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First Look – The Motel Life

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In an interview in the current issue of Uncut with Willy Vlautin, the singer-songwriter with Richmond Fontaine, discusses his flourishing second career as an author. “A lot of the time when I’m writing, I’m trying to lay things to rest,” he explains, He specifically cites the autobiographical elements of his first novel, The Motel Life, which is set in Reno, Nevada, where Vlautin was raised, and flags up the correlation between himself and the book’s narrator, Frank Flannigan, an aspiring writer who inhabits the city’s motels and dive bars with his brother, Jerry Lee. “It’s hard to be a stand-up guy when you’ve just been getting drunk paycheque to paycheque,” Vlautin says. “I lived like Frank until my mid-thirties.” This wintry adaptation of Vlautin’s novel finds Emile Hirsch cast as Frank and Stephen Dorff as Jerry Lee, and comes shot through with the elegiac qualities you’d associate with an outlaw ballad. Orphaned as children, the Flannigan brothers have effectively been living on the margins for most of their lives: a hopeless, downbeat cycle from which Frank and Jerry Lee retreat through their own stories and illustrations. Their predicament is exacerbated by the fact Jerry has a prosthetic leg after falling from a train. The situation finally becomes untenable for the brothers when they become involved in a fatal road accident. First published in 2006, The Motel Life has taken a number of turns before it finally reaches UK cinemas. The book was first optioned by Guillermo Arriaga, the screenwriter of 21 Grams and Amores Perros, before being picked up by Alan and Gabe Polsky. The Polsky brothers had previously produced Werner Herzog’s Bad Lieutenant: Port Of Call: New Orleans, and are here making their debut as directors. Following its premier in November 2012 at the Rome Film Festival – where it picked up three awards including Best Film, it subsequently played at a handful of American film festivals. The Motel Life deals in a pretty familiar array of themes – familial love, redemption, survival in desperate circumstances – and it conspicuously shares a sensibility with films like My Private Idaho and Drugstore Cowboy. But what’s perhaps most intriguing here is the absence of an adversary for the Flannigans. Considering their desperate environment, you could be forgiven for thinking they’d find themselves pursued by one of the usual bad guys you’d find in these kind of movies – hustlers, maybe, loan sharks, an aggrieved love rival or simply some guys they crossed one night in a bar. In fact, for all the Flannigans’ increasingly diminished luck, the Polskys have crafted a film that is surprisingly warm hearted. Far from being the kind of bickering, dysfunctional pair you might otherwise expect, the Flannigans are held together by a tight bond of brotherly affection. Hirsch and Dorff do good work as the Flannigans – boys essentially dealt a rum hand by fate and struggling as best they can to deal with it. A sub plot concerning Hirsch’s tentative attempts to reconnect with his former girlfriend – an understated turn from Dakota Fanning – is handled without sentiment. Kris Kristofferson cameos as the well-meaning surrogate father figure for the brothers. The soundtrack confirms the film’s Americana credentials: Calexico, Dylan and Cash and - of course - Richmond Fontaine. Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsmzYBXWc4Q THE MOTEL LIFE OPENS IN THE UK ON APRIL 4

In an interview in the current issue of Uncut with Willy Vlautin, the singer-songwriter with Richmond Fontaine, discusses his flourishing second career as an author.

“A lot of the time when I’m writing, I’m trying to lay things to rest,” he explains, He specifically cites the autobiographical elements of his first novel, The Motel Life, which is set in Reno, Nevada, where Vlautin was raised, and flags up the correlation between himself and the book’s narrator, Frank Flannigan, an aspiring writer who inhabits the city’s motels and dive bars with his brother, Jerry Lee. “It’s hard to be a stand-up guy when you’ve just been getting drunk paycheque to paycheque,” Vlautin says. “I lived like Frank until my mid-thirties.”

This wintry adaptation of Vlautin’s novel finds Emile Hirsch cast as Frank and Stephen Dorff as Jerry Lee, and comes shot through with the elegiac qualities you’d associate with an outlaw ballad. Orphaned as children, the Flannigan brothers have effectively been living on the margins for most of their lives: a hopeless, downbeat cycle from which Frank and Jerry Lee retreat through their own stories and illustrations. Their predicament is exacerbated by the fact Jerry has a prosthetic leg after falling from a train. The situation finally becomes untenable for the brothers when they become involved in a fatal road accident.

First published in 2006, The Motel Life has taken a number of turns before it finally reaches UK cinemas. The book was first optioned by Guillermo Arriaga, the screenwriter of 21 Grams and Amores Perros, before being picked up by Alan and Gabe Polsky. The Polsky brothers had previously produced Werner Herzog’s Bad Lieutenant: Port Of Call: New Orleans, and are here making their debut as directors. Following its premier in November 2012 at the Rome Film Festival – where it picked up three awards including Best Film, it subsequently played at a handful of American film festivals.

The Motel Life deals in a pretty familiar array of themes – familial love, redemption, survival in desperate circumstances – and it conspicuously shares a sensibility with films like My Private Idaho and Drugstore Cowboy. But what’s perhaps most intriguing here is the absence of an adversary for the Flannigans. Considering their desperate environment, you could be forgiven for thinking they’d find themselves pursued by one of the usual bad guys you’d find in these kind of movies – hustlers, maybe, loan sharks, an aggrieved love rival or simply some guys they crossed one night in a bar. In fact, for all the Flannigans’ increasingly diminished luck, the Polskys have crafted a film that is surprisingly warm hearted. Far from being the kind of bickering, dysfunctional pair you might otherwise expect, the Flannigans are held together by a tight bond of brotherly affection. Hirsch and Dorff do good work as the Flannigans – boys essentially dealt a rum hand by fate and struggling as best they can to deal with it. A sub plot concerning Hirsch’s tentative attempts to reconnect with his former girlfriend – an understated turn from Dakota Fanning – is handled without sentiment. Kris Kristofferson cameos as the well-meaning surrogate father figure for the brothers. The soundtrack confirms the film’s Americana credentials: Calexico, Dylan and Cash and – of course – Richmond Fontaine.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

THE MOTEL LIFE OPENS IN THE UK ON APRIL 4

Suede to release “lost” single for Record Store Day

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Suede are to release their "lost" single, "Let Go", on 7" vinyl on Record Store Day 2014 (april 19). The track was originally issued as a CD single in Sweden in 1999. The Record Store Day 7” single (backed with "Heroin") coincides the release of the Suede 7” Singles Box Set on April 14, but wi...

Suede are to release their “lost” single, “Let Go“, on 7” vinyl on Record Store Day 2014 (april 19).

The track was originally issued as a CD single in Sweden in 1999.

The Record Store Day 7” single (backed with “Heroin”) coincides the release of the Suede 7” Singles Box Set on April 14, but will not be included in it.

You can watch a trailer for the Singles Box Set below:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x8OgANfuNpk

Under The Skin

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The Woman Who Fell To Earth... For those of you who miss Jonathan Glazer’s abstract black and white videos for Radiohead – “Street Spirit (Fade Out)” comes to mind – then Under The Skin is surely the film for you. It stars Scarlett Johansson as a nameless alien driving round the streets of Glasgow in a battered white van while looking for single men to harvest for, we assume, sinister purposes. Not that you’d know it: the dialogue is scant, motivations hidden, the film’s ‘what-the-fuck’ qualities operating at full tilt. It is, perhaps, Species as directed by Scottish filmmaker Lynne Ramsay, whose 2002 film Morvern Callar was as mesmeric, startling and frequently baffling as Under The Skin. Just as Ramsay’s film followed a luminous, inscrutable Samantha Morton round wind-swept Scotland, so Glazer’s film traces Johansson’s passage through Glasgow’s schemes and A-roads, her behavior equally unfathomable (Under The Skin is based on a 2000 novel by Michael Faber, and it is perhaps advisable to read a plot summary in order to fill in the many blanks Glazer deliberately leaves in his narrative.) It’s perhaps best to consider Glazer’s film to be an avant garde midnight movie, using familiar genre conventions to explore conceptual philosophical ideas. As we watch Johansson trawl Glasgow’s boondocks in search of prey, the film assumes the quality of a bizarro feminist allegory; later, after an incident that sparks curiousity about her human form, the hunter becomes the hunted deep in the Highlands. Glazer’s film has a chilly, austere quality to it. He shoots plenty of verité footage of Glaswegians that at times suggest this is an anthropological study (perhaps this is reflective of Johansson as she eyes up her potential prey?); the sections in the Highlands, with the landscape shrouded in damp mist, is on the other hand remarkably beautiful. Johansson herself proves a game accomplice for Glazer: an A-list Hollywood star adrift in the Galashiels. With a black bob, fur coat and British accent, she mostly resembles Tiswas’ Sally James; nevertheless, she’s extremely good at communicating her character’s beautiful otherworldliness, a disconnection from the people she meets that imperceptibly shifts into something approaching an understanding of the human condition. Michael Bonner Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

The Woman Who Fell To Earth…

For those of you who miss Jonathan Glazer’s abstract black and white videos for Radiohead – “Street Spirit (Fade Out)” comes to mind – then Under The Skin is surely the film for you.

It stars Scarlett Johansson as a nameless alien driving round the streets of Glasgow in a battered white van while looking for single men to harvest for, we assume, sinister purposes. Not that you’d know it: the dialogue is scant, motivations hidden, the film’s ‘what-the-fuck’ qualities operating at full tilt. It is, perhaps, Species as directed by Scottish filmmaker Lynne Ramsay, whose 2002 film Morvern Callar was as mesmeric, startling and frequently baffling as Under The Skin. Just as Ramsay’s film followed a luminous, inscrutable Samantha Morton round wind-swept Scotland, so Glazer’s film traces Johansson’s passage through Glasgow’s schemes and A-roads, her behavior equally unfathomable (Under The Skin is based on a 2000 novel by Michael Faber, and it is perhaps advisable to read a plot summary in order to fill in the many blanks Glazer deliberately leaves in his narrative.)

It’s perhaps best to consider Glazer’s film to be an avant garde midnight movie, using familiar genre conventions to explore conceptual philosophical ideas. As we watch Johansson trawl Glasgow’s boondocks in search of prey, the film assumes the quality of a bizarro feminist allegory; later, after an incident that sparks curiousity about her human form, the hunter becomes the hunted deep in the Highlands. Glazer’s film has a chilly, austere quality to it. He shoots plenty of verité footage of Glaswegians that at times suggest this is an anthropological study (perhaps this is reflective of Johansson as she eyes up her potential prey?); the sections in the Highlands, with the landscape shrouded in damp mist, is on the other hand remarkably beautiful.

Johansson herself proves a game accomplice for Glazer: an A-list Hollywood star adrift in the Galashiels. With a black bob, fur coat and British accent, she mostly resembles Tiswas’ Sally James; nevertheless, she’s extremely good at communicating her character’s beautiful otherworldliness, a disconnection from the people she meets that imperceptibly shifts into something approaching an understanding of the human condition.

Michael Bonner

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

Director quits Freddie Mercury biopic

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Director Dexter Fletcher has reportedly quit the forthcoming Freddie Mercury biopic. Deadline says that filmmaker Fletcher, who made his directorial debut with 2012's Wild Bill and also helmed last year's Proclaimers-inspired musical Sunshine On Leith, has backed out of the project due to creative differences. His vision for the film reportedly clashed with that of producer Graham King. Sacha Baron Cohen was originally slated to play Mercury in the biopic of the late Queen singer's life, but he also pulled out of the project because, according to reports, he and the band were unable to agree on the type of movie they wanted to make. He was subsequently replaced by actor Ben Whishaw. Speaking about Cohen's departure, Queen guitarist Brian May said: "You have to really suspend that disbelief – the man who plays Freddie, you have to really believe is Freddie. And we didn't think that could really happen with Sacha. That's not any criticism of his talent whatsoever, it's just a feeling that it was not going to work – that the pieces didn't fit together anymore." Filming on Mercury is scheduled to begin this summer. A script has been written by screenwriter Peter Morgan, who has previously worked on films including The Queen and Frost/Nixon.

Director Dexter Fletcher has reportedly quit the forthcoming Freddie Mercury biopic.

Deadline says that filmmaker Fletcher, who made his directorial debut with 2012’s Wild Bill and also helmed last year’s Proclaimers-inspired musical Sunshine On Leith, has backed out of the project due to creative differences. His vision for the film reportedly clashed with that of producer Graham King.

Sacha Baron Cohen was originally slated to play Mercury in the biopic of the late Queen singer’s life, but he also pulled out of the project because, according to reports, he and the band were unable to agree on the type of movie they wanted to make.

He was subsequently replaced by actor Ben Whishaw. Speaking about Cohen’s departure, Queen guitarist Brian May said: “You have to really suspend that disbelief – the man who plays Freddie, you have to really believe is Freddie. And we didn’t think that could really happen with Sacha. That’s not any criticism of his talent whatsoever, it’s just a feeling that it was not going to work – that the pieces didn’t fit together anymore.”

Filming on Mercury is scheduled to begin this summer. A script has been written by screenwriter Peter Morgan, who has previously worked on films including The Queen and Frost/Nixon.

Jarvis Cocker unveils Pulp documentary

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A new documentary charting Pulp's homecoming show in Sheffield in December 2012 has been unveiled at the SXSW Film Festval. The movie, simply entitled Pulp, received its world premiere in Austin, Texas, and also had a follow-up screening last night (March 12) at the city's Stateside Theatre, at which Jarvis Cocker and director Florian Habicht were present. The 90 minute long movie uses live footage from the band's Motorpoint Arena gig, with songs such as 'FEELINGCALLEDLOVE', 'Common People' and 'This Is Hardcore' featured alongside interviews with members of the band, including drummer Nick Banks, who talks about the band sponsoring his daughter's football team, Sheffield FC U-14 Ladies, and keyboard played Candida Doyle, who discusses her struggle with arthritis, which she developed as a teenager. Richard Hawley also features in the film. Jarvis Cocker also discusses his uncomfortableness with aging as well as his stage wardrobe and his work as a teenage fishmonger. A large part of the movie is made up of interviews with fans of the band, as well as local people from Sheffield. Interviews for the film were conducted in Sheffield city centre and also with fans waiting outside the Arena, including one with a nurse from Georgia, who had traveled all the way from the United States for the show. Florian Habicht revealed that the nurse was present at the opening night of the film. The film features a number of set pieces with local singing and dancing groups, who perform and dance to the band's material, including a group of older singers, who sing the band's hit 'Help The Aged' in a cafe. "It seems like a fairytale place," said Florian, a native New Zealander, of Sheffield. "A nice fairy tale? Not a scary one?" asked Jarvis in response, to laughs from the audience last night. The film marks the last time Pulp played a headline show and was be made by Pistachio Pictures. Speaking about the project, Steve Milne of executive producers British Film Company previously said; "Music has been a big part of my life and we are delighted to be able to support this exciting project." When asked last year by NME what he meant when he told fans at the band's triumphant homecoming show "This is it, for now", Jarvis Cocker replied: "For a while, you know. That was a good concert that, it was nice. But those things, you can't keep doing them… Pulp won't be playing this year." Jarvis Cocker also spoke at SXSW yesterday (March 12) at the Austin Convention Centre, leading an hour long seminar to a packed room, which saw him presenting a Powerpoint presentation and reading his own lyrics from his book 'Mother, Brother, Lover: Selected Lyrics', including 'Sorted For E's & Wizz', which he read over a projection of British artist 's 1999 dance film, Fiorucci Made Me Hardcore. He also played pieces by Scott Walker and Roger McGough.

A new documentary charting Pulp‘s homecoming show in Sheffield in December 2012 has been unveiled at the SXSW Film Festval.

The movie, simply entitled Pulp, received its world premiere in Austin, Texas, and also had a follow-up screening last night (March 12) at the city’s Stateside Theatre, at which Jarvis Cocker and director Florian Habicht were present.

The 90 minute long movie uses live footage from the band’s Motorpoint Arena gig, with songs such as ‘FEELINGCALLEDLOVE’, ‘Common People’ and ‘This Is Hardcore’ featured alongside interviews with members of the band, including drummer Nick Banks, who talks about the band sponsoring his daughter’s football team, Sheffield FC U-14 Ladies, and keyboard played Candida Doyle, who discusses her struggle with arthritis, which she developed as a teenager. Richard Hawley also features in the film. Jarvis Cocker also discusses his uncomfortableness with aging as well as his stage wardrobe and his work as a teenage fishmonger.

A large part of the movie is made up of interviews with fans of the band, as well as local people from Sheffield. Interviews for the film were conducted in Sheffield city centre and also with fans waiting outside the Arena, including one with a nurse from Georgia, who had traveled all the way from the United States for the show. Florian Habicht revealed that the nurse was present at the opening night of the film.

The film features a number of set pieces with local singing and dancing groups, who perform and dance to the band’s material, including a group of older singers, who sing the band’s hit ‘Help The Aged‘ in a cafe. “It seems like a fairytale place,” said Florian, a native New Zealander, of Sheffield. “A nice fairy tale? Not a scary one?” asked Jarvis in response, to laughs from the audience last night.

The film marks the last time Pulp played a headline show and was be made by Pistachio Pictures. Speaking about the project, Steve Milne of executive producers British Film Company previously said; “Music has been a big part of my life and we are delighted to be able to support this exciting project.”

When asked last year by NME what he meant when he told fans at the band’s triumphant homecoming show “This is it, for now”, Jarvis Cocker replied: “For a while, you know. That was a good concert that, it was nice. But those things, you can’t keep doing them… Pulp won’t be playing this year.”

Jarvis Cocker also spoke at SXSW yesterday (March 12) at the Austin Convention Centre, leading an hour long seminar to a packed room, which saw him presenting a Powerpoint presentation and reading his own lyrics from his book ‘Mother, Brother, Lover: Selected Lyrics’, including ‘Sorted For E’s & Wizz’, which he read over a projection of British artist ‘s 1999 dance film, Fiorucci Made Me Hardcore. He also played pieces by Scott Walker and Roger McGough.

Kurt Vile: “Like Neil Young says, your past is your worst enemy”

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The War On Drugs’ new album, Lost In The Dream, is out on Monday (March 17). Here, in this feature from Uncut’s November 2011 issue (Take 174), Sam Richards joins Adam Granduciel’s friend and collaborator Kurt Vile on tour in California to uncover the blood ties between Vile’s Violators and ...

The War On Drugs’ new album, Lost In The Dream, is out on Monday (March 17). Here, in this feature from Uncut’s November 2011 issue (Take 174), Sam Richards joins Adam Granduciel’s friend and collaborator Kurt Vile on tour in California to uncover the blood ties between Vile’s Violators and The War On Drugs…

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Kurt Vile is sitting on the sidewalk outside the Troubadour, the fabled Los Angeles club on Santa Monica Boulevard, where tonight he will play the second of two shows as a special guest of Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore.

History hums in the walls of the Troubadour. This, after all, is the place where Janis Joplin and Jim Morrison caroused nightly, James Taylor and Carole King performed “You’ve Got A Friend” for the first time in front of an audience and where, among many others, Tom Waits, Elton John and even Guns N’ Roses kickstarted their careers. On any given night in the early ’70s you might wander in and find the club’s front bar full of rock royalty – CSNY, The Eagles, Poco, Joni Mitchell, Gram Parsons, Van Morrison, Tim Buckley, Randy Newman, Harry Nilsson and innumerable other singer-songwriters, scene-makers, groupies and hangers-on.

“It really is pretty awesome to be on the same stage that bands like The Byrds and The Flying Burrito Brothers played so many times,” says Vile, the Philly singer-songwriter with the punk rock name, the grunge mane and the folk tunings. “One of the bouncer guys,” he adds, his voice dropping to an almost conspiratorial whisper, “has all these funny stories about Bonnie Raitt and Linda Ronstadt getting into fistfights.” He shakes his head in something approaching disbelief.

Vile, it’s not a surprise to discover, is a keen student of rock history. By his own reckoning, he’s consumed eight Rolling Stones biographies – he recommends Robert Greenfield’s STP if you want “the real debauched one” – plus books galore about Dylan, Springsteen, Neil Young and any other rocker whose life has turned to legend. “I always had my own dreams of writing songs and going on the road, so reading these rock biographies became an obsessive thing for me. When you listen back to these people’s records with the knowledge of how they recorded them and all that was going on in their lives, it becomes like virtual reality.”

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It’s taken a while, but Vile is gradually beginning to insinuate himself into the grand narrative of rock’n’roll that he worships so much. A consensus is quietly forming around his fourth album, Smoke Ring For My Halo, an appealing concoction of bummed-out classic rock vibes and slacker insouciance that was voted the best album of the first half of the year by readers of Uncut’s Wild Mercury Sound blog.

Even more gratifying for Vile have been the fond eulogies from several of his teenage heroes. When a copy of Vile’s previous album Childish Prodigy found its way into the hands of J Mascis, the Dinosaur Jr guitarist immediately recruited Vile to add mellow acoustic textures to his solo album, Several Shades Of Why. “I like the atmosphere he generates,” says Mascis. “He plays stuff I wouldn’t think of.”

On this current tour, he’s a guest of another alt.rock titan, Thurston Moore, who reveals how Kurt’s early records became a fixture on his and Kim Gordon’s “kitchen playlist”. “The way he mixes his records is very distinct, real personal,” enthuses the Sonic Youth man. “He has such a good positive energy. He’s a funny guy, and a beautiful songwriter.”

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Kurt Vile’s destiny was mapped out for him from the moment that his father, a fan of bluegrass and roots music, but evidently not 1920s Marxist musical theatre, unwittingly gave him the best punning punk rock name since Dinah Cancer. Growing up in a family of 10 kids in the Landsdowne neighbourhood of Philadelphia, most of Vile’s childhood experiences were soundtracked by his dad’s tapes of Doc Watson or John Denver, “Or Rusty Kershaw, this Cajun guy, who played on On The Beach.” Vile was encouraged to play music at home, although his first instruments were the trumpet and the banjo. “I wanted a guitar but it was too rock’n’roll or something,” he smiles. Vile dutifully mastered the banjo anyway, and these days he still often employs its distinctive open tunings when playing guitar.

At 17, inspired by the wry DIY fumblings of Beck and Pavement, Vile had an epiphany with a four-track tape machine and began recording his own songs at a prodigious rate. He scraped through art school before travelling cross-country with his girlfriend, settling in Boston where she attended grad school at Emerson College. There, he made friends with a bunch of college students who turned him onto “more cool music, like John Fahey and Brian Eno”. Yet despite continuing to amass a catalogue of quirky home recordings, the breakthrough never came.

His lowest point came when he found himself at a pitiful distance from his rock’n’roll dream as it was possible to get, driving a forklift truck for an air freight company in Everett, Massachusetts. Then again, it was just the kick up the arse he needed. “I was away from my childhood friends, working at this shitty warehouse, driving a forklift. And obviously the job totally sucked but I’d play all the time and all these songs just poured out of me. You get in a rut, but that’s where inspiration comes from.”

Moving back to Philly, he was galvanised by meeting Adam Granduciel of The War On Drugs (see panel) and the pair began working up the cache of songs that Vile would continue to draw on for 2008’s uber-indie debut, the sardonically titled Constant Hitmaker, right through to this year’s Smoke Ring For My Halo. “The song ‘Ghost Town’ on Smoke Ring… came from that period,” he confirms. “It’s about trying to climb out of something, aiming for something you can’t quite reach.”

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It’s sentiments like this that have found Vile talked up as a kind of lo-fi Springsteen, although it’s difficult to imagine The Boss ever singing, as Vile does in “Runner Ups”, of wanting to “take a wizz on the world”. More often, Vile resembles a later school of American songwriters: on “Peeping Tomboy”, when he sings, “I don’t wanna change but I don’t wanna stay the same”, you’re immediately put in mind of Evan Dando’s “Don’t wanna get stoned but I don’t wanna not get stoned” dilemma. And Vile has a habit of signing off his verses with a verbal shrug – an “Aw, hey, who cares” – that reminds you of another Kurt, and his “Oh well, whatever, never mind.” Where many rock songs strive to make statements and end up sounding glib, Vile’s honest demurrals are wholly refreshing.

“There’s a million ways to answer a question, and who’s to say which one is 100 per cent right?” he says. “I never want to be too straight-up literal, I like to leave things open.” He reaches back into those rock biographies for an analogy. “It’s like the difference between Dylan and Phil Ochs. Dylan would always make it broad, so anyone could relate at any time, whereas Phil Ochs would write songs about very specific events. That’s where Dylan’s insult came from, ‘You’re not a folk singer, you’re a journalist!’ It’s why I strive to make my music timeless.”

Indeed, the sarcastic snarl of Smoke Ring…’s “Puppet To The Man” has more than a hint of electric Dylan about it, Vile hitting back at the indier-than-thou bores who take umbrage whenever an artist tries to progress.

“When Smoke Ring… first leaked there were a load of nerd blogs who totally hammered it because it wasn’t so lo-fi or fucked up or something,” he says, “which was frustrating because to me it’s a more honest record then my previous ones – it’s just straight-up music. Like Neil Young says, your past is your own worst enemy, and people are always going to hold your new thing up to everything else that you’ve done. But I’m proud of the record and I couldn’t be happier with its reception.”

Nine o’clock the following night, and we’re roaming the streets near San Diego’s Casbah venue in search of fish tacos. Vile is weary but content, having broken up the journey between LA and San Diego by stopping off in Costa Mesa to record a raucous impromptu cover version of Keith Richards’ “Before They Make Me Run” with Jennifer Herrema of Royal Trux/RTX.

He clearly gets a kick out of collaborating, and diversions like these help break up the monotony of life on the road, which he has memorably compared to Lord Of The Flies. “I wanna beat on a drum so hard/’Til it bleeds blood” run the mordant lyrics of “On Tour”, and there is a definite frisson to watching him sing them live, flanked by the very people whose heads he must occasionally imagine skewered on stakes in the woods.

“It’s psychological warfare sometimes,” he smiles. “I wrote that on my first tour with The Violators. You’re just getting to know these people and all of a sudden you’re stuck in a van and it’s like being stranded on an island. Touring is hard work, especially with me being a new dad [Vile’s daughter was born in 2010], but then again, when I’m home I always have the itch to play. I’m stoked to be in this position.”

It seems that The Violators [Granduciel, third guitarist Jesse ‘Turbo’ Trbovich and drummer Mike Zanghi, there is no bassist] will have a bigger role to play on Vile’s next album. “Definitely, with all this touring we’re getting so tight. There’ll be rocking out for sure but it’s not going to be like Black Sabbath or anything. I just want to get in the studio and give it my all. A big element of my music is trial and error, but I want to try to execute songs with a little more authority.”

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Today’s session with RTX has given Vile some ideas on how to maintain the intimacy of his records while expanding their scope. “It was cool recording with Jen, they cranked the song through the PA. Sometimes when you’re used to playing a song live and suddenly you’re there in a studio hearing it through headphones you can’t summon up the same energy. So losing the headphones seems like a good plan to get the raw rock’n’roll vibes. Overdubbing’s fine, but I like the blueprint of a song to be as natural as possible.”

In some artists, this yearning for authenticity might seem like a pose, but Vile is too ingenuous a performer for that to ever be the case. Jennifer Herrema makes a shrewd assessment: “Nothing about his music feels contrived. Usually music is just a little subsection of somebody’s life and there’s very few people, like Kurt, where their music and their life are all one thing.” If Vile’s having a bad night on stage, you can immediately hear in his voice; it only means that songs such as “Ghost Town” and “On Tour” bite even harder.

“If that’s how it comes across then that’s cool,” says Vile, breaking into a goofy grin, “because even if it’s a little out of tune, or it’s totally raw, the people who understand the music know that it comes from the heart.”

The reason his songs can stumble from glee to despair to resignation within the space of a few lines is because that’s how things really are. “Life can be beautiful,” he says, “but it can be super fucked-up at the same time.”

Peter Gabriel: “Genesis is like going back to school, a fun place to visit but not a great place to live”

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Peter Gabriel answers your questions in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2014 and out now. The musician discusses writing songs with monkeys, the pros and cons of music streaming and why it’s time he made another album. Asked if he’s likely to get back together with Genesis, Gabriel says:...

Peter Gabriel answers your questions in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2014 and out now.

The musician discusses writing songs with monkeys, the pros and cons of music streaming and why it’s time he made another album.

Asked if he’s likely to get back together with Genesis, Gabriel says: “I looked at their last bit of touring and it grew into a bigger meal than I was quite ready to visit.

“It’s a bit like going back to school, a fun place to visit but not necessarily a great place to live. There’s nothing to say I won’t. I’m not sure it’s going to happen as we all creak towards senility, but we’ll see.”

The new issue of Uncut, featuring David Bowie on the cover, is out now.

Photo: Jon Enoch

The Rolling Stones live set “vetoed” by Chinese authorities

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The Rolling Stones have returned to China for the first time since their debut there in 2006, headlining the Shanghai Mercedes-Benz Arena last night (March 12) with a setlist altered due to government censorship. The band had been set to play the country for the first time in 2003 but the gigs were...

The Rolling Stones have returned to China for the first time since their debut there in 2006, headlining the Shanghai Mercedes-Benz Arena last night (March 12) with a setlist altered due to government censorship.

The band had been set to play the country for the first time in 2003 but the gigs were cancelled due to the Sars crisis. When they did play there, in 2006, songs including “Brown Sugar”, “Honky Tonk Women” and “Let’s Spend The Night Together” were banned by the Chinese Ministry Of Culture.

Last night the former two songs were off the setlist again, with Mick Jagger telling the crowd that “Honky Tonk Women” was “vetoed” by the authorities. Speaking before the show to local media, he had confirmed that the band had to submit their lyrics to Chinese authorities for vetting, as is custom for all foreign bands playing in China.

They played Macau, a Special Administrative Region of China that does not fall under the same censorship rules, earlier in the tour.

The band’s 1971 song “Dead Flowers” was brought into the Shanghai setlist as was “Street Fighting Man”. The latter song had been chosen by fans on the Stones’ social media channels.

Mick Taylor is joined them in Shanghai for “Slipping Away”, “Midnight Rambler” and “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction”.

The tour continues in Singapore on Saturday.

The band have just announced European festival dates for the summer.

The Rolling Stones played:

‘Jumpin’ Jack Flash’

‘Get Off My Cloud’

‘It’s Only Rock ‘n’ Roll (But I Like It)’

‘Tumbling Dice’

‘Dead Flowers’

‘Ruby Tuesday’

‘Street Fighting Man’

‘Doom And Gloom’

‘Miss You’

‘Slipping Away’

‘Happy’

‘Midnight Rambler’

‘All Down The Line’

‘Paint It Black’

‘Gimme Shelter’

‘Start Me Up’

‘Sympathy For The Devil’

‘You Can’t Always Get What You Want’

‘(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction’

Led Zeppelin to reissue first three albums with unreleased material

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Led Zeppelin are to 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. Each album has been remastered by Jimmy Page and will feature a second disc of companion audio comprised entire...

Led Zeppelin are to 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.

Each album has been remastered by Jimmy Page and will feature a second disc of companion audio comprised entirely of unreleased music related to that album.

“The material on the companion discs presents a portal to the time of the recording of Led Zeppelin,” says Page. “It is a selection of work in progress with rough mixes, backing tracks, alternate versions, and new material recorded at the time”

Led Zeppelin, Led Zeppelin II, and Led Zeppelin III will each be available June 3 from Atlantic/Swan Song in the following formats:

Single CD – Remastered album packaged in a gatefold card wallet.

Deluxe Edition (2CD) – Remastered album, plus a second disc of unreleased companion audio.

Single LP – Remastered album on 180-gram vinyl, packaged in a sleeve that replicates the LP’s first pressing in exacting detail. (For example, III will feature the original wheel and die cut holes.)

Deluxe Edition Vinyl – Remastered album and unreleased companion audio on 180-gram vinyl.

Digital Download – Remastered album and companion audio will both be available.

Super Deluxe Boxed Set – This collection includes:

o Remastered album on CD in vinyl replica sleeve.

o Companion audio on CD in card wallet.

o Remastered album on 180-gram vinyl in a sleeve replicating first pressing.

o Companion audio on 180-gram vinyl.

o High-def audio download card of all content at 96kHz/24 bit. (Live tracks are 48kHz/24 bit).

o Hard bound, 70+ page book filled with rare and previously unseen photos and memorabilia.

o High quality print of the original album cover, the first 30,000 of which will be individually numbered.

o Led Zeppelin will also include a replica of the band’s original Atlantic press kit.

The tracklisting for the reissues is:

Led Zeppelin

1. “Good Times Bad Times”

2. “Babe I’m Gonna Leave You”

3. “You Shook Me”

4. “Dazed And Confused”

5. “Your Time Is Gonna Come”

6. “Black Mountain Side”

7. “Communication Breakdown”

8. “I Can’t Quit You Baby”

9. “How Many More Times”

Companion Audio Disc

Live At The Olympia – Paris, France, October 10, 1969

1. “Good Times Bad Times/Communication Breakdown”

2. “I Can’t Quit You Baby”

3. “Heartbreaker”

4. “Dazed And Confused”

5. “White Summer/Black Mountain Side”

6. “You Shook Me”

7. “Moby Dick”

8. “How Many More Times”

Led Zeppelin II

1. “Whole Lotta Love”

2. “What Is And What Should Never Be”

3. “The Lemon Song”

4. “Thank You”

5. “Heartbreaker”

6. “Living Loving Maid (She’s Just A Woman)”

7. “Ramble On”

8. “Moby Dick”

Companion Audio Disc

1. “Whole Lotta Love”

2. “What Is And What Should Never Be”

3. “Thank You”

4. “Heartbreaker”

5. “Living Loving Maid (She’s Just A Woman)”

6. “Ramble On”

7. “Moby Dick”

8. “La La”

9. “Bring It On Home”

Led Zeppelin III

1. “Immigrant Song”

2. “Friends”

3. “Celebration Day”

4. “Since I’ve Been Loving You”

5. “Out On The Tiles”

6. “Gallows Pole”

7. “Tangerine”

8. “That’s The Way”

9. “Bron-Y-Aur Stomp”

10. “Hats Off To (Roy) Harper”

Companion Audio Disc

1. “The Immigrant Song”

2. “Friends”

3. “Celebration Day”

4. “Since I’ve Been Loving You”

5. “Bathroom Sound”

6. “Gallows Pole”

7. “That’s The Way”

8. “Jennings Farm Blues”

9. “Keys To The Highway/Trouble In Mind”

Johnny Marr breaks hand; future shows “up in the air”

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Johnny Marr has said that his future live shows are in jeopardy after he broke his band earlier this month. The guitarist and singer fell while he was out running in London last week, and now has his hand in plaster (see picture above). In a statement, Marr said: "I was running pretty fast and j...

Johnny Marr has said that his future live shows are in jeopardy after he broke his band earlier this month.

The guitarist and singer fell while he was out running in London last week, and now has his hand in plaster (see picture above).

In a statement, Marr said: “I was running pretty fast and just went straight over. I banged my shoulder and then realised my hand was in a bad way. Obviously we’re hoping there’s no long term damage.”

Marr, who is currently touring his 2013 debut solo album The Messenger, said he is still hoping to play his planned future live shows, but these all depend on how well his hand heals.

He stated: “The plan is to do the Leeds Brudenell shows on March 24 and 25 and then the dates I have in South America as long as I can play the guitar when the plaster comes off. Usually that would be after six weeks but I’m hoping it will be OK, it’s a bit up in the air at this point. I may have to start drinking heavily.”

Johnny Marr recently told NME that he will release a new solo album this September. “I’ve got a new record coming out in the end of September, the follow-up to last year’s,” he said. “I wanted to do the second one really quick. For me, it was just about being on tour and wanting to capture the spirit of the band and the audience before it wears off. I’d been touring for 11 months so I wanted to keep that same energy. I didn’t want to overthink it.”

Watch the video for unreleased Johnny Cash song, “She Used To Love Me A Lot”

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The video for a previously unreleased Johnny Cash track "She Used To Love Me A Lot" has been released – watch it below. John Hillcoat, the man behind films including The Proposition, The Road, and Lawless, directed the video in homage to the late singer. "She Used To Love Me A Lot" features on the album Out Among the Stars, a collection of 13 lost Johnny Cash recordings from the early 80s, which will be released on March 31. The tracks, which were recorded between 1981 and 1984, include duets with wife June Carter Cash and Waylon Jennings. The tapes were discovered by archivists at Legacy records and the country legend's son, John Carter Cash. The video was filmed over the course of a month across the US. Speaking about the track, John Hillcoat revealed: "The lyrics seemed to speak to America as it is now, to the nation that loved him and to the great divide he fought so hard against. This divide has only grown exponentially since he died, so we wanted to show America under this stark light and as a homage to the very reason Cash always wore black: to the shameful increase of the disenfranchised and outsiders. "At the same time, we wanted to reference the great man's own struggle and journey from the love of his life to the burnt out ruins of his infamous lake house home, personal photographs, the cave where he tried to take his life but then turned it all around, the place he last recorded in and his last photo before his passing." You can read all about Johnny Cash's lost decade in the current issue of Uncut. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rwRScXqKoXY ) Photo credit: Norman Seeff

The video for a previously unreleased Johnny Cash track “She Used To Love Me A Lot” has been released – watch it below.

John Hillcoat, the man behind films including The Proposition, The Road, and Lawless, directed the video in homage to the late singer.

She Used To Love Me A Lot” features on the album Out Among the Stars, a collection of 13 lost Johnny Cash recordings from the early 80s, which will be released on March 31. The tracks, which were recorded between 1981 and 1984, include duets with wife June Carter Cash and Waylon Jennings. The tapes were discovered by archivists at Legacy records and the country legend’s son, John Carter Cash.

The video was filmed over the course of a month across the US. Speaking about the track, John Hillcoat revealed: “The lyrics seemed to speak to America as it is now, to the nation that loved him and to the great divide he fought so hard against. This divide has only grown exponentially since he died, so we wanted to show America under this stark light and as a homage to the very reason Cash always wore black: to the shameful increase of the disenfranchised and outsiders.

“At the same time, we wanted to reference the great man’s own struggle and journey from the love of his life to the burnt out ruins of his infamous lake house home, personal photographs, the cave where he tried to take his life but then turned it all around, the place he last recorded in and his last photo before his passing.”

You can read all about Johnny Cash’s lost decade in the current issue of Uncut.

)

Photo credit: Norman Seeff

Jack White to appear on two tracks on Neil Young’s new album

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Neil Young has confirmed that Jack White will appear on his new album. The album, titled A Letter Home, was recorded at White's Third Man studios in Nashville and will be released "very soon", most likely this Spring, Young told Billboard. Young confirmed that he covers songs from his favourite ...

Neil Young has confirmed that Jack White will appear on his new album.

The album, titled A Letter Home, was recorded at White’s Third Man studios in Nashville and will be released “very soon”, most likely this Spring, Young told Billboard.

Young confirmed that he covers songs from his favourite writers on the album, and that White will feature on two of the tracks. “It’s not ready for prime time yet,” he said. “It’s not really a release yet, but it’s a very unique record. It’s like a time capsule. It doesn’t sound like anything you’ve heard that was made recently. And some great songs, some beautiful music.”

He added: “They’re songs that I love, songs that changed my life, songs that made it so that I understood what someone else was saying to me, songs by greater writers.”

Young previously recorded a version of Bert Jansch’s “Needle Of Death” for Record Store Day 2013 in White’s 1947 Voice-o-Graph booth.

Earlier this week, Neil Young gave a keynote speech at SXSW festival in Austin, Texas, during which he launched his high quality digital music service and portable music player Pono.

The Rolling Stones announce European festival dates

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The Rolling Stones have confirmed they will be playing European tour dates this summer. Last week, Uncut reported that the band were planning a run of European dates. Now, the band have announced they will play the Pinkpop Festival on Holland on Saturday 7 June and the TW Classic Festival in Belgi...

The Rolling Stones have confirmed they will be playing European tour dates this summer.

Last week, Uncut reported that the band were planning a run of European dates.

Now, the band have announced they will play the Pinkpop Festival on Holland on Saturday 7 June and the TW Classic Festival in Belgium on Saturday 28 June as part of their 14 On Fire tour.

The Rolling Stones will be playing more major shows in Europe in May and June, and these will be announced over the next two weeks.

Mick Jagger commented: “I love festivals in the summertime and can’t wait for the tour to get to Europe.”

Keith Richards added: “Let’s keep this show on the road …the band are in top form so I’m really looking forward to getting back to Europe.”

The Tenth Uncut Playlist Of 2014

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I’ve alluded a few times in recent weeks to the excellence of the forthcoming “Spiderland” boxset, and especially to the Lance Bangs documentary, “Breadcrumb Trail”, which it contains. “Breadcrumb Trail” tells the odd, low-key, long-obfuscated tale of Slint, revealing much without entirely dismantling the band’s mystique, and focusing on the band’s drummer Britt Walford. Walford, it transpires, was the band’s key creative force and fount of perversity – there are vague discourses on “anal breathing” tapes and a cataclysmic stretch of house-sitting for Steve Albini, among other deviations, often elucidated by Walford’s amazingly staunch parents. What has happened to Walford in the 20-odd years since Slint disbanded, though, remains tantalisingly oblique. There was a stint in The Breeders (pseudonyms included “Mike Hunt”), and intermittent Slint reunions. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LVdU_bLD2-M ) Bafflingly, his own new music seemed to dry up: there is talk in “Breadcrumb Trail” about a bakery job making “erotic cakes”. That’s changed this month with the arrival of “This World”, the first album by a band called Watter that features Zak Riles from Grails, Tyler Trotter and, on drums, the enigmatic Walford (Two more Louisville players, Rachel Grimes from Rachel’s and Todd Cook from The For Carnation, figure, too). First thing you might notice from the “Rustic Fog” track below is that Walford’s dealing in uncharacteristically conventional time signatures. The whole album, in fact, has a sort of solidity and grandeur that’s quite different in mood to Slint, even if it deals to some degree in a sound that we’ve been calling post-rock for the past two decades. If anything, though, Watter remind me of a step onwards and backwards from latterday Earth, towards the sort of blasted desert soundtracks of the Savage Republic/Scenic continuum that eventually fed into Godspeed You Black Emperor (mixed with a little Kosmische synth atmospherics, too). Worth a listen, anyhow – as is plenty more here. Maybe try Dylan Shearer, who’s backed by bits of Comets On Fire and Thee Oh Sees, but spends most of his debut album fastidiously recreating the sound of early Robert Wyatt solo albums? Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Terry Riley – A Rainbow In Curved Air (CBS) 2 Watter – This World (Temporary Residence) 3 Grace Jones – Nightclubbing: Deluxe Edition (Island) 4 Fennesz – Bécs (Editions Mego) 5 Sam Doores + Riley Downing & The Tumbleweeds - Holy Cross Blues (Coin) 6 Kenny Graham – The Small World Of Sammy Lee (Trunk) 7 Dylan Shearer – Meadow Mines (Fort Polio) (Castleface/Empty Cellar) 8 Archie Bronson Outfit – Wild Crush (Domino) 9 Lee Bains III & The Glory Fires - Dereconstructed (Sub Pop) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YucWOXSCa4U ) 10 Terry Bickers & Pete Fij – Broken Heart Surgery (?) 11 Toumani Diabaté & Sidiki Diabaté - Toumani & Sidiki (World Circuit) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCEeaERMfNo 12 Jack Ruby – Hit And Run (Saint Cecilia Knows) 13 Woo – When The Past Arrives (Drag City) 14 The Grateful Dead – One From The Vault (Light In The Attic) 15 Super Furry Animals – Dark Days/Light Years (Rough Trade) 16 Hiss Golden Messenger - March 2, 2014, Mercury Lounge, New York (NYC Taper)

I’ve alluded a few times in recent weeks to the excellence of the forthcoming “Spiderland” boxset, and especially to the Lance Bangs documentary, “Breadcrumb Trail”, which it contains. “Breadcrumb Trail” tells the odd, low-key, long-obfuscated tale of Slint, revealing much without entirely dismantling the band’s mystique, and focusing on the band’s drummer Britt Walford.

Walford, it transpires, was the band’s key creative force and fount of perversity – there are vague discourses on “anal breathing” tapes and a cataclysmic stretch of house-sitting for Steve Albini, among other deviations, often elucidated by Walford’s amazingly staunch parents. What has happened to Walford in the 20-odd years since Slint disbanded, though, remains tantalisingly oblique. There was a stint in The Breeders (pseudonyms included “Mike Hunt”), and intermittent Slint reunions.

)

Bafflingly, his own new music seemed to dry up: there is talk in “Breadcrumb Trail” about a bakery job making “erotic cakes”. That’s changed this month with the arrival of “This World”, the first album by a band called Watter that features Zak Riles from Grails, Tyler Trotter and, on drums, the enigmatic Walford (Two more Louisville players, Rachel Grimes from Rachel’s and Todd Cook from The For Carnation, figure, too).

First thing you might notice from the “Rustic Fog” track below is that Walford’s dealing in uncharacteristically conventional time signatures. The whole album, in fact, has a sort of solidity and grandeur that’s quite different in mood to Slint, even if it deals to some degree in a sound that we’ve been calling post-rock for the past two decades. If anything, though, Watter remind me of a step onwards and backwards from latterday Earth, towards the sort of blasted desert soundtracks of the Savage Republic/Scenic continuum that eventually fed into Godspeed You Black Emperor (mixed with a little Kosmische synth atmospherics, too).

Worth a listen, anyhow – as is plenty more here. Maybe try Dylan Shearer, who’s backed by bits of Comets On Fire and Thee Oh Sees, but spends most of his debut album fastidiously recreating the sound of early Robert Wyatt solo albums?

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

1 Terry Riley – A Rainbow In Curved Air (CBS)

2 Watter – This World (Temporary Residence)

3 Grace Jones – Nightclubbing: Deluxe Edition (Island)

4 Fennesz – Bécs (Editions Mego)

5 Sam Doores + Riley Downing & The Tumbleweeds – Holy Cross Blues (Coin)

6 Kenny Graham – The Small World Of Sammy Lee (Trunk)

7 Dylan Shearer – Meadow Mines (Fort Polio) (Castleface/Empty Cellar)

8 Archie Bronson Outfit – Wild Crush (Domino)

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

)

10 Terry Bickers & Pete Fij – Broken Heart Surgery (?)

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

12 Jack Ruby – Hit And Run (Saint Cecilia Knows)

13 Woo – When The Past Arrives (Drag City)

14 The Grateful Dead – One From The Vault (Light In The Attic)

15 Super Furry Animals – Dark Days/Light Years (Rough Trade)

16 Hiss Golden Messenger – March 2, 2014, Mercury Lounge, New York (NYC Taper)

Ronnie Lane’s Slim Chance – Ooh La La: An Island Harvest

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Double-disc retrospective from the king of rustic rock... When Ronnie Lane left The Faces in 1973 he had grown tired of the rock lifestyle and of being around “the names that, when dropped, attract a crowd,” as he put it so beautifully on “Little Piece Of Nothing”. Even the name he gave his hastily assembled new band was a sly – and, as it transpired, accurate – comment on their commercial potential. Still only 27 but already deep in the transition from ace face to gypsy king, Lane sealed the deal by settling into Fishpool farm, up in the Shropshire hills near the Welsh border. From his new base, surrounded by animals and rolling countryside, he set about fashioning a rustic-rock idyll in which the music he made reflected the landscape and his new way of life. “Country Boy”, one of 37 album tracks, singles, outtakes, alternate versions and live cuts compiled for this two-disc retrospective, is almost a manifesto, Lane finding “silver in the stars and gold in the morning sun”. Elsewhere there are songs about blacksmiths, poachers, Indian summers and harvest time. To bring nature’s bounty to life, the shifting groups of musicians he assembled hit upon a fertile blend of rock and roll, country, folk, music hall, roadhouse blues, hot jazz, Cajun and early American roots music. Covers here include “Buddy, Can You Spare A Dime?”, Fats Domino’s “Blue Monday” and the Isaac Family’s bluegrass gospel obscurity “Bottle Of Brandy”. But as well as honouring a past that stretched back much further than “Heartbreak Hotel” or the first Beatles LP, this music contains pre-echoes of future records by Paul Weller, The Waterboys, Nick Lowe, Van Morrisson and countless others. The disarmingly beautiful instrumental “Harvest Home” would sound completely at ease on any recent release by contemporary folk trio Lau. These tracks hum to the sound of accordions, fiddles, mandolins, saloon bar piano, acoustic guitars, squawking geese and chirruping birds, but as fiddler Charlie Hart points out, “it’s not all polite.” You can well imagine The Faces tearing through “Steppin’ and Reelin’”; “One For The Road” is a rowdy closing time sing-song and “Ain’t No Lady” indulges Lane’s bawdy side, while the raw “Back Street Boy” is rude Southern funk with a Romany heart. Whether stately or rambunctious, Slim Chance made good time music with bags of soul. Imagine Chas & Dave meeting Meher Baba. The darkly beautiful “Burnin’ Summer” may have a powerful seam of pastoral spirituality running through it, but Lane still prefaces an unbridled first tilt at Chuck Berry’s “You Never Can Tell” with the elbows-out cockney joshing of the young Steptoe. Emerging from the shadow of Rod Stewart, his characterful voice blossomed, settling into a hybrid of Dylan’s clean Nashville Skyline-era croon and George Harrison’s ragged soulfulness. As wonderful as much of this richly diverse music is, Ooh La La: An Island Harvest is not an entirely satisfactory overview of Lane’s first few post-Faces years. As the title implies, it focuses on his two Island albums, Ronnie Lane’s Slim Chance (1974) and One For The Road (1976). The complete omission of tracks from the first Slim Chance album Anymore For Anymore, released in 1974 on GM Records and therefore presumably sidelined for contractual reasons, is regrettable, ensuring meagre pickings from the band’s first act. All that’s on offer is a (beautiful) alternate version of “The Poacher”, as well as live renditions of debut single “How Come” and Anymore For Anymore’s “Tell Everyone”, the latter pair part of an eight-song BBC In Concert set from April 1974, when Slim Chance, in its initial incarnation, featured Scottish folk duo Gallagher & Lyle. The live tracks also provide a connective thread back to Lane’s work with The Faces, with outings for “Last Orders”, “Debris”, “Flags And Banners” and “Ooh La La”. The latter song crops up again in a previously unreleased version which brings a vibrant Dixieland verve to one of Lane’s greatest compositions, though admittedly at the expense of some of the original’s poignancy. Wonderful songs all, of course, but their presence, alongside the jumbled chronology and omissions elsewhere, lend a slightly incoherent, rag-bag feel to an otherwise very welcome salute to an undervalued songbook. A decent crop, but not quite the full golden harvest. Graeme Thomson Q&A SLIM CHANCE’S CHARLIE HART What are your memories of life at Fishpool? It’s the most fabulous, out-of-the-way part of the world. We’d stay up all night, watch the light coming up in the valley, then I’d go out and sow barley with Ronnie and we’d come home and record “Harvest Home”. The music is really rooted to the place, the lifestyle, the characters. It was idyllic. When he moved back to London in the early 80s he’d say to me, ‘God, that was a magical time.’ The blend of music is remarkable. He was bringing in music hall, Cajun, early jazz, Leadbelly, East End songs, and somehow it all came together in unified form. He has been influential. In the mid-70s rock and roll was getting over-ripe, and in a way Ronnie was reacting against that in a similar way to punk. Ronnie did not like pretence, that’s for sure. Did he talk much about The Faces? He wanted to start afresh, but he’d talk about it. He liked Mac, who remained a very good pal, and there was a bit of ranting about Rod Stewart! He didn’t let go of everything. He wanted to retain the entertainment factor of The Faces, he wanted to look good on stage, and he was still up for rocking out. Was he deliberately turning away from the mainstream? He had done it all, so in a certain sense he was content to do whatever he wanted artistically. But he was also trying to broaden rock and roll, and to do that you have to remain reasonably commercial. We did OK, but we weren’t successful enough to keep the band together. That was a source of deep regret to him. He was trying to do two things and couldn’t quite manage it. INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Double-disc retrospective from the king of rustic rock…

When Ronnie Lane left The Faces in 1973 he had grown tired of the rock lifestyle and of being around “the names that, when dropped, attract a crowd,” as he put it so beautifully on “Little Piece Of Nothing”. Even the name he gave his hastily assembled new band was a sly – and, as it transpired, accurate – comment on their commercial potential.

Still only 27 but already deep in the transition from ace face to gypsy king, Lane sealed the deal by settling into Fishpool farm, up in the Shropshire hills near the Welsh border. From his new base, surrounded by animals and rolling countryside, he set about fashioning a rustic-rock idyll in which the music he made reflected the landscape and his new way of life. “Country Boy”, one of 37 album tracks, singles, outtakes, alternate versions and live cuts compiled for this two-disc retrospective, is almost a manifesto, Lane finding “silver in the stars and gold in the morning sun”. Elsewhere there are songs about blacksmiths, poachers, Indian summers and harvest time.

To bring nature’s bounty to life, the shifting groups of musicians he assembled hit upon a fertile blend of rock and roll, country, folk, music hall, roadhouse blues, hot jazz, Cajun and early American roots music. Covers here include “Buddy, Can You Spare A Dime?”, Fats Domino’s “Blue Monday” and the Isaac Family’s bluegrass gospel obscurity “Bottle Of Brandy”. But as well as honouring a past that stretched back much further than “Heartbreak Hotel” or the first Beatles LP, this music contains pre-echoes of future records by Paul Weller, The Waterboys, Nick Lowe, Van Morrisson and countless others. The disarmingly beautiful instrumental “Harvest Home” would sound completely at ease on any recent release by contemporary folk trio Lau.

These tracks hum to the sound of accordions, fiddles, mandolins, saloon bar piano, acoustic guitars, squawking geese and chirruping birds, but as fiddler Charlie Hart points out, “it’s not all polite.” You can well imagine The Faces tearing through “Steppin’ and Reelin’”; “One For The Road” is a rowdy closing time sing-song and “Ain’t No Lady” indulges Lane’s bawdy side, while the raw “Back Street Boy” is rude Southern funk with a Romany heart.

Whether stately or rambunctious, Slim Chance made good time music with bags of soul. Imagine Chas & Dave meeting Meher Baba. The darkly beautiful “Burnin’ Summer” may have a powerful seam of pastoral spirituality running through it, but Lane still prefaces an unbridled first tilt at Chuck Berry’s “You Never Can Tell” with the elbows-out cockney joshing of the young Steptoe. Emerging from the shadow of Rod Stewart, his characterful voice blossomed, settling into a hybrid of Dylan’s clean Nashville Skyline-era croon and George Harrison’s ragged soulfulness.

As wonderful as much of this richly diverse music is, Ooh La La: An Island Harvest is not an entirely satisfactory overview of Lane’s first few post-Faces years. As the title implies, it focuses on his two Island albums, Ronnie Lane’s Slim Chance (1974) and One For The Road (1976). The complete omission of tracks from the first Slim Chance album Anymore For Anymore, released in 1974 on GM Records and therefore presumably sidelined for contractual reasons, is regrettable, ensuring meagre pickings from the band’s first act. All that’s on offer is a (beautiful) alternate version of “The Poacher”, as well as live renditions of debut single “How Come” and Anymore For Anymore’s “Tell Everyone”, the latter pair part of an eight-song BBC In Concert set from April 1974, when Slim Chance, in its initial incarnation, featured Scottish folk duo Gallagher & Lyle.

The live tracks also provide a connective thread back to Lane’s work with The Faces, with outings for “Last Orders”, “Debris”, “Flags And Banners” and “Ooh La La”. The latter song crops up again in a previously unreleased version which brings a vibrant Dixieland verve to one of Lane’s greatest compositions, though admittedly at the expense of some of the original’s poignancy.

Wonderful songs all, of course, but their presence, alongside the jumbled chronology and omissions elsewhere, lend a slightly incoherent, rag-bag feel to an otherwise very welcome salute to an undervalued songbook. A decent crop, but not quite the full golden harvest.

Graeme Thomson

Q&A

SLIM CHANCE’S CHARLIE HART

What are your memories of life at Fishpool?

It’s the most fabulous, out-of-the-way part of the world. We’d stay up all night, watch the light coming up in the valley, then I’d go out and sow barley with Ronnie and we’d come home and record “Harvest Home”. The music is really rooted to the place, the lifestyle, the characters. It was idyllic. When he moved back to London in the early 80s he’d say to me, ‘God, that was a magical time.’

The blend of music is remarkable.

He was bringing in music hall, Cajun, early jazz, Leadbelly, East End songs, and somehow it all came together in unified form. He has been influential. In the mid-70s rock and roll was getting over-ripe, and in a way Ronnie was reacting against that in a similar way to punk. Ronnie did not like pretence, that’s for sure.

Did he talk much about The Faces?

He wanted to start afresh, but he’d talk about it. He liked Mac, who remained a very good pal, and there was a bit of ranting about Rod Stewart! He didn’t let go of everything. He wanted to retain the entertainment factor of The Faces, he wanted to look good on stage, and he was still up for rocking out.

Was he deliberately turning away from the mainstream?

He had done it all, so in a certain sense he was content to do whatever he wanted artistically. But he was also trying to broaden rock and roll, and to do that you have to remain reasonably commercial. We did OK, but we weren’t successful enough to keep the band together. That was a source of deep regret to him. He was trying to do two things and couldn’t quite manage it.

INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Keith Richards to release children’s book in September

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Keith Richards will release a children's with his daughter, Theodora, later this year. The guitarist will release Gus & Me: The Story of My Granddad and My First Guitar on September 9 after signing a deal with Little, Brown Books for Young Readers. Richards' artist daughter Theordora has illus...

Keith Richards will release a children’s with his daughter, Theodora, later this year.

The guitarist will release Gus & Me: The Story of My Granddad and My First Guitar on September 9 after signing a deal with Little, Brown Books for Young Readers. Richards’ artist daughter Theordora has illustrated the picture book, which was co-written with Barnaby Harris and Bill Shapiro.

Gus & Me: The Story of My Granddad and My First Guitar is inspired by Richards’ grandfather, Theodore Augustus Dupree (known as Gus), who was in a jazz big band and provided inspiration for Theodora Richards’ name. Richards first wrote about his grandfather in his best-selling autobiography Life.

Speaking about the book, Richards’ said in a statement: “The bond, the special bond, between kids and grandparents is unique and should be treasured. This is a story of one of those magical moments. May I be as great a grandfather as Gus was to me.”

Richards became grandfather to a baby boy after his daughter Angela Richards gave birth to Otto Reed earlier this year (February 6).

Neil Young recruits Bruce Springsteen, David Crosby, Jack White to help him launch Pono

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Neil Young launched his high quality digital Pono music player and service yesterday (March 11) at SXSW in Austin, Texas, saying of the player "once you hear this, you can't go back." Young spoke at the Austin Convention Centre and announced his plans for Pono, which yesterday also launched its Kic...

Neil Young launched his high quality digital Pono music player and service yesterday (March 11) at SXSW in Austin, Texas, saying of the player “once you hear this, you can’t go back.”

Young spoke at the Austin Convention Centre and announced his plans for Pono, which yesterday also launched its Kickstarter campaign. At the end of the event, Young revealed that the campaign had already raised over half its target funds of $800,000 in just four hours, “which is pretty cool” he commented. He also explained that ‘Pono’ is the Hawaiian word for ‘righteousness’.

Pono will consist of a digital music service (PonoMusic) and 128GB portable device (PonoPlayer) capable of storing 1-2,000 high resolution songs. The PonoPlayer is described in a press release as a “purpose-built, portable, high-resolution digital-music player designed and engineered in a “no-compromise” fashion to allow consumers to experience studio master-quality digital music at the highest audio fidelity possible, bringing the true emotion and detail of the music, the way the artist recorded it, to life.”

Speaking without notes and pacing back and forth on the large stage, Young explained his reasons for launching Pono, which has been two and half years in the making, and he also explained that he had support from all the major record labels, commenting: “They’re all with us, all the record companies”.

Criticising the rise of MP3 quality sound and explaining that was the reason behind making his own player, Young said: “I’m a fan of listening loud – I love to listen loud… I like to take whatever it is to the limit.” He stated that this was not possible with MP3 and said the music industry also began to slump after its introduction. “Everything started to die – it was because of the MP3 and the cheapening of the quality to where it was practically unrecognisable,” he commented, lamenting albums which were perceived to have been made with ‘filler’ tracks. “The album had no value – only the individual tracks had value,” he stated.

He added: “As a guy who’d been making records for many years at that point, I was pissed off – I love every note, on every song, on every record…. They weren’t just filler.” He then said that the sound of MP3 was ‘shit’: “We were selling shit, but people were still buying it because they like music [but] they were buying Xeroxes of the Mona Lisa.”

Young went on to explain that music adapted to the constraints of MP3. “Instead of being soulful – which it still is – music adapted, it became beat heavy, it became smart, it became tricky. But for me, it was like ‘woah, I don’t want to do that!’… I started thinking it might be a good idea to do something about it”.

He then showed a short film, which saw a host of music world stars commenting on Pono, after listening to the player, including Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty, Patti Smith, Mumford and Sons, Dave Grohl, Elvis Costello, Mike D of the Beastie Boys and Jack White. Click above to watch the video. “This gives it to you as good as you can get it,” says Tom Petty, whilst Springsteen comments that it has “a closeness and intimacy that digital recordings can lose very quickly.” Elton John says: “I haven’t heard a sound like that since vinyl”.

“Pono plays back whatever the artist decided to do,” added Young. “My body is getting washed, I’m getting hit with something great. It’s not ice cubes, it’s water – I’m listening. I’m feeling.” Pono’s CEO John Hamm also spoke during the session and talked about the triangular shape of the Pono device. “The electronics that fit inside wouldn’t fit in a flat package,” he explained. “It’s a small piece of audio gear, not a mobile device.”

Waging Heavy Peace, released in 2012, Young explained how Pono will help to “save the sound of music”. Young claims in the book that he had emailed Steve Jobs about Pono before his death: “I have consistently reached out to try to assist Apple with true audio quality, and I have even shared my high-resolution masters with them,” he wrote, before stating that his service will “force iTunes to be better and to improve quality at a faster pace”.

Introducing… Oasis: the Ultimate Music Guide

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“There wasn’t a lot of pre-production for What’s The Story. . .If we were at home, the postman would drop off an envelope and in it would be a cassette saying ‘Noel demos’. You’d get a phone call: ‘There’s the next album. Learn it. See you in a week.’ That’s the way Noel worked. Everyone would figure out the chords – there was no point asking him, he didn’t know the name of the fucking things. ‘It’s one of them where your finger’s up there. . .’” This is Paul ‘Bonehead’ Arthurs, looking back at the somewhat haphazard way one of the biggest-selling UK albums of all time came together in his introduction to the latest instalment in our series of Ultimate Music Guides, this one dedicated to Oasis, who in their illustrious pomp swept all before them before the always-simmering tensions between permanently squabbling siblings Noel and Liam Gallagher, for many years an entertaining if occasionally wearying distraction, came to a brutal climax in August 2009 at the Rock et Seine festival in Paris. A backstage argument between the two ended with Noel walking out on the band that for just over a decade has held such omnipotent sway over British rock. Two hours later, he released a statement announcing “with some sadness and great relief. . . .I quit Oasis tonight”. Noel went off and formed The High Flying Birds. Liam and what was left of the final Oasis line-up became Beady Eye, with a promise from Liam that they would be “bigger than Oasis”, which is not something they have yet become, despite Liam’s initial post-split bravado. Anyway, 20 years on from the release of Definitely, Maybe, our Ultimate Music Guide, as ever, brings together a collection of predictably colourful and eventful interviews from the archives of Melody Maker, NME and Uncut , a fantastic trawl that’s supplemented by new, in-depth reviews of every Oasis album and the albums that have followed by High Flying Birds and Beady Eye, plus a full Oasis singles discography, including rarities and most valuable collectables. Oasis: the Ultimate Music Guide is on sale from Thursday, March 13 and will also available to order online at www.uncut.co.uk/store or download digitally at www.uncut.co.uk/digital-edition. To get you in the mood here’s a clip of Oasis making their TV debut on The Word from 1994. Have a good week. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_lzy_kMF1c

“There wasn’t a lot of pre-production for What’s The Story. . .If we were at home, the postman would drop off an envelope and in it would be a cassette saying ‘Noel demos’. You’d get a phone call: ‘There’s the next album. Learn it. See you in a week.’ That’s the way Noel worked. Everyone would figure out the chords – there was no point asking him, he didn’t know the name of the fucking things. ‘It’s one of them where your finger’s up there. . .’”

This is Paul ‘Bonehead’ Arthurs, looking back at the somewhat haphazard way one of the biggest-selling UK albums of all time came together in his introduction to the latest instalment in our series of Ultimate Music Guides, this one dedicated to Oasis, who in their illustrious pomp swept all before them before the always-simmering tensions between permanently squabbling siblings Noel and Liam Gallagher, for many years an entertaining if occasionally wearying distraction, came to a brutal climax in August 2009 at the Rock et Seine festival in Paris.

A backstage argument between the two ended with Noel walking out on the band that for just over a decade has held such omnipotent sway over British rock. Two hours later, he released a statement announcing “with some sadness and great relief. . . .I quit Oasis tonight”. Noel went off and formed The High Flying Birds. Liam and what was left of the final Oasis line-up became Beady Eye, with a promise from Liam that they would be “bigger than Oasis”, which is not something they have yet become, despite Liam’s initial post-split bravado.

Anyway, 20 years on from the release of Definitely, Maybe, our Ultimate Music Guide, as ever, brings together a collection of predictably colourful and eventful interviews from the archives of Melody Maker, NME and Uncut , a fantastic trawl that’s supplemented by new, in-depth reviews of every Oasis album and the albums that have followed by High Flying Birds and Beady Eye, plus a full Oasis singles discography, including rarities and most valuable collectables.

Oasis: the Ultimate Music Guide is on sale from Thursday, March 13 and will also available to order online at www.uncut.co.uk/store or download digitally at www.uncut.co.uk/digital-edition.

To get you in the mood here’s a clip of Oasis making their TV debut on The Word from 1994.

Have a good week.

U2 deny pushing next album back to 2015

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A spokesperson for U2 has denied that the band have pushed back the release date of their 13th studio album to 2015. Investigations by Billboard last week suggested that the band had pushed the album back to next year. It reported that the band had booked further studio time with producers Paul Epworth and Ryan Tedder, who would join the project's main producer Danger Mouse. It also suggested that U2 had cancelled a tour due to take place in summer 2014. Speaking to The Guardian, a spokesperson for the band flatly the claims, saying: "U2's album is planned for this year (2014), is still on track and touring plans haven’t been confirmed yet." Following recent appearances at the Golden Globes and the release of new tracks "Ordinary Love" and "Invisible", which was downloaded for free three million times, speculation had mounted that the band were gearing up to release their next album this year. Following Billboard's investigation last week, an Interscope representative said the album cannot be considered delayed as a release date was never announced.

A spokesperson for U2 has denied that the band have pushed back the release date of their 13th studio album to 2015.

Investigations by Billboard last week suggested that the band had pushed the album back to next year. It reported that the band had booked further studio time with producers Paul Epworth and Ryan Tedder, who would join the project’s main producer Danger Mouse. It also suggested that U2 had cancelled a tour due to take place in summer 2014.

Speaking to The Guardian, a spokesperson for the band flatly the claims, saying: “U2’s album is planned for this year (2014), is still on track and touring plans haven’t been confirmed yet.”

Following recent appearances at the Golden Globes and the release of new tracks “Ordinary Love” and “Invisible”, which was downloaded for free three million times, speculation had mounted that the band were gearing up to release their next album this year. Following Billboard’s investigation last week, an Interscope representative said the album cannot be considered delayed as a release date was never announced.

The Stooges recording new album without Iggy Pop

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The Stooges are recording an album of material without Iggy Pop. The line-up of James Williamson, Mike Watt, Steve Mackay and Toby Dammit are working on an album, Re-Licked, with a series of guest vocalists including Mark Lanegan and Jello Biafra. Re-Licked consists of previously unreleased songs ...

The Stooges are recording an album of material without Iggy Pop.

The line-up of James Williamson, Mike Watt, Steve Mackay and Toby Dammit are working on an album, Re-Licked, with a series of guest vocalists including Mark Lanegan and Jello Biafra.

Re-Licked consists of previously unreleased songs written around the time of the Iggy And The Stooges’ 1973 album Raw Power. Pop announced last September that he wouldn’t be working with The Stooges in 2014, but Williamson told Rolling Stone: “Iggy gave me his blessing and wished me success with the album. But it’s a hard pill to swallow when someone is doing all your songs with your band and you’re not on it.”

Pop said in a statement: “I don’t have a problem with anything. This statement about ‘hard pill’ sounds kind of passive aggressive to me…T hese guys are my friends and we’ve all worked together many years. They’re working musicians and they need to play.” Pop’s spokesman additionally claimed the singer wasn’t given the chance to appear on Re-Licked and only learned of the album in December 2013 when a record label rejected the chance to release it.

Since reforming in 2003, the band have released two albums: The Weirdness in 2007 and Ready To Die in 2013.