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Neil Young confirms more solo shows

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Neil Young has confirmed a pair of solo shows. Young, who is due to play four solo shows in Los Angeles, has now announced two shows in Dallas, Texas at the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center on April 17 and 18. Tickets for the two-night run will go on sale March 14 and are available here. Meanwh...

Neil Young has confirmed a pair of solo shows.

Young, who is due to play four solo shows in Los Angeles, has now announced two shows in Dallas, Texas at the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center on April 17 and 18.

Tickets for the two-night run will go on sale March 14 and are available here.

Meanwhile, to enter our competition to win a pair of tickets to see Neil Young & Crazy Horse at London’s Hyde Park, click here.

Roddy Frame announces details of new album Seven Dials + previews track

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Roddy Frame has announced details of new album, Seven Dials. Seven Dials will be released on AED on Monday May 5h 2014. It's Frame's first since Western Skies in 2006, was recorded at West Heath Studios in London and co-produced with Seb Lewsley. The track listing for Seven Dials is as follows: ...

Roddy Frame has announced details of new album, Seven Dials.

Seven Dials will be released on AED on Monday May 5h 2014.

It’s Frame’s first since Western Skies in 2006, was recorded at West Heath Studios in London and co-produced with Seb Lewsley.

The track listing for Seven Dials is as follows:

White Pony

Postcard

Into The Sun

Rear View Mirror

In Orbit

Forty Days Of Rain

English Garden

On The Waves

The Other Side

From A Train

Meanwhile, Frame is previewing “Forty Days Of Rain“, which you can hear below.

Benmont Tench – You Should Be So Lucky

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The Heartbreakers keys man debuts - with a little help from his friends... As a member of Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers and a busy A-list session player, Benmont Tench is a master of the art of getting the job done without drawing undue attention to himself. This quintessential sideman is also an eminent presence in the LA musical community, egolessly blending in with his fellow players, who revere the 60-year-old veteran for being both a musicians’ musician and a disarmingly laidback dude. Long one of producer Rick Rubin’s guns for hire, he always shows up when a friend like Ryan Adams or Ringo Starr calls. Both are on Tench’s first solo album, part of a veritable supersession that also includes locally bred guitarist Blake Mills, expat drummer Jeremy Stacey, bassist Don Was, multi-instrumentalist Ethan Johns, singer/guitarists Gillian Welch and David Rawlings and Petty himself. Ethan’s dad, legendary producer Glyn Johns, first broached the subject of Tench making a solo album 20 years ago, and took his chair behind the console when Benmont finally decided to go for it. Computers were absent from the control room. With its organic arrangements, live-off-the-floor performances and painterly detail, You Should Be So Lucky is very much an old-school Glyn Johns production, cut in the same room and featuring several of the same players who appeared on Adams’ similarly timeless 2012 LP Ashes & Fire. There’s nothing flashy about this record; it’s totally in character for the resolutely understated Tench. It opens subtly with the melancholy ballad “Today I Took Your Picture Down”, which recalls Warren Zevon at his most stoic. “On this track you can hear the players really listening”, Tench notes in his track-by-track breakdown, but he could just as accurately be referring to the album as a whole, which is about simpatico players locking in with the material and each other. Tench sings his lyrics much as he plays, with restraint, feel and unforced emotion, not letting himself get in the way of the song yet still fully inhabiting its nuances. The title of “Veronica Said” signals Tench’s debt to Lou Reed (another singer who made the most of a limited voice). The sublime “Why Don’t You Quit Leaving Me Alone” (recorded by Rosanne Cash for 1987’s King’s Record Shop) wouldn’t be out of place out of place on a Randy Newman album; the tender love song “Hannah” inspires Tench’s most heartfelt vocal, its melody pushing his voice to the top of his narrow range, with poignant results; and “Blonde Girl, Blue Dress” knowingly captures the emotional state of the other guy, the one who doesn’t get the girl – presumably a common occurrence with sidekicks and sidemen alike. Bob Dylan, who’s done more with less than any singer, is Tench’s primary touchstone, and he honours the bard on the album’s two non-originals, a luminous take on Dylan’s rendition of the folk standard “Corrina, Corrina” and a rollicking barrelhouse cover of Tempest’s “Duquesne Whistle”. You can also pick up his influence in the torrid title track, which comes across with the hellbent ferocity of Highway 61 Revisited, as Tench unleashes his inner Al Kooper and Adams, playing rhythm guitar as if his life depended on it, practically tears the strings off his acoustic. “Ecor Rouge”, one of two instrumentals, is a watercolour landscape, while the other, “Wobbles”, swings New Orleans style, propelled by the dual drumming of Stacey and Ethan Johns. As different as they are, both capture lightning in a bottle, and hearing them, it’s easy to see why Was, after playing on the record, was inspired to release it on the iconic label Blue Note, which he now heads. Much like the classic Blue Note albums of the last century, You Should Be So Lucky is tailor-made for connoisseurs of musicianship at its headiest and most tasteful – the kind of record you’re proud to own, matching the pride of all those who participated in its creation. Bud Scoppa Q&A You’re known around LA for your willingness to play with anybody. I hope I use a little bit of taste when I go out [laughs]. “He’s no pushover, but he can be had.” But the Heartbreakers have a lot of downtime, and I love to play. If you play with other people, you’re gonna learn something. You blend everybody’s dialects and you find a common language. This record strikes me as an extension of that impulse. Everybody on this record is a good friend of mine. I’ve played with these folks in my house; we cook some food and talk, break out some instruments and play. So making the record felt like my house. That’s exactly what I wanted and what Glyn wanted. Hell, we just wanted to have some fun and do something good. But if I hadn’t been surrounded by friends, it would’ve been too intimidating and overwhelming. You made the record in 10 days, soup to nuts. That’s impressive. That’s the amount of time that we could have all of the musicians, Glyn and Sunset Sound. But I like limitations. Limitations make you work in a different way, and you get a different result. INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

The Heartbreakers keys man debuts – with a little help from his friends…

As a member of Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers and a busy A-list session player, Benmont Tench is a master of the art of getting the job done without drawing undue attention to himself. This quintessential sideman is also an eminent presence in the LA musical community, egolessly blending in with his fellow players, who revere the 60-year-old veteran for being both a musicians’ musician and a disarmingly laidback dude.

Long one of producer Rick Rubin’s guns for hire, he always shows up when a friend like Ryan Adams or Ringo Starr calls. Both are on Tench’s first solo album, part of a veritable supersession that also includes locally bred guitarist Blake Mills, expat drummer Jeremy Stacey, bassist Don Was, multi-instrumentalist Ethan Johns, singer/guitarists Gillian Welch and David Rawlings and Petty himself. Ethan’s dad, legendary producer Glyn Johns, first broached the subject of Tench making a solo album 20 years ago, and took his chair behind the console when Benmont finally decided to go for it.

Computers were absent from the control room. With its organic arrangements, live-off-the-floor performances and painterly detail, You Should Be So Lucky is very much an old-school Glyn Johns production, cut in the same room and featuring several of the same players who appeared on Adams’ similarly timeless 2012 LP Ashes & Fire. There’s nothing flashy about this record; it’s totally in character for the resolutely understated Tench. It opens subtly with the melancholy ballad “Today I Took Your Picture Down”, which recalls Warren Zevon at his most stoic. “On this track you can hear the players really listening”, Tench notes in his track-by-track breakdown, but he could just as accurately be referring to the album as a whole, which is about simpatico players locking in with the material and each other.

Tench sings his lyrics much as he plays, with restraint, feel and unforced emotion, not letting himself get in the way of the song yet still fully inhabiting its nuances. The title of “Veronica Said” signals Tench’s debt to Lou Reed (another singer who made the most of a limited voice). The sublime “Why Don’t You Quit Leaving Me Alone” (recorded by Rosanne Cash for 1987’s King’s Record Shop) wouldn’t be out of place out of place on a Randy Newman album; the tender love song “Hannah” inspires Tench’s most heartfelt vocal, its melody pushing his voice to the top of his narrow range, with poignant results; and “Blonde Girl, Blue Dress” knowingly captures the emotional state of the other guy, the one who doesn’t get the girl – presumably a common occurrence with sidekicks and sidemen alike.

Bob Dylan, who’s done more with less than any singer, is Tench’s primary touchstone, and he honours the bard on the album’s two non-originals, a luminous take on Dylan’s rendition of the folk standard “Corrina, Corrina” and a rollicking barrelhouse cover of Tempest’s “Duquesne Whistle”. You can also pick up his influence in the torrid title track, which comes across with the hellbent ferocity of Highway 61 Revisited, as Tench unleashes his inner Al Kooper and Adams, playing rhythm guitar as if his life depended on it, practically tears the strings off his acoustic.

“Ecor Rouge”, one of two instrumentals, is a watercolour landscape, while the other, “Wobbles”, swings New Orleans style, propelled by the dual drumming of Stacey and Ethan Johns. As different as they are, both capture lightning in a bottle, and hearing them, it’s easy to see why Was, after playing on the record, was inspired to release it on the iconic label Blue Note, which he now heads. Much like the classic Blue Note albums of the last century, You Should Be So Lucky is tailor-made for connoisseurs of musicianship at its headiest and most tasteful – the kind of record you’re proud to own, matching the pride of all those who participated in its creation.

Bud Scoppa

Q&A

You’re known around LA for your willingness to play with anybody.

I hope I use a little bit of taste when I go out [laughs]. “He’s no pushover, but he can be had.” But the Heartbreakers have a lot of downtime, and I love to play. If you play with other people, you’re gonna learn something. You blend everybody’s dialects and you find a common language.

This record strikes me as an extension of that impulse.

Everybody on this record is a good friend of mine. I’ve played with these folks in my house; we cook some food and talk, break out some instruments and play. So making the record felt like my house. That’s exactly what I wanted and what Glyn wanted. Hell, we just wanted to have some fun and do something good. But if I hadn’t been surrounded by friends, it would’ve been too intimidating and overwhelming.

You made the record in 10 days, soup to nuts. That’s impressive.

That’s the amount of time that we could have all of the musicians, Glyn and Sunset Sound. But I like limitations. Limitations make you work in a different way, and you get a different result.

INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

Neil Young to sell PonoPlayer music device through Kickstarter

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Neil Young will debut his new digital audio format Pono at South By Southwest tomorrow [March 11]. Details of the service have now appeared online. A number of news sources - including The Guardian - report that Young will launch a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign for his new PonoPlayer device on ...

Neil Young will debut his new digital audio format Pono at South By Southwest tomorrow [March 11]. Details of the service have now appeared online.

A number of news sources – including The Guardian – report that Young will launch a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign for his new PonoPlayer device on 15 March, with early buyers getting a discount on its planned $399 price.

The device will be supported by an online music downloads store called PonoMusic, which will sell files at a higher resolution than rivals like Apple’s iTunes.

Here’s the Pono press release in full:

March 10, 2014 – (Burbank, CA.) – PonoMusic is a revolutionary movement conceived and founded by Neil Young. Our mission is to bring the highest-quality digital music to discerning, passionate consumers, who wish to experience music the way the artists intended, with the emotion, detail, and power intact. “It’s about the music, real music. We want to move digital music into the 21st century and PonoMusic does that. We couldn’t be more excited about bringing PonoMusic to the market,” said Neil Young, founder and chairman of PonoMusic.

PonoMusic encompasses both an online music store (PonoMusic.com) and a playback device (The PonoPlayer). The PonoPlayer is a digital-music experience unlike any other, offering the finest quality, highest-resolution digital music from both major labels and prominent independent labels, curated and archived for discriminating PonoMusic customers. The Pono desktop media management application allows customers to download, manage and sync their music to their PonoPlayer and other high- resolution digital music devices.

“Our goal was to offer the highest quality digital music available from all the major labels with the world’s greatest sounding, user-friendly portable music player. We’ve achieved our goal and we are excited to launch our Kickstarter campaign next week to invite music lovers everywhere to join the PonoMusic community and reserve a PonoPlayer for their own enjoyment,” said John Hamm, CEO of PonoMusic.

The PonoPlayer is 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. It also features a convenient, easy-to-use LCD touch screen interface that is totally intuitive. The audio technology in the PonoPlayer was developed in conjunction with the engineering team at Ayre, in Boulder Colorado, a leader in world class audio technology.

PonoMusic and Ayre have collaborated their ideas to achieve their goal — to make the power and majesty of music available to everybody. “We are absolutely thrilled to be a part of this project. We will always be grateful to Neil Young for changing the landscape of recorded music,” said Charlie Hansen, CEO of Ayre Acoustics.

The PonoPlayer has 128GB of memory and can store 1000 to 2000 high-resolution digital-music albums. Memory cards can be used to store and play different playlists and additional collections of music. The PonoPlayer will be sold at PonoMusic.com for $399 MSRP and is available for pre-order at a discount on Kickstarter.com as of March 15th. PonoMusic recommended earbud and headphone products will also be available for purchase on PonoMusic.com.

David Bowie announces Record Store Day releases

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David Bowie will release two limited edition picture discs on Record Store Day next month. The annual celebration of music shops will take place on April 19 and Bowie has outlined plans to release a 7" picture disc of "Rock 'n' Roll Suicide" in the UK, while North American fans will be able to purc...

David Bowie will release two limited edition picture discs on Record Store Day next month.

The annual celebration of music shops will take place on April 19 and Bowie has outlined plans to release a 7″ picture disc of “Rock ‘n’ Roll Suicide” in the UK, while North American fans will be able to purchase the single “1984” on 7″ picture disc.

First released as a single in 1974, “Rock ‘n’ Roll Suicide” celebrates its 40th anniversary in 2014 with the new release set to come backed with “Farewell Speech” recorded at the final Ziggy Stardust concert at the Hammersmith Odeon in July 1973.

The track listing for “Rock ‘n’ Roll Suicide” 40th Anniversary 7″ Picture Disc is:

A-Side “Rock ‘n’ Roll Suicide”

AA-Side “Rock ‘n’ Roll Suicide inc Farewell Speech” (Live Ziggy Stardust The Motion Picture version)

Catalogue No DBROCK40

The track listing for “1984” 40th Anniversary 7″ Picture Disc is:

A-Side “1984”

AA-Side “1984 (Live On The Dick Cavett Show)”

Catalogue No DB401984

These are the latest in the run of Bowie’s 40th anniversary 7″ picture discs, following on from “Starman”, “John I’m Only Dancing”, “The Jean Genie”, “Drive In Saturday”, “Live On Mars”, “Sorrow” and “Rebel Rebel”.

Meanwhile, in this month’s issue of Uncut we celebrate the 40th anniversary of David Bowie’s album Diamond Dogs. You can find details about it here.

Watch trailer for HBO’s Bruce Springsteen documentary

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The first trailer for HBO's forthcoming Bruce Springsteen documentary has been revealed. Scroll down to watch it. Titled High Hopes, the film follows Springsteen as he works on his latest album of the same name. High Hopes, the album, was released in January 2014 and the trailer shows Springsteen and the E Street Band as they recruit Rage Against The Machine guitarist Tom Morello and begin work on the record. Speaking about his songwriting process in the preview clip, Springsteen says: "I find I'm trying to resolve something internally. That's really the thrust. It's where all the fuel for what you're going to do is." High Hopes will air on HBO on April 4. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4UDzIfrmK98

The first trailer for HBO’s forthcoming Bruce Springsteen documentary has been revealed. Scroll down to watch it.

Titled High Hopes, the film follows Springsteen as he works on his latest album of the same name. High Hopes, the album, was released in January 2014 and the trailer shows Springsteen and the E Street Band as they recruit Rage Against The Machine guitarist Tom Morello and begin work on the record.

Speaking about his songwriting process in the preview clip, Springsteen says: “I find I’m trying to resolve something internally. That’s really the thrust. It’s where all the fuel for what you’re going to do is.”

High Hopes will air on HBO on April 4.

Morrissey announces title and release date for new studio album

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Morrissey has announced details of his new studio album. A post on the quasi-official fansite, True To You, reveals the album will be called World Peace Is None of Your Business. The post continues by saying that a release date has been provisionally set for late June/early July worldwide by Harve...

Morrissey has announced details of his new studio album.

A post on the quasi-official fansite, True To You, reveals the album will be called World Peace Is None of Your Business.

The post continues by saying that a release date has been provisionally set for late June/early July worldwide by Harvest Records thru Capitol. Morrissey is said to be “beyond ecstatic” with the album, all 12 tracks of which were produced by Joe Chiccarelli in France.

At the end of last year, Morrissey’s guitarist Jesse Tobias here told Uncut that the singer had two albums worth of songs ready to record.

Morrissey’s last studio album was Years Of Refusal in 2009.

Win tickets to see Neil Young & Crazy Horse at Hyde Park

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Neil Young And Crazy Horse will headline this year's Barclaycard Presents British Summer Time event at London's Hyde Park on Saturday July 12. They'll be joined by special guests The National, Phosphorescent, Caitlin Rose and Ethan Johns. We're delighted to be able to offer a pair of tickets to th...

Neil Young And Crazy Horse will headline this year’s Barclaycard Presents British Summer Time event at London’s Hyde Park on Saturday July 12.

They’ll be joined by special guests The National, Phosphorescent, Caitlin Rose and Ethan Johns.

We’re delighted to be able to offer a pair of tickets to the event.

To enter, just tell us:

Which long out-of-print live Neil Young album is due to be reissued on Record Store Day this year?

Send your entries to uncutcomp@ipcmedia.com. Please include your full name, address and a daytime phone number. The competition closes at noon GMT on Friday, March 14, 2014. The editor’s decision is final.

Neil Young: The Ultimate Music Guide is available to buy online here.

A digital edition is also available to download on digital newsstands including Apple, Zinio and Google Play. To download your copy, click here and select the appropriate newsstand.

Other instalments in The Ultimate Music Guide series are also available online at www.uncut.co.uk/store.

For more information about Barclaycard Presents British Summer Time click here.

Dave Van Ronk – Down In Washington Square: The Smithsonian Folkways Collection

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The real Llewyn Davis? The Mayor of MacDougal Street's first career-spanning collection... One irony (among many) of Dave Van Ronk is that, for a lifetime of inspiration, on multiple generations — from Bob Dylan’s earliest days to the latest Coen Brothers film — the man himself generally despised what passed for folk music. His true roots lay in pre-swing jazz and Dixieland, jug band music and hardcore country/blues — cf. Rev. Gary Davis, Mississippi John Hurt. For another, he staunchly avoided specific social commentary, even as that was in vogue; protest songs were strictly nonstarters. Possessed of a gruff exterior and nary an ounce of pop sense, his recording career only occasionally matched his legend. Still, his astonishing finger-pick guitar style and encyclopedic knowledge of the tributaries of American music, his generous spirit and his larger-than-life presence, mark him as a pivotal figure. This set, collecting some 54 tracks, most from his 1957-61 prime, well captures Van Ronk’s penchant for bringing a proper apocalyptic fervor to wide swaths of material, from scarifying blues to sea shanties, balladic obscurities to standards-to-be. He was most effective on myriad down-and-dirty blues, like Arthur Crudup’s “Mean Old Frisco”, given a driven, psychotic vocal amid lacerating guitar runs. An early studio recording of Bessie Smith’s harrowing “Backwater Blues” is just as spooky, but nuanced by comparison — elegantly syncopated guitar, ever-present gut-check vocal. Several unreleased live 1961 recordings are both electrifying and apocryphal: “Had More Money”, a burning, churning riff on Robert Johnson’s “Possession On Judgment Day” finds him in his growling, interpretive prime, inhabiting a steely, twitchy, unsettled intensity. “House of the Rising Sun,” presented in the splendid arrangement Dylan heard and swiped for his first album, descends — within Van Ronk’s choppy, spooked vocals—like a never-ending bad dream. Down In Washington Square, adding 16 unreleased cuts even while it summarily ignores some 20 years of Van Ronk history (1963-1982), brims with revelation. Luke Torn

The real Llewyn Davis? The Mayor of MacDougal Street’s first career-spanning collection…

One irony (among many) of Dave Van Ronk is that, for a lifetime of inspiration, on multiple generations — from Bob Dylan’s earliest days to the latest Coen Brothers film — the man himself generally despised what passed for folk music. His true roots lay in pre-swing jazz and Dixieland, jug band music and hardcore country/blues — cf. Rev. Gary Davis, Mississippi John Hurt. For another, he staunchly avoided specific social commentary, even as that was in vogue; protest songs were strictly nonstarters.

Possessed of a gruff exterior and nary an ounce of pop sense, his recording career only occasionally matched his legend. Still, his astonishing finger-pick guitar style and encyclopedic knowledge of the tributaries of American music, his generous spirit and his larger-than-life presence, mark him as a pivotal figure.

This set, collecting some 54 tracks, most from his 1957-61 prime, well captures Van Ronk’s penchant for bringing a proper apocalyptic fervor to wide swaths of material, from scarifying blues to sea shanties, balladic obscurities to standards-to-be. He was most effective on myriad down-and-dirty blues, like Arthur Crudup’s “Mean Old Frisco”, given a driven, psychotic vocal amid lacerating guitar runs. An early studio recording of Bessie Smith’s harrowing “Backwater Blues” is just as spooky, but nuanced by comparison — elegantly syncopated guitar, ever-present gut-check vocal.

Several unreleased live 1961 recordings are both electrifying and apocryphal: “Had More Money”, a burning, churning riff on Robert Johnson’s “Possession On Judgment Day” finds him in his growling, interpretive prime, inhabiting a steely, twitchy, unsettled intensity. “House of the Rising Sun,” presented in the splendid arrangement Dylan heard and swiped for his first album, descends — within Van Ronk’s choppy, spooked vocals—like a never-ending bad dream. Down In Washington Square, adding 16 unreleased cuts even while it summarily ignores some 20 years of Van Ronk history (1963-1982), brims with revelation.

Luke Torn

Greg Dulli: “No doubt about it, having sex with a stripper under the stage during an Aerosmith set is the most rock thing I’ve done…”

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Greg Dulli discusses the return of The Afghan Whigs in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2014 and out now. As well shedding light on the band’s new album, Do To The Beast, the singer, guitarist and songwriter invites Uncut into his home and talks about the ghosts he suspects may be haunting his lounge, and reveals his most rock’n’roll moment – having sex with a stripper under a stage while Aerosmith performed above them. “Yeah, no doubt about it, that’s the most rock thing I’ve done,” laughs Dulli. “There’s nothing you can do about ghosts,” he states elsewhere in the piece. “There are things we’re never gonna know.” The Afghan Whigs’ Do To The Beast is released on April 14. The new issue of Uncut is out now. Photo: Danny Clinch

Greg Dulli discusses the return of The Afghan Whigs in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2014 and out now.

As well shedding light on the band’s new album, Do To The Beast, the singer, guitarist and songwriter invites Uncut into his home and talks about the ghosts he suspects may be haunting his lounge, and reveals his most rock’n’roll moment – having sex with a stripper under a stage while Aerosmith performed above them.

“Yeah, no doubt about it, that’s the most rock thing I’ve done,” laughs Dulli.

“There’s nothing you can do about ghosts,” he states elsewhere in the piece. “There are things we’re never gonna know.”

The Afghan Whigs’ Do To The Beast is released on April 14.

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

Photo: Danny Clinch

Elbow – Album By Album

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The Take Off And Landing Of Everything, Elbow’s sixth album, is out on Monday (March 10) – in this archive piece from Uncut’s August 2011 issue (Take 171), Guy Garvey, Mark Potter and Craig Potter stroll through two decades’ worth of musical memories. “We’ve never had the word ‘can’t...

The Take Off And Landing Of Everything, Elbow’s sixth album, is out on Monday (March 10) – in this archive piece from Uncut’s August 2011 issue (Take 171), Guy Garvey, Mark Potter and Craig Potter stroll through two decades’ worth of musical memories. “We’ve never had the word ‘can’t’ bandied around the room,” says Garvey. “It’s like a red rag to a bull.” Interview: Graeme Thomson

___________________

ELBOW

The Newborn EP (Ugly Man, 2000)

Having been dropped by Island Records without even releasing an album, Elbow sign to local indie label Ugly Man. The proggy title track on their second EP proves a watershed.

Mark Potter: Getting our Island deal was an amazing moment for us, and to have it pulled away at the last minute literally put us on our arses. Pete Jobson from I Am Kloot was with us when we found out we’d been dropped and he said, “I know a guy who would love to put your music out.” That was Ugly Man. So right away it was, “We don’t need this deal, we can do this on our own.” There’s a real defiance on that EP.

Craig Potter: “Newborn” was very much a breakthrough song. We’d been picking through these early Genesis albums and one song, “Entangled”, jumped out. The way that song developed and took its time was a big inspiration on “Newborn”. We had the front half of the song and in the studio we started experimenting and it just grew and grew. We knew we had something special when we finished it.

Guy Garvey: We’d never written anything that ambitious before, although I’m very proud of all the songs we chose for the EP. “Kisses” is a crazy piece of work based on a field recording that I made on a bus, and “None One” was the first bitter heartbreak lyric I’d ever put together. First of many!

ELBOW

The Any Day Now EP (Ugly Man, 2001)

The influences on the third EP range from Bowie to Funkadelic, but the Elbow sound is beginning to emerge. It’s later reissued by V2 in truncated form.

Mark Potter: At the time we weren’t sure exactly what we wanted to be. We were still developing as musicians and working out how we wanted to come across. We learned to play together by playing funk music, Sly Stone and stuff like that, and there was still a bit of that in “Any Day Now”. I’m actually thinking of getting my wah-wah pedal back out on the next album!

Craig Potter: We were determined these songs were going to see the light of day, but it was all done on the fly, really. Getting favours pulled in from friends who had little studios just to get these recordings done.

Garvey: We wrote “Any Day Now” close to the time we wrote “Newborn”. They’re very different songs, and yet it all seemed to happen in this single month. The root sensibilities of what we’re trying to do haven’t changed. The buzz when all five of us are feeling the same thing was there then and it’s still the same. It’s really lovely and not lost on any of us. We’re different people now but I think we’re still doing what we set out to do on these EPs. Even the sleeve of “Any Day Now” is very us.

ELBOW

Asleep In The Back (V2, 2001)

Having already recorded their debut album once for Island with Steve Osborne, after signing to V2 they have another go. It’s nominated for the Mercury prize and a Brit, while the title track goes Top 20.

Mark Potter: I have a copy of the original version and it’s quite different sounding. The first time around it was a bit overwhelming to have people criticising your music and picking apart the arrangements. Second time it felt better. Ben [Hillier] was one of the team. Very much, “Throw it at the wall and see what sticks.”

Garvey: It was a case of, “Fuck it, we can do what we want”, whereas the first time it was a case of, “This has got to be perfect”. Lots of fun and experimentation. At the end of “Bitten By The Tailfly” I’m chanting “Portillo is a fascist bully-boy”. If you know it’s there, you can hear it! There’s also the sound of me hitting myself on the head with a crate. In my mind it sounded like a Wagnerian timpani, but that’s three bottles of red wine for you.

Craig Potter: It doesn’t sound like a debut to me. It sounds like a bold, confident album, maybe because we’d been through the shit beforehand.

Mark Potter: It got some acclaim and we felt like we were on our away, but had it had the success of The Seldom Seem Kid, I’m not sure

we were quite ready for it then.

ELBOW

Cast Of Thousands (V2, 2003)

Recording in Liverpool, the band suffer a severe case of Second Album Syndrome, though in “Grace Under Pressure” – “We still believe in love so fuck you” – they mint their first anthem.

Garvey: There’s a book to be written about this record. Every single one of us was going through something fucking weird. We were buzzing because everything had gone so well, so we arrogantly strode into the studio with half an album’s worth of material thinking, ‘Ah, it’ll be all right.’ It dried up pretty quickly.

Mark Potter: Ben Hillier sat us down and said, “Sorry lads, I’ll give you a month to go away and write some songs and we’ll go at it again.” I know Guy got quite ill from worrying about it.

Craig Potter: There was a lot of pressure on everyone, especially Guy. At the end it was like, “This can’t happen again.”

Garvey: They were probably the bitterest rows we’ve ever had. They were mostly about music, but they couldn’t help get personal at times. It was awful. At the same time I became much more interested in lyrics. The build-up to the Iraq War was going on and all I could see were bare-faced liars. I wanted something that spoke positively but had a bit of an edge to it, and when I went on at Glastonbury to sing “Grace Under Pressure” those words came all at once: “We still believe in love so fuck you”. If I’d thought about them more they might have been a little better…

ELBOW

Leaders Of The Free World (V2, 2005)

Fuelled by “the odd beer and other things” at Blueprint in Salford, the band self-produce an album packed with dynamic songwriting.

Mark Potter: It was the first time Craig took the reins production-wise. We found this amazing space, a big old textile mill in Salford. [Art group] the Soup Collective came in and put cameras all over, there were animators in one corner, painters in another, it was a really buzzing environment. We’d often work until 5am, helped by the odd beer and other things that go on at that time of night. It was amazingly creative.

Garvey: Leaders… was made while the studio was being made. We had to stop recording so often because of the sound of manual labour – we ended up using it on “Picky Bugger”: the loops are all hammers, whistles and bells. It was great initially but there was a certain air of trepidation because we’d decided to make it ourselves. “Forget Myself” was running to 128 tracks of audio when we mixed. And with the Soup Collective’s involvement, overall it was an ambitious project. We were there day and night. I was drinking a load of red wine, really knocking it back, and there was a heartbreak for me in the middle of it, which informed the lyrics. It all poured out. The result is something that’s light years ahead of Cast Of Thousands.

ELBOW

The Seldom Seem Kid (Fiction, 2008)

A slow-burning sensation created in the shadow of further industry upheaval and the death, aged 39, of local musician and close friend Bryan Glancy. They win the 2008 Mercury prize; “One Day Like This” becomes a summer anthem, and boom – Elbow hit the big time.

Mark Potter: Leaders… came out and even Elbow fans didn’t know about it, which was really saddening for us. V2 were happy for us to be an underdog indie band, but we always had ambition. Halfway through the Leaders… campaign we said to our manager, “Look, we’re going to down tools, see if you can get some interest.” Fiction expressed interest straight away but negotiations were complicated, so we decided to get back in the studio and work on the next record while all this industry stuff was being sorted out. In the end it took two years.

Garvey: We had enough money in the coffers to last pretty much exactly the amount of time it took to make the album. Bankruptcy was on the horizon. It could have very well spelled the end of the band, but we never talked about that. I encountered a different sense of responsibility about my songwriting on that record than I’d ever had before. Once we’d made the decision to dedicate it to Bryan, it was a whole different ball game. The front end of “Friend Of Ours” was written about a week after he died, and it’s really angry. I sang it only once because I told the band I was never going to sing those words again, and then I didn’t look at it again for 12 months. All the end stuff on that song, about how he’s remembered and how much we love him, was one of the last things we did for the album.

Craig Potter: As far as we were concerned, the record was finished, but [Elbow A&R man] Jim Chancellor came in and said, “I think you’ve got another song in you.” “One Day Like This” started with me and Guy sat around the piano. We wanted to write a song that sounded like a classic, starting off with the simplest of chords and the melody following the vocal line. Then we sat down as the five of us and finished it as a song. We were under a lot of pressure on that album but I don’t think the pressure comes across in the music. Somehow we managed to keep a positive slant on the whole thing.

Garvey: It’s something we’re immensely proud of. We had such fun doing it, despite everything going on. Some of that first album feeling is there again: “Fuck ’em, let’s do what we want.”

ELBOW

The Seldom Seen Kid Live At Abbey Road (Fiction, 2009)

Elbow perform their breakthrough album live at Abbey Road backed by the BBC Concert Orchestra. Broadcast on the BBC to one million interactive viewers – later released on album and DVD.

Mark Potter: I’d never seen the band so nervous in my life. Absolute fear! We turned up at Abbey Road with all these “real” musicians and had one day’s rehearsal with them. We only got one shot. We hadn’t heard the arrangements so we didn’t know what it was going to sound like at all. We started playing “Grounds For Divorce” and when the orchestra struck up behind us it was shivers-down-your-spine. Unbelievable. When the concert was over I sat under a table for 10 minutes just to recover. Guy came to see me and said, “S’alright Potts, we’ve pulled it off.” It’s perhaps the highlight of everything we’ve ever done, I’m so proud of it.

Garvey: Like riding a unicycle on a tightrope. The most difficult thing was calming myself down between songs so my voice didn’t quiver. On top of the awards and the Glastonbury performance, that single event doubled our audience. It allowed people of all ages to realise they were as welcome at our concerts as kids.

I AM KLOOT

Sky At Night (Shepherd Moon/EMI, 2010)

The two Manc bands were old friends. A decade after Garvey produced Kloot’s debut, he and Craig are invited to oversee John Bramwell’s most sublime set of songs.

Garvey: Kloot have always been our contemporaries and good friends. It was bad timing, actually, because we were supposed to be finishing up Build A Rocket Boys, but Johnny’s songs were too good for us not to get involved. They wanted this late night record, and there were some astonishing moments. “I Still Do” is just gorgeous. That’s Johnny on a plate: chilling and incredibly beautiful.

Craig Potter: We wanted to do everything we could because here’s a brilliant songwriter who should be appreciated a lot more. I think there was a worry we were going to turn them into something they’re not – and we did, in a way. We spent time on arrangements and subtleties, but it was the same way we always work. You need to support a song and do whatever it demands.

Garvey: We knew our names being attached to the record would help, but it wasn’t favours for a mate. We were honoured to be asked. I hope people are going back through Kloot’s back catalogue because John is a classic songwriter.

ELBOW

Build A Rocket Boys! (Fiction, 2011)

The task of following a massively successful record is gracefully negotiated. This spacious yet intimate album is again recorded at Blueprint, though its character is shaped during a week spent together on Mull.

Craig Potter: “Jesus Is A Rochdale Girl” cropped up while we were on Mull and thematically something clicked for Guy. At the same time the rest of us embraced the idea of doing stuff with more space.

Garvey: I was very conscious that most of what I’d had in the way of new experiences were life-affirming, but anyone who writes an album about just those kinds of feelings is a twat. So what to do? I realised I had all this drama in my past, so that was a starting point. I’m talking about things that affect people our age: new insecurities, new things to feel guilty about.

Mark Potter: There’s a feeling that this album rounds things off and now we have even more room to go somewhere else, although I’m not sure we know yet where that is.

Garvey: This isn’t really a proper job, but it’s something we’ve worked at out whole lives and we want it to keep moving. It feels like we’re just at the start. Isn’t that ridiculous after 20 years!

Watch Julian Casablancas preview new solo album

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Julian Casablancas has given a sneak preview of his new solo album. Click below to watch now. The two-minute clip is credited to Julian Casablancas + The Voidz and shows footage of The Strokes' frontman recording in the studio, with various snippets of new songs audible throughout. There is no fur...

Julian Casablancas has given a sneak preview of his new solo album. Click below to watch now.

The two-minute clip is credited to Julian Casablancas + The Voidz and shows footage of The Strokes‘ frontman recording in the studio, with various snippets of new songs audible throughout. There is no further information regarding an album title or release date included with the video, but vsitors to Casablancas’ website can sign up to pre-order the album now.

The Strokes will make their live return at the Governors’ Ball in New York this June. The three-day event will take place on Randall’s Island between June 6 and 8. OutKast have been announced as the headliner alongside Jack White and Vampire Weekend. As well as performing with The Strokes, Julian Casablancas will also perform as a solo artist at the event.

The Black Keys, Afghan Whigs, War On Drugs, Parquet Courts announced for Latitude Festival

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The Black Keys have been announced as the final headliner for Latitude Festival 2014. The band join previously announced headliners Two Door Cinema Club and Damon Albarn at the top of the bill. Other acts announced today include Editors, James, Crystal Fighters, Kelis, The Afghan Whigs and Tinar...

The Black Keys have been announced as the final headliner for Latitude Festival 2014.

The band join previously announced headliners Two Door Cinema Club and Damon Albarn at the top of the bill.

Other acts announced today include Editors, James, Crystal Fighters, Kelis, The Afghan Whigs and Tinariwen. Mogwai, Lykke Li, War On Drugs, Temples, Parquet Courts, George Ezra, Conor Oberst and Tom Vek will also play.

Latitude 2014 will take place from July 17-20 at Henham Park in Southwold, Suffolk.

Other acts so far confirmed to play include Bombay Bicycle Club, Tame Impala, Jungle, Julia Holter, Koreless, East India Youth, Eagulls and Fat White Family. Slowdive will also appear, along with Röyksopp, Haim, Robyn, Billy Bragg, Anna Calvi, Phosphorescent, Cass McCombs, Nils Frahm, Goat, Marika Hackman, San Fermin, Son Lux, Willis Earl Beal and Josephine Foster.

For the first time this year, the festival has launched a new deposit scheme where fans will be able to secure a ticket with a £50 deposit now and then pay the balance over the following three months at £46.83 each time (for an adult ticket which includes the booking fee).

For more information, visit www.latitudefestival.co.uk

The Rolling Stones rumoured to be planning European tour dates for summer 2014

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The Rolling Stones are rumoured to be in the process of booking European dates for summer 2014. According to Spanish newspaper El Mundo, the band will play Madrid's Vicente Calderón stadium on June 25. The story says the Stones will begin a European jaunt at Paris' Stade de France in early June. ...

The Rolling Stones are rumoured to be in the process of booking European dates for summer 2014.

According to Spanish newspaper El Mundo, the band will play Madrid’s Vicente Calderón stadium on June 25.

The story says the Stones will begin a European jaunt at Paris’ Stade de France in early June. The band are also reportedly booked in the Pinkpop Festival in the Netherlands – which runs June 7, 8 and 9 – and will allegedly play their first show in Israel, at Tel Avivi’s Ramat Gan stadium on June 10. They will then return to Europe for other dates.

A Rolling Stones spokesperson told Uncut: “The Rolling Stones have no confirmed dates in Europe.”

The band are currently in the middle of their 14 On Fire tour. On Tuesday in Tokyo, they played “Silver Train” live for the first time in 40 years. They next play Macau on March 9.

First Look – Starred Up

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A lot of people peak in high school. Eric Love is not one of them. While many other teenagers are in the thick of their glory days, Eric is being starred up – that is, making the transition from a juvenile facility to a maximum security penitentiary, where he is billeted alongside some of the country’s very worst criminals. What follows over the next 100 minutes is as harrowing as you’d perhaps expect for a film that, in the first 10 minutes, sees Eric fashioning a shiv from a toothbrush and Bic razor. No good will come of this. As you can probably tell by now, Starred Up feels close to the work of Alan Clarke, Ken Loach and the socially minded grandees of British cinema. Initially, Clarke’s Scum appears to be a key reference point here – both films open with the arrival of a new inmate whose passage through prison provides the film’s narrative motor. But Eric Love and Clarke’s prison initiate Carlin are very different; Love is far more aggressive and impulsive than the resourceful Carlin. Critically, director David Mackenzie appears less interested in pursuing Clarke’s other, more politically minded concerns, in particular exposing conditions in the British penal system and, by extension, how that might be an indictment of an incumbent government. Another, more recent reference would be Jacques Audiard’s A Prophet. The heart of Mackenzie’s film – surprisingly, considering the violence, the swearing, the violence and the swearing – is the relationship between Eric and his estranged father, Neville, a career criminal who is incarcerated in the same prison. It doesn’t take much to work out that part of the reason for Eric’s history of anti-social behaviour lies with his father’s absence – Neville has been in jail since Eric was five years old. In keeping with the tone of the rest of the film, their reunion is characterised by much swearing, interrupted by sporadic bursts of violence. Starred Up marks an intriguing change of direction for David Mackenzie. Nine films into his career and so far he’s been hard to pin down. Among his early projects, he found critical acclaim with an Alex Trocchi adaptation, Young Adam – a film I remember chiefly, and woefully, for liberally displaying Ewan McGregor’s penis on camera – and also Hallam Foe, a dark but entertaining piece of magic realism starring Jamie Bell. A largely unsatisfactory sojourn to Hollywood followed. But Starred Up signals an upward shift of the gears for Mackenzie; and with its uncompromising subject matter comes the implication that this is a work of mature filmmaking, one that should be taken seriously. In fact, Starred Up is so relentless and intensely bleak it’s possible to find yourself inadvertently bursting out laughing as yet another con gets their face slashed open, or a group of guards hang an inmate. The script is by Jonathan Asser, a former prison therapist, who uses his own intimate experiences to give authenticity to what is, essentially, a family drama set against a detailed backdrop of the British prison ecosystem. There is a subtext here about the nature of prison life – how, rather than rehabilitating characters like Eric and Neville, it has instead taught them how to get stronger. But more interestingly is the way Asser and Mackenzie find subtle parallels between Eric and Neville, in particular the way they both utilise rage as a defence mechanism against external pressure to address their own feelings. As Eric, former Skins actor Jack O’Connell displays the same level of commitment to the role that – yes – the young Ray Winstone brought to Carlin in Scum, while Rupert Friend – presumably playing an analogue of Asser himself – is cast as the prison therapist who attempts to engage with Eric. The Australian actor Ben Mendelsohn – perhaps best known in the UK for playing the psychotic ‘Pope’ Cody in Animal Kingdom, as well as supporting roles in The Dark Knight Rises and Killing Them Softly – is entirely convincing as Neville, a man whose shambling gait and hangdog expression only seem to enhance his sense of menace. Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zE4ziBfu0JA STARRED UP OPENS IN THE UK ON MARCH 21

A lot of people peak in high school. Eric Love is not one of them. While many other teenagers are in the thick of their glory days, Eric is being starred up – that is, making the transition from a juvenile facility to a maximum security penitentiary, where he is billeted alongside some of the country’s very worst criminals. What follows over the next 100 minutes is as harrowing as you’d perhaps expect for a film that, in the first 10 minutes, sees Eric fashioning a shiv from a toothbrush and Bic razor. No good will come of this.

As you can probably tell by now, Starred Up feels close to the work of Alan Clarke, Ken Loach and the socially minded grandees of British cinema. Initially, Clarke’s Scum appears to be a key reference point here – both films open with the arrival of a new inmate whose passage through prison provides the film’s narrative motor.

But Eric Love and Clarke’s prison initiate Carlin are very different; Love is far more aggressive and impulsive than the resourceful Carlin. Critically, director David Mackenzie appears less interested in pursuing Clarke’s other, more politically minded concerns, in particular exposing conditions in the British penal system and, by extension, how that might be an indictment of an incumbent government. Another, more recent reference would be Jacques Audiard’s A Prophet.

The heart of Mackenzie’s film – surprisingly, considering the violence, the swearing, the violence and the swearing – is the relationship between Eric and his estranged father, Neville, a career criminal who is incarcerated in the same prison. It doesn’t take much to work out that part of the reason for Eric’s history of anti-social behaviour lies with his father’s absence – Neville has been in jail since Eric was five years old. In keeping with the tone of the rest of the film, their reunion is characterised by much swearing, interrupted by sporadic bursts of violence.

Starred Up marks an intriguing change of direction for David Mackenzie. Nine films into his career and so far he’s been hard to pin down. Among his early projects, he found critical acclaim with an Alex Trocchi adaptation, Young Adam – a film I remember chiefly, and woefully, for liberally displaying Ewan McGregor’s penis on camera – and also Hallam Foe, a dark but entertaining piece of magic realism starring Jamie Bell. A largely unsatisfactory sojourn to Hollywood followed.

But Starred Up signals an upward shift of the gears for Mackenzie; and with its uncompromising subject matter comes the implication that this is a work of mature filmmaking, one that should be taken seriously. In fact, Starred Up is so relentless and intensely bleak it’s possible to find yourself inadvertently bursting out laughing as yet another con gets their face slashed open, or a group of guards hang an inmate. The script is by Jonathan Asser, a former prison therapist, who uses his own intimate experiences to give authenticity to what is, essentially, a family drama set against a detailed backdrop of the British prison ecosystem. There is a subtext here about the nature of prison life – how, rather than rehabilitating characters like Eric and Neville, it has instead taught them how to get stronger.

But more interestingly is the way Asser and Mackenzie find subtle parallels between Eric and Neville, in particular the way they both utilise rage as a defence mechanism against external pressure to address their own feelings. As Eric, former Skins actor Jack O’Connell displays the same level of commitment to the role that – yes – the young Ray Winstone brought to Carlin in Scum, while Rupert Friend – presumably playing an analogue of Asser himself – is cast as the prison therapist who attempts to engage with Eric. The Australian actor Ben Mendelsohn – perhaps best known in the UK for playing the psychotic ‘Pope’ Cody in Animal Kingdom, as well as supporting roles in The Dark Knight Rises and Killing Them Softly – is entirely convincing as Neville, a man whose shambling gait and hangdog expression only seem to enhance his sense of menace.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

STARRED UP OPENS IN THE UK ON MARCH 21

David Bowie ‘offers to write new songs with Oscar winner’

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David Bowie has reportedly offered to write new music with Claudia Lennear, a former backing singer and star of Oscar winning documentary 20 Feet From Stardom. Lennear revealed that Bowie, with whom she was romantically linked in the 1970s, called her "out of the blue" to offer his services and tha...

David Bowie has reportedly offered to write new music with Claudia Lennear, a former backing singer and star of Oscar winning documentary 20 Feet From Stardom.

Lennear revealed that Bowie, with whom she was romantically linked in the 1970s, called her “out of the blue” to offer his services and that she intends to take him up on the proposal. The backing singer, who is said to have inspired Bowie’s song “Lady Grinning Soul“, told the New York Post that she has been shocked by the success the film in which she stars has brought.

“I got a call from David Bowie out of the blue two days ago,” she said. “I couldn’t believe it when I first heard his voice. We haven’t seen each other in 20 years… He told me he wanted to write my next project.”

“This is bringing so many gifts back from my past,” she added, before saying that she “will definitely hold David [Bowie] to his promise”.

Lennear has previously performed with musicians such as George Harrison, Ike & Tina Turner and Joe Cocker and is also said to have inspired The Rolling Stones’ song “Brown Sugar”. She released one solo album, Phew!, in 1973.

On Sunday (March 2), 20 Feet From Stardom, which takes an in-depth look at the lives of back-up singers, was named Best Documentary at the 2014 Academy Awards.

Meanwhile, in this month’s issue of Uncut we celebrate the 40th anniversary of David Bowie’s album Diamond Dogs. You can find details about it here.

Watch My Bloody Valentine, Sufjan Stevens, Mogwai, Built To Spill, in All Tomorrow’s Parties doc

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My Bloody Valentine, Sufjan Stevens, Built To Spill, Mogwai, Lightning Bolt and Mercury Rev are among the artists appearing in From Ghosts, a new Kickstarter-funded documentary produced by Pitchfork.tv. The film was shot in 2008, when All Tomorrow's Parties held its first East Coast festival in Mon...

My Bloody Valentine, Sufjan Stevens, Built To Spill, Mogwai, Lightning Bolt and Mercury Rev are among the artists appearing in From Ghosts, a new Kickstarter-funded documentary produced by Pitchfork.tv.

The film was shot in 2008, when All Tomorrow’s Parties held its first East Coast festival in Monticello, New York.

It was directed by Vincent Moon, who has worked with Arcade Fire, Fleet Foxes, REM and The National.

Lennon and McCartney’s “Help!” piano up for auction

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The piano played by John Lennon and Paul McCartney while filming Help! is up for auction. The pair used the 1907 Bechstein Concert Grand to compose the title track to the 1965 film, according to the film's director Richard Lester, who is selling it, the BBC reports. Lester bought the piano in the late '60s from Twickenham film studios where it had been used for dozens of feature films since the 1930s. The director also says the instrument was used by Paul McCartney to compose "Yesterday". It has been valued at £50,000 by Omega Auctions and will be sold in Liverpool on March 20, 2014.

The piano played by John Lennon and Paul McCartney while filming Help! is up for auction.

The pair used the 1907 Bechstein Concert Grand to compose the title track to the 1965 film, according to the film’s director Richard Lester, who is selling it, the BBC reports. Lester bought the piano in the late ’60s from Twickenham film studios where it had been used for dozens of feature films since the 1930s.

The director also says the instrument was used by Paul McCartney to compose “Yesterday“. It has been valued at £50,000 by Omega Auctions and will be sold in Liverpool on March 20, 2014.

The Rolling Stones play “Silver Train” live for the first time in 40 years

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The Rolling Stones this week performed a track that last appeared on their setlists more than 40 years ago. The band are currently on the Asia Pacific leg of their !4 On Fire tour, which includes three shows in Tokyo. It was at Tokyo Dome on Tuesday (March 4) that the band performed the Goat's He...

The Rolling Stones this week performed a track that last appeared on their setlists more than 40 years ago.

The band are currently on the Asia Pacific leg of their !4 On Fire tour, which includes three shows in Tokyo.

It was at Tokyo Dome on Tuesday (March 4) that the band performed the Goat’s Head Soup track, “Silver Train”. Mick Taylor appeared as a guest performer on the track.

The track won the “fan vote”, a fixture of Stones setlists in which local fans nominate a track via social media. As the vote was closely run, the band also performed the runner-up, “You Got Me Rocking”, from 1994’s Voodoo Lounge.

After Tokyo, the band will travel to Macau, then various cities in Australia and New Zealand.

Watch the original promo video for “Silver Train” below.

The Stones had previously played the song on February 14 in Paris to a group of 30 fans during a short set marking the last day of their 14 On Fire rehearsals.

The full setlist for Tuesday’s Tokyo Dome show is:

‘Start Me Up’

‘You Got Me Rocking’

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

‘Tumbling Dice’

‘Angie’

‘Doom And Gloom’

‘Silver Train’

‘Honky Tonk Women’

‘Slipping Away’

‘Happy’

‘Midnight Rambler’

‘Miss You’

‘Paint It Black’

‘Gimme Shelter’

‘Jumpin’ Jack Flash’

‘Sympathy For The Devil’

‘Brown Sugar’

Encore:

‘You Can’t Always Get What You Want’ (with the Senzoku Freshman Singers)

‘(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction’

The Ninth Uncut Playlist Of 2014

Being a bit of a broken record here: a proliferation of Hurray For The Riff Raff albums this week, since I’m writing a review of the fantastic “Small Town Heroes” at the moment. Plenty of new stuff as well, though, at least some of it recommended, with strong reference to Toumani Diabaté and his son Sidiki’s kora duets, and to the tantalising extract from a Fennesz album that’s being explicitly pitched as the follow-up to “Endless Summer”… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Toumani Diabaté & Sidiki Diabaté - Toumani & Sidiki (World Circuit) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCEeaERMfNo 2 Landlady – Above My Ground (Hometapes) 3 Pharrell Williams – G I R L (Columbia) 4 Jesse Sparhawk & Eric Carbonara – Tributes & Diatribes (VHF) 5 The Bar-Kays – Gotta Groove (Stax) 6 Greg Ashley – Awkward Affections (Trouble In Mind) 7 Fennesz – The Liar (Editions Mego) 8 Wooden Wand - Farmer's Corner (Fire) 9 Hamilton Leithauser – Black Hours (Ribbon) 10 Hurray For The Riff Raff – Look Out Mama (Loose) 11 Little Dragon – Nabuma Rubberband (Because) 12 Hurray For The Riff Raff – My Dearest Darkest Neighbor (Mod Mobilian) 13 Fatima Al Qadiri – Asiatisch (Planet Mu) 14 Coldplay – Magic (Parlophone) 15 tUnE-yArDs - Nikki Nack (4AD) 16 Terry Waldo – The Soul Of Ragtime (Tompkins Square) 17 Hurray For The Riff-Raff – Small Town Heroes (ATO) 18 Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Phosphorescent Harvest (Silver Arrow) 19 Robert Ashley – Private Parts (Lovely Music) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQBpire6jhw 20 Håkon Stene - Lush Laments for Lazy Mammal (Hubro) 21 Dex Romweber Duo – Images 13 (bloodshot) 22 Pink Mountaintops - Get Back (Jajaguwar) 23 Kelis – Food (Ninjatune) 24 Horseback – Piedmont Apocrypha (Three Lobed) 25 K Leimer - A Period Of Review (RVNG INTL) 26 Bobby Charles - Bobby Charles (Light In The Attic) 27 Eno/Hyde – Someday World (Warp)

Being a bit of a broken record here: a proliferation of Hurray For The Riff Raff albums this week, since I’m writing a review of the fantastic “Small Town Heroes” at the moment. Plenty of new stuff as well, though, at least some of it recommended, with strong reference to Toumani Diabaté and his son Sidiki’s kora duets, and to the tantalising extract from a Fennesz album that’s being explicitly pitched as the follow-up to “Endless Summer”…

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

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

2 Landlady – Above My Ground (Hometapes)

3 Pharrell Williams – G I R L (Columbia)

4 Jesse Sparhawk & Eric Carbonara – Tributes & Diatribes (VHF)

5 The Bar-Kays – Gotta Groove (Stax)

6 Greg Ashley – Awkward Affections (Trouble In Mind)

7 Fennesz – The Liar (Editions Mego)

8 Wooden Wand – Farmer’s Corner (Fire)

9 Hamilton Leithauser – Black Hours (Ribbon)

10 Hurray For The Riff Raff – Look Out Mama (Loose)

11 Little Dragon – Nabuma Rubberband (Because)

12 Hurray For The Riff Raff – My Dearest Darkest Neighbor (Mod Mobilian)

13 Fatima Al Qadiri – Asiatisch (Planet Mu)

14 Coldplay – Magic (Parlophone)

15 tUnE-yArDs – Nikki Nack (4AD)

16 Terry Waldo – The Soul Of Ragtime (Tompkins Square)

17 Hurray For The Riff-Raff – Small Town Heroes (ATO)

18 Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Phosphorescent Harvest (Silver Arrow)

19 Robert Ashley – Private Parts (Lovely Music)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQBpire6jhw

20 Håkon Stene – Lush Laments for Lazy Mammal (Hubro)

21 Dex Romweber Duo – Images 13 (bloodshot)

22 Pink Mountaintops – Get Back (Jajaguwar)

23 Kelis – Food (Ninjatune)

24 Horseback – Piedmont Apocrypha (Three Lobed)

25 K Leimer – A Period Of Review (RVNG INTL)

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

27 Eno/Hyde – Someday World (Warp)