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Led Zeppelin share rare live tracks from upcoming reissues

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Led Zeppelin have posted a rare live performance of "Good Times Bad Times" and "Communication Breakdown" online. The tracks, which you can listen to by clicking on the Soundcloud link below, were performed by the band live at Paris' Olympia Theatre on October 10, 1969. The full show is set to featu...

Led Zeppelin have posted a rare live performance of “Good Times Bad Times” and “Communication Breakdown” online.

The tracks, which you can listen to by clicking on the Soundcloud link below, were performed by the band live at Paris’ Olympia Theatre on October 10, 1969. The full show is set to feature on the companion disc that will come with the reissue of the band’s self-titled debut later this year.

Led Zeppelin will reissue their first three albums on July 9, with four previously unheard tracks set to accompany each release.

The reissues will be released on CD, vinyl as digitally on June 2, and all tracks are remastered by Jimmy Page. All nine of the band’s studio albums are due to be reissued in chronological order.

The Rolling Stones confirm rescheduled Australia and New Zealand tour dates

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The Rolling Stones have rescheduled Australia and New Zealand tour dates which were postponed following the death of Mick Jagger's partner L'Wren Scott on March 17. Shows in Australia and New Zealand have been rescheduled for October, with the band set to start in Adelaide on October 25. The initia...

The Rolling Stones have rescheduled Australia and New Zealand tour dates which were postponed following the death of Mick Jagger’s partner L’Wren Scott on March 17.

Shows in Australia and New Zealand have been rescheduled for October, with the band set to start in Adelaide on October 25. The initial seven date tour has also increased with additional concerts in Perth and the Hunter Valley announced. Jimmy Barnes will support in Adelaide while Hunters & Collectors will open in Auckland on November 22.

Yesterday The Rolling Stones released a video ‘postcard’ from their recent Asian live shows.

“A Postcard From Asia” features live performance, crowds, airport arrivals and behind-the-scenes footage from the Stones’ shows in Abu Dhabi, Tokyo, Macau, Shanghai and Singapore during February and March 2014.

The video arrives ahead of the band resuming their tour in Norway on May 26. The band will pick up their European dates in May at Oslo’s Telenor Arena. The run of gigs includes a headline slot at Roskilde festival in Denmark on July 3 plus slots at Pinkpop in Holland and Roskilde in Denmark.

The Rolling Stones will play:

Adelaide, Oval (October 25)

Perth Arena (29/ November 1)

Melbourne, Rod Laver Arena (5)

Hanging Rock, Macedon (8)

Sydney, Allphones Arena (12)

Hope Estate, Hunter Valley (15)

Brisbane, Entertainment Centre (18)

Auckland, Mt Smart Stadium (22)

Linda Perhacs – The Soul Of All Natural Things

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Psychedelic folk, eschatology, spirals and choirs: welcome back, Linda Perhacs... Of all the strange, unexpected records to slip through the cracks during the late 1960s, few have endured like Linda Perhacs’ 1970 album, Parallelograms. Quietly released by the Kapp label, and then lost to time, the album’s resurgence over the past decade has moved Perhacs out of the footnotes of psychedelic history and re-positioned her as one of the era’s more influential spirits. Daft Punk included “If You Were My Man” on the soundtrack of their 2006 film, Electroma; Julia Holter and Devendra Banhart adore her; the late Trish Keenan, of Broadcast, marvelled over Parallelograms’ titular epic, a dream-song split apart by electronics: “[the] simple idea of a list of shapes as a song… it’s really special.” Indeed it is. Perhacs’ own story is as unexpected and odd as the album itself. Working as a dental hygienist, she was quizzed by one of her patients, “I can’t believe this is all you do.” That patient happened to be film composer Leonard Rosenman, who, after hearing of Perhacs’ double-life as a Topanga Canyon songwriter, opened the doors for Perhacs to record Parallelograms. After the album’s disappearance, she returned to her dayjob, seemingly unfazed, though her slow-release discovery of her new millennial cult status has led her both back to the stage, performing with Holter and other collaborators in tow, and back into the studio. The Soul Of All Natural Things mostly captures the articulate mysticism of Parallelograms and beds it down with becalmed musicianship, and quietly gorgeous songs. These kinds of returns to visibility, the long-awaited follow-up, are fraught with risk. Lost in technology, and corralled by muso types, they often sell short the weirdness that built the myth, replacing it with ersatz easy listening. The Soul Of All Natural Things doesn’t entirely skirt this: there are a few moments where the performances are sickly-sweet, such as the astral muzak of “Intensity”, where the “living on the edge/Playing on the edge” sentiments of the lyrics are sold well short by glossy, smoothed-out production and ‘tasteful’ playing. But if The Soul Of All Natural Things, at times, courts lugubriousness, it’s just as often perfectly poised. The gentleness of the album’s acoustic ambiences suits Perhacs’ world-view (a kind of benign, elder-statesperson, post-hippy eco-politics), and on songs like the soft driftworks of “Freely”, or the stately, encircling guitar figures of “Children”, the combination of Perhacs’ simply stated songwriting and the chamber-music resonances of the arrangements sit together naturally. The voice is in fine fettle as well: Perhacs’ mature voice has a lighter cast, and what it lacks in stridency – the understated fierceness that made Parallelograms songs like “Paper Mountain Man” so starkly compelling – it gains in kindness. This tenderness plays to the Apollonian aspects of Perhacs’s music, and The Soul Of All Natural Things sometimes scans as deceptively gentle, feather-light, as though a few errant breaths would send it scuttling off its rails. But this reading of the album underestimates its powers, particularly the two songs that form the album’s core: “River Of God” and “Prisms Of Glass”. The latter, in particular, is a gem: reaching back to 1970’s “Parallelograms”, it very clearly echoes that song’s balance between acoustic filigree and electronic disturbance. On “Prisms Of Glass”, Perhacs spins out “spirals of windows and spirals of stairwells” in a surreal, eschatological vision. One of her guests, Holter herself, gives an equally bravura performance, her occasionally mannered voice disarmed and freed in such company, and even better for it. It’s no surprise that Holter informs the more widescreen visions of The Soul Of All Natural Things, given the ambitions of her own Loud City Song from last year, and the microscopically exploded pop songs of Michael Pisaro’s Tombstones, another album Holter was deeply involved with. Elsewhere in The Soul Of All Natural Things, there are a few moments of longueurs, where the songs come off a little too session muso. But this new, becalmed Perhacs reveals a clear eco-political message articulated with subtlety and nuance. For Linda Perhacs, the road back to the garden is gently lit. Jon Dale Q&A Linda Perhacs During the sessions for The Soul Of All Natural Things, you worked with other artists, such as Julia Holter. How do you feel these new presences changed the way you make and think about music? The recording sessions were pure magic. I loved how everyone brought their own thoughts and ideas to the table. The best answer I can give you is the same one I have seen in some of our performances and recordings. And that is, sometimes people are in your life and they make you feel clumsy, [and] then there are those rare moments when things are so harmonious and so good, the only thing you can do is say in amazement and gratitude that this has to be “sent and meant”… Much of the album suggests a ‘stepping out of the world’, not as retreat, but as a ‘step forward’. I feel the purpose of my music is to heal. Perhaps that is the forward step. My compositions come as an energy flow that starts above me and flows through me like a fast flow of rain. This only happens when I am grateful to the universe for all its beauty, when I am in a prayerful and thankful state of mind. Then it comes so quickly I can’t catch it fast enough to write it all down.

Psychedelic folk, eschatology, spirals and choirs: welcome back, Linda Perhacs…

Of all the strange, unexpected records to slip through the cracks during the late 1960s, few have endured like Linda Perhacs’ 1970 album, Parallelograms. Quietly released by the Kapp label, and then lost to time, the album’s resurgence over the past decade has moved Perhacs out of the footnotes of psychedelic history and re-positioned her as one of the era’s more influential spirits. Daft Punk included “If You Were My Man” on the soundtrack of their 2006 film, Electroma; Julia Holter and Devendra Banhart adore her; the late Trish Keenan, of Broadcast, marvelled over Parallelograms’ titular epic, a dream-song split apart by electronics: “[the] simple idea of a list of shapes as a song… it’s really special.”

Indeed it is. Perhacs’ own story is as unexpected and odd as the album itself. Working as a dental hygienist, she was quizzed by one of her patients, “I can’t believe this is all you do.” That patient happened to be film composer Leonard Rosenman, who, after hearing of Perhacs’ double-life as a Topanga Canyon songwriter, opened the doors for Perhacs to record Parallelograms. After the album’s disappearance, she returned to her dayjob, seemingly unfazed, though her slow-release discovery of her new millennial cult status has led her both back to the stage, performing with Holter and other collaborators in tow, and back into the studio. The Soul Of All Natural Things mostly captures the articulate mysticism of Parallelograms and beds it down with becalmed musicianship, and quietly gorgeous songs. These kinds of returns to visibility, the long-awaited follow-up, are fraught with risk. Lost in technology, and corralled by muso types, they often sell short the weirdness that built the myth, replacing it with ersatz easy listening. The Soul Of All Natural Things doesn’t entirely skirt this: there are a few moments where the performances are sickly-sweet, such as the astral muzak of “Intensity”, where the “living on the edge/Playing on the edge” sentiments of the lyrics are sold well short by glossy, smoothed-out production and ‘tasteful’ playing.

But if The Soul Of All Natural Things, at times, courts lugubriousness, it’s just as often perfectly poised. The gentleness of the album’s acoustic ambiences suits Perhacs’ world-view (a kind of benign, elder-statesperson, post-hippy eco-politics), and on songs like the soft driftworks of “Freely”, or the stately, encircling guitar figures of “Children”, the combination of Perhacs’ simply stated songwriting and the chamber-music resonances of the arrangements sit together naturally. The voice is in fine fettle as well: Perhacs’ mature voice has a lighter cast, and what it lacks in stridency – the understated fierceness that made Parallelograms songs like “Paper Mountain Man” so starkly compelling – it gains in kindness.

This tenderness plays to the Apollonian aspects of Perhacs’s music, and The Soul Of All Natural Things sometimes scans as deceptively gentle, feather-light, as though a few errant breaths would send it scuttling off its rails. But this reading of the album underestimates its powers, particularly the two songs that form the album’s core: “River Of God” and “Prisms Of Glass”. The latter, in particular, is a gem: reaching back to 1970’s “Parallelograms”, it very clearly echoes that song’s balance between acoustic filigree and electronic disturbance. On “Prisms Of Glass”, Perhacs spins out “spirals of windows and spirals of stairwells” in a surreal, eschatological vision. One of her guests, Holter herself, gives an equally bravura performance, her occasionally mannered voice disarmed and freed in such company, and even better for it.

It’s no surprise that Holter informs the more widescreen visions of The Soul Of All Natural Things, given the ambitions of her own Loud City Song from last year, and the microscopically exploded pop songs of Michael Pisaro’s Tombstones, another album Holter was deeply involved with. Elsewhere in The Soul Of All Natural Things, there are a few moments of longueurs, where the songs come off a little too session muso. But this new, becalmed Perhacs reveals a clear eco-political message articulated with subtlety and nuance. For Linda Perhacs, the road back to the garden is gently lit.

Jon Dale

Q&A

Linda Perhacs

During the sessions for The Soul Of All Natural Things, you worked with other artists, such as Julia Holter. How do you feel these new presences changed the way you make and think about music?

The recording sessions were pure magic. I loved how everyone brought their own thoughts and ideas to the table. The best answer I can give you is the same one I have seen in some of our performances and recordings. And that is, sometimes people are in your life and they make you feel clumsy, [and] then there are those rare moments when things are so harmonious and so good, the only thing you can do is say in amazement and gratitude that this has to be “sent and meant”…

Much of the album suggests a ‘stepping out of the world’, not as retreat, but as a ‘step forward’.

I feel the purpose of my music is to heal. Perhaps that is the forward step. My compositions come as an energy flow that starts above me and flows through me like a fast flow of rain. This only happens when I am grateful to the universe for all its beauty, when I am in a prayerful and thankful state of mind. Then it comes so quickly I can’t catch it fast enough to write it all down.

Roger Waters announces Amused To Death reissue

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Roger Waters is preparing to reissue his 1992 solo album, Amused To Death. The project contains brand new stereo and 5.1 mixes from Waters' long term collaborator, Pink Floyd’s sound engineer, James Guthrie, and will come with additional never before released content and new graphics. The album ...

Roger Waters is preparing to reissue his 1992 solo album, Amused To Death.

The project contains brand new stereo and 5.1 mixes from Waters’ long term collaborator, Pink Floyd’s sound engineer, James Guthrie, and will come with additional never before released content and new graphics.

The album will be reportedly released on both Super Audio CD and 200g vinyl.

No official release date has yet been given, although one site reports it is due out on September 23, 2014.

Guthrie will preview samples of these newly mastered stereo and 5.1 tracks at Pink Floyd: Sound, Sight, and Structure, the Pink Floyd interdisciplinary conference hosted at Princeton University on April 12, 2014.

Manic Street Preachers debut new song “Let’s Go To War” at Brixton gig – watch

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Manic Street Preachers played new song "Let's Go To War" for the first time as they ended their UK tour in London last night (April 11). The band offered up a taste of new album Futurology during their headline performance at O2 Academy Brixton with Nicky Wire introducing the track by saying: "Ple...

Manic Street Preachers played new song “Let’s Go To War” for the first time as they ended their UK tour in London last night (April 11).

The band offered up a taste of new album Futurology during their headline performance at O2 Academy Brixton with Nicky Wire introducing the track by saying: “Please excuse me if I fuck it up. This is a nice marching song, it’s called ‘Let’s Go To War’.”

The London show marked the final night of a tour which began in Leeds late last month. That show in Yorkshire also saw new tracks played with “Europa Geht Durch Mich” and “Futurology” featuring on the setlist.

Tweeting after the gig, a message from bass player Nicky Wire read: “As I sit here in a comforting yet painful ice bath I can only thank everyone who came to brixton tonight-TRULY STUNNING CROWD.”

Futurology will be the follow-up to 2013’s Rewind The Film.

Speaking previously about Futurology to NME, James Dean Bradfield said: “It’s a lot spikier and shinier. It’s much more band-based, a tiny bit of krautrock influence. It’s not like The Holy Bible but there’s a bit of the same intent and threat. Lyrically, it’s got a European fascination. The landscape of Europe, the malaise of Europe, the malaise of us Brits not feeling part of it.”

Elvis Presley’s estate sues over gun adverts

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Elvis Presley's estate is allegedly suing a gun manufacturer for using the singer's likeness in an advert. According to TMZ, Elvis Presley Enterprises has filed a lawsuit against Beretta claiming they wrongfully used Presley's image without permission to advertise their new 692 shotgun. They also u...

Elvis Presley‘s estate is allegedly suing a gun manufacturer for using the singer’s likeness in an advert.

According to TMZ, Elvis Presley Enterprises has filed a lawsuit against Beretta claiming they wrongfully used Presley’s image without permission to advertise their new 692 shotgun. They also used Elvis impersonators at the 2014 Shot Show in Las Vegas.

The lawsuit allegedly mentions the fact that Elvis was a big gun lover. However, it states that the estate has never given permission to Beretta. Elvis Presley Enterprises is suing for damages and has demanded that Beretta stop using Elvis’ image for now on.

Meanwhile, A dozen dentists across the UK will be hosting an ‘Elvis Day’ in May to promote awareness of mouth cancer.

Each practice will host a model of Presley’s teeth plus a genuine dental crown made for the rock ‘n’ roller by former Memphis dentist Henry J Weiss. Each ‘Elvis Day’ will involve costumes, music and free mouth cancer screenings, according to the organisers.

Presley visited the dentist at 10.30pm on August 15, 1977, the day before he died. Elvis’s Crown was bought in auction in February 2012 for $11,000 by Michael Zuk, Canadian author and dentist and obsessive collector of celebrity teeth.

Morrissey reveals track listing and release date for new album, World Peace Is None of Your Business

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Morrissey has revealed the tracklist for his new album World Peace Is None of Your Business. The quasi-official fan site True-To-You confirms that the album will be released in July and includes songs with titles such as "Neal Cassidy Drops Dead", "Earth Is The Loneliest Planet" and "Kick The Bri...

Morrissey has revealed the tracklist for his new album World Peace Is None of Your Business.

The quasi-official fan site True-To-You confirms that the album will be released in July and includes songs with titles such as “Neal Cassidy Drops Dead”, “Earth Is The Loneliest Planet” and “Kick The Bride Down The Aisle”. Scroll down to see the full tracklist.

World Peace Is None of Your Business will be released via Harvest Records through Capitol. The fansite reports that Morrissey is “beyond ecstatic” with the album and that all 12 tracks were produced by Joe Chiccarelli (The Strokes, The Killers) in France.

The singer, who released his autobiography in October 2013, has signed a new, worldwide record deal with Universal Music’s US-based Harvest Records for the release of his 10th studio album.

As reported on earlier this year (February 13), Morrissey has announced two major US arena shows with very unusual support acts: veteran performers Sir Tom Jones and Sir Cliff Richard. In a statement, Morrissey said he was “honoured and thrilled” to have Jones and Richard on the bills.

The track listing for World Peace Is None of Your Business is:

‘World Peace Is None Of Your Business’

‘Neal Cassady Drops Dead’

‘Istanbul’

‘I’m Not A Man’

‘Earth Is The Loneliest Planet’

‘Staircase At The University’

‘The Bullfighter Dies’

‘Kiss Me A Lot’

‘Smiler With Knife’

‘Kick The Bride Down The Aisle’

‘Mountjoy’

‘Oboe Concerto’

Jesse Winchester dies aged 69

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Jessie Winchester has died aged 69. The musician had been suffering from cancer and passed away at his home in Charlottesville, Virginia on Friday morning. "Friends, our sweet Jesse died peacefully in his sleep this morning," said a message posted on Winchester's Facebook page. "Bless his loving ...

Jessie Winchester has died aged 69.

The musician had been suffering from cancer and passed away at his home in Charlottesville, Virginia on Friday morning.

“Friends, our sweet Jesse died peacefully in his sleep this morning,” said a message posted on Winchester’s Facebook page. “Bless his loving heart.”

Winchester – whose songs included “Yankee Lady”, “Biloxi”, “Mississippi You’re on My Mind” and “The Brand New Tennessee Waltz” – was born in Louisiana, in 1944, before moving to Memphis, Tennessee with his family.

Famously, he left the States for Montréal in 1967 after receiving his draft notice. “It’s strange, but I respect the people who went to Vietnam. It was just the way you saw it. If you believed in the reasons for it, it was your duty to go. If you didn’t, then I don’t see how you could go. If you’re gonna pick up a gun and shoot somebody, you better believe,” he told the Montreal Gazette . Winchester was eventually pardoned by President Jimmy Carter in 1977.

Speaking to Rolling Stone, Robbie Robertson recalls meeting Winchester in 1970.

“A friend of mine told me about him, and we went from Montréal, where I was living, to pay him a visit,” Robertson says. “He sang me a few songs, and I knew immediately he was the real thing. Great songwriter, with a very moving vocal sound.”

Robertson subsequently hooked Winchester up with manager Albert Grossman, and also produced Winchester’s self-titled debut, which also featured Robertson’s fellow Band musician, Levon Helm/.

Winchester’s songs were covered by a artists from James Taylor, Jerry Garcia, Allen Toussaint, Emmylou Harris, Wilson Pickett, Joan Baez, the Walker Brothers. Bob Dylan once said of Winchester: “You can’t talk about the best songwriters and not include him.”

Last autumn, artists including James Taylor, Rosanne Cash, Lucinda Williams and Elvis Costello recorded a tribute album, Quiet About It.

Previous reports had erroneously claimed that Winchester had died last weekend. “Elvis Costello sent me a lovely condolence note,” his wife, Cindy Winchester, told The Commercial Appeal. “When he learned that the rumor of Jesse’s death [was] false, Elvis replied, ‘Jesse continues to be a very surprising fellow.’”

Photo credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Metronomy – Love Letter

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Joseph Mount and co head to Toe Rag for analogue experiment and mild anxiety... On their last album, The English Riviera, which sold quarter of a million copies and was nominated for the Mercury prize, Metronomy seemed to have finally tied down their eccentric English songwriting. Their first record fussed its way around scuzzy rock, videogame brightness and electroclash sleaze, while 2008’s Nights Out still had an air of mania even as the hooks got stronger. The English Riviera, and wonderful transitional single “Not Made For Love”, took a much-needed deep breath – their songs were still brittle and nervy, but often slower, and a little more at ease. That restless energy still hums away, however, only now they’re diverting it into a change of production rather than songwriting. Like The English Riviera, these are cool, sad lounge-pop songs that fret about love, but rather than being slick digital arrangements, they were recorded at Toe Rag Studios, the all-analogue base for The White Stripes, Tame Impala and others. Frontman Joseph Mount has been writing with a guitar, and has cited The Isley Brothers and The Zombies’ Odessey And Oracle as influences. If you were cynical you might see this as retrograde, but the fact is that Toe Rag fits Metronomy perfectly. You can hear the room echo in Mount’s vocals, a sound of immediate vulnerability, and the smudgy synths soften their tendency towards the inscrutable and wacky. The backbeats are the pre-808 drum machines that you might find perched atop a shopping mall church organ, so cute in their dogged bossa nova pulsing – “The Most Immaculate Haircut” doesn’t even chop off the sound of the machine warming up, slowly speeding up like a record with a needle left on it, while it stutters to a pathetic stop at the end of “The Upsetter”. It’s the beta-male version of the swaggering drumkit, but is humbly resilient, matching the protagonists of the songs who are easily hurt, flawed and yet not entirely spineless. “The Upsetter” opens the album, a lovely ballad where Mount wheedles “you’re really giving me a hard time tonight” over acoustic strumming and softly modulating seasick synths, that swell into an exceptional guitar solo reminiscent of Neil Young. The mood darkens on the next track “I’m Aquarius”, even the boom-tsk of the drum machine sounding more harried; the backing vocals are all sung rather than sequenced, and you can hear the singer grimly smiling after the nth shoop-doop-doop-ah. It’s perhaps their greatest song yet, a deftly told tale of the various poisons that seep into modern relationships: passive aggression, spite, narcissism and an emotional articulacy that paradoxically means a total lack of communication. “Never saw just how much you thought I meant to me,” Mount raps, taking the language of love song and twisting it into baffling anti-logic. He eventually lapses into a desperate repetition of the title, blaming the stars instead of himself. The rest can’t quite match this opening brace (indeed, Italo instrumental “Boy Racers” is plain annoying), but there are gems throughout. The title track is a big Roxy/Abba white disco number, while “Reservoir” uses a slightly silly backing – the kind of thing you might hear in a ’70s infomercial for carpet cleaner – on a Jarvis Cocker-style slice of freewheeling smalltown storytelling. There’s more wry emotional weakness on “Call Me”, as Mount promises “we can try anything” before immediately adding a caveat: “we can say we’ll try anything”. And throughout there’s a marked psych influence, half Byrds and half West Coast, and nowhere more than “Month Of Sundays” with its chorus line ringing with a Grace Slick hauteur. Mount has said that the Toe Rag trip was a one-off, so perhaps Metronomy will never cure their itchy feet. But they’re thriving in their constant meandering – be it around a mixing desk or affairs of the heart. Ben Beaumont-Thomas Q&A Joseph Mount Why did you head to Toe Rag? The last record was the first time I’d been in a proper recording studio, but in the end I was still quite heavily relying on a computer to edit and arrange. My only all-encompassing thought was to do a record that forced me to write songs in a more traditional way, and get a different sense of achievement. People of my age always feel like computers help you cheat a little bit in certain things you do; the feeling you get [at Toe Rag] is more that you’ve made something out of nothing. Making music in that environment is much more laborious, in a workmanlike way… It’s a different level of care: pre-production versus post-production, and it means that everything you’re doing with intent rather than as a reaction to something. The lyrics are quite frank… You’re laying yourself bare – I’ve always been quite aware of that and worried that people will take things the wrong way, or laugh. But I realised you can kind of say what you want and people will listen and not judge. I was travelling when I was writing, and the only stuff I felt I had the authority to write about was being away from people, mildly upsetting people by being unreliable. But there are other tracks where I took a little bit of inspiration from what I experienced and ran with it. So if maybe in some songs I sound like a flawed person, I can assure you I’m not, I’m just singing a little story [laughs]. INTERVIEW: BEN BEAUMONT-THOMAS Photo credit: Tim Eve

Joseph Mount and co head to Toe Rag for analogue experiment and mild anxiety…

On their last album, The English Riviera, which sold quarter of a million copies and was nominated for the Mercury prize, Metronomy seemed to have finally tied down their eccentric English songwriting. Their first record fussed its way around scuzzy rock, videogame brightness and electroclash sleaze, while 2008’s Nights Out still had an air of mania even as the hooks got stronger. The English Riviera, and wonderful transitional single “Not Made For Love”, took a much-needed deep breath – their songs were still brittle and nervy, but often slower, and a little more at ease.

That restless energy still hums away, however, only now they’re diverting it into a change of production rather than songwriting. Like The English Riviera, these are cool, sad lounge-pop songs that fret about love, but rather than being slick digital arrangements, they were recorded at Toe Rag Studios, the all-analogue base for The White Stripes, Tame Impala and others. Frontman Joseph Mount has been writing with a guitar, and has cited The Isley Brothers and The Zombies’ Odessey And Oracle as influences. If you were cynical you might see this as retrograde, but the fact is that Toe Rag fits Metronomy perfectly.

You can hear the room echo in Mount’s vocals, a sound of immediate vulnerability, and the smudgy synths soften their tendency towards the inscrutable and wacky. The backbeats are the pre-808 drum machines that you might find perched atop a shopping mall church organ, so cute in their dogged bossa nova pulsing – “The Most Immaculate Haircut” doesn’t even chop off the sound of the machine warming up, slowly speeding up like a record with a needle left on it, while it stutters to a pathetic stop at the end of “The Upsetter”. It’s the beta-male version of the swaggering drumkit, but is humbly resilient, matching the protagonists of the songs who are easily hurt, flawed and yet not entirely spineless.

“The Upsetter” opens the album, a lovely ballad where Mount wheedles “you’re really giving me a hard time tonight” over acoustic strumming and softly modulating seasick synths, that swell into an exceptional guitar solo reminiscent of Neil Young. The mood darkens on the next track “I’m Aquarius”, even the boom-tsk of the drum machine sounding more harried; the backing vocals are all sung rather than sequenced, and you can hear the singer grimly smiling after the nth shoop-doop-doop-ah. It’s perhaps their greatest song yet, a deftly told tale of the various poisons that seep into modern relationships: passive aggression, spite, narcissism and an emotional articulacy that paradoxically means a total lack of communication. “Never saw just how much you thought I meant to me,” Mount raps, taking the language of love song and twisting it into baffling anti-logic. He eventually lapses into a desperate repetition of the title, blaming the stars instead of himself.

The rest can’t quite match this opening brace (indeed, Italo instrumental “Boy Racers” is plain annoying), but there are gems throughout. The title track is a big Roxy/Abba white disco number, while “Reservoir” uses a slightly silly backing – the kind of thing you might hear in a ’70s infomercial for carpet cleaner – on a Jarvis Cocker-style slice of freewheeling smalltown storytelling. There’s more wry emotional weakness on “Call Me”, as Mount promises “we can try anything” before immediately adding a caveat: “we can say we’ll try anything”. And throughout there’s a marked psych influence, half Byrds and half West Coast, and nowhere more than “Month Of Sundays” with its chorus line ringing with a Grace Slick hauteur.

Mount has said that the Toe Rag trip was a one-off, so perhaps Metronomy will never cure their itchy feet. But they’re thriving in their constant meandering – be it around a mixing desk or affairs of the heart.

Ben Beaumont-Thomas

Q&A

Joseph Mount

Why did you head to Toe Rag?

The last record was the first time I’d been in a proper recording studio, but in the end I was still quite heavily relying on a computer to edit and arrange. My only all-encompassing thought was to do a record that forced me to write songs in a more traditional way, and get a different sense of achievement. People of my age always feel like computers help you cheat a little bit in certain things you do; the feeling you get [at Toe Rag] is more that you’ve made something out of nothing. Making music in that environment is much more laborious, in a workmanlike way… It’s a different level of care: pre-production versus post-production, and it means that everything you’re doing with intent rather than as a reaction to something.

The lyrics are quite frank…

You’re laying yourself bare – I’ve always been quite aware of that and worried that people will take things the wrong way, or laugh. But I realised you can kind of say what you want and people will listen and not judge. I was travelling when I was writing, and the only stuff I felt I had the authority to write about was being away from people, mildly upsetting people by being unreliable. But there are other tracks where I took a little bit of inspiration from what I experienced and ran with it. So if maybe in some songs I sound like a flawed person, I can assure you I’m not, I’m just singing a little story [laughs].

INTERVIEW: BEN BEAUMONT-THOMAS

Photo credit: Tim Eve

J Mascis, Kim Gordon and more join Nirvana for tiny Brooklyn show

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Nirvana followed their Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame induction by playing an intimate show at Brooklyn's Saint Vitus, which has a capacity of 230. As reported by Noisey, the band were joined by a series of guest singers, beginning with Joan Jett, who opened the show with "Smells Like Teen Spirit", "Br...

Nirvana followed their Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame induction by playing an intimate show at Brooklyn’s Saint Vitus, which has a capacity of 230.

As reported by Noisey, the band were joined by a series of guest singers, beginning with Joan Jett, who opened the show with “Smells Like Teen Spirit”, “Breed”, “In Bloom” and “Territorial Pissings”.

J Mascis joined the band for “Drain You”, “Pennyroyal Tea” and “School”.

St Vincent’s Annie Clark, who, like Jett and Gordon, had also performed with the band at the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame ceremony, played three songs starting with “Lithium”.

Deer Tick’s John McCauley fronted the band for three songs, while Kim Gordon closed the show with “Aneurysm”, “Negative Creep” and “Moist Vagina”.

Nirvana played:

‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’ (with Joan Jett)

‘Breed’ (with Joan Jett)

‘In Bloom’ (with Joan Jett)

‘Territorial Pissings’ (with Joan Jett)

‘Drain You’ (with J Mascis)

‘Pennyroyal Tea’ (with J Mascis)

‘School’ (with J Mascis)

‘Lithium’ (with Annie Clark)

‘About A Girl’ (with Annie Clark)

‘Heart-Shaped Box’ (with Annie Clark)

‘Serve The Servants’ (with John McCauley)

‘Scentless Apprentice’ (with John McCauley)

‘tourette’s’ (with John McCauley)

‘Aneurysm’ (with Kim Gordon)

‘Negative Creep’ (with Kim Gordon)

‘Moist Vagina’ (with Kim Gordon)

The Stooges’ James Williamson: “I didn’t feel Iggy Pop was particularly thrilled about jumping back into the studio”

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James Williamson has shed light on his latest project, Re-Licked, a new version of a ‘lost’ 1974 Stooges album, in the new issue of Uncut. The guitarist has re-recorded a host of songs, including “Open Up And Bleed”, “I Got A Right” and “Gimme Some Skin”, with guest singers includ...

James Williamson has shed light on his latest project, Re-Licked, a new version of a ‘lost’ 1974 Stooges album, in the new issue of Uncut.

The guitarist has re-recorded a host of songs, including “Open Up And Bleed”, “I Got A Right” and “Gimme Some Skin”, with guest singers including Mark Lanegan, Alison Mosshart, Jello Biafra and Ariel Pink.

Live Stooges Mike Watt, Toby Dammit and Steve Mackay all feature on the recordings, but Iggy Pop does not.

“I discussed doing these with Iggy,” explains Williamson. “We decided there’d be no way we could do them as The Stooges and have it not be compared to the old Stooges – though I guess it’s the other way around, ’cause we were new in those days and now we’re old. So we opted to do a new record [2012’s Ready To Die].

“Why don’t I do it with Iggy now? I felt like this was my project, I didn’t feel like he was particularly thrilled about jumping back into the studio. Now I think he’s hearing that it sounds pretty damn good, so hey, if he wants to sing on one or two of them I’d be thrilled to death to have him do it.”

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

The Afghan Whigs’ Greg Dulli – My Life In Music

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As The Afghan Whigs release Do To The Beast, their first new album in 16 years, we delve into the Uncut archive to revisit the band’s dapper frontman recalling the albums and songs that changed his life (June 2012, Take 181). Includes Prince’s “laser jizz”… Interview: Sharon O’Connell ...

As The Afghan Whigs release Do To The Beast, their first new album in 16 years, we delve into the Uncut archive to revisit the band’s dapper frontman recalling the albums and songs that changed his life (June 2012, Take 181). Includes Prince’s “laser jizz”… Interview: Sharon O’Connell

___________________

The first album I ever bought

The Rolling Stones

Sticky Fingers (1971)

I’d heard “Brown Sugar” on the radio a lot and then, once I got into it, it was “Wild Horses”, “Sister Morphine”… that record had a bunch of styles. Older friends explained the subtext of “Brown Sugar” to me and there was the allure of the forbidden. I loved the Stones whenever I saw them on TV – they were dangerous and demonic. They’re still one of my favourite groups.

The most honest record I’ve ever heard

Richard Pryor

That Nigger’s Crazy (1974)

Me and my friends memorised this when we were about 10. That word alone is shocking and is rightly demonised, but Richard Pryor took it back and taught me, as a listener, how to be free – how to say what’s on my mind without fear of the consequences. He was talking about stuff that, as a white suburban kid, I didn’t know about, but I consider him to be a formative influence.

The album that floored me as a teen

Prince

Purple Rain (1984)

It’s just a perfect record. “When Doves Cry” has no bass on it – it’s still ahead of its time – and the last three songs are just… I saw the tour when I was about 17 and it blew my mind. Prince lay on a bed with a hot blonde chick and shot laser jizz out of his guitar. I wasn’t quite prepared for that and I’ve never been the same since.

The biggest influence on the Afghan Whigs

Hüsker Dü

Flip Your Wig (1985)

This has my favourite Bob Mould song on it, “Divide And Conquer”, and my two favourite Grant Hart songs, “Green Eyes” and “Keep Hanging On”. If I had to pick one song as an influence on Afghan Whigs, it would be “Keep Hanging On”. Lyrically, it’s all about the joy and optimism of the first verse. I would love to write something that innocent and beautiful, and mean it.

A soundtrack to transition

PJ Harvey

Stories From The City, Stories From The Sea (2000)

At the end of Afghan Whigs and the start of The Twilight Singers, I didn’t know I was looking for inspiration, but this is the record that stuck out during that interim; I played it over and over. “The Whores Hustle And The Hustlers Whore” holds the record together and has a peace to it. It was like a mantra for me and reminds me why I love The Pretenders.

My favourite singer

Marvin Gaye

Let’s Get It On (1973)

He’s probably my favourite singer ever. To me, this album is perfect. It’s very short and it has a suite style in that he brings back themes and re-sings them; that was very influential on me as a songwriter. Marvin Gaye has this ecstatic style that means whenever I hear him, I feel it in every pore of my body. I don’t know if I’ve felt as connected to any other singer.

My favourite rock’n’roll singer

AC/DC

Highway To Hell (1979)

This is prime Bon Scott – one of the greatest men to ever sing rock’n’roll. He was a great lyricist and a soul singer in his own way; I believed everything he sang. “Night Prowler” is one of the greatest blues songs ever written, “Walk All Over You” is AC/DC at their peak and the title track… well, he wrote his own obituary. Nothing against Brian Johnson, but Bon Scott spoke to my soul.

A record packed with memories

David Crosby

If I Could Only Remember My Name… (1971)

This was a record my friend Jeff played me back in college, and I really liked it, but I was in a different place then – I was listening to a lot of punk rock. I found the vinyl copy he gave me about six years ago, and when I put it on I was flooded with feeling. It was made in San Francisco, but it’s a beautiful soundtrack for driving in any city.

Photo: Danny Clinch

Dentist details plan to clone John Lennon and raise him as his son

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Canadian dentist Dr Michael Zuk has outlined his plans to clone John Lennon using DNA from the singer’s tooth. Speaking to Channel 4's Dead Famous DNA, Dr Zuk told presenter Mark Evans: “He could be looked at as my son.” Dr Zuk, who lives in Alberta, Canada, bought the wisdom tooth for nearly £20,000 at an auction two years ago. It was previously in the possession of Lennon's housekeeper. However, he accepted that the technology to clone the singer is not currently available to him. Explaining how he would raise the potential clone, Dr Zuk said: "He would still be his exact duplicate but you know, hopefully keep him away from drugs and cigarettes, that kind of thing." He added: "But you know, guitar lessons wouldn’t hurt anyone right?" The dentist also appears to believe that the clone could make a claim on Lennon's estate, saying: “I don’t think I would be the one, you know, owning his property, he would have the rights when he was old enough to make er, make a claim." Referring to possible legal restrictions, Dr Zuk added: "[It] depends where you do these things. If it can’t be done in one country you can do these things in another.” The dentist even suggested that he could clone Lennon multiple times. He said: "Well, if it works once it’s going to work again, right?"

Canadian dentist Dr Michael Zuk has outlined his plans to clone John Lennon using DNA from the singer’s tooth.

Speaking to Channel 4‘s Dead Famous DNA, Dr Zuk told presenter Mark Evans: “He could be looked at as my son.”

Dr Zuk, who lives in Alberta, Canada, bought the wisdom tooth for nearly £20,000 at an auction two years ago. It was previously in the possession of Lennon’s housekeeper. However, he accepted that the technology to clone the singer is not currently available to him.

Explaining how he would raise the potential clone, Dr Zuk said: “He would still be his exact duplicate but you know, hopefully keep him away from drugs and cigarettes, that kind of thing.”

He added: “But you know, guitar lessons wouldn’t hurt anyone right?”

The dentist also appears to believe that the clone could make a claim on Lennon’s estate, saying: “I don’t think I would be the one, you know, owning his property, he would have the rights when he was old enough to make er, make a claim.”

Referring to possible legal restrictions, Dr Zuk added: “[It] depends where you do these things. If it can’t be done in one country you can do these things in another.”

The dentist even suggested that he could clone Lennon multiple times.

He said: “Well, if it works once it’s going to work again, right?”

Red Hot Chili Peppers music used to torture prisoners in Guantánamo Bay

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The CIA reportedly used Red Hot Chili Peppers music to torture prisoners in Guantánamo Bay. US officials speaking anonymously to Al Jazeera confirmed details techniques used by the CIA during the George Bush administration following the declassification process for the report on its own "enhanced interrogation" procedures used after September 11. Among the techniques used to torture those suspected of being terrorists was exposure to the Californian band on repeat. One specific segment of the Senate Intelligence Committee report states that a suspect, named as Zayn al-Abidin Muhammad Husayn Abu Zubaydah, was subjected to the technique at a black site prison out of Guantánamo Bay between May and July in 2002. The report also reveals the fact that Abu Zubaydah was stuffed into a pet crate and was shackled by his wrists to the ceiling of his cell as well as being subjected to an endless loop of loud music. Earlier this year, industrial band Skinny Puppy revealed that they invoiced the US government after finding out that their music had allegedly been used as a 'torture device' at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.

The CIA reportedly used Red Hot Chili Peppers music to torture prisoners in Guantánamo Bay.

US officials speaking anonymously to Al Jazeera confirmed details techniques used by the CIA during the George Bush administration following the declassification process for the report on its own “enhanced interrogation” procedures used after September 11. Among the techniques used to torture those suspected of being terrorists was exposure to the Californian band on repeat.

One specific segment of the Senate Intelligence Committee report states that a suspect, named as Zayn al-Abidin Muhammad Husayn Abu Zubaydah, was subjected to the technique at a black site prison out of Guantánamo Bay between May and July in 2002.

The report also reveals the fact that Abu Zubaydah was stuffed into a pet crate and was shackled by his wrists to the ceiling of his cell as well as being subjected to an endless loop of loud music.

Earlier this year, industrial band Skinny Puppy revealed that they invoiced the US government after finding out that their music had allegedly been used as a ‘torture device’ at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.

Nirvana reunite with female singers

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The surviving members of Nirvana reunited last night [April 10] at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. They were joined by four female vocalists, filling in for Kurt Cobain. Joan Jett sang "Smells Like Teen Spirit", Kim Gordon took on "Aneurysm", St. Vincent performed "Lithium" and Lorde covered "All Apologies" with bassist Krist Novoselic, drummer Dave Grohl and guitarist Pat Smear. Earlier, the band had been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame by Michael Stipe, who said, “Nirvana were artists in every sense of the word. Nirvana tapped into a voice that was yearning to be heard. Nirvana were kicking against the mainstream. They spoke truth and a lot of people listened.” Grohl and Novoselic gave speeches upon accepting their awards, along with Wendy Cobain and Courtney Love, who buried the hatchet with her husband’s bandmates, embracing them for a hug. You can watch Joan Jett perform with Nirvana below. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4zBOrLOa2vY

The surviving members of Nirvana reunited last night [April 10] at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

They were joined by four female vocalists, filling in for Kurt Cobain.

Joan Jett sang “Smells Like Teen Spirit”, Kim Gordon took on “Aneurysm”, St. Vincent performed “Lithium” and Lorde covered “All Apologies” with bassist Krist Novoselic, drummer Dave Grohl and guitarist Pat Smear.

Earlier, the band had been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame by Michael Stipe, who said, “Nirvana were artists in every sense of the word. Nirvana tapped into a voice that was yearning to be heard. Nirvana were kicking against the mainstream. They spoke truth and a lot of people listened.”

Grohl and Novoselic gave speeches upon accepting their awards, along with Wendy Cobain and Courtney Love, who buried the hatchet with her husband’s bandmates, embracing them for a hug.

You can watch Joan Jett perform with Nirvana below.

Bruce Springsteen inducts the E Street Band into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: read his speech in full

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Bruce Springsteen inducted the E Street Band into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame last night [April 10]. The current line-up of the E Street Band was on hand for the induction, alongside original drummer Vini "Mad Dog" Lopez and keyboardist David Sancious. Danny Federici's widow Maya accepted on his...

Bruce Springsteen inducted the E Street Band into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame last night [April 10].

The current line-up of the E Street Band was on hand for the induction, alongside original drummer Vini “Mad Dog” Lopez and keyboardist David Sancious. Danny Federici’s widow Maya accepted on his behalf, and Victoria Clemons spoke for her late husband Clarence.

You can read Springsteen’s entire induction speech below:

Bruce Springsteen: Good evening. In the beginning, there was Mad Dog Vini Lopez, standing in front of me, fresh out of jail, his head shaved, in the Mermaid Room of the Upstage Club in Asbury Park. He told me he had a money-making outfit called Speed Limit 25, they were looking for a guitarist and was I interested? I was broke, so I was. So the genesis point of the E Street Band was actually a group that Vini Lopez asked me to join to make a few extra dollars on the weekend.

Shortly thereafter, I met Dan Federici. He was draped in three quarter-length leather, had his red hair slicked back with his wife Flo—she was decked out in the blonde, bouffant wig—and they were straight out of Flemington, NJ.

So Vini, Danny, myself, along with bass player Vinnie Roslin, were shortly woodshedding out of a cottage on the main street of a lobster-fishing town: Highlands, NJ. We first saw Garry Tallent along with Southside Johnny when they dragged two chairs onto an empty dance floor as I plugged my guitar into the upstage wall of sound. I was the new kid in a new town and these were the guys who owned the place. They sat back and looked at me like, “Come on, come on, punk. Bring it; let’s see what you got.” And I reached back and I burnt their house down.

Garry Tallent’s great bass-playing and Southern gentleman’s presence has anchored my band for 40 years; thank you, Garry! Thank you, sir.

Then one night, I wandered in the Upstage and I was dumbstruck by a baby-faced, 16-year-old David Sancious. Davey was very, very unusual: he was a young, black man who—in 1968, Asbury Park, which was not a peaceful place—crossed the tracks in search of musical adventure and he blessed us with his talent and his love. He was my roomie in the early, two-guys-to-one-six-dollar-motel-room years of the E Street Band. He was good, he kept his socks clean; it was lovely. And he was carrying around a snake around his neck at that time, so I lucked out with Davey as my roommate. [laughs] AND, Davey’s the only member of the group who ever actually lived on E Street!

So I walked in and he was on the club’s organ. And Davey’s reserved now, but at the time, he danced like Sly Stone and he played like Booker T, and he poured out blues and soul and jazz and gospel and rock & roll and he had things in his keyboard that we just never heard before. It was just so full of soul and so beautiful. Davey, we love you and we still miss you so, you know?

But predating all of this was Steve Van Zandt. Steven: frontman, frontman. I walk into the Middletown Hullabaloo Club; he was the frontman for a band called the Shadows. He had on a tie that went from here down to his feet. All I remember is that he was singing the Turtles’ “Happy Together.” During a break at the Hullabaloo Club in New Jersey, he played 55 minutes on and five minutes off, and if there was a fight, he had to rush onstage and start playing again.

So I met Stevie there and he soon became my bass player first, then lead guitarist. My consigliere, my dependable devil’s advocate whenever I need one. The invaluable ears for everything that I create, I always get ahold of him, and fan #1. So he’s my comic foil onstage, my fellow producer/arranger, and my blood, blood, blood, blood, blood brother.

Let’s keep rolling for as many lines as they’ll give us, alright?

Years and bands went by: Child, Steel Mill, the Bruce Springsteen Band — they were all some combo of the above-mentioned gang. Then I scored a solo recording contract with Columbia Records and I argued to get to choose my recording “sidemen,” which was a misnomer, in this case, if there ever was one.

So, I chose my band and my great friends, and we finally landed on E Street — the rare, rock & roll hybrid of solo artistry and a true rock & roll band.

But one big thing was missing — it was a dark and stormy night, as a Nor’easter rattled the street lamps on Kingsley Blvd. and in walked Clarence Clemons. I’ve been enthralled by the sax sounds of King Curtis and I searched for years for a great Rock and Roll saxophonist. And that night Clarence walked in, walked towards the stage, and he rose, towering to my right on the Prince’s tiny stage, about the size of this podium, and then he unleashed the force of nature that was the sound and the soul of the Big Man. In that moment, I knew that my life had changed. Miss you, love you Big Man. Wish that he was with us tonight; this would mean a great, great deal to Clarence.

An honorable mention and shout-out to Ernie “Boom” Carter. The drummer who played on one song only: “Born to Run.” He picked a good one. So here’s to you, Ernie. Thank you, thank you.

Thanks of course Max Weinberg and Roy Bittan, who answered an ad in the Village Voice. And they beat out 60 other drummers and keyboardists for the job. It was the in-fatigable, almost dangerously dedicated Mighty Max Weinberg and the fabulous five finger of Prof. Roy Bittan. They refined and they defined the sounds of the E Street Band that remains our calling card around the world to this day. Thank you, Roy. Thank you, Max. They are my professional hitmen; I love them both.

Then, 10 years later, Nils Lofgren and Patti Scialfa joined just in time to assist us in the rebirth of Born in the U.S.A. Nils, one of the world’s great, great rock guitarists, with a choir boy’s voice, has given me everything he’s had for the past 30 years. Thank you, Nils. So much love.

And Patti Scialfa — a Jersey Girl — who came down one weekend from New York City and sat in with a local band, Cats on a Smooth Surface and Bobby Bandiera at the Stone Pony, where she sang a killer version of the Exciters’ “Tell ‘Em.” She had a voice that was full of a little Ronnie Spector, a little Dusty Springfield and a lot of something that was her very, very own. After she was done, I walked up, I introduced myself at the back bar, we grabbed a couple of stools and we sat there for the next hour or thirty years or so—talking about music and everything else. So we added my lovely red-headed woman and she broke the boy’s club!

Now, I wanted our band to mirror our audience, and by 1984, that band had grown men and grown women. But, her entrance freaked us out so much that opening night of the Born in the U.S.A. tour, I asked her to come into my dressing room and see what she was gonna wear! So she had on kind of a slightly feminine T-shirt and I stood there, sort of sweating. At my feet, I had a little Samsonite luggage bag that I carried with me, and I kicked it over. It was full of all my smelly, sweaty T-shirts and I said, “Just pick one of these; it’ll be fine.” She’s not wearing one tonight. But Patti, I love you, thank you for your beautiful voice, you changed my band and my life. Thank you for our beautiful children.

So, real bands — real bands are made primarily from the neighborhood. From a real time and real place that exists for a little while, then changes, and is gone forever. They’re made from the same circumstances, the same needs, the same hungers, culture. They’re forged in the search of something more promising then what you were born into. These are the elements, the tools, and these are the people who built the place called E Street.

Now, E Street was a dance; was an idea; was a wish; was a refuge; was a home; was a destination; was a gutter dream; and finally, it was a band. We struggled together, and sometimes, we struggled with one another. We bathed in the glory, and often, the heartbreaking confusion of our rewards together. We’ve enjoyed health, and we’ve suffered illness and aging and death together. We took care of one another when trouble knocked, and we hurt one another in big and small ways.

But in the end, we kept faith in each other. And one thing is for certain: as I said before in reference to Clarence Clemons — I told a story with the E Street Band that was, and is, bigger than I ever could have told on my own. And I believe that settles that question.

But that is the hallmark of a rock and roll band—the narrative you tell together is bigger than anyone could have told on your own. That’s the Rolling Stones; the Sex Pistols; that’s Bob Marley and the Wailers. That’s James Brown and his Famous Flames. That’s Neil Young and Crazy Horse.

So, I thank you my beautiful men and women of E Street. You made me dream and love bigger than I could have ever without you. And tonight I stand here with just one regret: that Danny and Clarence couldn’t be with us here tonight.

Sixteen years ago, a few days before my own induction, I stood in my darkened kitchen along with Steve Van Zandt. Steve was just returning to the band after a 15-year hiatus and he was petitioning me to push the Hall of Fame to induct all of us together. I listened, and the Hall of Fame had its rules, and I was proud of my independence. We hadn’t played together in 10 years, we were somewhat estranged, we were just taking the first small steps over reforming. We didn’t know what the future would bring. And perhaps the shadows of some of the old grudges held some sway.

It was a conundrum, as we’ve never quite been fish nor fowl. And Steve was quiet, but persistent. And at the end of our conversation, he just said, “Yeah, I understand. But Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band — that’s the legend.”

So I’m proud to induct, into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the heart-stopping, pants-dropping, hard-rocking, booty-shaking, love-making, earth-quaking, Viagra-taking, justifying, death-defying, legendary E Street Band.

Led Zeppelin reissues: trailer released

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Led Zeppelin have released a trailer for their forthcoming reissues. The clip is previously unreleased and was recorded live at L'Olympia, Paris, October 10, 1969. The full concert will be included on the Led Zeppelin album companion disc. Led Zeppelin will kick off a major chronological reissue ...

Led Zeppelin have released a trailer for their forthcoming reissues.

The clip is previously unreleased and was recorded live at L’Olympia, Paris, October 10, 1969.

The full concert will be included on the Led Zeppelin album companion disc.

Led Zeppelin will kick off a major chronological reissue programme of their entire catalogue on June 2, 2014 with deluxe editions of Led Zeppelin, Led Zeppelin II, and Led Zeppelin III.

Neil Young’s Time Fades Away reissue: the plot thickens

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Copies of Neil Young's Record Store Day reissue of his long-out-of-print 1973 album, Time Fades Away, have been manufactured and are sitting in warehouse, according to Record Store Day co-founder Michael Kurtz. The album was scheduled for release as part of Young's Official Release Series Discs 5-8 Vinyl Box Set, alongside On The Beach, Tonight's The Night and Zuma. It was delayed in March "due to several other projects that Young has in the works that he wishes to focus on." But in an April 9 interview on East Village Radio Kurtz explained that the box set had been manufactured and shipped to the warehouse before Young decided to delay the release. “One of the big projects we had for Record Store Day was the Neil Young box set, which was all of those last four albums of his iconic period of his career," Kurtz explained. "And Neil had put it together, Warner Bros, who’s a good partner with Record Store Day created it, and they manufactured it, shipped it to the warehouse and then they got the call from Neil, ‘I don’t want to do that. We’re going to wait and put those out on Black Friday.’ They were already ordered, the stores were expecting to get it. But this is Record Store Day, there’s always a bit of chaos involved in it, because it does come down to the artist, what they want to do, and if they change their mind as Neil did in the last minute, those records are going to wait another six months before we all get a chance to get them.” Record Store Day takes place this year on April 19; no date has been confirmed for Black Friday 2014, although last year's event took place on November 29. Meanwhile, Young recently finished a four-date residency at the Dolby Theatre, Los Angeles. His next run of solo acoustic shows take place on April 17 and 18 at the Meyerson Symphony Center, Dallas, Texas and then on April 21 and 22 and the Chicago Theatre, Chicago, Illinois.

Copies of Neil Young‘s Record Store Day reissue of his long-out-of-print 1973 album, Time Fades Away, have been manufactured and are sitting in warehouse, according to Record Store Day co-founder Michael Kurtz.

The album was scheduled for release as part of Young’s Official Release Series Discs 5-8 Vinyl Box Set, alongside On The Beach, Tonight’s The Night and Zuma. It was delayed in March “due to several other projects that Young has in the works that he wishes to focus on.”

But in an April 9 interview on East Village Radio Kurtz explained that the box set had been manufactured and shipped to the warehouse before Young decided to delay the release.

“One of the big projects we had for Record Store Day was the Neil Young box set, which was all of those last four albums of his iconic period of his career,” Kurtz explained. “And Neil had put it together, Warner Bros, who’s a good partner with Record Store Day created it, and they manufactured it, shipped it to the warehouse and then they got the call from Neil, ‘I don’t want to do that. We’re going to wait and put those out on Black Friday.’ They were already ordered, the stores were expecting to get it. But this is Record Store Day, there’s always a bit of chaos involved in it, because it does come down to the artist, what they want to do, and if they change their mind as Neil did in the last minute, those records are going to wait another six months before we all get a chance to get them.”

Record Store Day takes place this year on April 19; no date has been confirmed for Black Friday 2014, although last year’s event took place on November 29.

Meanwhile, Young recently finished a four-date residency at the Dolby Theatre, Los Angeles. His next run of solo acoustic shows take place on April 17 and 18 at the Meyerson Symphony Center, Dallas, Texas and then on April 21 and 22 and the Chicago Theatre, Chicago, Illinois.

The 14th Uncut Playlist Of 2014

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Bit of a rush in the face of deadlines this morning, but a strange list – not all of it recommended, really – with a notable discovery in Mike Cooper, whose early ‘70s albums work well as companion pieces to those of Michael Chapman. Anyone who knows his work, and knows more, drop me a line. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 William Tyler – Lost Colony (Merge) 2 Lee Bains III & The Glory Fires - Dereconstructed (Sub Pop) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YucWOXSCa4U ) 3 Jerry David DeCicca – Understanding Land (Electric Ragtime) 4 Jonathan Richman – No Me Quejo De Mi Estrella (Munster) 5 Cluster – Apropos Cluster (Bureau B) 6 Fennez – Fennesz Plays (Mego) 7 Fennesz – Venice (Touch) 8 The Orwells – Disgraceland (Atlantic) 9 Ray LaMontagne – Supernova (RCA) 10 Mike Cooper - Trout Steel (Paradise Of Bachelors) 11 Owen Pallett – In Conflict (Domino) 12 Bobby Charles - Bobby Charles (Light In The Attic) 13 Lee Fields & Expressions – Emma Jean (Truth & Soul) 14 Olga Bell – Krai (One Little Indian) 15 Mike Cooper - Places I Know/The Machine Gun Co With Mike Cooper (Paradise Of Bachelors) 16 Turn To Crime – Sunday’s Cool (Mugg & Bopp/Old Flame) 17 Alice Boman – What (Soundcloud) 18 Silkworm - Libertine Deluxe Reissue (Comedy Minus One) 19 Toumani Diabaté & Sidiki Diabaté - Toumani & Sidiki (World Circuit) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCEeaERMfNo 20 Various Artists – Angola Soundtrack 2: Hypnosis, Distortions & Other Sonic Innovations 1969-1978 (Analog Africa) 21 Boris – Noise (Sargent House) 22 Black Bananas – Electric Brick Wall (Drag City) 23 Luke Abbott – Wysing Forest (Border Community)

Bit of a rush in the face of deadlines this morning, but a strange list – not all of it recommended, really – with a notable discovery in Mike Cooper, whose early ‘70s albums work well as companion pieces to those of Michael Chapman. Anyone who knows his work, and knows more, drop me a line.

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

1 William Tyler – Lost Colony (Merge)

2 Lee Bains III & The Glory Fires – Dereconstructed (Sub Pop)

)

3 Jerry David DeCicca – Understanding Land (Electric Ragtime)

4 Jonathan Richman – No Me Quejo De Mi Estrella (Munster)

5 Cluster – Apropos Cluster (Bureau B)

6 Fennez – Fennesz Plays (Mego)

7 Fennesz – Venice (Touch)

8 The Orwells – Disgraceland (Atlantic)

9 Ray LaMontagne – Supernova (RCA)

10 Mike Cooper – Trout Steel (Paradise Of Bachelors)

11 Owen Pallett – In Conflict (Domino)

12 Bobby Charles – Bobby Charles (Light In The Attic)

13 Lee Fields & Expressions – Emma Jean (Truth & Soul)

14 Olga Bell – Krai (One Little Indian)

15 Mike Cooper – Places I Know/The Machine Gun Co With Mike Cooper (Paradise Of Bachelors)

16 Turn To Crime – Sunday’s Cool (Mugg & Bopp/Old Flame)

17 Alice Boman – What (Soundcloud)

18 Silkworm – Libertine Deluxe Reissue (Comedy Minus One)

19 Toumani Diabaté & Sidiki Diabaté – Toumani & Sidiki (World Circuit)

20 Various Artists – Angola Soundtrack 2: Hypnosis, Distortions & Other Sonic Innovations 1969-1978 (Analog Africa)

21 Boris – Noise (Sargent House)

22 Black Bananas – Electric Brick Wall (Drag City)

23 Luke Abbott – Wysing Forest (Border Community)

Watch Patti Smith discuss Just Kids adaptation

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Patti Smith has been discussing a potential future film adaptation of her memoir Just Kids. Speaking to NME, she has revealed that she wouldn't want Charlotte Gainsbourg to play her. Although the actress – who has been tipped to play the punk icon – would be "ideal" for the role, she would pref...

Patti Smith has been discussing a potential future film adaptation of her memoir Just Kids.

Speaking to NME, she has revealed that she wouldn’t want Charlotte Gainsbourg to play her. Although the actress – who has been tipped to play the punk icon – would be “ideal” for the role, she would prefer two “unknown” actors to play her and her friend, the photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, whom the book centres around.

Watch the interview below.

Smith recently aired a new track, “ Mercy Is“, a collaboration with Kronos Quartet and Clint Mansell from the film, Noah.