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Police raid Europe’s biggest counterfeit record pressing plant

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German police have discovered what they believe to be one of the largest illegal record-pressing plants in Europe. After a two-year investigation, a large amount of bootleg vinyl, CDs and DVDs were seized from Aschaffenburg and Hessen, reports Billboard. German authorities are still evaluating the material. Dr Florian Drücke, head of the German Federal Music Industry Association, commented: "With a market share of about 70 per cent, there is still a high demand for CDs in Germany – this is evident not only in the legitimate business, but unfortunately also on the illegal market." "The equipment found here demonstrates once again that this is not the work of petty criminals, but of professional organisations whose criminal activities inflict massive damage on artists and the recording industry," he added.

German police have discovered what they believe to be one of the largest illegal record-pressing plants in Europe.

After a two-year investigation, a large amount of bootleg vinyl, CDs and DVDs were seized from Aschaffenburg and Hessen, reports Billboard. German authorities are still evaluating the material.

Dr Florian Drücke, head of the German Federal Music Industry Association, commented: “With a market share of about 70 per cent, there is still a high demand for CDs in Germany – this is evident not only in the legitimate business, but unfortunately also on the illegal market.”

“The equipment found here demonstrates once again that this is not the work of petty criminals, but of professional organisations whose criminal activities inflict massive damage on artists and the recording industry,” he added.

Eddie Vedder: anti-war speech causes offence in Israel

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Fans have reacted to an anti-war speech which was delivered by Eddie Vedder last week during Pearl Jam's show at Milton Keynes Bowl (July 11). His words have angered Israeli fans of the band, who believe his comments were made in support of the Free Palestine campaign, reports Spin. The Jerusalem Post has branded the speech an "anti-Israel diatribe" and fans of the band have taken to Vedder's Facebook to both support and condone his comments. On fan wrote: "He broke my heart... speak[ing] so irresponsibly about things and situations he knows nothing about. Now every time I listen to his CD's in my car, there is bitterness that goes along with the music." However, another stated: "It is a truly sad day when a man gets abuse for speaking out against murder and bloodshed." Speaking on stage during the three hour long gig, Vedder commented: "I swear to fucking God, there are people out there who are looking for a reason to kill! They're looking for a reason to go across borders and take over land that doesn't belong to them. They should get the fuck out, and mind their own fucking business." Vedder continued: "Everyone wants the same goddamn thing: to have our children, eat, procreate, draw a painting, make some art, listen to music, fuck some more, have another baby, eat, work, eat, work, love, love, love, everyone's the fucking same! So why are people at war? Stop the fucking shit, now! Now! Now! We don't want to give them our money. We don't want to give them our taxes to drop bombs on children! Now! No more! Now!" Vedder then sang Edwin Starr's anti-war song 'War'. Neil Young & Crazy Horse have cancelled a gig in Israel due to the "current security situation" in the country. The band were due to perform in Tel Aviv's Hayarkon Park on July 17 but the gig will no longer take place. A statement issued claims that Young and his band will return to Israel when the country is at peace with Palestine.

Fans have reacted to an anti-war speech which was delivered by Eddie Vedder last week during Pearl Jam’s show at Milton Keynes Bowl (July 11).

His words have angered Israeli fans of the band, who believe his comments were made in support of the Free Palestine campaign, reports Spin. The Jerusalem Post has branded the speech an “anti-Israel diatribe” and fans of the band have taken to Vedder’s Facebook to both support and condone his comments. On fan wrote: “He broke my heart… speak[ing] so irresponsibly about things and situations he knows nothing about. Now every time I listen to his CD’s in my car, there is bitterness that goes along with the music.” However, another stated: “It is a truly sad day when a man gets abuse for speaking out against murder and bloodshed.”

Speaking on stage during the three hour long gig, Vedder commented: “I swear to fucking God, there are people out there who are looking for a reason to kill! They’re looking for a reason to go across borders and take over land that doesn’t belong to them. They should get the fuck out, and mind their own fucking business.”

Vedder continued: “Everyone wants the same goddamn thing: to have our children, eat, procreate, draw a painting, make some art, listen to music, fuck some more, have another baby, eat, work, eat, work, love, love, love, everyone’s the fucking same! So why are people at war? Stop the fucking shit, now! Now! Now! We don’t want to give them our money. We don’t want to give them our taxes to drop bombs on children! Now! No more! Now!” Vedder then sang Edwin Starr’s anti-war song ‘War’.

Neil Young & Crazy Horse have cancelled a gig in Israel due to the “current security situation” in the country. The band were due to perform in Tel Aviv’s Hayarkon Park on July 17 but the gig will no longer take place. A statement issued claims that Young and his band will return to Israel when the country is at peace with Palestine.

Paul McCartney re-releases Wings and solo albums as apps

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Paul McCartney has re-released five of his classic Wings and solo albums as apps. The former Beatle has put out new versions of Band On The Run, McCartney, McCartney II, RAM and Wings Over America, releasing them via the Apple store as apps for the iPad. The apps include the original albums and a ...

Paul McCartney has re-released five of his classic Wings and solo albums as apps.

The former Beatle has put out new versions of Band On The Run, McCartney, McCartney II, RAM and Wings Over America, releasing them via the Apple store as apps for the iPad.

The apps include the original albums and a host of special features and extra material, including remastered audio tracks, interviews, photos, artwork and rehearsal footage and documentary videos, reports The Guardian.

The apps cost £5.49, which, The Guardian points out, is less that the remastered albums in iTunes, which range in price from £7.99 to £10.99.

First Aid Kit – Stay Gold

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Singing sisters' major-label debut is a glittering folk-pop tapestry of Scandi-angst... When they first started releasing music six years ago, teenage Swedish sisters Klara and Johanna Söderberg named their band in acknowledgement of the healing power of song. On their third album the pair sound in need of a dose of their own medicine. The emotions driving these ten tracks are as troubled and uncertain as the music is gloriously resolved. There has always been a underlay of Scandi-angst to First Aid Kit’s otherwise unfailingly accessible take on past and present Americana. It’s got a lot to do with their vaulting sibling harmonies, so redolent of The Carter Family, The Louven Brothers and the Everlys in the way in which they simultaneously convey a spine-tingling mixture of joy and heartbreak. Melancholia is also an integral ingredient in many of their most obvious musical influences. The pair first emerged in 2008 when their cover of Fleet Foxes’ “Tiger Mountain Peasant Song” became a YouTube hit. On stage they’ve covered Gram Parsons’ “Still Feeling Blue”, while the pointedly titled “Emmylou”, from their second album, 2012’s The Lion’s Roar, name-checks Parsons alongside Johnny Cash and June Carter. On Stay Gold, their major label debut, these core inspirations remain tangible, but the net is cast wider. “My Silver Lining”, a galloping Death Valley lament in a malevolent minor key, sounds like Cash’s take on “Ghost Riders (In The Sky”) filtered through Lee Hazelwood’s “Some Velvet Morning”. “Waitress Song”’s mix of crystalline vocals, violin and keening pedal steel recalls Neko Case’s “I Wish I Was The Moon” from her 2002 album Blacklisted. On “Cedar Lane”, a shifty waltz with a bad case of the motel blues, the mix of sobering country music borne aloft by flutes and strings brings to mind Townes Van Zandt’s 1969 album Our Mother The Mountain. Elsewhere there are other, perhaps more surprising echoes. The pounding tribal chorus of “Stay Gold” has more than a hint of vintage Eurovision about it, while the beautiful “Shattered & Hollow” pulses powerfully, like a forlorn, backwoods version of The Ronettes’ “Be My Baby”. The duo’s skill lies in their ability to weave these strands into a golden folk-pop tapestry of consistent loveliness, even if the results are hardly ground-breaking. First Aid Kit made their great leap forward when they moved from the spare acoustic renderings of their 2010 debut, The Big Black And The Blue, to the more fully-fleshed sound of The Lion’s Roar. As a next step, Stay Gold is part confident consolidation, part logical progression. Like its predecessor, it was recorded in Omaha with Bright Eyes’ producer/instrumentalist Mike Mogis, but while the general creative approach is similar, the arrangements are markedly more ambitious. The marquee harmonies and indie-folk textures remain, but it’s Nate Walcott’s inventive use of viola, cello, flute, mellotron and clarinet, performed by members of the Omaha Symphony Orchestra, which dominates. Among all this crafted tastefulness, the breathless train-track rattle of “Heaven Knows” provides a welcome carefree kick, a lip-smacking kiss-off to some hapless fellow who has “spent a year staring into a mirror”. If Stay Gold at times seems almost too poised and pretty, then the words drag the listener back to the messy heart of the matter. Now 21 and 23 respectively, Klara and Johanna have moved away from the precocious observational narratives of early songs like “Tangerine” into what feels like nakedly autobiographical terrain. The songs return again and again to the dislocated sensation of being in constant motion and a long way from home. On “Master Pretender”, “shit gets fucked up and people just disappear,” while the rousing “Waitress Song” imagines a simpler life away from this “dark, twisted road.” The prevailing sense of regret, stoicism and hard-won wisdom is captured best on “Shattered & Hollow”, which concludes: “I’d rather be broken than empty, rather be striving than settled.” Embracing experience in all its prickly incarnations might make for a tricky life but – on this evidence – the pay-off is the creation of ever more beautiful and emotionally engaging music. Graeme Thomson Q&A KLARA & JOHANNA SÖDERBERG Has signing to Sony changed anything about how you work? KLARA: Not at all. We had the album finished before we even knew who the label was going to be. We made the record we wanted, and then found a home for it. It feels like a logical continuation of The Lion’s Roar. JOHANNA: With that record we felt we’d found our home sonically and lyrically, so we wanted to establish what we’d already done, instead of doing something completely new. KLARA: We did try new things. The strings and arrangements move us into new territory. We’re a four-piece band on stage, but we felt that shouldn’t dictate how this record sounds. If the songs wanted to be big, let them be big! On “Waitress Song” and “Stay Gold” we really wanted something epic from the get-go. There’s a recurring theme of travel and dislocation, and yet resolving to keep on keeping on. KLARA: It’s not something we planned. We wrote these songs about what we’ve been going through – being away from people we love and going on great adventures, but hopefully anyone can relate to it. It’s not an “on tour” record, it’s about feeling lost in any sort of way. We’re very emotional people, and we deal with our sadness by writing about it. That’s really the whole idea behind our band. INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Singing sisters’ major-label debut is a glittering folk-pop tapestry of Scandi-angst…

When they first started releasing music six years ago, teenage Swedish sisters Klara and Johanna Söderberg named their band in acknowledgement of the healing power of song. On their third album the pair sound in need of a dose of their own medicine. The emotions driving these ten tracks are as troubled and uncertain as the music is gloriously resolved.

There has always been a underlay of Scandi-angst to First Aid Kit’s otherwise unfailingly accessible take on past and present Americana. It’s got a lot to do with their vaulting sibling harmonies, so redolent of The Carter Family, The Louven Brothers and the Everlys in the way in which they simultaneously convey a spine-tingling mixture of joy and heartbreak. Melancholia is also an integral ingredient in many of their most obvious musical influences. The pair first emerged in 2008 when their cover of Fleet Foxes’ “Tiger Mountain Peasant Song” became a YouTube hit. On stage they’ve covered Gram Parsons’ “Still Feeling Blue”, while the pointedly titled “Emmylou”, from their second album, 2012’s The Lion’s Roar, name-checks Parsons alongside Johnny Cash and June Carter.

On Stay Gold, their major label debut, these core inspirations remain tangible, but the net is cast wider. “My Silver Lining”, a galloping Death Valley lament in a malevolent minor key, sounds like Cash’s take on “Ghost Riders (In The Sky”) filtered through Lee Hazelwood’s “Some Velvet Morning”. “Waitress Song”’s mix of crystalline vocals, violin and keening pedal steel recalls Neko Case’s “I Wish I Was The Moon” from her 2002 album Blacklisted. On “Cedar Lane”, a shifty waltz with a bad case of the motel blues, the mix of sobering country music borne aloft by flutes and strings brings to mind Townes Van Zandt’s 1969 album Our Mother The Mountain.

Elsewhere there are other, perhaps more surprising echoes. The pounding tribal chorus of “Stay Gold” has more than a hint of vintage Eurovision about it, while the beautiful “Shattered & Hollow” pulses powerfully, like a forlorn, backwoods version of The Ronettes’ “Be My Baby”.

The duo’s skill lies in their ability to weave these strands into a golden folk-pop tapestry of consistent loveliness, even if the results are hardly ground-breaking. First Aid Kit made their great leap forward when they moved from the spare acoustic renderings of their 2010 debut, The Big Black And The Blue, to the more fully-fleshed sound of The Lion’s Roar. As a next step, Stay Gold is part confident consolidation, part logical progression. Like its predecessor, it was recorded in Omaha with Bright Eyes’ producer/instrumentalist Mike Mogis, but while the general creative approach is similar, the arrangements are markedly more ambitious. The marquee harmonies and indie-folk textures remain, but it’s Nate Walcott’s inventive use of viola, cello, flute, mellotron and clarinet, performed by members of the Omaha Symphony Orchestra, which dominates.

Among all this crafted tastefulness, the breathless train-track rattle of “Heaven Knows” provides a welcome carefree kick, a lip-smacking kiss-off to some hapless fellow who has “spent a year staring into a mirror”. If Stay Gold at times seems almost too poised and pretty, then the words drag the listener back to the messy heart of the matter. Now 21 and 23 respectively, Klara and Johanna have moved away from the precocious observational narratives of early songs like “Tangerine” into what feels like nakedly autobiographical terrain. The songs return again and again to the dislocated sensation of being in constant motion and a long way from home. On “Master Pretender”, “shit gets fucked up and people just disappear,” while the rousing “Waitress Song” imagines a simpler life away from this “dark, twisted road.”

The prevailing sense of regret, stoicism and hard-won wisdom is captured best on “Shattered & Hollow”, which concludes: “I’d rather be broken than empty, rather be striving than settled.” Embracing experience in all its prickly incarnations might make for a tricky life but – on this evidence – the pay-off is the creation of ever more beautiful and emotionally engaging music.

Graeme Thomson

Q&A

KLARA & JOHANNA SÖDERBERG

Has signing to Sony changed anything about how you work?

KLARA: Not at all. We had the album finished before we even knew who the label was going to be. We made the record we wanted, and then found a home for it.

It feels like a logical continuation of The Lion’s Roar.

JOHANNA: With that record we felt we’d found our home sonically and lyrically, so we wanted to establish what we’d already done, instead of doing something completely new.

KLARA: We did try new things. The strings and arrangements move us into new territory. We’re a four-piece band on stage, but we felt that shouldn’t dictate how this record sounds. If the songs wanted to be big, let them be big! On “Waitress Song” and “Stay Gold” we really wanted something epic from the get-go.

There’s a recurring theme of travel and dislocation, and yet resolving to keep on keeping on.

KLARA: It’s not something we planned. We wrote these songs about what we’ve been going through – being away from people we love and going on great adventures, but hopefully anyone can relate to it. It’s not an “on tour” record, it’s about feeling lost in any sort of way. We’re very emotional people, and we deal with our sadness by writing about it. That’s really the whole idea behind our band.

INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Watch first trailer for Nick Cave documentary, 20,000 Days On Earth

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The first trailer for the new Nick Cave film, 20,000 Days On Earth has been released. Scroll down to watch it. The documentary, directed by Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard, will be released in the UK on September 19. It purports to feature a day in the life of Cave, and includes appearances from Kylie Minogue, Ray Winstone, Warren Ellis and Blixa Bargeld. Cave has also announced he will participate in a Q&A and a live performance at London's Barbican Hall on September 17 ahead of the film's release. You can read our first look preview of the film here. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ap0_y5EGttk

The first trailer for the new Nick Cave film, 20,000 Days On Earth has been released.

Scroll down to watch it.

The documentary, directed by Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard, will be released in the UK on September 19.

It purports to feature a day in the life of Cave, and includes appearances from Kylie Minogue, Ray Winstone, Warren Ellis and Blixa Bargeld.

Cave has also announced he will participate in a Q&A and a live performance at London’s Barbican Hall on September 17 ahead of the film’s release.

You can read our first look preview of the film here.

Unreleased Woody Guthrie songs to be included on new three-disc compilation

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A number of unreleased Woody Guthrie songs are to be included on a new three-disc compilation, according to Rolling Stone. My Name Is New York pairs tracks Guthrie wrote during the 27 years he lived in the city along with informal interviews featuring Pete Seeger, Ramblin' Jack Elliott and Nora and Arlo Guthrie. “Working on this project has been more than just a nostalgic walk down memory lane," said his daughter Nora. "It’s been a precious adventure, collecting the stories and the voices - of my father’s NYC friends and family, many of them who are now gone. It’s been, at times, both a hilarious and tearful journey. And, just as for thousands of artists who have migrated here, you can see how New York City was absolutely critical in significantly chiseling my father’s destiny.” The disc of music includes Guthrie’s first recording of “This Land Is Your Land”, as well as previously unreleased demo recordings he made in New York, including the title track.

A number of unreleased Woody Guthrie songs are to be included on a new three-disc compilation, according to Rolling Stone.

My Name Is New York pairs tracks Guthrie wrote during the 27 years he lived in the city along with informal interviews featuring Pete Seeger, Ramblin’ Jack Elliott and Nora and Arlo Guthrie.

“Working on this project has been more than just a nostalgic walk down memory lane,” said his daughter Nora. “It’s been a precious adventure, collecting the stories and the voices – of my father’s NYC friends and family, many of them who are now gone. It’s been, at times, both a hilarious and tearful journey. And, just as for thousands of artists who have migrated here, you can see how New York City was absolutely critical in significantly chiseling my father’s destiny.”

The disc of music includes Guthrie’s first recording of “This Land Is Your Land”, as well as previously unreleased demo recordings he made in New York, including the title track.

Johnny Cash tribute album announced

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A 1964 album by Johnny Cash, Bitter Tears: Ballads Of The American Indian, has been re-recorded to mark its 50th anniversary. The album, which was originally envisaged as a concept album to highlight the mistreatment of Native Americans, has been reinterpreted by artists including Gillian Welch and David Rawlings, Emmylou Harris and Kris Kristofferson. Look Again To The Wind: Johnny Cash’s Bitter Tears Revisited will be released by Sony Music Masterworks on August 19, reports Rolling Stone. The album was recorded in Los Angeles, Nashville and at the Cash Cabin in Hendersonville, Tennessee. "Prior to Bitter Tears, the conversation about Native American rights had not really been had," says Joe Henry, Look Again's producer. "At a very significant moment in his trajectory, Johnny Cash was willing to draw a line and insist that this be considered a human rights issue, alongside the civil rights issue that was coming to fruition in 1964. But he also felt that the record had never been heard, so there's a real sense that we're being asked to carry it forward." The tracklisting for Look Again To The Wind: Johnny Cash’s Bitter Tears Revisited is: "As Long As The Grass Shall Grow" (Gillian Welch & David Rawlings) "Apache Tears" (Emmylou Harris w/the Milk Carton Kids) "Custer" (Steve Earle w/the Milk Carton Kids) "The Talking Leaves" (Nancy Blake w/Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch and David Rawlings) "The Ballad Of Ira Hayes" (Kris Kristofferson w/Gillian Welch and David Rawlings) "Drums" (Norman Blake w/Nancy Blake, Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch and David Rawlings) "Apache Tears (Reprise)" (Gillian Welch and David Rawlings) "White Girl" (Milk Carton Kids) "The Vanishing Race" (Rhiannon Giddens) "As Long As The Grass Shall Grow (Reprise)" (Nancy Blake, Gillian Welch and David Rawlings) "Look Again To The Wind" (Bill Miller)

A 1964 album by Johnny Cash, Bitter Tears: Ballads Of The American Indian, has been re-recorded to mark its 50th anniversary.

The album, which was originally envisaged as a concept album to highlight the mistreatment of Native Americans, has been reinterpreted by artists including Gillian Welch and David Rawlings, Emmylou Harris and Kris Kristofferson.

Look Again To The Wind: Johnny Cash’s Bitter Tears Revisited will be released by Sony Music Masterworks on August 19, reports Rolling Stone.

The album was recorded in Los Angeles, Nashville and at the Cash Cabin in Hendersonville, Tennessee.

“Prior to Bitter Tears, the conversation about Native American rights had not really been had,” says Joe Henry, Look Again’s producer. “At a very significant moment in his trajectory, Johnny Cash was willing to draw a line and insist that this be considered a human rights issue, alongside the civil rights issue that was coming to fruition in 1964. But he also felt that the record had never been heard, so there’s a real sense that we’re being asked to carry it forward.”

The tracklisting for Look Again To The Wind: Johnny Cash’s Bitter Tears Revisited is:

“As Long As The Grass Shall Grow” (Gillian Welch & David Rawlings)

“Apache Tears” (Emmylou Harris w/the Milk Carton Kids)

“Custer” (Steve Earle w/the Milk Carton Kids)

“The Talking Leaves” (Nancy Blake w/Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch and David Rawlings)

“The Ballad Of Ira Hayes” (Kris Kristofferson w/Gillian Welch and David Rawlings)

“Drums” (Norman Blake w/Nancy Blake, Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch and David Rawlings)

“Apache Tears (Reprise)” (Gillian Welch and David Rawlings)

“White Girl” (Milk Carton Kids)

“The Vanishing Race” (Rhiannon Giddens)

“As Long As The Grass Shall Grow (Reprise)” (Nancy Blake, Gillian Welch and David Rawlings)

“Look Again To The Wind” (Bill Miller)

Reviewed! Neil Young & Crazy Horse, London Hyde Park, July 12, 2014

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It is hard to tell where Neil Young and what we can just about call Crazy Horse end their main set in Hyde Park, Saturday night. "Rockin' In The Free World" has spluttered to a conclusion, of sorts, and the band appear to have left the stage. Then, you notice Young remains amidst the debris, pointing agitatedly at the word printed across his new t-shirt: "EARTH". For the previous two hours, Young has confounded his audience once again. Last summer, Crazy Horse's tour was a compellingly fractious affair, built around mammoth "Psychedelic Pill" noise jams that presented Young as creatively uncompromising, far from afraid of alienating some of his fans (You can read my review of the great 2013 O2 show here). This year, the show starts in broadly similar fashion: 15 magnificently wallowing minutes of "Love And Only Love", followed up by ten of "Goin' Home", plucked from the oblivion of "Are You Passionate?" and not, perhaps, one to gladden the hearts of the casual onlookers at this British Summertime festival in central London. Even in the turmoil and longueurs of "Love And Only Love", though, there's a different energy and focus, driven as it is by Rick Rosas, a slightly more conventional bassist than Billy Talbot, in recovery from a mild stroke. The onslaught is leavened, too, by the presence of two backing vocalists, Dorene Carter and YaDonna West, whose repeated exhortations to "Break it down" provide further structure for Young and Frank 'Poncho' Sampedro's ambulatory paths. There's a good comparison to be made with the electric portions of the "Chrome Dreams II" tour in 2008, when Rosas again provided the security and Pegi Young and Anthony Crawford, on backing vocals, added a degree of emotional ballast. It's not a compromise, exactly; more a way in. Another "Ragged Glory" song follows, "The Days That Used To Be", played with a lightness of touch that accentuates its kinship to "My Back Pages". Soon enough, though, the show takes an uncharacteristically populist turn. For those who bemoaned the lack of 'hits' on the Alchemy tour, you can only hope they gave it another go this year. "After The Gold Rush" leads the charge, delivered at an engagingly sprightly pace, and then there's a beautiful "Only Love Can Break Your Heart" (Sampedro excelling on upright piano), an acoustic singalong of "Heart Of Gold", "Barstool Blues", "Cinnamon Girl", "Rockin' In The Free World". Not the solid comforts of Young's Stateside acoustic shows earlier in the year, perhaps, but not 30 minutes of "Walk Like A Giant", either. For those of who love 30 minutes of "Walk Like A Giant", mind you, there's still plenty to dig into. As ever with Young, it's impossible not to try and parse his setlist and performance to tell where, after "A Letter Home" and the acoustic shows, he might be heading next. Does that heartening exhumation of "Goin' Home" mean that the turn-of-the-millennium Crazy Horse session from which it came, "Toast", might finally see the light of day? Why has Young chosen to pluck "Separate Ways" - a nuanced, almost jazzy performance - from the mid-'70s wasteland of abandoned albums? Is "Archives Volume 2" is finally nearing completion? And what of Young's new "EARTH" shirt, on sale at the merch stands? When Young points to the shirt and the band hastily reconvene around him, it is to crunch into the night's solitary new song, "Who's Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?", whose machine-gunned riff opens up into something quite spectacular, a fiery compatriot to "Fuckin' Up" with a momentum only slightly derailed by an awkward, churchy chorus reminiscent of "Be The Rain" from "Greendale". Extrapolating wildly from this righteous anti-fracking anthem, from the gentler but still aggrieved "Hole In The Sky" which surfaced on last year's tour, and from rumours of another album in the works, it might not be a stretch to imagine a forthcoming ecological concept album. Whatever, the continued potency of Neil Young is a wonder to behold, not least when he manages to transform what could have been a contractually expedient tour into something which is both conventionally satisfying and full of tantalising possibilities, both new and old. Beyond those monolithic solos (and that final searing flourish after the choral "Yeah! Yeah! Yeah" in "Cinnamon Girl" is better than ever tonight), it's the range he displays tonight, the delicacy and nuance which underpins "Separate Ways", which is most striking. After "Who's Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?", there is time for one more, 20-minute song - a version of "Down By The River" that might rank as the deepest I've ever witnessed, for the dramatic highs and lows, the graceful tension, the jazzy space and nuance which is introduced into Young, Sampedro and the staunch Rosas' tight little face-offs. In spite of all the whims and tangents, it's at this point that a thought occurs about one of Neil Young's most enduring skills - how his shows, his ever-evolving songs, manage to be wildly unpredictable but, at the same time, hugely reliable. If you were there, or at any other of the European shows, please drop me a line: uncut_feedback@ipcmedia.com. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey SETLIST 1. Love And Only Love 2. Goin' Home 3. Days That Used To Be 4. After The Gold Rush 5. Love To Burn 6. Separate Ways 7. Only Love Can Break Your Heart 8. Blowin' In The Wind 9. Heart Of Gold 10. Barstool Blues 11. Psychedelic Pill 12. Cinnamon Girl 13. Rockin' In The Free World Encore: 14. Who's Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth 15. Down By The River Some previous things I’ve written about Neil Young in the past few years… A review of the 2013 London O2 show Americana Horse Back Psychedelic Pill Le Noise Chrome Dreams II Live at Hammersmith Apollo, 2008 Fork In The Road

It is hard to tell where Neil Young and what we can just about call Crazy Horse end their main set in Hyde Park, Saturday night. “Rockin’ In The Free World” has spluttered to a conclusion, of sorts, and the band appear to have left the stage. Then, you notice Young remains amidst the debris, pointing agitatedly at the word printed across his new t-shirt: “EARTH”.

For the previous two hours, Young has confounded his audience once again. Last summer, Crazy Horse’s tour was a compellingly fractious affair, built around mammoth “Psychedelic Pill” noise jams that presented Young as creatively uncompromising, far from afraid of alienating some of his fans (You can read my review of the great 2013 O2 show here).

This year, the show starts in broadly similar fashion: 15 magnificently wallowing minutes of “Love And Only Love”, followed up by ten of “Goin’ Home”, plucked from the oblivion of “Are You Passionate?” and not, perhaps, one to gladden the hearts of the casual onlookers at this British Summertime festival in central London. Even in the turmoil and longueurs of “Love And Only Love”, though, there’s a different energy and focus, driven as it is by Rick Rosas, a slightly more conventional bassist than Billy Talbot, in recovery from a mild stroke. The onslaught is leavened, too, by the presence of two backing vocalists, Dorene Carter and YaDonna West, whose repeated exhortations to “Break it down” provide further structure for Young and Frank ‘Poncho’ Sampedro‘s ambulatory paths. There’s a good comparison to be made with the electric portions of the “Chrome Dreams II” tour in 2008, when Rosas again provided the security and Pegi Young and Anthony Crawford, on backing vocals, added a degree of emotional ballast. It’s not a compromise, exactly; more a way in.

Another “Ragged Glory” song follows, “The Days That Used To Be”, played with a lightness of touch that accentuates its kinship to “My Back Pages”. Soon enough, though, the show takes an uncharacteristically populist turn. For those who bemoaned the lack of ‘hits’ on the Alchemy tour, you can only hope they gave it another go this year. “After The Gold Rush” leads the charge, delivered at an engagingly sprightly pace, and then there’s a beautiful “Only Love Can Break Your Heart” (Sampedro excelling on upright piano), an acoustic singalong of “Heart Of Gold”, “Barstool Blues”, “Cinnamon Girl”, “Rockin’ In The Free World”. Not the solid comforts of Young’s Stateside acoustic shows earlier in the year, perhaps, but not 30 minutes of “Walk Like A Giant”, either.

For those of who love 30 minutes of “Walk Like A Giant”, mind you, there’s still plenty to dig into. As ever with Young, it’s impossible not to try and parse his setlist and performance to tell where, after “A Letter Home” and the acoustic shows, he might be heading next. Does that heartening exhumation of “Goin’ Home” mean that the turn-of-the-millennium Crazy Horse session from which it came, “Toast”, might finally see the light of day? Why has Young chosen to pluck “Separate Ways” – a nuanced, almost jazzy performance – from the mid-’70s wasteland of abandoned albums? Is “Archives Volume 2” is finally nearing completion?

And what of Young’s new “EARTH” shirt, on sale at the merch stands? When Young points to the shirt and the band hastily reconvene around him, it is to crunch into the night’s solitary new song, “Who’s Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?”, whose machine-gunned riff opens up into something quite spectacular, a fiery compatriot to “Fuckin’ Up” with a momentum only slightly derailed by an awkward, churchy chorus reminiscent of “Be The Rain” from “Greendale”. Extrapolating wildly from this righteous anti-fracking anthem, from the gentler but still aggrieved “Hole In The Sky” which surfaced on last year’s tour, and from rumours of another album in the works, it might not be a stretch to imagine a forthcoming ecological concept album.

Whatever, the continued potency of Neil Young is a wonder to behold, not least when he manages to transform what could have been a contractually expedient tour into something which is both conventionally satisfying and full of tantalising possibilities, both new and old. Beyond those monolithic solos (and that final searing flourish after the choral “Yeah! Yeah! Yeah” in “Cinnamon Girl” is better than ever tonight), it’s the range he displays tonight, the delicacy and nuance which underpins “Separate Ways”, which is most striking.

After “Who’s Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?”, there is time for one more, 20-minute song – a version of “Down By The River” that might rank as the deepest I’ve ever witnessed, for the dramatic highs and lows, the graceful tension, the jazzy space and nuance which is introduced into Young, Sampedro and the staunch Rosas’ tight little face-offs. In spite of all the whims and tangents, it’s at this point that a thought occurs about one of Neil Young’s most enduring skills – how his shows, his ever-evolving songs, manage to be wildly unpredictable but, at the same time, hugely reliable. If you were there, or at any other of the European shows, please drop me a line: uncut_feedback@ipcmedia.com.

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

SETLIST

1. Love And Only Love

2. Goin’ Home

3. Days That Used To Be

4. After The Gold Rush

5. Love To Burn

6. Separate Ways

7. Only Love Can Break Your Heart

8. Blowin’ In The Wind

9. Heart Of Gold

10. Barstool Blues

11. Psychedelic Pill

12. Cinnamon Girl

13. Rockin’ In The Free World

Encore:

14. Who’s Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth

15. Down By The River

Some previous things I’ve written about Neil Young in the past few years…

A review of the 2013 London O2 show

Americana

Horse Back

Psychedelic Pill

Le Noise

Chrome Dreams II

Live at Hammersmith Apollo, 2008

Fork In The Road

In praise of Richard Linklater’s Boyhood

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There is a telling scene early on in Boyhood that gets to the heart of what makes Richard Linklater’s new film so remarkable. It takes place at the book launch for Harry Potter And The Half-Blood Prince, where Linklater’s main character, Mason, and his friends queue up dressed as their favourite JK Rowling characters, eager to devour the latest exploits of the boy wizard. While Linklater’s film similarly follows the life of a young boy from six to 18, there are no magical adventures accompanying this particular journey towards adulthood. Linklater has fashioned a film about the ordinary details - painting the house, getting a haircut, bowling nights with dad - and accordingly, the episodes of a boy’s life are measured not by otherworldly events but instead by a thread of small moments. Shot in 39 says across a 12 year period, Boyhood is certainly Linklater’s most accomplished experiment yet in an eclectic career that includes the freewheeling Slacker, lo-fi animations like Waking Life, School Of Rock and the Before… trilogy, which also followed a core group of characters through various points in their lives. What partly makes Boyhood such an achievement are the mind-boggling logistics of the undertaking. The time transitions are seamless, the details shift fluidly, the passing of the years marked by clothes, hair, music, mobile phone technology. And of course the principals themselves, who quite literally transform in front of us: Ellar Coltrane as Mason, Lorelei Linklater as his elder sister Samantha, Patricia Arquette as their single mother Olivia and their father Mason Sr (Ethan Hawke), who drifts in and out of their lives. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IiDztHS3Wos Olivia moves her children from town to town around Texas. Much of the film’s narrative is concerned with the decisions she makes - the men who begin with so much promise but who solidify over time into something else - and the impact these have on Mason and Samantha. But Linklater avoids making judgments and steers clear from dramatic set pieces, while characters that play prominent roles in Mason’s life vanish as we jump forward in time. Linklater’s concern is how these challenges ultimately shape Mason and his family. There are few moments that feel conspicuously plot-driven; the vibe is natural and free-flowing. Incidentally, Arquette is excellent as the determined Olivia, supporting her kids in the face of persistent setbacks. Hawke has an equally complex role, growing from arrested adolescent to respectable family man: an erratic figure who nevertheless is unequivocal in his love for his children. Lorelei Linklater - the director’s daughter - is equally watchable as Samantha, growing from the young Mason’s annoying elder kid sister to good friend as the film comes to a close. Mason’s transit from boyhood to adulthood provides the film’s narrative spine. Brilliantly played by Coltrane, Mason’s life is a series of quiet moments of disillusionment that you suspect he will carry deep into adulthood. The tenets of Philip Larkin’s “This Be The Verse” are clearly delineated here. Young Mason starts off as an open-faced blank canvas - the first time we see him, he’s lying on his back staring at clouds - and he enters adulthood as an inquisitive, quietly unconventional dreamer. One of the most resonant scenes - and there are many - occurs quite early on. Mason and his father are crashed out on couches at Mason Sr’s, Hogwarts still fresh in the young boy’s mind. “Dad,” he says, “there’s no real magic in the world, right? Right this second, there's like no elves in the world?" Mason Sr replies: “No, technically. No elves.” Taken cumulatively, these moments contain the movie’s magic.

There is a telling scene early on in Boyhood that gets to the heart of what makes Richard Linklater’s new film so remarkable.

It takes place at the book launch for Harry Potter And The Half-Blood Prince, where Linklater’s main character, Mason, and his friends queue up dressed as their favourite JK Rowling characters, eager to devour the latest exploits of the boy wizard. While Linklater’s film similarly follows the life of a young boy from six to 18, there are no magical adventures accompanying this particular journey towards adulthood. Linklater has fashioned a film about the ordinary details – painting the house, getting a haircut, bowling nights with dad – and accordingly, the episodes of a boy’s life are measured not by otherworldly events but instead by a thread of small moments.

Shot in 39 says across a 12 year period, Boyhood is certainly Linklater’s most accomplished experiment yet in an eclectic career that includes the freewheeling Slacker, lo-fi animations like Waking Life, School Of Rock and the Before… trilogy, which also followed a core group of characters through various points in their lives. What partly makes Boyhood such an achievement are the mind-boggling logistics of the undertaking. The time transitions are seamless, the details shift fluidly, the passing of the years marked by clothes, hair, music, mobile phone technology. And of course the principals themselves, who quite literally transform in front of us: Ellar Coltrane as Mason, Lorelei Linklater as his elder sister Samantha, Patricia Arquette as their single mother Olivia and their father Mason Sr (Ethan Hawke), who drifts in and out of their lives.

Olivia moves her children from town to town around Texas. Much of the film’s narrative is concerned with the decisions she makes – the men who begin with so much promise but who solidify over time into something else – and the impact these have on Mason and Samantha. But Linklater avoids making judgments and steers clear from dramatic set pieces, while characters that play prominent roles in Mason’s life vanish as we jump forward in time. Linklater’s concern is how these challenges ultimately shape Mason and his family. There are few moments that feel conspicuously plot-driven; the vibe is natural and free-flowing. Incidentally, Arquette is excellent as the determined Olivia, supporting her kids in the face of persistent setbacks. Hawke has an equally complex role, growing from arrested adolescent to respectable family man: an erratic figure who nevertheless is unequivocal in his love for his children. Lorelei Linklater – the director’s daughter – is equally watchable as Samantha, growing from the young Mason’s annoying elder kid sister to good friend as the film comes to a close.

Mason’s transit from boyhood to adulthood provides the film’s narrative spine. Brilliantly played by Coltrane, Mason’s life is a series of quiet moments of disillusionment that you suspect he will carry deep into adulthood. The tenets of Philip Larkin’s “This Be The Verse” are clearly delineated here. Young Mason starts off as an open-faced blank canvas – the first time we see him, he’s lying on his back staring at clouds – and he enters adulthood as an inquisitive, quietly unconventional dreamer.

One of the most resonant scenes – and there are many – occurs quite early on. Mason and his father are crashed out on couches at Mason Sr’s, Hogwarts still fresh in the young boy’s mind. “Dad,” he says, “there’s no real magic in the world, right? Right this second, there’s like no elves in the world?” Mason Sr replies: “No, technically. No elves.”

Taken cumulatively, these moments contain the movie’s magic.

Bob Mould – Beauty And Ruin

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Warhorse: Songs and Stories – Hüsker Dü veteran makes peace with the past... That guitar sound again: the sound of glass shattering, the sound of a hurricane howling. The sudden sandblast squall that whips up about 50 seconds into “Kid With Crooked Face” – the fastest, most furious moment on Bob Mould’s latest album – is giddily familiar. Endlessly imitated but essentially unused since Hüsker Dü split up in 1988, it’s perhaps the mightiest weapon in Mould’s armoury, and on Beauty And Ruin, it is the sound of permafrost cracking. For Mould’s 14th full-length outing post-Hüsker Dü may be the first to fully engage with that part of his musical legacy. The Minneapolis three-piece did a fairly indifferent job of following up their mind-blowing (10), (10), (10), trio of Jackson Pollock hardcore LPs – 1984’s Zen Arcade and New Day Rising, and the following year’s Flip Your Wig – with Mould, songwriting foil Grant Hart and elaborately-moustached bassist Greg Norton disbanding after two frustrating albums for Warner Brothers. Mould and Hart have done fine things since, but neither have dared to turn the distortion and chorus pedals on in the same dizzying combination until now. Inspired in part by the death of his father, Beauty And Ruin’s ruminations on mortality are hardly new territory for Mould, who sang in 1986 on Hüsker Dü’s stark “Hardly Getting Over It”: “My parents they just wonder when they both are gonna die; what do I do when they die?” However, his lyrics here seemingly derive less from a need to come to terms with his father – depicted in Mould’s autobiography See A Little Light as a controlling, violent alcoholic who never acknowledged Mould’s homosexuality – than a desire to stare down the disapproving glances of his younger self. The “tales filled with riddles and rhymes that I just don’t recognise” on the perky “I Don’t Know You Anymore” might detail a conversation with his dying father or an unwelcome encounter with the mirror, while on the frenzied “Kid With Crooked Face”, Mould squirms in front of his glowering 20-something gaze: “Look away, look away, look away.” Now 53, Mould would seem to have little to be ashamed of when he looks back, having systematically vanquished his demons since Hüsker Dü’s late-1980s demise. An ex drinker and smoker, he came out publicly while enjoying 1990s commercial success with Sugar, and then spent a decade spooking his fanbase by writing scripts for professional wrestling, DJ-ing at his “gay bear” house night, Blowoff, and releasing an unhinged hybrid electronic album – Modulate – in 2002. However, personal fulfilment has not always made for great output; the string of elegantly-whittled albums he has produced since moving to San Francisco in 2009 - District Line, Life And Times and 2012’s Sugar re-enactment, The Silver Age – have not for the first time seen Mould’s art gradually downgraded to craftsmanship. Beauty And Ruin, however, is an invigorating reconnection with a more difficult, dangerous part of himself. Glowering opener “Low Season” bemoans “chances that I wasted in my unforgiving days”, and while the Hüskers-pitched centrepiece “The War” ostensibly recounts Mould’s difficult relationship with his father, it sounds awfully like an apologia for the decades of sniping that followed his first band’s demise. “Listen to my voice it’s the only weapon I kept from the war,” Mould wails, still pleading for a ceasefire long after Armistice Day. Beauty And Ruin falls short as a masterpiece – the Wings-ish “Let The Beauty Be” is a notable lapse of taste – but it quietly lets the handbrake off on Mould’s creativity. It ends on an upbeat, “Fix It” slamming the door shut on the past. “Time to find out who you are,” Mould sings. Comfortable enough now that he knows who he was, what happens next could be incredible. Jim Wirth Q&A Did your father’s death inspire Beauty And Ruin? Parts of it. He passed away in October 2012 right after The Silver Age came out. My father and I are a lot alike in many ways. I’ve come to terms with that in different ways over the course of my life – quitting smoking, quitting drinking. I’ve always loved my parents and though my dad’s final years were pretty tough I was fortunate to get a lot of good time with him and to talk about a lot of things. “Kid With Crooked Face” is closer to ’81-style hardcore than anything else you have done since Hüsker Dü. How did that come about? It just happened – it fell out. People are going to get way more wound up about me doing those sorts of songs than I do. I used to hate pictures of myself when we did photos ‘cause I thought my face was a little crooked; not symmetrical. I am a Libra so symmetry is huge. Have you ever fancied cutting loose and doing a concept album or a musical? Like a big fictional stage thing? Yeah, someday. I fancy it but I can’t do it myself. The last thing I tried something like that we got Modulate! I always say it’s my Trans. Constructing an entire circus with invisible wires and antigravity machines – I think I need some scientists to help me with that. But I’ll do it someday. This is all building up to something big. INTERVIEW: JIM WIRTH

Warhorse: Songs and Stories – Hüsker Dü veteran makes peace with the past…

That guitar sound again: the sound of glass shattering, the sound of a hurricane howling. The sudden sandblast squall that whips up about 50 seconds into “Kid With Crooked Face” – the fastest, most furious moment on Bob Mould’s latest album – is giddily familiar. Endlessly imitated but essentially unused since Hüsker Dü split up in 1988, it’s perhaps the mightiest weapon in Mould’s armoury, and on Beauty And Ruin, it is the sound of permafrost cracking.

For Mould’s 14th full-length outing post-Hüsker Dü may be the first to fully engage with that part of his musical legacy. The Minneapolis three-piece did a fairly indifferent job of following up their mind-blowing (10), (10), (10), trio of Jackson Pollock hardcore LPs – 1984’s Zen Arcade and New Day Rising, and the following year’s Flip Your Wig – with Mould, songwriting foil Grant Hart and elaborately-moustached bassist Greg Norton disbanding after two frustrating albums for Warner Brothers. Mould and Hart have done fine things since, but neither have dared to turn the distortion and chorus pedals on in the same dizzying combination until now.

Inspired in part by the death of his father, Beauty And Ruin’s ruminations on mortality are hardly new territory for Mould, who sang in 1986 on Hüsker Dü’s stark “Hardly Getting Over It”: “My parents they just wonder when they both are gonna die; what do I do when they die?” However, his lyrics here seemingly derive less from a need to come to terms with his father – depicted in Mould’s autobiography See A Little Light as a controlling, violent alcoholic who never acknowledged Mould’s homosexuality – than a desire to stare down the disapproving glances of his younger self.

The “tales filled with riddles and rhymes that I just don’t recognise” on the perky “I Don’t Know You Anymore” might detail a conversation with his dying father or an unwelcome encounter with the mirror, while on the frenzied “Kid With Crooked Face”, Mould squirms in front of his glowering 20-something gaze: “Look away, look away, look away.”

Now 53, Mould would seem to have little to be ashamed of when he looks back, having systematically vanquished his demons since Hüsker Dü’s late-1980s demise. An ex drinker and smoker, he came out publicly while enjoying 1990s commercial success with Sugar, and then spent a decade spooking his fanbase by writing scripts for professional wrestling, DJ-ing at his “gay bear” house night, Blowoff, and releasing an unhinged hybrid electronic album – Modulate – in 2002.

However, personal fulfilment has not always made for great output; the string of elegantly-whittled albums he has produced since moving to San Francisco in 2009 – District Line, Life And Times and 2012’s Sugar re-enactment, The Silver Age – have not for the first time seen Mould’s art gradually downgraded to craftsmanship.

Beauty And Ruin, however, is an invigorating reconnection with a more difficult, dangerous part of himself. Glowering opener “Low Season” bemoans “chances that I wasted in my unforgiving days”, and while the Hüskers-pitched centrepiece “The War” ostensibly recounts Mould’s difficult relationship with his father, it sounds awfully like an apologia for the decades of sniping that followed his first band’s demise. “Listen to my voice it’s the only weapon I kept from the war,” Mould wails, still pleading for a ceasefire long after Armistice Day.

Beauty And Ruin falls short as a masterpiece – the Wings-ish “Let The Beauty Be” is a notable lapse of taste – but it quietly lets the handbrake off on Mould’s creativity. It ends on an upbeat, “Fix It” slamming the door shut on the past. “Time to find out who you are,” Mould sings. Comfortable enough now that he knows who he was, what happens next could be incredible.

Jim Wirth

Q&A

Did your father’s death inspire Beauty And Ruin?

Parts of it. He passed away in October 2012 right after The Silver Age came out. My father and I are a lot alike in many ways. I’ve come to terms with that in different ways over the course of my life – quitting smoking, quitting drinking. I’ve always loved my parents and though my dad’s final years were pretty tough I was fortunate to get a lot of good time with him and to talk about a lot of things.

“Kid With Crooked Face” is closer to ’81-style hardcore than anything else you have done since Hüsker Dü. How did that come about?

It just happened – it fell out. People are going to get way more wound up about me doing those sorts of songs than I do. I used to hate pictures of myself when we did photos ‘cause I thought my face was a little crooked; not symmetrical. I am a Libra so symmetry is huge.

Have you ever fancied cutting loose and doing a concept album or a musical?

Like a big fictional stage thing? Yeah, someday. I fancy it but I can’t do it myself. The last thing I tried something like that we got Modulate! I always say it’s my Trans. Constructing an entire circus with invisible wires and antigravity machines – I think I need some scientists to help me with that. But I’ll do it someday. This is all building up to something big.

INTERVIEW: JIM WIRTH

Radiohead to begin ‘rehearsing and recording’ new album in September

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Radiohead will begin rehearsing and recording again in September, guitarist Jonny Greenwood has confirmed. 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 ...

Radiohead will begin rehearsing and recording again in September, guitarist Jonny Greenwood has confirmed.

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 on July 12, Greenwood was asked what Radiohead are 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” will gain life in the coming months.

Earlier this year, Jonny’s brother Colin Greenwood said that Radiohead’s plans for a new album were “up in the air” as members of the band focus on side projects.

Quizzed on current activity in the Radiohead camp, Greenwood said: “It’s all up in the air at the minute. Thom’s just come back from touring Atoms For Peace and he’s having some quiet time. I’m sorry to be vague but we’re all just taking it easy at the moment. Just enjoying being at home and hanging out really. But at the same time, the vibe is very much Oxford and all good! It’s like that.”

Neil Young And Crazy Horse cancel Israel gig over security concerns

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Neil Young And Crazy Horse have cancelled a gig in Israel due to the "current security situation" in the country. The band were due to perform in Tel Aviv's Hayarkon Park on July 17 but according to a press release, via Pitchfork, the gig will no longer take place. The statement issued claims that ...

Neil Young And Crazy Horse have cancelled a gig in Israel due to the “current security situation” in the country.

The band were due to perform in Tel Aviv’s Hayarkon Park on July 17 but according to a press release, via Pitchfork, the gig will no longer take place. The statement issued claims that Young and his band will return to Israel when the country is at peace with Palestine.

“It is with heavy hearts and deep sadness that we must cancel our one and only Israeli concert due to tensions which have rendered the event unsafe at this time,” reads the statement. “We’ll miss the opportunity to play for our fans and look forward to playing in Israel and Palestine in peace.”

In addition, Young added, “I will be making donations to both the Louise & Tillie Alpert Youth Music Centre of Israel, and Heartbeat, two organizations that teach music to Palestinian and Israeli youth simultaneously by enabling them to play music together.”

Neil Young & Crazy Horse performed in London this past weekend, playing a gig in Hyde Park as part of this year’s British Summer Time festival.

The set list for July 12, Hyde Park, London, England was:

Love And Only Love

Goin’ Home

Days That Used To Be

After The Gold Rush

Love To Burn

Separate Ways

Only Love Can Break Your Heart

Blowin’ In The Wind

Heart Of Gold

Barstool Blues

Psychedelic Pill

Cinnamon Girl

Rockin’ In The Free World

Who’s Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?

Encore:

Down By The River

Tommy Ramone dies aged 65

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Tommy Ramone has died aged 65. His death marks the passing of the last surviving member of The Ramones. "Tom died yesterday, July 11, at 12:15 p.m. at his home in Ridgewood, Queens," Andy Schwartz, publisher of New York Rocker magazine, said on behalf of Ramone's family. "He was in hospice care fo...

Tommy Ramone has died aged 65.

His death marks the passing of the last surviving member of The Ramones.

“Tom died yesterday, July 11, at 12:15 p.m. at his home in Ridgewood, Queens,” Andy Schwartz, publisher of New York Rocker magazine, said on behalf of Ramone’s family. “He was in hospice care following treatment for cancer of the bile duct.”

Rolling Stone confirm Ramone was 65 at the time of his death.

Born Erdelyi Tamas in Budapest in 1949, Ramone was the group’s drummer from 1974 to 1978, and co-produced their first three albums.

The news of Tommy’s death was accompanied by the following 1978 quote of his on the band’s Facebook page: “It wasn’t just music in The Ramones: it was an idea. It was bringing back a whole feel that was missing in rock music – it was a whole push outwards to say something new and different. Originally it was just an artistic type of thing; finally I felt it was something that was good enough for everybody.”

Photo credit: Getty

Watch Neil Young & Crazy Horse perform new song, “Who’s Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?”

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Neil Young & Crazy Horse have debuted a new song, "Who's Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?", on their current European tour dates. The song first emerged in the set in Reykjavík on July 7. You can watch the band perform the song live in Cork, Ireland last night [July 10]. http://www.youtube...

Neil Young & Crazy Horse have debuted a new song, “Who’s Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?“, on their current European tour dates.

The song first emerged in the set in Reykjavík on July 7.

You can watch the band perform the song live in Cork, Ireland last night [July 10].

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

The set list for the July 10 show at The Docklands, Cork, Ireland:

Love And Only Love

Goin’ Home

Days That Used To Be

After The Gold Rush

Love To Burn

Separate Ways

Only Love Can Break Your Heart

Don’t Cry No Tears

Blowin’ In The Wind

Red Sun

Heart Of Gold

Powderfinger

Psychedelic Pill

Rockin’ In The Free World

Who’s Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?

Encore

Roll Another Number

The band play London’s Hyde Park tomorrow [July 12].

The Grateful Dead announce new Spring 1990 box set

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The Grateful Dead have announced details of a new box set, Spring 1990 (The Other One). The release is a companion to the sold-out Spring 1990 boxed set from 2012. The 23-disc set covers eight complete shows, all previously unreleased, and will be available from September 9. The collection will b...

The Grateful Dead have announced details of a new box set, Spring 1990 (The Other One).

The release is a companion to the sold-out Spring 1990 boxed set from 2012.

The 23-disc set covers eight complete shows, all previously unreleased, and will be available from September 9.

The collection will be limited to 9,000 individually numbered copies and is currently available for pre-order exclusively from the band’s website, Dead.net.

It will also be released as an HD digital download on the same date.

In addition to its inclusion in the boxed set, a March 29, 1990 show at Nassau Coliseum with Branford Marsalis will also be released separately as a three-disc set.

“When we produced the first Spring 1990 box in 2012, there were a lot of tough choices to make about what shows to omit from that box. However, we knew we’d do this second box someday, so the choices of omission were easier to digest,” says Grateful Dead archivist David Lemieux. “Now we’re able to complete the picture the first box painted with music that’s every bit as good, and in some cases surpasses, the six shows in the original box. These are eight extremely high-level Dead shows, each and every one of which would make a terrific CD releases. It only seemed fitting that in the face of such an abundance of quality Dead, we should release it all at once.”

Eric Idle: “Monty Python never took very kindly to being told what to do”

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Eric Idle discusses Monty Python’s new boxset, which compiles all their albums, in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2014 and out now. The Python comedian and songwriter explains how the troupe’s best-selling record, 1989’s Monty Python Sings, was put together. “We found out we ‘owe...

Eric Idle discusses Monty Python’s new boxset, which compiles all their albums, in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2014 and out now.

The Python comedian and songwriter explains how the troupe’s best-selling record, 1989’s Monty Python Sings, was put together.

“We found out we ‘owed’ Clive Davis and Arista an album,” says Idle. “Python never took very kindly to being told what they must do. So we threw a lot more songs in as an ironic gesture.

“This led to our best-selling album, Monty Python Sings, which I put together. You can listen to a funny song many more times than a sketch.”

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

A Hard Day’s Night: 50 years on…

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Last week, the BFI hosted a Q&A session with director Richard Lester, as a prelude to the 50th anniversary re-release of A Hard Day’s Night. The BFI have kindly let us host the Q&A - which you can watch below. Lester, who's 82 now, is in formidable form during the session with author Ma...

Last week, the BFI hosted a Q&A session with director Richard Lester, as a prelude to the 50th anniversary re-release of A Hard Day’s Night.

The BFI have kindly let us host the Q&A – which you can watch below. Lester, who’s 82 now, is in formidable form during the session with author Mark Lewisohn. Watching the film again now – brushed up for its birthday – it’s reassuring to see how much it still sparkles. As Lester points out, much of that is to do with the way he and screenwriter simply let The Beatles be themselves, albeit in slightly exaggerated form. Perhaps most conspicuous is how funny the film is. “How did you find America?” a journalist asks Lennon: “Turn left at Greenland,” he pings back.

It’s interested to see how similar the portrayal of the band in A Hard Day’s Night is compared to the Albert and David Maysles’ documentary What’s Happening! The Beatles In The U.S.A, which offered a similarly freewheeling and candid snapshot of the band. As research for his script, Owen spent three days with the band in November 1963, three months before the Maysles’ filmed The Beatles’ first visit to America. The parity between the ‘reality’ created by Owen and director Richard Lester in A Hard Day’s Night is extraordinarily close to the band’s true lives as caught by the Maysles.

But of course, Lester’s film isn’t a documentary: part Marx Brothers slapstick, part Goons surrealism, part New Wave cinema, part satire on being The Beatles, it’s an incredibly multi-faceted piece, nowhere near as straightforward as it’s simple proposition and brisk pacing might suggest. There is some shenanigans with schoolgirls at the start, and Lennon’s ‘comedy German’ impressions in the bath (a Spike Milligan lift) inevitably appear slightly dubious in 2014. The scene where George Harrison teaches John Junkin how to shave using his reflection in the mirror is a brilliant piece of composition, predicated entirely on the location of the camera rather than what Harrison can really see of Junkin’s reflection. Fab gear, etc.


Incidentally, the interview with Richard Lester can also be watched on the BFI Player here.

A Hard Day’s Night runs at the BFI Southbank until July 17; you can find more details here. It will be released on DVD and Blu-ray on July 21

Bernard Sumner reveals details of his autobiography

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Bernard Sumner has confirmed details of his autobiography. Chapter And Verse (New Order, Joy Division And Me) will be published by Transworld on September 25. It had been announced in June 2013 that Sumner had signed a deal to publish his memoirs. The accompanying press release states that the boo...

Bernard Sumner has confirmed details of his autobiography.

Chapter And Verse (New Order, Joy Division And Me) will be published by Transworld on September 25. It had been announced in June 2013 that Sumner had signed a deal to publish his memoirs.

The accompanying press release states that the book will offer “a vivid and illuminating” account of Sumner’s childhood in Salford, before detailing his thoughts on Joy Division, New Order and the Hacienda nightclub. It continues: “Sometimes moving, often hilarious and occasionally completely out of control, this is a tale populated by some of the most colourful and creative characters in music history.”

The book is Sumner’s first.

New Order are currently on a North American tour which finishes on Sunday (July 13) at Los Angeles’ Greek Theater. They have previewed one new song, “Singularity”, a video of which can be seen below. A new album is provisionally due out next spring. The Chemical Brothers’ Tom Rowlands was working with the band in 2013, but it isn’t known who the final producers are on the album.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJ5idkbbSno

Brazil fans blame Mick Jagger for World Cup defeat

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Mick Jagger has been blamed by a Brazilian TV station for Brazil’s record-breaking 7-1 World Cup semi-final defeat by Germany yesterday (July 8). Jagger has endured a six-game losing streak at the World Cup since 2010, by publicly endorsing countries who promptly lose. It even led to Brazil fans ...

Mick Jagger has been blamed by a Brazilian TV station for Brazil’s record-breaking 7-1 World Cup semi-final defeat by Germany yesterday (July 8).

Jagger has endured a six-game losing streak at the World Cup since 2010, by publicly endorsing countries who promptly lose. It even led to Brazil fans dressing cut-outs of Jagger in the colours of Chile and Colombia before their victories over those countries. But they lost when Jagger and his son Lucas attended the Germany game in Belo Horizonte.

Jagger has been dubbed “The Angel Of Doom” by upset Brazilians, while TV station R7 called him “The biggest jinx in history” following the 7-1 thrashing, which was both Brazil’s biggest-ever defeat and the heaviest loss in a World Cup semi-final in the tournament’s 84-year history.

The run of bad luck began at the World Cup in South Africa in 2010, when Jagger watched England’s 4-1 second round defeat by Germany. He went with Bill Clinton to see the USA lose 2-1 to Ghana in the same round, before wearing a Brazil shirt during their 2-1 loss to the Netherlands in the quarter-final.

At the current World Cup, Jagger tweeted the England team a good luck message before they lost 2-1 to Italy, then announced during a Rolling Stones gig in Lisbon that Portugal would win the tournament. Portugal failed to reach the second round, as did Italy after Jagger said at a Stones show in Rome that Italy would win their vital group game against Uruguay. Italy lost 1-0.

Although Jagger wore a neutral’s England baseball cap during the semi-final, his 15-year-old son Lucas is Brazilian. Fans had carried a cut-out of Jagger in a Germany kit with a speech bubble saying “Let’s go, Germany!” outside the stadium.

Lucas’ mother, Brazilian model Luciana Giminez, defended Jagger, saying: “He’s suffering cyber-bullying, and I’d ask people to think before doing it. He’s been successful for 50 years and is a good friend and father to my son.”

AC/DC reveal new album details

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AC/DC have revealed that they have completed work on their new album. Brian Johnson, who collected an honorary doctorate from Northumbria University today, has said that the band have finished work on the LP, which they have been working on in Vancouver. It is likely to be released later this year...

AC/DC have revealed that they have completed work on their new album.

Brian Johnson, who collected an honorary doctorate from Northumbria University today, has said that the band have finished work on the LP, which they have been working on in Vancouver. It is likely to be released later this year or early next year.

“It was brilliant over there. We’re done. I’m very excited and we’ve got some great songs,” he told Metal Hammer.

Speaking about the current absence from the band due to health reasons of Malcolm Young, Johnson said: “We miss Malcolm obviously. He’s a fighter. He’s in hospital but he’s a fighter. We’ve got our fingers crossed that he’ll get strong again.”

His nephew, Stevie, has been filling in for his ill uncle during sessions.

“Stevie was magnificent,” said Johnson. “But when you’re recording with this thing hanging over you and your work mate isn’t well, it’s difficult.

“But I’m sure he [Malcolm] was rooting for us. He’s such a strong man. He’s a small guy but he’s very strong. He’s proud and he’s very private so we can’t say too much. But fingers crossed he’ll be back.”

Johnson admitted the band had discussed a number of album titles with the new release due to hit stores later this year or early 2015.

And he added: “I wanted to call the album Man Down. But it’s a bit negative and it was probably just straight from the heart. I like that.”

Johnson received his honorary degree from Northumbria University’s vice chancellor Prof Andrew Wathey, who says: “Brian has been an inspiration to the people of the North East and rock fans the world over.”