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Johnny Marr announces new album, Playland

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Johnny Marr has announced details of his second solo album, Playland. The follow-up to 2013's solo debut The Messenger will be released on October 6. Speaking exclusively to NME, the former Smiths guitarist said it was a continuation of his last album, written while on the road in the past two ye...

Johnny Marr has announced details of his second solo album, Playland.

The follow-up to 2013’s solo debut The Messenger will be released on October 6.

Speaking exclusively to NME, the former Smiths guitarist said it was a continuation of his last album, written while on the road in the past two years. Unlike its predecessor, which was made between Berlin, New York and Manchester, Playland was recorded in London at Tritone Studios near Tower Bridge and will come out on the same day as lead single “Easy Money”.

“It was deliberate to work in London,” said Marr. “Where you work definitely affects how it sounds and seeps into the music, and I’ve developed a really good feeling for London in the past couple of years, I like the frenetic atmosphere.”

The title was inspired by “Homo Ludens”, by Dutch historian and cultural theorist Johan Huizinga. ‘Homo Ludens’ translates as ‘Man The Player’, or ‘Playing Man’. As with ‘The Messenger’, it was produced by Marr and his co-producer/band member Doviak, mixed by Claudius Mittendorfer in New York and mastered at Abbey Road by Frank Arkwright, who has in the past worked with Arcade Fire, The Smiths, New Order, Joy Division, Coldplay, Oasis and Primal Scream.

“The album’s main themes are the atmosphere of the city, and the preoccupations of the people who live in them; those preoccupations being consumerism, sex and anxiety, or distraction and transcendence from those things,” he says.

Of the autobiographical songs on the album, Marr says “25 Hours” is about the realisation he had as a child of having to do something to escape the life that was laid out in front of him, and features the lyric “Being chased by the priests and the freaks who are hunting me down with attitude/The heat and the bricks are falling on me like doom”.

He says: “I was immersed in the Catholic school system and an oppressive upbringing, looking at a life of having to consort with people that I didn’t want to be around. I realised you need to find some escape to break out of that, and that’s when I realised art was a way of escaping, in my case the music I was making or wanted to make. I would’ve been eight or nine, and I knew I just needed to escape the life that I was in. I got a sense of what might be my destiny if I didn’t do that.”

He describes “Dynamo” as a “love affair with a building”, inspired by his ongoing interest in psychogeography, the study of an environment’s effect on the behaviour of the humans within it.

“It might happen when you look up at a building, modern or old, on a clear summer day, big blue sky behind it filled with jet streams, and not being able to help think of stories that go with it all. I’ve been interested in the city and the people in it since I was a kid, it has this romantic attraction I just clicked with. Then when I was older I started reading more about it and got into the philosophy behind it. Of course, when you’re writing about something like that, it often works out that you’re writing about a person too.”

The Trap“, meanwhile, is about “how we try to hide what we’re really communicating with each other”, and “Easy Money” is about greed, “which is everywhere, but you see so much more in the city”.

The Playland tracklisting is:

‘Back In The Box’

‘Easy Money’

‘Dynamo’

‘Candidate’

’25 Hours’

‘The Trap’

‘Playland’

‘Speak Out Reach Out’

‘Boys Get Straight’

‘This Tension’

‘Little King’

Johnny Marr tours throughout October. He will play:

Lincoln The Engine Shed (October 13)

Southend Cliffs Pavillion (14)

Bexhill De La Warr (15)

Wolverhampton Civic Hall (17)

Cardiff Great Hall (18)

Bournemouth O2 Academy (20)

Cambridge Corn Exchange (21)

London O2 Academy Brixton (23)

Bath Pavilion (24)

Manchester O2 Apollo (25)

Glasgow O2 Academy (27)

Newcastle O2 Academy (28)

Leeds O2 Academy (29)

Hear new Vashti Bunyan song, “Across The Water”

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Vashti Bunyan has shared a new song, entitled "Across The Water". Listen to the track below, which comes from the artist's new album Heartleap, which is released on October 6 via FatCat. The LP follows her 1970 debut Just Another Diamond Day and 2005's comeback album Lookaftering. The new album was...

Vashti Bunyan has shared a new song, entitled “Across The Water”.

Listen to the track below, which comes from the artist’s new album Heartleap, which is released on October 6 via FatCat. The LP follows her 1970 debut Just Another Diamond Day and 2005’s comeback album Lookaftering. The new album was produced by Bunyan herself and was primarily recorded in her own studio.

The release of the album will be supported by a UK tour, which starts at Birmingham MAC on October 7, with two shows at London St Pancras Church (8-9), Farndale The Band Room (11) and Manchester St Philip’s Church (12).

Vashti Bunyan plays:

Birmingham MAC (October 7)

London St. Pancras Church (8-9)

Farndale (11)

Manchester St. Philip’s Church (12)

Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers unveil new song, “Forgotten Man”

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Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers have unveiled a new song, "Forgotten Man". The song can be found on their website here. The interactive site is modelled after an old car radio; turn it on and use your mouse to flip through the stations. "Forgotten Man" can be found between 104 and 100. The song a...

Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers have unveiled a new song, “Forgotten Man”.

The song can be found on their website here.

The interactive site is modelled after an old car radio; turn it on and use your mouse to flip through the stations. “Forgotten Man” can be found between 104 and 100.

The song appears on their new album, Hypnotic Eye, which is released on July 29 via Reprise Records.

You can also find four other previously released songs from the album on the website.

U Get Me High” starts between 300 and 280 on the dial, “Red River” is between 260 and 240, “American Dream Plan B” can be found between 240 and 220 and “Fault Lines” plays on 220.

The tracklisting for Hypotic Eye is:

American Dream Plan B

Fault Lines

Red River

Full Grown Boy

All You Can Carry

Power Drunk

Forgotten Man

Son of My Youth

U Get Me High

Burnt Out Town

Shadow People

Led Zeppelin – Remasters I – III

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The first three albums plus extra material from the Page archives... A musician’s catalogue is his castle; its strength not defined by how much it changes, but how far it stays the same. In the case of Led Zeppelin, that castle has a vigilant gatekeeper. Of the group’s surviving members, one now makes platinum-plated Americana for an imagined hippy society. Another stalks a black ambient Mordor in the company of adventurous Norwegians. And then there’s Jimmy Page. Page is a musician who now has a curious relationship with his own band. In the 1960s and 1970s he controlled Led Zeppelin down to the smallest detail: selecting the players, paying for the sessions, retaining control of the masters. The devil, so to speak, was in the detail. Only having confirmed the security of his initial position, could he go on to contrive his most extravagant flourishes. Since the band’s 1980 demise, however, Page’s – relative – reluctance to make new music has meant he has become the de facto architect of the Zeppelin legacy, painstakingly curating his historic work. The 2007 Led Zeppelin 02 show seemed to suggest that there might soon be new chapters to the Zeppelin story – but the lack of movement in seven years suggests that Page, who once held all the cards, has seen a recalibration of his power. Is he still Led Zeppelin’s master? Or has he now become its servant? These new editions of the first three Led Zeppelin albums, which begin a campaign of attractive vinyl/CD reissues of the catalogue, do all they can to assert the former. To Page’s ears, the advent of “streaming and MP3s” warranted giving the catalogue additional polish. These new reissues duly derive from work done on them prior to their soft release on iTunes in 2012. Led Zeppelin audio is a heavy scene, as anyone who has spent time on messageboard threads called ‘“Gallows Pole”: Left or Right channel?’ will know. Many rate the original “Diament” CD transfers, mastered by Barry Diament in 1987 over the initial “Page/Marino” ’92 remasters. John Davis, who brought a crisp loudness to 2007’s Mothership and Celebration Day, isn’t entirely popular in this world – but his well-articulated and fruity sound here isn’t going to disappoint the sensible listener. Certainly not John Paul-Jones, whose warm, busy bass playing and deep Rhodes piano are both big winners here. All done from transfers of the original – apparently unplayed – master tapes, these feel a little less “loud” than Mothership. Still, whether you’re listening flicking through the 70 page deluxe book while listening to your audiophile vinyl, or on the tube vibing to your device, familiar features feel vibrant. That odd off-mic shout during “Babe I’m Gonna Leave You”. The whump that shakes the room immediately before the guitar solo in “Whole Lotta Love”. Or “Since I’ve Been Loving You”, the song that details the empathetic Page/Plant musical relationship in a tender seven and a half minutes. Whatever defines your relationship with the first three Led Zeppelin albums, you will find it here, as involving as ever. What did we expect, though? Bad sound? Aswell as the detailed replica packaging (though not so detailed we get plum and red labels), the selling point of these reissues is a previously unexplored aspect of the Zeppelin catalogue: extra material, judiciously selected by Page from his (two) archives. What you’ll be appreciating here, however, isn’t exactly a treasure house of undiscovered gems. III’s “Keys To The Highway” is a pleasant reminder, were one needed, that Page and Plant were connoisseurs of the blues. “La La” is an wordless Hammond number but becomes a compendium of LZII guitar tropes, more production showcase than song. “Jennings Farm Blues” and “Bathroom Sound” are works-in-progress for other LZIII tracks (“Bron –Yr-Aur Stomp”; “Out On The Tiles”). Instead, the additional material on II and III is not misleadingly referred to as “companion audio”, and directs our attention to the tacit purpose of these reissues: to remind us of the editorial talents of Jimmy Page, Producer. “Whole Lotta Love” is a decent place to begin. As we hear it on the second disc, much of the track is in place, but there is simply reverberating space in the cavern later populated by Theramin, and a heavy-breathing Robert Plant. It’s maybe not the revelation Page imagines, but it does endorse the value in what he recently described in as the “filigree work” that completes a Led Zeppelin song. They didn’t just throw this stuff together, you know. III, often overlooked, will surely win new converts. Supposedly some kind of low-fi Wiccan hoedown, the detail of the remaster reveals the space and structure in the songs (particularly the backing vocals), and the degree to which the band derived its sound not only from country, blues and folk, but also – like Deep Purple – from progressive pop. “Out On The Tiles” claims its seat at the table of big hitters, while the comparison disc is particularly interesting for “Immigrant Song”. You know something sounds odd. It’s because the one that sounds finished is the demo. The one with the hissy metronome and count-in is the finished one. On headphones, odd studio acoustics reveal themselves. Page’s notion of what might catch the ear was eccentric, but generally infallible. Duly, these remasters aren’t asking you to extend your idea of the Zeppelin canon, but retract it – to realize why the albums have the power and mystery they do. The reason there aren’t more songs is because control – over quality, over everything – was, and is, very high. The disc released to accompany I has been subjected to just this rigour. The live show, from Paris in November 1969 (note to audiophiles: a mono recording, sent over to Page in an email) has had its “How Many More Times” edited down by 50 per cent (to 11 minutes), while “Moby Dick” (omitted from the original French radio broadcast) has been reinstated. An entertaining exchange between Page and Plant in which the pair refer to “White Summer” as “the wanking dog” has been excised. You might wonder at the inclusion of this, more II than I show here (rather than, say, some “New Yardbirds”-era stuff), and then the band begin to play. It’s “Good Times, Bad Times”. But that’s proves to be a deliberate false beginning – it’s now “Communication Breakdown”, and it seems like the song’s going far too fast. It sounds as if Jimmy Page is never going to be able to pull off a solo at that velocity, that the wheels are going to come off completely. But then you listen again and get the picture. No need for alarm. Then as now, Jimmy Page knows precisely what he’s doing. John Robinson

The first three albums plus extra material from the Page archives…

A musician’s catalogue is his castle; its strength not defined by how much it changes, but how far it stays the same. In the case of Led Zeppelin, that castle has a vigilant gatekeeper. Of the group’s surviving members, one now makes platinum-plated Americana for an imagined hippy society. Another stalks a black ambient Mordor in the company of adventurous Norwegians. And then there’s Jimmy Page.

Page is a musician who now has a curious relationship with his own band. In the 1960s and 1970s he controlled Led Zeppelin down to the smallest detail: selecting the players, paying for the sessions, retaining control of the masters. The devil, so to speak, was in the detail. Only having confirmed the security of his initial position, could he go on to contrive his most extravagant flourishes.

Since the band’s 1980 demise, however, Page’s – relative – reluctance to make new music has meant he has become the de facto architect of the Zeppelin legacy, painstakingly curating his historic work. The 2007 Led Zeppelin 02 show seemed to suggest that there might soon be new chapters to the Zeppelin story – but the lack of movement in seven years suggests that Page, who once held all the cards, has seen a recalibration of his power. Is he still Led Zeppelin’s master? Or has he now become its servant?

These new editions of the first three Led Zeppelin albums, which begin a campaign of attractive vinyl/CD reissues of the catalogue, do all they can to assert the former. To Page’s ears, the advent of “streaming and MP3s” warranted giving the catalogue additional polish. These new reissues duly derive from work done on them prior to their soft release on iTunes in 2012.

Led Zeppelin audio is a heavy scene, as anyone who has spent time on messageboard threads called ‘“Gallows Pole”: Left or Right channel?’ will know. Many rate the original “Diament” CD transfers, mastered by Barry Diament in 1987 over the initial “Page/Marino” ’92 remasters. John Davis, who brought a crisp loudness to 2007’s Mothership and Celebration Day, isn’t entirely popular in this world – but his well-articulated and fruity sound here isn’t going to disappoint the sensible listener. Certainly not John Paul-Jones, whose warm, busy bass playing and deep Rhodes piano are both big winners here.

All done from transfers of the original – apparently unplayed – master tapes, these feel a little less “loud” than Mothership. Still, whether you’re listening flicking through the 70 page deluxe book while listening to your audiophile vinyl, or on the tube vibing to your device, familiar features feel vibrant. That odd off-mic shout during “Babe I’m Gonna Leave You”. The whump that shakes the room immediately before the guitar solo in “Whole Lotta Love”. Or “Since I’ve Been Loving You”, the song that details the empathetic Page/Plant musical relationship in a tender seven and a half minutes. Whatever defines your relationship with the first three Led Zeppelin albums, you will find it here, as involving as ever.

What did we expect, though? Bad sound? Aswell as the detailed replica packaging (though not so detailed we get plum and red labels), the selling point of these reissues is a previously unexplored aspect of the Zeppelin catalogue: extra material, judiciously selected by Page from his (two) archives. What you’ll be appreciating here, however, isn’t exactly a treasure house of undiscovered gems. III’s “Keys To The Highway” is a pleasant reminder, were one needed, that Page and Plant were connoisseurs of the blues. “La La” is an wordless Hammond number but becomes a compendium of LZII guitar tropes, more production showcase than song. “Jennings Farm Blues” and “Bathroom Sound” are works-in-progress for other LZIII tracks (“Bron –Yr-Aur Stomp”; “Out On The Tiles”).

Instead, the additional material on II and III is not misleadingly referred to as “companion audio”, and directs our attention to the tacit purpose of these reissues: to remind us of the editorial talents of Jimmy Page, Producer. “Whole Lotta Love” is a decent place to begin. As we hear it on the second disc, much of the track is in place, but there is simply reverberating space in the cavern later populated by Theramin, and a heavy-breathing Robert Plant. It’s maybe not the revelation Page imagines, but it does endorse the value in what he recently described in as the “filigree work” that completes a Led Zeppelin song.

They didn’t just throw this stuff together, you know. III, often overlooked, will surely win new converts. Supposedly some kind of low-fi Wiccan hoedown, the detail of the remaster reveals the space and structure in the songs (particularly the backing vocals), and the degree to which the band derived its sound not only from country, blues and folk, but also – like Deep Purple – from progressive pop. “Out On The Tiles” claims its seat at the table of big hitters, while the comparison disc is particularly interesting for “Immigrant Song”. You know something sounds odd. It’s because the one that sounds finished is the demo. The one with the hissy metronome and count-in is the finished one. On headphones, odd studio acoustics reveal themselves.

Page’s notion of what might catch the ear was eccentric, but generally infallible. Duly, these remasters aren’t asking you to extend your idea of the Zeppelin canon, but retract it – to realize why the albums have the power and mystery they do. The reason there aren’t more songs is because control – over quality, over everything – was, and is, very high.

The disc released to accompany I has been subjected to just this rigour. The live show, from Paris in November 1969 (note to audiophiles: a mono recording, sent over to Page in an email) has had its “How Many More Times” edited down by 50 per cent (to 11 minutes), while “Moby Dick” (omitted from the original French radio broadcast) has been reinstated. An entertaining exchange between Page and Plant in which the pair refer to “White Summer” as “the wanking dog” has been excised.

You might wonder at the inclusion of this, more II than I show here (rather than, say, some “New Yardbirds”-era stuff), and then the band begin to play. It’s “Good Times, Bad Times”. But that’s proves to be a deliberate false beginning – it’s now “Communication Breakdown”, and it seems like the song’s going far too fast. It sounds as if Jimmy Page is never going to be able to pull off a solo at that velocity, that the wheels are going to come off completely. But then you listen again and get the picture. No need for alarm. Then as now, Jimmy Page knows precisely what he’s doing.

John Robinson

Jonny Greenwood says he has been emailing Thom Yorke new Radiohead song ideas

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Jonny Greenwood has said that he has been emailing Thom Yorke ideas for new Radiohead songs. Speaking in The Sunday Times, Greenwood commented: "I was emailing stuff to Thom last night, actually, but it's not the same, is it? You don't see him tutting." When asked if there was a release date in min...

Jonny Greenwood has said that he has been emailing Thom Yorke ideas for new Radiohead songs.

Speaking in The Sunday Times, Greenwood commented: “I was emailing stuff to Thom last night, actually, but it’s not the same, is it? You don’t see him tutting.” When asked if there was a release date in mind for their next album, Greenwood explained: “No! Release? No, no idea. No,” adding: “Our plan is to start making music soon. We’ve just got to get the inertia back.”

Greenwood previously said Radiohead will begin rehearsing and recording again in September. The band are currently pursuing solo projects and enjoying a break from official band duty following the end of touring their last album, ‘The King Of Limbs.’

Speaking on Mary Anne Hobbes’ BBC 6Music show earlier this month, Greenwood was asked what Radiohead were up to at the moment and said, “We’re going to start up in September, playing, rehearsing and recording and see how it’s sounding.”

These comments correlate with what Greenwood said about the band regrouping this summer to discuss their next album in different interview earlier this year. Speaking then he said that the “slow moving animal” would gain life in the coming months.

Neil Young & Crazy Horse perform rare songs at German show

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Neil Young & Crazy Horse performed two rare cuts at their show in Münsterplatz, Ulm, Germany last night [July 20]. The band have already played two rarities on the current European tour - "Separate Ways", from the Homegrown sessions, which hasn't had a live airing since 2008, and "Days That Us...

Neil Young & Crazy Horse performed two rare cuts at their show in Münsterplatz, Ulm, Germany last night [July 20].

The band have already played two rarities on the current European tour – “Separate Ways“, from the Homegrown sessions, which hasn’t had a live airing since 2008, and “Days That Used To Be” from Ragged Glory, which the band hadn’t played live since 1991.

But at the Ulm show, they played “Name Of Love“, from CSNY’s 1988 album, American Dream. The song has only had 19 live performances: prior to the Ulm show, it was last played live in November, 1988.

They also performed the CSNY song, “Living With War“, which hasn’t been played live since September 2006 and has never been performed live by Crazy Horse before.

Also on this tour, Young and Crazy Horse have debuted a new song, “Who’s Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?“, which you can watch them perform here.

You can read our review of the Neil Young & Crazy Horse show on July 12 at Hyde Park here.

Neil Young & Crazy Horse set list for Münsterplatz, Ulm, Germany, July 20, 2014:

Love And Only Love

Goin’ Home

Days That Used To Be

Living With War

Love To Burn

Name Of Love

Blowin’ In The Wind

Heart Of Gold

Barstool Blues

Psychedelic Pill

Cortez The Killer

Rockin’ In The Free World

Encore

Who’s Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?

Paul McCartney: “It would be a pity if Eric Clapton retires”

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Paul McCartney has discussed his plans for retirement, telling Rolling Stone he will step away from the spotlight when he feels like it. "...the answer to 'Are you going to retire?' is 'When I feel like it'. But that's not today." McCartney's comments were made in connection with views about retir...

Paul McCartney has discussed his plans for retirement, telling Rolling Stone he will step away from the spotlight when he feels like it.

“…the answer to ‘Are you going to retire?’ is ‘When I feel like it’. But that’s not today.”

McCartney’s comments were made in connection with views about retirement Eric Clapton expressed in Uncut‘s current cover story,

Rolling Stone asked: Your friend Eric Clapton recently said he’s thinking about retiring from touring. Does that idea have any appeal to you?

“Obviously, when you get to a certain age, it’s going to be on the cards,” said McCartney. “I had a manager once who advised me to retire when I was 50. He said, ‘You know, I’m not sure it’s seemly for a 50-year-old guy to keep on trying.’ I thought about it for a second and thought, ‘Nah.’ When will you give up? When will it give out? Who knows? But the margin has been stretched these days. The Stones go out now, and I go to their show and I think, ‘It doesn’t matter that they’re old gits. They can play great.’ And I talk to young kids who say exactly the same thing: ‘They play good.’

“I think that’s the deciding factor. It would be a pity if Eric retires, because, shit, he really plays good! But he’s that kind of guy, Eric. I can see him saying, ‘I’m going to retire.’ He’s kind of a homebody in essence. We’ve talked about this before. I remember him joking about how I stand up for the whole show. He said, ‘I sit down.’ That’s a blues player thing. But he’s just too good a player. I would say to him, ‘Yeah, by all means, sit down, Eric. But don’t retire.'”

The 27th Uncut Playlist Of 2014

A bit of a manic week, for various reasons, not least the fact that we've finished two magazines: the next issue of Uncut, which should be coming your way on July 29; and an Ultimate Music Guide dedicated to the genius of… Tom Waits! More about all that in the next few days. In the meantime, here are the records, tracks and so on that have kept us going this week. Special attention: a new Hiss Golden Messenger video; a free Tim Hecker download; Mary Lattimore, Purling Hiss and a track from the wonderful Steve Gunn. Can't wait to share some of this Chris Forsyth album with you… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Robbie Basho - Zarthus (Vanguard) 2 Chris Forysth & The Solar Motel Band - Intensity Ghost (No Quarter) 3 [REDACTED] 4 Tim Hecker - Amps, Drugs, Mellotron (Adult Swim Singles Club) 5 Steve Gunn – Way Out Weather (Paradise Of Bachelors) 6 Alt-J - This Is All Yours (Infectious) 7 The Vines - Wicked Nature (Wicked Nature) 8 Alice Gerrard - Follow The Music (Tompkins Square) 9 Hiss Golden Messenger – Lateness Of Dancers (Merge) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vqzhsUtGCz4 10 Jon Hassell - City: Works Of Fiction (All Saints) 11 Smoke Dawson - Fiddle (Tompkins Square) 12 Kim Hiorthoy - Dogs (Smalltown Supersound) 13 Goat – Commune (Rocket) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JjquKdvIX6U 14 Various Artists – More Lost Soul Gems From Sounds Of Memphis (Kent) 15 [REDACTED] 16 Mary Lattimore & Jeff Zeigler - Slant Of Light (Thrill Jockey) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6GXMHhOsya8 17 Bing & Ruth - Tomorrow Was The Golden Age (RVNG INTL) 18 Purling Hiss - Weirdon (Drag City) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-sKVTLPUgmE 19 The 2 Bears - The Night Is Young (Southern Fried) 20 Various Artists - Song Reader (Virgin)

A bit of a manic week, for various reasons, not least the fact that we’ve finished two magazines: the next issue of Uncut, which should be coming your way on July 29; and an Ultimate Music Guide dedicated to the genius of…

Tom Waits! More about all that in the next few days. In the meantime, here are the records, tracks and so on that have kept us going this week. Special attention: a new Hiss Golden Messenger video; a free Tim Hecker download; Mary Lattimore, Purling Hiss and a track from the wonderful Steve Gunn. Can’t wait to share some of this Chris Forsyth album with you…

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

1 Robbie Basho – Zarthus (Vanguard)

2 Chris Forysth & The Solar Motel Band – Intensity Ghost (No Quarter)

3 [REDACTED]

4 Tim Hecker – Amps, Drugs, Mellotron (Adult Swim Singles Club)

5 Steve Gunn – Way Out Weather (Paradise Of Bachelors)

6 Alt-J – This Is All Yours (Infectious)

7 The Vines – Wicked Nature (Wicked Nature)

8 Alice Gerrard – Follow The Music (Tompkins Square)

9 Hiss Golden Messenger – Lateness Of Dancers (Merge)

10 Jon Hassell – City: Works Of Fiction (All Saints)

11 Smoke Dawson – Fiddle (Tompkins Square)

12 Kim Hiorthoy – Dogs (Smalltown Supersound)

13 Goat – Commune (Rocket)

14 Various Artists – More Lost Soul Gems From Sounds Of Memphis (Kent)

15 [REDACTED]

16 Mary Lattimore & Jeff Zeigler – Slant Of Light (Thrill Jockey)

17 Bing & Ruth – Tomorrow Was The Golden Age (RVNG INTL)

18 Purling Hiss – Weirdon (Drag City)

19 The 2 Bears – The Night Is Young (Southern Fried)

20 Various Artists – Song Reader (Virgin)

Kevin Rowland and Dexys band members to introduce select screenings of new documentary

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Kevin Rowland and other members of Dexys are set to introduce select screenings of their new documentary, Nowhere Is Home. The film, directed by Paul Kelly, was shot during the band's residency at London’s Duke Of York’s Theatre last year and includes performance footage interspaced with interv...

Kevin Rowland and other members of Dexys are set to introduce select screenings of their new documentary, Nowhere Is Home.

The film, directed by Paul Kelly, was shot during the band’s residency at London’s Duke Of York’s Theatre last year and includes performance footage interspaced with interviews with Kevin Rowland and Jim Paterson about the band.

It is due to screen in UK cinemas at 7.45 on Monday, July 21.

Kevin Rowland will introduce the film at Vue Piccadilly in London, while other band members will be at the following venues:

Jim Paterson: Vue Westfield in Shepherds Bush, London

Lucy Morgan: Vue Cardiff

David Ruffy: Vue Croydon

Sean Read: Westfield Vue, Stratford, London

Meanwhile, director Paul Kelly will introduce the film at Vue Islington and producer Martin Kelly will introduce the screening at the Vue Oxford.

Please contact the relevant box offices for further details.

Jimi Hendrix: early session recordings to get released

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Early recordings of Jimi Hendrix made between 1965 and 1967 have been acquired by the Hendrix family's music company, Experience Hendrix LLC, and Sony Music's catalog division, Legacy Recordings. The 88 studio recordings that Hendrix made during his stint with the R&B group Curtis Knight and the Squires have been the subject of lengthy litigation between the Hendrix family and onetime rights holder Ed Chalpin, who produced the sessions, reports Rolling Stone. The recordings include a live performance recorded in Hackensack, New Jersey in December 1965, as well as Curtis Knight and the Squires' recordings with Hendrix in 1967. Hendrix’s long-time sound engineer Eddie Kramer will oversee the reissues, which will be released by Legacy Recordings over the next three years.

Early recordings of Jimi Hendrix made between 1965 and 1967 have been acquired by the Hendrix family’s music company, Experience Hendrix LLC, and Sony Music’s catalog division, Legacy Recordings.

The 88 studio recordings that Hendrix made during his stint with the R&B group Curtis Knight and the Squires have been the subject of lengthy litigation between the Hendrix family and onetime rights holder Ed Chalpin, who produced the sessions, reports Rolling Stone.

The recordings include a live performance recorded in Hackensack, New Jersey in December 1965, as well as Curtis Knight and the Squires’ recordings with Hendrix in 1967.

Hendrix’s long-time sound engineer Eddie Kramer will oversee the reissues, which will be released by Legacy Recordings over the next three years.

Blondie’s Clem Burke: “Debbie Harry says this tour could be the last”

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Blondie’s Clem Burke has revealed that the band’s current world tour may be their last. Burke has been drumming with the band since they began back in 1972. In a recent interview, the 58-year-old has said that Debbie Harry has hinted that this could be it for the band once their current tour c...

Blondie’s Clem Burke has revealed that the band’s current world tour may be their last.

Burke has been drumming with the band since they began back in 1972.

In a recent interview, the 58-year-old has said that Debbie Harry has hinted that this could be it for the band once their current tour comes to an end.

“By the time we get to beautiful Vancouver, B.C., we will have toured Europe, played Glastonbury and done a number of big festivals in North America,” he told The Province. “As for the rumours of the last tour, we’ve decided we’ll live forever. But Debbie, is older than me and has hinted it could be time. Obviously without her, there is no Blondie.”

The band recently performed at Glastonbury Festival as well as playing dates in London and Sheffield at the end of June. Blondie were honoured at the NME Awards in February.

The band will play Bristol O2 Academy on August 19 and Leicester O2 Academy on August 20. Tickets are on sale now and the gigs will follow the release of the recent two-disc Blondie 4(0) Ever which is made up of a greatest hits album alongside the band’s new LP Ghosts Of Download. It was their first release since 2011’s Panic Of Girls.

Creedence Clearwater Revival – the full story, by John Fogerty, Stu Cook and Doug Clifford

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John Fogerty is out on an extensive tour of the US right now, so it seems a good time to dip into the archives and remind ourselves of this great feature from Uncut’s February 2012 issue (177). At the dawn of the ’70s, Creedence Clearwater Revival were the biggest band in the world – a brillia...

John Fogerty is out on an extensive tour of the US right now, so it seems a good time to dip into the archives and remind ourselves of this great feature from Uncut’s February 2012 issue (177). At the dawn of the ’70s, Creedence Clearwater Revival were the biggest band in the world – a brilliant and driven hit machine with deep roots in American tradition. By 1972, though, it was all over, and the ex-bandmates embarked on a bitter war that still continues, 40 years later. Here, Fogerty tells his side of a remarkable story – and then hears the very different stories of his old Creedence sparring partners. “I had so much anger,” says Fogerty, “I couldn’t play those songs…” Words: David Cavanagh

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Built in the Roaring Twenties, New York’s Beacon Theatre is known as the ‘older sister’ of the famous Radio City Music Hall. The 30-foot Greek goddesses towering either side of the Beacon stage have witnessed everything from opera to a series of Allman Brothers concerts. Tonight, John Fogerty is playing the first of two shows in which he’ll perform Creedence Clearwater Revival albums (Cosmo’s Factory and, tomorrow, Green River) in their entirety. Both million-sellers, they contain eight classic singles between them.

For various reasons, Fogerty refused to play Creedence’s music for almost 15 years after their 1972 break-up. He relented on a few occasions in 1986–7, following some gentle cajoling by Bob Dylan and George Harrison, but then came a typically Fogertyesque withdrawal – a gloomy, implacable silence – before his re-emergence in 1997 with Blue Moon Swamp. He officially began reintroducing Creedence songs into his sets that year.

Fogerty acknowledges the burden of engaging with the music (and, perhaps, demons) of his past. He compares it to the Eagles reuniting for their Hell Freezes Over tour. “Yes, there were long, dark times,” he tells Uncut. “I was miserable. I stopped playing guitar. I was a bitter person.” Claiming to be free of his grudges, Fogerty – whose dyed hair makes him appear younger than his 66 years – is animated onstage. His voice remains one of the most rip-roaring of rock’n’roll instruments, seeming to come with its own slapback echo. “This [Cosmo’s Factory] was an important record in the days when they still had vinyl,” he winks to the Beacon audience, “when people had Grateful Dead hairdos and smoked Jefferson Airplane cigarettes.”

The third song he plays is “Travelin’ Band”, a worldwide hit in 1970, which Fogerty wrote as an homage to Little Richard, a boyhood hero. But his tone turns sarcastic as he informs the crowd: “Of course, before you know it, lawyers got involved and I was sued.” The crowd don’t know what to say. Why has he mentioned a lawsuit? Why would someone sour the atmosphere of their own gig?

They might if they were John Fogerty.

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Creedence Clearwater Revival were an American phenomenon. From 1968 to 1972, they dominated FM and AM radio alike – an unusual feat – with a prolific run of glorious singles (“Suzie Q”, “Proud Mary”, “Bad Moon Rising”, “Green River”, “Fortunate Son”, “Up Around The Bend”). In 1969 alone, they earned three platinum discs and released three acclaimed albums (Bayou Country, Green River, Willy And The Poor Boys), as well as playing Woodstock and most major festivals. By late ’69, Creedence could have called themselves the biggest band in America. By mid-1970, they could have widened the parameters to ‘biggest band in the world’, since The Beatles, their only real competition in sales terms, no longer existed.

“Creedence took America by storm,” says Jake Rohrer, their former press officer and tour manager. “They had the broadest demographic imaginable. At Creedence concerts you’d see pre-teens, grandparents and literally every age group in between.” Some of their most enthusiastic fanmail came from US soldiers stationed in Vietnam, and inmates of federal prisons back home. “Creedence didn’t bring anything new to the culture,” Rohrer clarifies. “What they did was remind Americans from whence they’d come. Their lyrics were just so American.”

Creedence’s art was neither cosmic nor complex. Their grooves were smooth and warm, with steady, hypnotic momentum from Tom Fogerty’s rhythm guitar and a Memphis-like sense of economy. Paradoxically, their songs were haunted by anxiety and premonitions – malevolent moons and Biblical rainfall – like those from a Calvinist preacher crossed with a pessimistic meteorologist. Writing while bodies fell in a faraway war, John Fogerty composed allegories for a conflict which he emotionally opposed, but which, all the same, he could easily have joined. Some Creedence songs exchanged voodoo for parable, portraying a folkloric South of bayous, railroad stowaways (“flatcar riders”) and old-time courtesies. In Fogerty’s dual America, the bonfires of protest raged on the White House lawn (“Effigy”), but the people on the river were happy to share food with strangers (“Proud Mary”).

“Creedence made music for all the waylaid Tom Sawyers and Huck Finns,” pronounced Bruce Springsteen, inducting them into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame in 1993, “and for the world that would never be able to take them up on their most simple and eloquent invitation, which is: ‘If you get lost, come on home to Green River.’”

Fogerty’s post-Creedence depression in the ’80s had nothing to do with music. Mired in contractual disputes about royalties and publishing, he gradually lost his taste for the songs that the rest of the world loved. “I had so much anger,” he says of his long spell in the wilderness. “I was afraid that I’d start singing ‘Proud Mary’ and go off on a tirade. If one of my songs came on the car radio, I’d change the station. That’s why I couldn’t play those songs. I didn’t want that person standing in front of an audience.”

Does time heal all wounds? Intriguing comments by Fogerty last July suggested he would now be interested in a Creedence reunion. They last played together in 1983 (at a private party) and Fogerty explains that while he’s “not actively making overtures” to tour with them again, he’d be willing to listen to proposals. Uncut telephones Fogerty’s ex-colleagues to get their reactions. “Leopards don’t change their spots,” says an unimpressed Stu Cook (bass). “This is just an image-polishing exercise by John. My phone certainly hasn’t rung.”

“It might have been a nice idea 20 years ago, but it’s too late,” shrugs Doug Clifford (drums), who plays alongside Cook in Creedence Clearwater Revisited, a five-piece ‘reincarnation’ of CCR. Clifford adds: “I prefer the band I’m in now. We play Creedence better than Fogerty does.”

The three old friends and comrades, sad to say, have become used to aiming their remarks at the jugular.

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In one of his greatest songs, “Born On The Bayou”, John Fogerty sang nostalgically of the places where he’d grown up. He recalled the hound dog in the Louisiana backwoods; the Cajun Queen; the freight train “chooglin’” past on its way to New Orleans. There was just one thing. “Born On The Bayou” was complete fiction. It bore absolutely no resemblance to Fogerty’s childhood. Like all the members of Creedence, he hailed from the Northern Californian town of El Cerrito, nestled between Berkeley and Richmond, with pleasant views of San Francisco and the Golden Gate Bridge for the families who could afford a house on the hill.

John Fogerty was something of an anachronism. A serious, introverted boy, he grew up with a fondness for Uncle Remus stories and Disney’s Song Of The South, absorbing by osmosis a language of riverboats and catfish. Just like his contemporary Robbie Robertson (a Canadian), Fogerty would find his songwriter’s voice in the lexicon of the Southern states. “Let’s go all the way back,” he smiles. “Brer Rabbit. The Tar Baby. ‘Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah’. I found those things fascinating. Perhaps I identified with them more than kids who actually grew up in the South. I took note of them because they were so foreign to the place where I grew up.”

One of Fogerty’s favourite movies was Swamp Water (1941), directed by the émigré Frenchman Jean Renoir. Filmed on location in Georgia’s Okefenokee Swamp, it used real alligators and snakes and featured a spine-chilling shot of a human skull, balanced on a crucifix made of tree branches, grinning evilly above the foul water. Fogerty must have seen Swamp Water at an impressionable age. “Walter Brennan plays a guy living in the swamp,” he enthuses. “Dana Andrews is a government revenue guy trying to catch moonshiners – people making illegal booze – so he’s the enemy. But then Dana gets bitten by a snake, and Walter’s running around saying, ‘Cottonmouth bit! Cottonmouth bit!’ He nurses him back to health, but Dana goes delirious for a while and we see all these weird images. It’s a swampy, scary-looking movie and I was just fascinated by it.”

It was Bo Diddley’s “Who Do You Love?” that opened Fogerty’s eyes to “the darkness and spookiness” that could inhabit rock’n’roll. Along with a lifelong passion for echo-drenched Sun 45s, Diddley’s voodoo-steeped universe was a key influence on Fogerty’s thinking. “How can you not be inspired by a song about a guy wearing a cobra snake for a necktie?” he asks rhetorically. “And I liked anything to do with “gumbo” and “Little John the conqueroo” and “putting a spell” on somebody – those things seemed way cool.”

In 1959, Fogerty and two schoolfriends – Stu Cook, a well-to-do lawyer’s son, and Doug Clifford, a classmate of Cook’s with a drumkit – formed The Blue Velvets, an instrumental trio. All three boys were 14. John’s 18-year-old brother Tom, a singer, would sometimes borrow them as his backing group for gigs and demo recordings. In 1963, Tom joined The Blue Velvets permanently.

“The four of us spent the next few years,” Stu Cook recalls, “putting out unsuccessful records and touring around Central and Northern California, playing little towns and military bases. We had a variety of names: The Visions, Tommy Fogerty & The Blue Velvets, The Golliwogs. We put out half a dozen singles on the Scorpio label, a subsidiary of Fantasy. They got airplay in towns like San Jose, Lodi, Merced, all the little stations in Central Valley.” The idea of a musician playing out his days in one such backwater (“oh Lord, stuck in Lodi again”) would inform the Green River album’s poignant song “Lodi”. Doug Clifford remembers Lodi as “a small agricultural town with a seedy bar full of drunk farmhands and not a woman in the place”.

It had been Tom, not John, who led the charge in the band’s formative days, encouraging the younger lads to think of music as a viable career. Without his energy, they might have got nowhere. But it would be John who took over as singer, writer, leader and – ultimately – visionary as the years rolled by. A symbolic sibling shift took place, unspoken, for the benefit of all.

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The Golliwogs was a gimmicky British Invasion name foisted on them by Fantasy Records. The band hated it, mumbling into their collars when people asked them what they were called. Meanwhile, a more worrying matter presented itself. In late ’66, John Fogerty and Doug Clifford were drafted. Fogerty was placed in the reserve force. “I had a six-month active duty, plus a long period when I would do a whole weekend once a month, and every summer I’d do two weeks. And all that time I had the fear, at any moment, of being activated and sent to Vietnam.” Clifford had an even narrower escape. “I was two weeks away from being transferred to the Army and sent to Vietnam,” he confirms. “I even had the piece of paper in my hand, telling me where I’d be going.” Clifford calls it “the destiny of Creedence”. He says quietly, “Fifty-eight thousand Americans were killed out there, and hundreds of thousands were wounded, and John and I could have been among them.”

The Golliwogs re-signed with Fantasy – now run by new owner Saul Zaentz – in late ’67 and changed their name to Creedence Clearwater Revival. The three words came from different sources. Creedence was the Christian name of a friend of someone that Tom Fogerty knew. Clearwater was taken from a beer commercial. Revival (which they liked to say was the most salient part of the name) signified a rebooting of their youthful ambitions and a return to ’50s rock’n’roll values. “I didn’t like the idea of those acid-rock, 45-minute guitar solos,” says John Fogerty today. “I thought music should get to the point a little more quickly than that. I was a mainstream rock’n’roll kid, and I also had a country blues ethic. Lead Belly was a big influence. I learned about him through Pete Seeger. When you listen to those guys, you’re getting down to the root of the tree.”

Despite the constant threat of John or Doug being suddenly dispatched to Vietnam, there was a growing feeling in the Bay Area that Creedence had a promising future. Promoter Bill Graham expressed interest in managing them. “They’d play Winterland and the Fillmore West, third on the bill, and blow everyone off the stage,” declares Jake Rohrer. Fantasy were confident, too. “We sat in Saul Zaentz’s kitchen,” recalls Cook, “and he told us, ‘When you guys are successful, we’ll tear up this contract and give you a real deal.’” Cook sighs. “Well, we kept our side of the bargain. He didn’t.”

Their 1968 debut album, Creedence Clearwater Revival, was a modest seller at first. Its standout track was “Suzie Q”, an eight-minute version of a 1957 hit by Louisiana rocker Dale Hawkins. For all his scepticism about long solos, Fogerty stretched out penetratingly on guitar while Creedence’s rhythm trio laid down a sublime slow boogie. An edited version, issued by Fantasy as a single, was picked up by AM radio and reached No 11 in the charts. Nine years into their career, Creedence were finally a smash. That summer, on the day that he received his discharge papers from the Army, Fogerty wrote a song about a man shaking off the pressures of the city and finding harmony on the river. Fogerty called it “Proud Mary”.

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The first of Creedence’s true monster hits, “Proud Mary” would have topped the American charts if 1969 hadn’t been the annus mirabilis of bubblegum pop. As it was, Tommy Roe’s infernally catchy “Dizzy” kept Creedence at No 2, but “Proud Mary”, later covered by Ike & Tina Turner, Elvis Presley and a couple of hundred thousand bar bands, was already on its way to being established as a landmark in rock’n’roll. “Bad Moon Rising”, another million-seller, followed it to US No 2. As soon as the bad moon began to wane, it was promptly replaced in the charts by “Green River”, which sat (once again) at No 2 behind The Archies’ “Sugar Sugar” – another bubblegum behemoth – in September.

“We worked on a 12-week cycle,” explains Clifford. “John’s theory was that if we ever went out of the charts, our career would be over and we’d be forgotten. None of our peers thought that way. It put a lot of pressure on John. A lot of pressure on all of us.” Talking to Fogerty now, he gives every indication that the pressure stimulated him immensely. In 1969–70 he was arguably America’s most socio-politically significant songwriter since Dylan. Ask Fogerty about any song’s origins and he quickly applies his answer to the context of the times. “Effigy” (on Willy And The Poor Boys) was his response to President Nixon emerging from the White House one afternoon and sneering at the anti-war demonstrators outside. (“He said, ‘Nothing you do here today will have any effect on me. I’m going back inside to watch the football game.’”) “Fortunate Son”, angry and indignant, was an attack on the iniquities of the draft system, which saw rich men calling in favours to help their sons avoid the Vietnam bombs and bullets. “Run Through The Jungle” warns of a different kind of arms proliferation – this time at home – though its gun control message, couched in metaphor like most Fogerty songs, didn’t stop it being adopted as an anthem by US troops in the Vietnam jungles. Fogerty wrote the bulk of Creedence’s Bayou Country album, meanwhile, while a muted TV in the corner of his room showed horrified reactions to the assassination of Bobby Kennedy in June 1968.

“I would sit in my little apartment – which was very sparse – and stare at the wall. That’s how I wrote. I would stare at it all night. There was nothing hanging on the wall, because I didn’t have any money for paintings. It was just a beige wall. It was a blank slate, a blank canvas. But it was also exciting. I could go anywhere and do anything, because I was a writer. I was conjuring that place deep in my soul that was me.”

A loner who rarely socialised, Fogerty put Creedence through their paces as musicians. They rehearsed doggedly until songs’ arrangements were inch-perfect, enabling them to record whole albums in a matter of days. The emphasis was on being well-drilled, well-prepared, almost like the army that Fogerty had recently left. Creedence had a ‘no alcohol’ rule in their dressing-room. They disdained the drug culture. “The San Francisco bands called us boy scouts because we didn’t get high and we were all married with families,” laughs Clifford. Fogerty’s natural discipline (and self-confessed fear of LSD) made him a Roy Keane in an era of Balotellis. “At a time when rock’n’rollers were developing increasingly flamboyant looks,” relates Russ Gary, a recording engineer on several Creedence albums, “Fogerty, in his simple jeans and flannel shirt, came across as more of a shaggy haired workingman than a rock star. But even just standing around, he gave off an intensity that drew your eye to him.”

As they travelled around the country, Creedence were thrilled to be embraced in Louisiana and Georgia, where they’d been somewhat nervous about playing. Cook: “We were celebrating their culture and they liked us. The real disconnect was that they thought we were from the South. When they found out we were from California, they scratched their heads.” Jake Rohrer: “I remember Duck Dunn of Booker T & The MG’s telling me that when he found out the guys who’d done ‘Born On The Bayou’ were from Berkeley, he was going to go and burn all his Creedence records.” In the event, Creedence and The MG’s became friends and later toured together.

In the studio, Creedence shunned the psychedelic effects that other bands relied on, and instead used slapback echo to get the sounds of the mid-’50s Sun singles that John Fogerty adored. “I was greatly influenced by the early records of Elvis Presley and I just thought that was the way that music should sound,” he says. “I also loved Carl Perkins’ great records from that era. And also Roy Orbison’s ‘Ooby Dooby’ [which Creedence covered in 1970] and ‘Go Go Go’.” Fogerty would never outgrow the traditions and protocols of the ’50s. His aim was to make music that sounded great coming out of a radio, not music that hippies could trip out to on headphones. “This statement holds true for everybodyin Creedence: simple is better, less is more,” Fogerty says. “But even though it’s simple rock’n’roll, everybody will have a certain role within the framework. Tom’s guitar playing may just sound like a guy in a garage strumming away, but it’s awfully specific.” Cook adds: “People called it swamp-rock. We never called it that. We just called it rock’n’roll.”

Green River is Fogerty’s favourite Creedence album. The second of the three albums they released during 1969 (an amazing statistic which was matched by Fairport Convention in Britain), Green River was, says Fogerty, “something that I’d been carrying all of my life. Musically, Green River was everything that I was about. I really enjoyed making it. I was really focused with the arrangements, the rehearsals, the necessities for each song.

“The inspiration for ‘Bad Moon Rising’ was an old movie called The Devil And Daniel Webster. It’s an old tale about the Devil seducing some poor guy who’s wishing for a better life. In steps the Devil: ‘I can promise you untold success and wealth.’ ‘You can?’ ‘Yes. All you have to do is give me your soul.’ The movie made a big impression on me – especially a scene where there’s a hurricane during the night and the guy is cowering in his barn. The next morning he opens the door and it’s a beautiful sunny day. He looks over and sees his neighbour’s field trounced to the ground by the hailstorm, but his own crops are standing straight up. That was a very powerful image to me. That was my inspiration for ‘Bad Moon Rising’. I saw the movie again recently and the scene was so subtle, and so hard to hear, that it’s a wonder I got any inspiration from it. I guess in the old days movies were more subtle.”

Creedence made a rare foray outside America in 1970, flying to Europe and headlining the Royal Albert Hall. Jake Rohrer remembers arriving in West Germany “and finding we were bigger than The Beatles”. Cosmo’s Factory, released in July, was their fifth album in two years. Its title was a reference to the band’s Berkeley office space (The Factory) and also to their gregarious drummer Clifford (whose longtime nickname was ‘Cosmo’). The album’s front cover showed the four of them caught by a camera in an off-duty moment, a proudly uncool quartet who looked more like lumberjacks than rock stars. The album was enormous and the hit singles kept coming. Cosmo’s Factory had six of them. While San Francisco longhairs across the bridge scoffed at their commercialism, Creedence henceforth made a point of releasing double A-sides. And invariably both songs would have an uncanny knack of cutting through the weasel words and speaking directly to all sections of the population.

Clifford: “‘Fortunate Son’ and ‘Who’ll Stop The Rain’ – which was about Nixon – were very powerful messages. Some of the other bands on the political left were writing stuff like ‘fuck the pigs’, but who’s going to listen to something like that except the hardcore freaks? To be able to spread a message to a divided country, so that both sides heard it – and to do it poetically and descriptively – that’s where the power of John’s songs lay. We reached the masses with strong messages and feelgood music, and that really was our greatest achievement.”

In the autumn of 1970, Creedence were on top of the world. Nobody could have foreseen what would happen next. Having captured America’s hearts and minds, the four men somehow found a way to implode – with toxic effects on long-held friendships and a relationship between two brothers. It was to be the most acrimonious and protracted divorce that rock’n’roll has ever known.

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It began, John Fogerty recalls, with a band meeting. That in itself was odd. Creedence didn’t have band meetings. Creedence was a benevolent dictatorship in which the will of the rhythm section yielded to the decree of the flannel-shirted leader. Ever since “Proud Mary”, the system had worked with spectacular results. Fogerty was therefore irritated and nonplussed, towards the end of 1970, to be confronted with the first mentions of an unwelcome concept called democracy. “Suddenly everybody wanted to be a general,” he says ironically.

Part of the problem was that Creedence, even at their height of their fame, were a remarkably small operation. They travelled with two or three roadies, plus Rohrer, and that was it. They had no manager, no booking agent, no PR firm, no entourage. They were the equivalent of a small family firm that accidentally creates a brand name as marketable as Coca-Cola. “John was our manager,” Clifford groans. “Bad idea. He had no concept of the business side. Zero. None. Nada.” Stu Cook, who has a business degree from San Jose State University, gives a withering assessment of Fogerty’s managerial shortcomings. “He condemned us to a career that effectively never became professional. Doug and I call it El Cerrito Syndrome. We were always limited by John’s vision of how a band is supposed to be run. We were tied – and we’re still tied to this day – to the worst contract signed by any band in history. We said to John, ‘Look, you didn’t get us a new contract with Fantasy like you were supposed to do, like you said you’d do. You’re not qualified to be the manager. We’re the number one band in the world and we deserve a real manager.’ So what does John do, in an act of what I can only describe as brutal cynicism? He brings us Allen Klein.”

Klein was sent packing after one meeting and Fogerty resumed management of Creedence. A contract renegotiation was put on the table, but it would drag on for a year, complicated by Saul Zaentz’s offer of a percentage in Fantasy as a sweetener. Cook describes the percentage as “huge”. Clifford calculates it as “monumental”. Fogerty disputes their accounts, arguing that the percentage was minuscule and that only a pair of idiots would think otherwise. Cook counters that Fogerty was a novice at reading contracts and should have asked a lawyer to help him understand it. Fogerty refused to sign the contract. Cook and Clifford claim that his intransigence cost them tens of millions of dollars.

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If the restrictive clauses and meagre royalties of Creedence’s 1967 contract have denied Cook and Clifford the earnings they feel entitled to – well, that could be termed a ‘professional’ grievance. But so much of Creedence’s disintegration is personal. Fogerty’s stranglehold over their affairs was challenged, crucially, by his brother Tom, who had grown resentful of John’s refusal to allow him a more prominent role. “Tom had put up with a lot of shit from John,” remarks Clifford, Tom’s closest ally in the group. “I think Tom was expecting John to say, ‘OK, now we’ve achieved our goals, why don’t you start singing a few of the songs?’ Tom had a great voice, kinda like Ritchie Valens. Tom would have done a damn good job on ‘La Bamba’. But John didn’t want him to sing it, in case we had a hit with it. He didn’t want Tom to succeed.” John insists he simply didn’t want to mess with a successful formula.

Creedence’s sixth album, Pendulum, had a fuller-sounding production than its predecessors, and had been a long time in the works while John overdubbed keyboards and saxophones. Engineer Russ Gary remembers that Cook, Clifford and Tom Fogerty were only in the studio for “two or three days at the most”. Pendulum was launched to the media with an expensive PR event to which 200 journalists were invited – a very un-Creedence-like evening which John maintains he attended under protest. The party had been Tom’s idea.

Tom, nevertheless, left Creedence in early 1971 to begin a solo career. The others considered asking Duck Dunn to join, before deciding to continue as a trio. The bombshell lay just around the corner. Forty years later, the accusations are so vehement on both sides that it’s impossible to know who to believe. Fogerty complains that Cook and Clifford concocted a false story about him giving them a bizarre ultimatum in a limousine after a concert in San Diego. Cook and Clifford are adamant that the ultimatum (and the limo) were real. Fogerty says that Cook and Clifford demanded to write and sing a third of the next album each, or they’d leave. Cook and Clifford reject this completely, alleging that Fogerty threatened to leave if they didn’t write and sing a third of the next album each. It seems a shocking allegation for them to make, because it implies that Fogerty would intentionally sabotage an album – not to mention tarnish Creedence’s legacy – in order to make his two bandmates look inadequate.

“John wanted out,” says Clifford with contempt, “but first he wanted to punish us for supporting Tom. He was cutting his nose off to spite his face. That’s the way John Fogerty does things. Stu and I wanted some input, but the last thing we wanted to do was sing. But, anyway, we wrote and sang three songs, and of course the album was doomed to fail. John told the press that we’d put a gun to his head, but it was quite the opposite. It was a cruel lie.” Mardi Gras (1971), one of the most scathingly reviewed albums ever, was the last record Creedence would ever make.

“I had a pretty good idea that the album would be dreadful,” says Fogerty, who blames Cook and Clifford for forcing their songs on him. “I’d known these guys since high school and I figured I had a good handle on their abilities. The phrase I kept repeating to myself was, ‘I guess they deserve a shot.’ But I was dreading the results. Jon Landau in Rolling Stone called it the worst album he’d ever heard. And I agreed. The other guys didn’t. They thought the album was really cool.” He laughs. “They changed their tune later.”

Creedence split in 1972. Fogerty released The Blue Ridge Rangers in 1973, a country-bluegrass album on which he played all the instruments himself. In the years following Creedence’s demise, the real poison seeped in. Cook and Clifford became convinced that Fogerty’s mismanagement of the band’s affairs had got them into trouble with the IRS. In the meantime, the bandmembers had lost millions in an offshore banking scheme that turned out to be a swindle. “The full picture slowly unfolded,” says Cook, “that not only were we broke but we were also in trouble with the authorities. We found out more and more of what had actually gone on in John’s negotiations with Fantasy. More hard feelings developed. We got more and more isolated and estranged from John over the years.”

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Fogerty’s solo career faltered in the mid-’70s. He stopped recording, angered by a clause in his Fantasy contract that seemed to demand greater and greater amounts of product as each year passed. Jake Rohrer, who worked for Fogerty until 1977, questions his interpretation of the wording. “I disagree with John’s comment that the contract was a prison sentence. I personally thought that John wasted two decades of his life waging a war with Saul Zaentz.” Either way, it became dangerous to mention Zaentz’s name in Fogerty’s presence during the ’80s. His 1985 comeback album for Warner Bros, Centerfield, railed at Zaentz on not one but two tracks (“Mr. Greed”, “Zanz Kant Danz”), to the disbelief of his former colleagues. “He even told Warners, ‘I’ll indemnify you against lawsuits’,” says Doug Clifford. “He was still carrying all this crap from 15 years ago. He’s free, he’s won, he’s on the biggest label in the world, but he can’t get his foot out of the bucket of shit. So, of course, he gets sued.”

In spite of their animosities, Creedence played together twice during that decade. Both were private occasions. First came Tom Fogerty’s wedding in 1980. Then John Fogerty showed up at a 1983 high-school reunion in El Cerrito and Creedence performed as The Blue Velvets, shaking a tail feather the way they’d done in 1959. But the problems between the Fogerty brothers remained unresolved. At some point in the ’80s, Tom, who had undergone several operations on his back since 1974, caught AIDS from an unscreened blood transfusion. By 1989, his illness was a matter of desperate concern. Tom had one last request. He wanted Creedence to play as a four-piece one more time, if only in his living room, before his inevitable return to hospital. John declined the request. “Finally,” recalls Stu Cook, “when Tom couldn’t even lift his arm properly because he was so weak, John said, ‘OK, I’ll play with you.’ Just a little bit late there, John.” Admitting that he did not make his peace with Tom (who died in 1990), John reveals why he felt unable to grant him his wish. Some of the last words Tom ever uttered to John while he lay in an Arizona hospital were: “Saul Zaentz is my best friend.” They were the six words that John Fogerty could never forgive.

Creedence were inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame in 1993. For Jake Rohrer, it was “the saddest chapter of their career”. It was Fogerty at his most ruthless: he’d learned Cook and Clifford had sold their Creedence veto rights to Zaentz for five-figure sums, and he was not happy about it. Cook and Clifford arrived at the Hollywood centre with their families, expecting to play Creedence hits with Fogerty that night. They were informed by the stage manager that Fogerty would be performing with an all-star band (including Bruce Springsteen and Robbie Robertson) instead. “It was humiliating,” says Cook. “It was like John thought he was getting inducted, instead of Creedence. He thought he could exclude us.” Booing was heard when Fogerty took the stage. “It was a terrible night,” concludes Rohrer, “and all it did was pour kerosene on the flames.”

In Hank Bordowitz’s well-researched Creedence biography, Bad Moon Rising (1998), there are 31 index entries for ‘Fogerty, John, bitterness and rage’. Fogerty claims to lack venom these days (“I’m no longer a prisoner of my own device, to quote a Don Henley line,” he assures us), but it’s noticeable that, during a follow-up interview, he repeatedly describes a former business associate as a cheat, a liar and the second worst man in history after Saddam Hussein.

Clifford, who regards Fogerty’s career arc as “kind of Shakespearean” attempts to put a positive slant on Creedence’s ongoing hostilities. “The good news is, the music is what’s important,” Clifford says. “Look, we all made mistakes. It’s unfortunate, but the legacy of the music is still there, intact.” The bayou will surely freeze over, however, before Creedence Clearwater Revival share a stage again.

Ian McCulloch: “I didn’t want Echo And The Bunnymen to be ‘the second best band in the world’…”

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Echo And The Bunnymen take us through the making of their best-known albums in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2014 and out now. Discussing the group’s early days creating their debut album, 1980’s Crocodiles, frontman Ian McCulloch is in typically confident form. “It felt like we wer...

Echo And The Bunnymen take us through the making of their best-known albums in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2014 and out now.

Discussing the group’s early days creating their debut album, 1980’s Crocodiles, frontman Ian McCulloch is in typically confident form.

“It felt like we were the best band in the world,” he says. “It was my dream, and I didn’t want to be in ‘the second best band in the world’…

“I never doubted us. I could see it was special. I felt destined to make great records.”

The new Uncut, dated August 2014, is out now.

Watch The Rolling Stones’ 14 On Fire tour video

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The Rolling Stones have released a video celebrating the recent completion of the European leg of their 14 On Fire tour. Set to "Out Of Control" from their 1997 album Bridges To Babylon, the On Fire tour video features the band reflecting on the European leg of the tour, which came to an end with a...

The Rolling Stones have released a video celebrating the recent completion of the European leg of their 14 On Fire tour.

Set to “Out Of Control” from their 1997 album Bridges To Babylon, the On Fire tour video features the band reflecting on the European leg of the tour, which came to an end with a two hour set at the Roskilde Festival in Denmark this month (July 6), interspersed with behind-the-scenes recordings and videos of the band performing on stage to huge crowds.

“They give you so much energy, and they’re so vibrant and so alive, that I feel that,” says Mick Jagger in the video, discussing the effect the crowd have on the band when they perform. “I’m just interchanging energy with them.”

Mick Jagger and Charlie Watts recently appeared in a sketch as part of Monty Python’s press conference ahead of their Monty Python Live (Mostly) shows.

The rescheduled Australian and New Zealand leg of the tour is due to kick off on October 25 in Adelaide, Australia.

Patti Smith to perform new work inspired by Velvet Underground vocalist Nico

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Patti Smith has joined forces with international art group Soundwalk Collective (Stephan Crasneanscki, Simone Merli and Kamran Sadeghi) to perform the poetry of Nico. The piece, called Killer Road, is an immersive aural journey based on the day the Velvet Underground vocalist died in Ibiza in 1988....

Patti Smith has joined forces with international art group Soundwalk Collective (Stephan Crasneanscki, Simone Merli and Kamran Sadeghi) to perform the poetry of Nico.

The piece, called Killer Road, is an immersive aural journey based on the day the Velvet Underground vocalist died in Ibiza in 1988.

The performance pairs a multi-instrumental soundscape, also featuring Nico’s signature harmonium sound, with Patti Smith reciting the last unpublished poems by the German chanteuse.

The event will take place at London’s Barbican Hall on Wednesday, October 22.

Tickets are priced between £17.50 – £25.

The go on sale at 10am on Thursday, July 17 to Barbican members and at 10am on Friday, July 18 to the general public.

You can find more information here.

Scott Walker and Sunn O))) reveal details of collaborative album, Soused

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Scott Walker and Sunn O))) have announced details of their collaborative album, Soused. The album, which is 50 minutes long, will be released by 4AD on September 22. It was recorded in London in early 2014 and produced by Walker and Peter Walsh with the assistance of musical director Mark Warman. ...

Scott Walker and Sunn O))) have announced details of their collaborative album, Soused.

The album, which is 50 minutes long, will be released by 4AD on September 22.

It was recorded in London in early 2014 and produced by Walker and Peter Walsh with the assistance of musical director Mark Warman.

A website was recently launched to accompany the album.

The tracklisting for Soused is:

Brando

Herod 2014

Bull

Fetish

Lullaby

The Felice Brothers – Favourite Waitress

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The Felice Brothers refine their sound... The Felice Brothers’ previous proper album, 2011’s Celebration, Florida was by far their least characteristic to date – and, for that reason, arguably their most admirable. Having earned a reputation for robust, stirring, if somewhat orthodox Americana, The Felice Brothers took an abrupt left turn, incorporating electronic and hip-hop influences into a semi-conceptual conceit about a planned community built by the Disney Corporation. As startling diversions went, it wasn’t quite comparable to Radiohead unveiling an exciting new banjo-led direction, but it wasn’t far off. The Brothers began a return to their roots with 2012’s God Bless You Amigo – a lo-fi, home-recorded collection of standards and unrecorded Felice Brothers songs, sold from their website on a pay-what-you-like basis. It seems to have resuscitated the Felices’ enthusiasm for what they started out doing, jamming in the family home in upstate in New York, busking on the New York City subway. Favourite Waitress aims for a certain pastoral simplicity. Among the very first sounds it yields are the yaps of a dog – gambolling, it seems safe to assume, in view of a porchful of strumming musicians clad substantially in dungarees and beards. The opening couplet of the opening track, the Uncle Tupelo-ish trundle “Bird On Broken Wing”, rhymes “street” with “meet”. The Felices haven’t left behind absolutely everything they discovered in Celebration, Florida – “Saturday Night”, by far the album’s most successful ballad, suggests Tom Waits with his plinking pub piano replaced by a Roland, and a wobbly synthesizer underpins the slow verses of “Katie Cruel” before being spectacularly obliterated by the clattering, punky guitars of the album’s best chorus. In general, however, throughout these thirteen tracks, unconquered sonic frontiers are permitted to remain unconquered. It’s to The Felice Brothers’ credit that Favourite Waitress never quite becomes oppressively earnest, though it’s a near thing at a couple of points. As a general rule, the slower the tempo, the greater the temptation to fling an empty towards the chicken wire. Favourite Waitress assuredly has its moments, but it also has its hours – the ballads are too frequent and, in the main, way too much like hard work. “Meadow Of A Dream” has a certain grandeur, but it’s difficult to listen to the words, riddled as they are with references to factory whistles, boxcars, bottles, Butch and Sundance, without checking one’s way through an imaginary Americana bingo card. “Constituents” is pretty, but impossible to listen to without anticipating, at the end of every verse, the “1-2-3-4” that might launch it higher and faster. “Alien”, again, almost works, but a heavy-handed arrangement gives it more the feel of a lecture than a hymn. Mostly and fortunately, the Felices manage to avoid the curatorial piety which is often an unfortunate consequence of buying into a heritage, and realise that you’re allowed have fun with this stuff. The playful “Cherry Licorice” is a gleeful homage to John Prine at his daftest – think “Grandpa Was Carpenter”, “Spanish Pipedream” – right down to the cheerfully forced rhymes (“licorice”/“ridicklish”). “Lion”, lurching around a seasick accordion riff, summons something of the giddy dementia of DeVotchKa via the more anthemic tendencies of The Decemberists. “Woman Next Door” is a wondrous cowpunk romp, its churning guitars and daffy lyrics (“I came to a field of posies/I asked them how they grow/Some said ‘By the sunshine’/Some said ‘I don’t know’”) suggesting an unwritten history in which Donovan has recruited Drive-By Truckers as his backing group. Favourite Waitress is, then, a kind of homecoming for The Felice Brothers after their exploratory digression, and by and large it’s good to have them back. It would be a shame, however, if from hereon they entirely forgot that there’s a big world out there. Andrew Mueller Q&A JAMES FELICE Why the decision to record in Omaha? The studio is owned by friends of ours [Bright Eyes’ Coner Oberst and Mike Mogis]. And going there from here [upstate New York] gave us an opportunity to play the songs on the way. It took four days to drive there, so we played some places as we went. We took our producer [Jeremy Backofen] with us, and he listened to us play the songs, and gave us notes after the shows. Did the songs change at all as you went? Honestly, not much. It was good to have Jeremy in the audience, for sure, but it was mostly to get the performances right. The songs were 90% of the way there before we left, but it’s always good to hone. It was like a big camping trip. Was the idea to reconnect with your live sound? Yes. The idea was that if we liked how they sounded live, we’d like ’em on the record, and then we wouldn’t have to adjust anything when we toured. The songs on ‘Celebration, Florida’ we had to modify a lot to get them into the live show. How do you feel now about the different tack you took on “Celebration, Florida”? We’re extremely proud of that album. I think we had to make that reord, to prove we could do something different. It was a fun departure, and an interesting way to look at music – to escape the trappings of Americana or folk and stretch our arms a little bit. Was recording this one a very different experience? Totally. We were in Omaha for a week. ‘Celebration’ was a slog – months, on and off, with lots of experimentation. We knew what we were doing this time. INTERVIEW: ANDREW MUELLER

The Felice Brothers refine their sound…

The Felice Brothers’ previous proper album, 2011’s Celebration, Florida was by far their least characteristic to date – and, for that reason, arguably their most admirable. Having earned a reputation for robust, stirring, if somewhat orthodox Americana, The Felice Brothers took an abrupt left turn, incorporating electronic and hip-hop influences into a semi-conceptual conceit about a planned community built by the Disney Corporation. As startling diversions went, it wasn’t quite comparable to Radiohead unveiling an exciting new banjo-led direction, but it wasn’t far off.

The Brothers began a return to their roots with 2012’s God Bless You Amigo – a lo-fi, home-recorded collection of standards and unrecorded Felice Brothers songs, sold from their website on a pay-what-you-like basis. It seems to have resuscitated the Felices’ enthusiasm for what they started out doing, jamming in the family home in upstate in New York, busking on the New York City subway. Favourite Waitress aims for a certain pastoral simplicity. Among the very first sounds it yields are the yaps of a dog – gambolling, it seems safe to assume, in view of a porchful of strumming musicians clad substantially in dungarees and beards. The opening couplet of the opening track, the Uncle Tupelo-ish trundle “Bird On Broken Wing”, rhymes “street” with “meet”.

The Felices haven’t left behind absolutely everything they discovered in Celebration, Florida – “Saturday Night”, by far the album’s most successful ballad, suggests Tom Waits with his plinking pub piano replaced by a Roland, and a wobbly synthesizer underpins the slow verses of “Katie Cruel” before being spectacularly obliterated by the clattering, punky guitars of the album’s best chorus. In general, however, throughout these thirteen tracks, unconquered sonic frontiers are permitted to remain unconquered.

It’s to The Felice Brothers’ credit that Favourite Waitress never quite becomes oppressively earnest, though it’s a near thing at a couple of points. As a general rule, the slower the tempo, the greater the temptation to fling an empty towards the chicken wire. Favourite Waitress assuredly has its moments, but it also has its hours – the ballads are too frequent and, in the main, way too much like hard work. “Meadow Of A Dream” has a certain grandeur, but it’s difficult to listen to the words, riddled as they are with references to factory whistles, boxcars, bottles, Butch and Sundance, without checking one’s way through an imaginary Americana bingo card. “Constituents” is pretty, but impossible to listen to without anticipating, at the end of every verse, the “1-2-3-4” that might launch it higher and faster. “Alien”, again, almost works, but a heavy-handed arrangement gives it more the feel of a lecture than a hymn.

Mostly and fortunately, the Felices manage to avoid the curatorial piety which is often an unfortunate consequence of buying into a heritage, and realise that you’re allowed have fun with this stuff. The playful “Cherry Licorice” is a gleeful homage to John Prine at his daftest – think “Grandpa Was Carpenter”, “Spanish Pipedream” – right down to the cheerfully forced rhymes (“licorice”/“ridicklish”). “Lion”, lurching around a seasick accordion riff, summons something of the giddy dementia of DeVotchKa via the more anthemic tendencies of The Decemberists. “Woman Next Door” is a wondrous cowpunk romp, its churning guitars and daffy lyrics (“I came to a field of posies/I asked them how they grow/Some said ‘By the sunshine’/Some said ‘I don’t know’”) suggesting an unwritten history in which Donovan has recruited Drive-By Truckers as his backing group.

Favourite Waitress is, then, a kind of homecoming for The Felice Brothers after their exploratory digression, and by and large it’s good to have them back. It would be a shame, however, if from hereon they entirely forgot that there’s a big world out there.

Andrew Mueller

Q&A

JAMES FELICE

Why the decision to record in Omaha?

The studio is owned by friends of ours [Bright Eyes’ Coner Oberst and Mike Mogis]. And going there from here [upstate New York] gave us an opportunity to play the songs on the way. It took four days to drive there, so we played some places as we went. We took our producer [Jeremy Backofen] with us, and he listened to us play the songs, and gave us notes after the shows.

Did the songs change at all as you went?

Honestly, not much. It was good to have Jeremy in the audience, for sure, but it was mostly to get the performances right. The songs were 90% of the way there before we left, but it’s always good to hone. It was like a big camping trip.

Was the idea to reconnect with your live sound?

Yes. The idea was that if we liked how they sounded live, we’d like ’em on the record, and then we wouldn’t have to adjust anything when we toured. The songs on ‘Celebration, Florida’ we had to modify a lot to get them into the live show.

How do you feel now about the different tack you took on “Celebration, Florida”?

We’re extremely proud of that album. I think we had to make that reord, to prove we could do something different. It was a fun departure, and an interesting way to look at music – to escape the trappings of Americana or folk and stretch our arms a little bit.

Was recording this one a very different experience?

Totally. We were in Omaha for a week. ‘Celebration’ was a slog – months, on and off, with lots of experimentation. We knew what we were doing this time.

INTERVIEW: ANDREW MUELLER

Monty Python Live (Mostly), O2 Arena, London, July 15, 2014

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When Mick Jagger recently appeared in a promotion sketch, dryly describing these Monty Python reunion shows as "a bunch of wrinkly old men trying to relive their youth", it demonstrated that the Pythons still have the rock star heft of their ‘70s pomp. You might even wonder whether Jagger himself experienced a twinge of jealousy when the Pythons sold out their 10 date run at London’s O2 Arena in approximately the same length of time as it takes to recite "The Parrot Sketch"; the longest stint the Stones have had here is two nights. Certainly, there’s a sense that these Python shows are akin to a legendary rock band getting together for - possibly - one last hurrah, to play their greatest hits to an audience of whooping fans. But, equally, as you watch the arena fill up with men wearing knotted handkerchiefs on their heads or Australian cork hats, the vibe feels a little like a geek convention. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jcsVz6jo5MM Inevitably, the speed with which these shows sold out - 200,000 tickets in all - demonstrates there’s still considerable love for all things Python out there. Though arguably it might prompt you to consider the power the Pythons continue to exert, 30 years on from their last substantial work. Certainly, bearing in mind the comedians who usually enjoy extended runs at the O2 – the likes of Michael McIntyre, John Bishop, Micky Flanagan, Russell Howard - you could be hard pressed to identify a particular legacy Python has left embedded in British comedy. The loopy and iconoclastic spirit of experimentation they pioneered in the late Sixties has been replaced by the tepid observational comedy of McIntyre, or the kind of offence model favoured by Frankie Boyle. Television’s recent big hits have been Miranda, Mrs Brown’s Boys and Benidorm - old-fashioned, regressive shows. Stewart Lee's Comedy Vehicle appears to be a only voice of progressive comedy on air right now. Even Radio 4 - traditionally, the last bastion of that peculiarly Pythonesque brand of post-graduate, Fringe-dwelling humour - has allowed its comedy output to devolve into identikit panel shows, limp sketch shows and trad sitcoms. It says much about the current yield that the best comedy programmes on the station - Just A Minute and I’m Sorry I Haven’t A Clue - date from the same era as Python. Has anti-establishment humour that the Pythons championed has run its course? Conceivably, then, these reunion shows serve to remind us of a different, arguably richer time for comedy, while allowing each of the key participants to trouser a large pile of cash in the process (one hopes, too, the family of the late Graham Chapman will also enjoy the benefits of these shows). Anyone hoping the Pythons might revert to their original subversive tendencies and bypass entirely their greatest hits in favour of deep catalogue cuts and obscure sketches is bound to be disappointed. This is definitely a case of: and now for something reassuringly familiar. Much as a Stones show is going to draw heavily from the impressive arsenal of hits at the band’s disposal, so this Python reunion is about the classics. As with the Stones, Python may have been daring and risqué in their prime; but no one’s here to see them trot out a bunch of new material. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yBcYuwlWFRM Reassuringly, the Pythons do not particularly bother to bring along any new sketches to the party, nor update any of the jokes. There are a couple of passing references to Michael Palin’s career as a travel broadcaster, alongside telling mentions of John Cleese’s latest divorce and the High Court case over royalty rights to the Spamalot musical which reportedly triggered this reunion. Other than that, these sketches are untouched. Timothy White’s is referenced, a pound note changes hands, canned pre-cooked pork products are in abundance. Carol Cleveland still only has three lines of dialogue. There are some concessions, however. Terry Gilliam makes full use of the O2 screens for some new animation – an opening image of Graham Chapman’s head emerging from behind Earth, to Strauss’ Also Sprach Zarathsutra is rapturously received – while classic sketches, many of them featuring Chapman, are interspaced with the live sketches. There are other, arguably less welcome interruptions. There are too many dance routines ‘inspired’ by Python sketches. They might be a necessary exigency to allow for costume changes, but rather than evoking, say, the Sixties’ revue show model instead they bring to mind the kind of witless sequences that play out behind auditioning contestants on The X Factor. In fact, the show draws heavily on the troupe’s musical numbers. The songs were always a slightly weird anomaly in the Python canon; I always thought there were brought in to pad out the later albums when no one was really making much effort to write proper sketches. Tellingly, perhaps, half the material on the 1980 Contractual Obligation Album are songs. Eric Idle – a man with some heavy musical connections himself – was the troupe’s key songwriter. Incidentally, he is also this show’s director and gives himself plenty of opportunity to sing here: he has two big song numbers in the first 30 minutes. It’s a shame, I think, as Idle’s greatest strengths during the Python’s TV run were his word-play sketches - the man who speaks in anagrams, "Nudge-Nudge", "The Travel Agent Sketch". Incidentally, "The Travel Agent Sketch", with its marvellous climactic rant, is one of the main omissions from the show. Of course, while each Python brought their own specific qualities to the table. John Cleese and Graham Chapman’s material was often cruel, while Michael Palin and Terry Jones’ material tended towards absurdities like the Philosopher’s Football Match. They all excelled as elderly pepperpots, of course (for the record, Gilliam is the first one in a dress tonight), and there’s a genuine delight in watching a dragged up Jones and Cleese, shrieking at each other in those ridiculous voices during "The Death Of Mary, Queen Of Scots Sketch". Cleese seems least match fit. Unlike Palin and Idle, who seem astonishingly sprightly, he appears to struggle slightly with delivery while his voice sounds hoarse. There are flashes, though: his remorseless grinding down of Palin during "The Argument Sketch" or the way he snaps maniacally at Jones: “It’s a fucking albatross, isn’t it?” The deathless climax to "The Parrot Sketch" is noticeably muted. Incidentally, they exit with "The Parrot Sketch" which morphs magically into "The Cheese Shop" (no bouzouki player, sadly) and an encore of “Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life” – their “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction”. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kdlxqgRWCCM The Pythons are seasoned live performers, of course. In their pre-Python days, they were members of either the Footlights (Chapman, Cleese, Idle) or the Oxford Revue (Jones, Palin); their earliest forays on screen (The Frost Report, At Last! The 1948 Show, Do Not Adjust Your Set) all took place in the days where television was effectively a live medium. As such, they embraced the idea of taking Python out on stage – there’s three live albums to show for it – so what we see here at the O2 is very much in keeping with established traditions. Presumably, there’ll be a DVD and live album to document this run of shows, too. Whether or not it’s definitely the end – after the run ends, the Pythons claim, they will run down the curtain and join the bleedin’ choir invisible – remains to be seen. But the sight of grown men in dinner suits singing a song about the llama in dodgy Spanish accents remains an unalloyed pleasure. MONTY PYTHON LIVE (MOSTLY) WILL BE BROADCAST LIVE IN CINEMAS ROUND THE WORLD ON JULY 20

When Mick Jagger recently appeared in a promotion sketch, dryly describing these Monty Python reunion shows as “a bunch of wrinkly old men trying to relive their youth”, it demonstrated that the Pythons still have the rock star heft of their ‘70s pomp.

You might even wonder whether Jagger himself experienced a twinge of jealousy when the Pythons sold out their 10 date run at London’s O2 Arena in approximately the same length of time as it takes to recite “The Parrot Sketch”; the longest stint the Stones have had here is two nights. Certainly, there’s a sense that these Python shows are akin to a legendary rock band getting together for – possibly – one last hurrah, to play their greatest hits to an audience of whooping fans. But, equally, as you watch the arena fill up with men wearing knotted handkerchiefs on their heads or Australian cork hats, the vibe feels a little like a geek convention.

Inevitably, the speed with which these shows sold out – 200,000 tickets in all – demonstrates there’s still considerable love for all things Python out there. Though arguably it might prompt you to consider the power the Pythons continue to exert, 30 years on from their last substantial work. Certainly, bearing in mind the comedians who usually enjoy extended runs at the O2 – the likes of Michael McIntyre, John Bishop, Micky Flanagan, Russell Howard – you could be hard pressed to identify a particular legacy Python has left embedded in British comedy. The loopy and iconoclastic spirit of experimentation they pioneered in the late Sixties has been replaced by the tepid observational comedy of McIntyre, or the kind of offence model favoured by Frankie Boyle. Television’s recent big hits have been Miranda, Mrs Brown’s Boys and Benidorm – old-fashioned, regressive shows. Stewart Lee’s Comedy Vehicle appears to be a only voice of progressive comedy on air right now. Even Radio 4 – traditionally, the last bastion of that peculiarly Pythonesque brand of post-graduate, Fringe-dwelling humour – has allowed its comedy output to devolve into identikit panel shows, limp sketch shows and trad sitcoms. It says much about the current yield that the best comedy programmes on the station – Just A Minute and I’m Sorry I Haven’t A Clue – date from the same era as Python. Has anti-establishment humour that the Pythons championed has run its course?

Conceivably, then, these reunion shows serve to remind us of a different, arguably richer time for comedy, while allowing each of the key participants to trouser a large pile of cash in the process (one hopes, too, the family of the late Graham Chapman will also enjoy the benefits of these shows). Anyone hoping the Pythons might revert to their original subversive tendencies and bypass entirely their greatest hits in favour of deep catalogue cuts and obscure sketches is bound to be disappointed. This is definitely a case of: and now for something reassuringly familiar. Much as a Stones show is going to draw heavily from the impressive arsenal of hits at the band’s disposal, so this Python reunion is about the classics. As with the Stones, Python may have been daring and risqué in their prime; but no one’s here to see them trot out a bunch of new material.

Reassuringly, the Pythons do not particularly bother to bring along any new sketches to the party, nor update any of the jokes. There are a couple of passing references to Michael Palin’s career as a travel broadcaster, alongside telling mentions of John Cleese’s latest divorce and the High Court case over royalty rights to the Spamalot musical which reportedly triggered this reunion. Other than that, these sketches are untouched. Timothy White’s is referenced, a pound note changes hands, canned pre-cooked pork products are in abundance. Carol Cleveland still only has three lines of dialogue. There are some concessions, however. Terry Gilliam makes full use of the O2 screens for some new animation – an opening image of Graham Chapman’s head emerging from behind Earth, to Strauss’ Also Sprach Zarathsutra is rapturously received – while classic sketches, many of them featuring Chapman, are interspaced with the live sketches. There are other, arguably less welcome interruptions. There are too many dance routines ‘inspired’ by Python sketches. They might be a necessary exigency to allow for costume changes, but rather than evoking, say, the Sixties’ revue show model instead they bring to mind the kind of witless sequences that play out behind auditioning contestants on The X Factor.

In fact, the show draws heavily on the troupe’s musical numbers. The songs were always a slightly weird anomaly in the Python canon; I always thought there were brought in to pad out the later albums when no one was really making much effort to write proper sketches. Tellingly, perhaps, half the material on the 1980 Contractual Obligation Album are songs. Eric Idle – a man with some heavy musical connections himself – was the troupe’s key songwriter. Incidentally, he is also this show’s director and gives himself plenty of opportunity to sing here: he has two big song numbers in the first 30 minutes. It’s a shame, I think, as Idle’s greatest strengths during the Python’s TV run were his word-play sketches – the man who speaks in anagrams, “Nudge-Nudge”, “The Travel Agent Sketch”. Incidentally, “The Travel Agent Sketch”, with its marvellous climactic rant, is one of the main omissions from the show. Of course, while each Python brought their own specific qualities to the table. John Cleese and Graham Chapman’s material was often cruel, while Michael Palin and Terry Jones’ material tended towards absurdities like the Philosopher’s Football Match. They all excelled as elderly pepperpots, of course (for the record, Gilliam is the first one in a dress tonight), and there’s a genuine delight in watching a dragged up Jones and Cleese, shrieking at each other in those ridiculous voices during “The Death Of Mary, Queen Of Scots Sketch”.

Cleese seems least match fit. Unlike Palin and Idle, who seem astonishingly sprightly, he appears to struggle slightly with delivery while his voice sounds hoarse. There are flashes, though: his remorseless grinding down of Palin during “The Argument Sketch” or the way he snaps maniacally at Jones: “It’s a fucking albatross, isn’t it?” The deathless climax to “The Parrot Sketch” is noticeably muted. Incidentally, they exit with “The Parrot Sketch” which morphs magically into “The Cheese Shop” (no bouzouki player, sadly) and an encore of “Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life” – their “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction”.

The Pythons are seasoned live performers, of course. In their pre-Python days, they were members of either the Footlights (Chapman, Cleese, Idle) or the Oxford Revue (Jones, Palin); their earliest forays on screen (The Frost Report, At Last! The 1948 Show, Do Not Adjust Your Set) all took place in the days where television was effectively a live medium. As such, they embraced the idea of taking Python out on stage – there’s three live albums to show for it – so what we see here at the O2 is very much in keeping with established traditions. Presumably, there’ll be a DVD and live album to document this run of shows, too. Whether or not it’s definitely the end – after the run ends, the Pythons claim, they will run down the curtain and join the bleedin’ choir invisible – remains to be seen. But the sight of grown men in dinner suits singing a song about the llama in dodgy Spanish accents remains an unalloyed pleasure.

MONTY PYTHON LIVE (MOSTLY) WILL BE BROADCAST LIVE IN CINEMAS ROUND THE WORLD ON JULY 20

David Bowie promises “more music soon”

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David Bowie has teased a possible new album, confirming that there will be 'more music soon' but stopping short of giving a release date. A statement from Bowie was read out on Saturday at a fundraising event in London, which was held to celebrate 50 years of the rock icon's music and raise money f...

David Bowie has teased a possible new album, confirming that there will be ‘more music soon’ but stopping short of giving a release date.

A statement from Bowie was read out on Saturday at a fundraising event in London, which was held to celebrate 50 years of the rock icon’s music and raise money for the Terrence Higgins Trust.

The note read: “This city is even better than the one you were in last year, so remember to dance, dance, dance. And then sit down for a minute, knit something, then get up and run all over the place. Do it. Love on ya. More music soon. David.”

The singer’s spokesperson has since confirmed that the statement was indeed from Bowie.

The Beatles announce new documentary film

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The Beatles have announced details of a new authorised documentary film. The film will be co-produced by Apple Corps Ltd. and be based on the first part of The Beatles’ career -- the touring years. The film will be directed by Ron Howard and will be produced with the full cooperation of Paul McC...

The Beatles have announced details of a new authorised documentary film.

The film will be co-produced by Apple Corps Ltd. and be based on the first part of The Beatles’ career — the touring years.

The film will be directed by Ron Howard and will be produced with the full cooperation of Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Yoko Ono Lennon and Olivia Harrison.

The will focus on The Beatles’ journey from the early days of the Cavern Club in Liverpool and engagements in Hamburg to their last public concert in Candlestick Park, San Francisco, in 1966.

The film will make extensive use of concert footage — some of it shot on movie cameras by fans — and mixes of sound board recordings. Howard believes that the finished film will contain between 12 and 20 songs.

Photo: ©Apple Corps Ltd