his performance accordingly. Of course, Le Carré has a successful track record on film – memorably, The Spy Who Came In From The Cold, The Constant Gardener and most recently, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. All of these have understandably had to work hard to pare back Le Carré’s dense, labyrinthine plots; largely with great success. But here, for all it’s acting merits, A Most Wanted Man is a rather shapeless film. Much of the responsibility for that lies with Anton Corbijn. Cobijn is consummate stylist, as Control and The American proved (although, admittedly, for the former he was basically drawing on his own pre-established photographic template). While he is strong on mood – the colour palette is steely blue and muted gold – but he still has much to learn about pacing and marshalling narrative. For all its rich storyline and high level acting, A Most Wanted Man is a bit boring. A Most Wanted Man opens in UK cinemas on September 12

The last major works by one of Hollywood’s greatest modern actors.

It’s been a good year for spies. The BBC have given two further outings to Bill Nighy’s elegantly crumpled Johnny Worricker as well as the gnomic utterances of Stephen Rea and his fellow spooks in A Honourable Woman. A Most Wanted Man, however, comes laced with an extra level of pathos: it is the last leading role Philip Seymour Hoffman filmed before his death in February this year (although there are two further Hunger Games instalments still to come). A Most Wanted Man brings together Hoffman with a strong supporting cast including Willem Dafoe, Robin Penn, Rachel McAdams and Daniel Brühl. The source material, too, is robust: it’s based on a 2008 novel by John Le Carré about the densely-layered counterespionage business in present day Hamburg.

Incidentally, A Most Wanted Man arrives on the heels of God’s Pocket, which you might still find in a few cinemas. As with A Most Wanted Man, it’s also based on an early novel, this one by Pete Dexter, whose credits include Paris Trout, Mulholland Falls and The Paperboy. On the strength of this adaptation, it feels like a minor work for Dexter, though debuting director John Slattery (Mad Men’s Roger Sterling) has certainly assembled a staunch cast of actorly actors: aside from Hoffman, there’s John Turturro, Richard Jenkins, Christina Hendricks and Eddie Marsan, who portray denizens in a scuffed working class neighbourhood of South Philadelphia. Hoffman plays a thieving meat supplier who has to arrange the funeral of his despicable stepson after the boy is killed at a construction site. Slattery aims for scudded naturalism – a cinematic approximation of a Bruce Springsteen song – though it never quite hangs together successfully. I’m reminded of Out Of The Furnace from earlier this year: another high-calibre ensemble cast engaged in a story about blue collar crime that also failed to ignite. It’s worth watching for the performances – which is pretty much the case of A Most Wanted Man as well.

In this le Carré adaptation, Hoffman plays Günther Bachmann, a German intelligence officer investigating the trail left by an escaped Turkish prisoner – a devout Muslim – who has arrived in the city to claim his late father’s inheritance from a German bank for purposes unknown. Bachmann is a post-9/11 iteration of George Smiley, an inscrutable long-game player. Unlike the composed Smiley, however, Bachmann is a dishevelled figure who smokes and drinks heavily. Hoffman’s work could be extremely variable: he was prone to ham, especially in films like Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master. But he’s good here, certainly, mostly because Hoffman responds to the overwhelmingly downbeat atmosphere of Le Carré’s material and dials down his performance accordingly. Of course, Le Carré has a successful track record on film – memorably, The Spy Who Came In From The Cold, The Constant Gardener and most recently, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. All of these have understandably had to work hard to pare back Le Carré’s dense, labyrinthine plots; largely with great success.

But here, for all it’s acting merits, A Most Wanted Man is a rather shapeless film. Much of the responsibility for that lies with Anton Corbijn. Cobijn is consummate stylist, as Control and The American proved (although, admittedly, for the former he was basically drawing on his own pre-established photographic template). While he is strong on mood – the colour palette is steely blue and muted gold – but he still has much to learn about pacing and marshalling narrative. For all its rich storyline and high level acting, A Most Wanted Man is a bit boring.

A Most Wanted Man opens in UK cinemas on September 12

Cold Specks – Neuroplasticity

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Bigger, bolder second by brooding Canadian... “Neuroplasticity” is a term which relates to the brain’s ability to evolve when faced with new behaviour, environments, stimuli or trauma. According to Al Spx, the 26-year-old Canadian singer and songwriter who broods, bristles and snarls behind the soubriquet Cold Specks, she chose it as the title of her second album to honour “a creative rewiring process. It implies an aesthetic change.” Which, after prolonged immersion in this rather remarkable record, seems about right. Neuroplasticity is the follow-up to Cold Specks’ 2012 debut, I Predict A Graceful Expulsion, and bears the same relation to that album as an abstract oil painting does to an accomplished sketch. ...Expulsion placed Spx’s core sources – old spirituals, delta blues, southern soul, Alan Lomax field recordings – into an overly-polite gothic-folk setting of carefully plucked guitars, soft piano, keening violins and primal rhythm. It’s a lovely record, but it could have offered more bite and daring. Past songs like “When The City Lights Dim” suggested that Spx could turn her hand to vaguely anthemic radio-friendly fare, but in the event she has travelled to the other extreme. While I Predict A Graceful Expulsion was recorded in less than a fortnight, Neuroplasticity was stitched together over a period of six months. That time was clearly not spent applying commercial polish, but instead building a bigger, bolder musical framework to give full vent to her extraordinary voice – two parts Patti Smith, one part Tom Waits, one part Macy Gray – and unbendingly bleak world view. The dark, churning soundscapes on Neuroplasticity frequently approach the kind of fever-pitch of confrontational intensity which bears comparison with Nick Cave and PJ Harvey, combined with the tribal kick of 80s Kate Bush. “A Quiet Chill” has the same irresistible pulse as “The Big Sky”, while “A Formal Invitation”, with its bat-shit rhythm and layered, multi-octave backing vocals, has the edge-of-madness feel familiar from The Dreaming. At other times Spx feels like a kindred spirit to notorious margin-hangers like Diamanda Galas and Swans. It seems entirely fitting that Michael Gira guests on two songs, his light-swallowing rasp intoning “hung, drawn, quartered” on “Exit Plan”, and adding an added layer of lupine menace to the album’s pitch-black highlight, “Season Of Doubt”. Even here, Spx out-glooms her co-vocalist, signing off with the promise that she possesses “an unrelenting desire to fall apart.” The results suggest a spectral Odetta covering late Talk Talk, a bewitching tapestry made up of uncomfortable silence, broken piano chords and forlorn trumpet, the latter courtesy of young American jazzer Ambrose Akinmusire, whose contributions prove to be one of the album’s most engaging new textures. His squealing horn lines skid all over opener “A Broken Memory”, as well as “Old Knives”, which pledges kinship to The Cure’s Faith, with its slow-hanging guitar arpeggios and funereal drum tattoo. Spx’s use of traditional black American sources is less overt but remains in evidence. Avant-garde jazz notwithstanding, “A Broken Memory” is a bleached machine-gospel stomp. “Absisto” is built on a blues drone, stretched and distorted over a bass-heavy rhythm, beautiful and sinister at the same time. “Living Signs” is clipped gothic funk, with a lyric – “I did not intend to raise the dead” – which evokes images of vine-covered New Orleans graveyards. There are other connective threads to Spx’s past work. “Change Of Command”, a lithe construction of fluid guitar lines and an almost-pop melody, recalls “Hector” from her debut. The gentle, undulating “Exit Plan” also returns to the calmer waters of ...Expulsion, at least until the peace is, somewhat inevitably, shattered by eruptions of sonic turbulence. Spx, who now lives in London, wrote much of this record in a remote cottage during a winter escape to the West Country, and the penetrating chill is tangible. Neuroplasticity is an unrelenting ride, but there’s something heroic about its unwavering commitment to its nightmare visions. On “A Quiet Chill” Spx growls “I remain unshakeable”. Every note of this compelling album backs her up. Graeme Thomson Q&A AL SPX, COLD SPECKS What changed between ...Expulsion and Neuroplasticity? My first album was a deeply personal folk record, and it became difficult performing those songs over two years. I felt like a bad actress and I wanted to change that. I made a conscious decision to make a more playful album with a much more expansive sound. “Playful” isn’t necessarily the first word I’d use! Sonically it’s playful. Lyrically and thematically it’s still incredibly dark. I don’t know how to write in other ways, I’ve come to accept it. Why did you go to the West Country to write? It was winter in London, miserable, and a friend had a cottage available for a few weeks. I had a couple of flat mates in London I just needed to get rid of! I definitely need to be alone to be comfortable with fully exploring sound. I don’t like to make errors in front of people, so I isolate myself. How did Michael Gira come on board? I couldn’t sing as low as he does! Luckily for me he was a fan and agreed to do it. He was kind and gracious throughout the entire process. I’m a very big fan of his, so it was a great pleasure. INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Bigger, bolder second by brooding Canadian…

“Neuroplasticity” is a term which relates to the brain’s ability to evolve when faced with new behaviour, environments, stimuli or trauma. According to Al Spx, the 26-year-old Canadian singer and songwriter who broods, bristles and snarls behind the soubriquet Cold Specks, she chose it as the title of her second album to honour “a creative rewiring process. It implies an aesthetic change.”

Which, after prolonged immersion in this rather remarkable record, seems about right. Neuroplasticity is the follow-up to Cold Specks’ 2012 debut, I Predict A Graceful Expulsion, and bears the same relation to that album as an abstract oil painting does to an accomplished sketch. …Expulsion placed Spx’s core sources – old spirituals, delta blues, southern soul, Alan Lomax field recordings – into an overly-polite gothic-folk setting of carefully plucked guitars, soft piano, keening violins and primal rhythm. It’s a lovely record, but it could have offered more bite and daring.

Past songs like “When The City Lights Dim” suggested that Spx could turn her hand to vaguely anthemic radio-friendly fare, but in the event she has travelled to the other extreme. While I Predict A Graceful Expulsion was recorded in less than a fortnight, Neuroplasticity was stitched together over a period of six months. That time was clearly not spent applying commercial polish, but instead building a bigger, bolder musical framework to give full vent to her extraordinary voice – two parts Patti Smith, one part Tom Waits, one part Macy Gray – and unbendingly bleak world view.

The dark, churning soundscapes on Neuroplasticity frequently approach the kind of fever-pitch of confrontational intensity which bears comparison with Nick Cave and PJ Harvey, combined with the tribal kick of 80s Kate Bush. “A Quiet Chill” has the same irresistible pulse as “The Big Sky”, while “A Formal Invitation”, with its bat-shit rhythm and layered, multi-octave backing vocals, has the edge-of-madness feel familiar from The Dreaming.

At other times Spx feels like a kindred spirit to notorious margin-hangers like Diamanda Galas and Swans. It seems entirely fitting that Michael Gira guests on two songs, his light-swallowing rasp intoning “hung, drawn, quartered” on “Exit Plan”, and adding an added layer of lupine menace to the album’s pitch-black highlight, “Season Of Doubt”. Even here, Spx out-glooms her co-vocalist, signing off with the promise that she possesses “an unrelenting desire to fall apart.”

The results suggest a spectral Odetta covering late Talk Talk, a bewitching tapestry made up of uncomfortable silence, broken piano chords and forlorn trumpet, the latter courtesy of young American jazzer Ambrose Akinmusire, whose contributions prove to be one of the album’s most engaging new textures. His squealing horn lines skid all over opener “A Broken Memory”, as well as “Old Knives”, which pledges kinship to The Cure’s Faith, with its slow-hanging guitar arpeggios and funereal drum tattoo.

Spx’s use of traditional black American sources is less overt but remains in evidence. Avant-garde jazz notwithstanding, “A Broken Memory” is a bleached machine-gospel stomp. “Absisto” is built on a blues drone, stretched and distorted over a bass-heavy rhythm, beautiful and sinister at the same time. “Living Signs” is clipped gothic funk, with a lyric – “I did not intend to raise the dead” – which evokes images of vine-covered New Orleans graveyards. There are other connective threads to Spx’s past work. “Change Of Command”, a lithe construction of fluid guitar lines and an almost-pop melody, recalls “Hector” from her debut. The gentle, undulating “Exit Plan” also returns to the calmer waters of …Expulsion, at least until the peace is, somewhat inevitably, shattered by eruptions of sonic turbulence.

Spx, who now lives in London, wrote much of this record in a remote cottage during a winter escape to the West Country, and the penetrating chill is tangible. Neuroplasticity is an unrelenting ride, but there’s something heroic about its unwavering commitment to its nightmare visions. On “A Quiet Chill” Spx growls “I remain unshakeable”. Every note of this compelling album backs her up.

Graeme Thomson

Q&A

AL SPX, COLD SPECKS

What changed between …Expulsion and Neuroplasticity?

My first album was a deeply personal folk record, and it became difficult performing those songs over two years. I felt like a bad actress and I wanted to change that. I made a conscious decision to make a more playful album with a much more expansive sound.

“Playful” isn’t necessarily the first word I’d use!

Sonically it’s playful. Lyrically and thematically it’s still incredibly dark. I don’t know how to write in other ways, I’ve come to accept it.

Why did you go to the West Country to write?

It was winter in London, miserable, and a friend had a cottage available for a few weeks. I had a couple of flat mates in London I just needed to get rid of! I definitely need to be alone to be comfortable with fully exploring sound. I don’t like to make errors in front of people, so I isolate myself.

How did Michael Gira come on board?

I couldn’t sing as low as he does! Luckily for me he was a fan and agreed to do it. He was kind and gracious throughout the entire process. I’m a very big fan of his, so it was a great pleasure.

INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON