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Ian McLagan: “I don’t think any band’s been treated worse than the Small Faces”

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The Small Faces’ surviving members, Ian McLagan and Kenney Jones, have taken us through the making of the group’s classic singles in the new issue of Uncut, out now. McLagan explains that he believes the group were treated worse by the industry than any other band. “[Manager Don] Arden never paid us,” says McLagan. “We got £20 a week and that was it. We went to Immediate and now we were on £50 a week… and that was all we got from them, too. Unbelievable. “I don’t think any band’s been treated worse than the Small Faces. We got our very first royalty cheque from the sales of our Decca records in 1997. So Steve [Marriott, who died in 1991] never got a penny.” The new issue of Uncut is out now.

The Small Faces’ surviving members, Ian McLagan and Kenney Jones, have taken us through the making of the group’s classic singles in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

McLagan explains that he believes the group were treated worse by the industry than any other band.

“[Manager Don] Arden never paid us,” says McLagan. “We got £20 a week and that was it. We went to Immediate and now we were on £50 a week… and that was all we got from them, too. Unbelievable.

“I don’t think any band’s been treated worse than the Small Faces. We got our very first royalty cheque from the sales of our Decca records in 1997. So Steve [Marriott, who died in 1991] never got a penny.”

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

Africa Express Presents: Maison Des Jeunes

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Damon Albarn-led cultural exchange bears fruit... The world at large may be more eager for news of a new Blur album, but for the last seven years, Damon Albarn’s attention has been fixed on a more distant horizon. Since 2006, the Blur frontman has been one of the main ringleaders of Africa Express, a cultural exchange project porting western musicians – themselves a diverse bunch including Paul McCartney, Fatboy Slim, and Flea of Red Hot Chili Peppers – out to locations such as Mali, Nigeria and the Congo in the name of musical alliance. Some care has evidently been taken to ensure Africa Express smacks neither of Live Aid showboating or Graceland-style cultural imperialism, as the consequent tours have played up the project’s democratic presentation and egalitarian participation. Take last year’s flagship event, a pan-ethnic group of musicians chugging out of London Euston in a sort of Magical Mystery train, bringing their improvised and collaborative pieces to schools and factories, trade clubs and music venues of the United Kingdom. The 11 tracks of Maison Des Jeunes constitute the highlights of a week spent in the Malian capital of Bamako, with visiting western musicians – an assortment including Albarn, Brian Eno, Yeah Yeah Yeah’s Nick Zinner, UK producers Two Inch Punch and Lil Silva, rapper Ghostpoet and members of Metronomy and Django Django – rubbing shoulders with local musicians in the titular youth club, sat on the banks of the Niger river. Mali, of course, has a rich musical tradition, home to the late guitarist Ali Farke Touré, desert blues group Tinariwen, and a cradle of the griot song-storytelling tradition. But the choice of location, you suspect, is also an artistic commentary on a political situation. Warfare continues to rage in northern Mali, where some areas remain under the control of Islamist militants, and armed groups such as Ansar Dine (“Followers Of The Faith”) threaten musicians with a public whipping, or worse. An early album highlight comes as Songhoy Blues, a Timbuktu group formed in response to the jihadi occupation, lock guitars with Zinner on “Soubour” (“Patience”), a thorny desert blues stomp with a firm, upright backbone. Deference, generally, is paid to the Malian contingent. Albarn sensitively produces a handful of tracks, letting the raw vocal soul of Bijou’s “Dougoudé Sarraf” and the weaving ngoni blues of Gambari’s “Yamore” (vocaled by Kankou Kouyaté, 21-year-old niece of Bassekou Kouyaté) shine through. Eno, too, is here in the guise of dutiful documentarian, not egghead remixer, and the two tracks that bear his involvement – Yacouba Sissoko Band’s “Chanson Denko Tapestry” and Tiemoko Sogodogo’s  “Latégué” – show off the flexibility of Malian song; the first an itchily danceable number with the faint vibe of a kora “Duelling Banjos”, the latter a wise griot lament suffused with sublime longing. Elsewhere, some of the younger members of the company set about a danceable sort of soundclash. Lil Silva, notionally known for his funky take on UK urban music, is behind the enjoyable “Bouramsy”, an organic-sounding rattle of hand percussion, flute-like melodies and lightly ecstatic synth swells that sounds like a Congotronics street performance retooled for the dancefloor. On “Deni Kelen Be Koko”, David Maclean of Scottish Beta Band-a-likes Django Django mixes musicians formerly associated with the late ‘Bambara bluesman’ into an insistent groove of loping bass and slippery snares by, while Two Inch Punch takes Malian rapper Talbi’s “Rapou Kanou” and retools it in jazzy fashion with a clutch of local instrumentation as his sound source. A glimpse of the social side of the project comes on “Season Change”, sloth-voiced Coventry MC Ghostpoet relating a smoked-out tale of late nights, strong drinks and late-night Mahjongg games that nonetheless cracks with melancholy. “All cried out but I’m shedding a tear/Why won’t the seasons change?” he pleads, backed by soft Albarn sighs, before Bamako’s talking drum band Doucoura beat the track to a hectic end. Maison Des Jeunes is the sort of project that will probably please neither world music aficionados of a purist stripe, nor those holding out for Damon to make another Parklife. But as a collection of friendly collisions, an impulsive document of how music can bring people together over musical and cultural boundaries, it’s well worth the visit. Louis Pattison

Damon Albarn-led cultural exchange bears fruit…

The world at large may be more eager for news of a new Blur album, but for the last seven years, Damon Albarn’s attention has been fixed on a more distant horizon. Since 2006, the Blur frontman has been one of the main ringleaders of Africa Express, a cultural exchange project porting western musicians – themselves a diverse bunch including Paul McCartney, Fatboy Slim, and Flea of Red Hot Chili Peppers – out to locations such as Mali, Nigeria and the Congo in the name of musical alliance.

Some care has evidently been taken to ensure Africa Express smacks neither of Live Aid showboating or Graceland-style cultural imperialism, as the consequent tours have played up the project’s democratic presentation and egalitarian participation. Take last year’s flagship event, a pan-ethnic group of musicians chugging out of London Euston in a sort of Magical Mystery train, bringing their improvised and collaborative pieces to schools and factories, trade clubs and music venues of the United Kingdom.

The 11 tracks of Maison Des Jeunes constitute the highlights of a week spent in the Malian capital of Bamako, with visiting western musicians – an assortment including Albarn, Brian Eno, Yeah Yeah Yeah’s Nick Zinner, UK producers Two Inch Punch and Lil Silva, rapper Ghostpoet and members of Metronomy and Django Django – rubbing shoulders with local musicians in the titular youth club, sat on the banks of the Niger river.

Mali, of course, has a rich musical tradition, home to the late guitarist Ali Farke Touré, desert blues group Tinariwen, and a cradle of the griot song-storytelling tradition. But the choice of location, you suspect, is also an artistic commentary on a political situation. Warfare continues to rage in northern Mali, where some areas remain under the control of Islamist militants, and armed groups such as Ansar Dine (“Followers Of The Faith”) threaten musicians with a public whipping, or worse. An early album highlight comes as Songhoy Blues, a Timbuktu group formed in response to the jihadi occupation, lock guitars with Zinner on “Soubour” (“Patience”), a thorny desert blues stomp with a firm, upright backbone.

Deference, generally, is paid to the Malian contingent. Albarn sensitively produces a handful of tracks, letting the raw vocal soul of Bijou’s “Dougoudé Sarraf” and the weaving ngoni blues of Gambari’s “Yamore” (vocaled by Kankou Kouyaté, 21-year-old niece of Bassekou Kouyaté) shine through. Eno, too, is here in the guise of dutiful documentarian, not egghead remixer, and the two tracks that bear his involvement – Yacouba Sissoko Band’s “Chanson Denko Tapestry” and Tiemoko Sogodogo’s  “Latégué” – show off the flexibility of Malian song; the first an itchily danceable number with the faint vibe of a kora “Duelling Banjos”, the latter a wise griot lament suffused with sublime longing.

Elsewhere, some of the younger members of the company set about a danceable sort of soundclash. Lil Silva, notionally known for his funky take on UK urban music, is behind the enjoyable “Bouramsy”, an organic-sounding rattle of hand percussion, flute-like melodies and lightly ecstatic synth swells that sounds like a Congotronics street performance retooled for the dancefloor. On “Deni Kelen Be Koko”, David Maclean of Scottish Beta Band-a-likes Django Django mixes musicians formerly associated with the late ‘Bambara bluesman’ into an insistent groove of loping bass and slippery snares by, while Two Inch Punch takes Malian rapper Talbi’s “Rapou Kanou” and retools it in jazzy fashion with a clutch of local instrumentation as his sound source.

A glimpse of the social side of the project comes on “Season Change”, sloth-voiced Coventry MC Ghostpoet relating a smoked-out tale of late nights, strong drinks and late-night Mahjongg games that nonetheless cracks with melancholy. “All cried out but I’m shedding a tear/Why won’t the seasons change?” he pleads, backed by soft Albarn sighs, before Bamako’s talking drum band Doucoura beat the track to a hectic end.

Maison Des Jeunes is the sort of project that will probably please neither world music aficionados of a purist stripe, nor those holding out for Damon to make another Parklife. But as a collection of friendly collisions, an impulsive document of how music can bring people together over musical and cultural boundaries, it’s well worth the visit.

Louis Pattison

Beatles Help! jackets to be auctioned

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The jackets worn by The Beatles in their 1965 film Help! are expected to fetch up to $115,000 (£69,000) when they are put up for auction next month. The items of clothing- worn by George Harrison and Ringo Starr - will go under the hammer at Omega Auctions in March. Taken from director Richard Lester's private collection, staff at the auction house have estimated that they will attract offers of between $82,000 (£49,875) and $115,000 (£69,947) when the bidding opens. Auctioneer Paul Fairweather said: "As Beatles clothing goes, these have got to be amongst the Holy Grail for any Beatles collector. They feature on one of their most recognizable album covers and I have a feeling these could really fly off the block."

The jackets worn by The Beatles in their 1965 film Help! are expected to fetch up to $115,000 (£69,000) when they are put up for auction next month.

The items of clothing- worn by George Harrison and Ringo Starr – will go under the hammer at Omega Auctions in March.

Taken from director Richard Lester‘s private collection, staff at the auction house have estimated that they will attract offers of between $82,000 (£49,875) and $115,000 (£69,947) when the bidding opens.

Auctioneer Paul Fairweather said: “As Beatles clothing goes, these have got to be amongst the Holy Grail for any Beatles collector. They feature on one of their most recognizable album covers and I have a feeling these could really fly off the block.”

Hear new Spiritualized song, “Always Forgetting With You (The Bridge Song)”

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Spiritualized are streaming a new track called "Always Together With You (The Bridge Song)". The six minute long song, which you can listen to below, features on the Space Project compilation album which will be released on April 19 for Record Store Day. Artists were invited to use sounds recorded ...

Spiritualized are streaming a new track called “Always Together With You (The Bridge Song)”.

The six minute long song, which you can listen to below, features on the Space Project compilation album which will be released on April 19 for Record Store Day. Artists were invited to use sounds recorded during the Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 space probes on the album. Spiritualized appear under the name The Spiritualized Mississippi Space Program alongside Beach House, Youth Lagoon, Mutual Benefit, the Antlers, Blues Control, Benoit & Sergio, Porcelain Raft, and others.

According to a press statement: “The ‘sounds’ recorded by the Voyager probes aren’t sounds in the conventional sense; rather, they are electromagnetic radiation fluctuations in the magnetosphere of the planets, moons, and large asteroids the Voyager probes traveled near. Each celestial body is composed of different elements, has its own size and mass, and therefore sounds unique.” There are seven pairs of songs about different celestial bodies.

The album will be available on vinyl, CD, and as a 7″ box set.

The Space Project tracklisting is:

Jupiter

A: Porcelain Raft, ‘Giove’

B: The Antlers, ‘Jupiter’

Miranda:

A: Mutual Benefit, ‘Terraform’

B: Anna Meredith, ‘Miranda’

Neptune:

A: The Spiritualized Mississippi Space Program, ‘Always Together With You (The Bridge Song)’

B: The Holydrug Couple, ‘Amphitrites Lost’

Uranus:

A: Youth Lagoon, ‘Worms’

B: Blues Control, ‘Blues Danube’

Saturn:

A: Beach House, ‘Saturn Song’

B: Zomes, ‘Moonlet’

Earth:

A: Absolutely Free, ‘EARTH I’

B: Jesu, ‘Song of Earth’

Io:

A: Benoit & Sergio, ‘Long Neglected Words’

B: Larry Gus, ‘Sphere of Io (For Georg Cantor)’

Tom Jones and Cliff Richard to support Morrissey at major American shows

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Morrissey has announced two major American arena shows with very unusual support acts: veteran performers Sir Tom Jones and Sir Cliff Richard. According to posters added to the quasi-official fansite, True To You, the shows are set to take place and LA's Los Angeles Sports Arena on May 10 and Brook...

Morrissey has announced two major American arena shows with very unusual support acts: veteran performers Sir Tom Jones and Sir Cliff Richard.

According to posters added to the quasi-official fansite, True To You, the shows are set to take place and LA’s Los Angeles Sports Arena on May 10 and Brooklyn’s Barclays Center on June 21. Tickets are not yet on sale. Both dates will include frequent Morrissey tour companion Kristeen Young.

Morrissey will release a new album later this year. The singer, who released his autobiography in October, has signed a new, worldwide record deal with Universal Music’s US-based Harvest Records. In a statement, he said he was “thrilled” to ink the deal.

Harvest’s joint general managers Piero Giramonti and Jacqueline Saturn confirmed Morrissey’s first album under the deal will be released in the second half of 2014, and that he is starting work on what will be his 10th solo album, the follow-up to 2009’s Years Of Refusal, later this month in France with producer Joe Chiccarelli.

Morrissey will play:

Los Angeles Sports Arena (May 10)

Brooklyn Barclays Center (June 21)

Watch U2’s new video for “Invisible”

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U2 have unveiled the video for their single 'Invisible' – scroll down to watch. The black-and-white promo was directed by Mark Romanek, the director behind videos such as Johnny Cash's "Hurt", and sees the band performing in front of a crow. U2 premiered the track, which was a charity single rel...

U2 have unveiled the video for their single ‘Invisible’ – scroll down to watch.

The black-and-white promo was directed by Mark Romanek, the director behind videos such as Johnny Cash’s “Hurt”, and sees the band performing in front of a crow.

U2 premiered the track, which was a charity single released as part of a new partnership between Bono’s charity (RED) and Bank Of America, during last month’s Super Bowl.

The track was available for free via iTunes for 24 hours, and Bank Of America agreed to donate $1 (60p) for every download of the track to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria.

Damon Albarn announces solo live dates

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Damon Albarn will play a number of intimate shows to launch his solo debut Everyday Robots. Albarn has announced that he will perform at the Rivioli Ballroom in Crofton Park on April 30, followed by a show at the People's Palace in Mile End on May 1. Both dates will come shortly after the release o...

Damon Albarn will play a number of intimate shows to launch his solo debut Everyday Robots.

Albarn has announced that he will perform at the Rivioli Ballroom in Crofton Park on April 30, followed by a show at the People’s Palace in Mile End on May 1. Both dates will come shortly after the release of Everyday Robots, which is co-produced by XL Records boss Richard Russell, on April 28. The LP will also feature contributions from Brian Eno and Bat For Lashes singer Natasha Khan. Tickets for both London shows are priced at £35 each and go on sale this Friday (February 14) at 9am GMT.

Albarn will also play a number of European dates.

April 30: The Rivoli Ballroom, LONDON

May 1: The Great Hall at Queen Mary University of London, LONDON

May 3: SOS 4.8 Festival, SPAIN

May 5: Alhambra, PARIS

June 27: Down The Rabbit Hole Festival, NL

July 3: Werchter Festival, BELGIUM

July 4: Roskilde Festival, DENMARK

July 19: Latitude Festival, UK

Radiohead launch PolyFauna app

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Radiohead / Polyfauna from Universal Everything on Vimeo.

Radiohead have launched a new app called PolyFauna.

Writing about the app at Radiohead.com, Thom Yorke explained it as “an experimental collaboration between us (Radiohead) & Universal Everything, born out of The King of Limbs sessions and using the imagery and the sounds from the song ‘Bloom’. It comes from an interest in early computer life-experiments and the imagined creatures of our subconscious.”

He then posted instructions on how to use the app, writing: “Your screen is the window into an evolving world. Move around to look around. You can follow the red dot. You can wear headphones.” The app can be downloaded through Radiohead.com.

Radiohead / Polyfauna from Universal Everything on Vimeo.

Last month, Radiohead’s Colin Greenwood said that Radiohead’s plans for a new album are “up in the air” as members of the band focus on side projects. Greenwood spoke to Drowned In Sound and revealed that he and his fellow Radiohead members are looking forward to making new music together but admitted that they are enjoying some time at home as the dust settles from touring their last album, The King Of Limbs.

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

Maintaining that live shows remain a long way off, Greenwood continues, “I wish I could say we were going to start work and put something out then spend 12 months on the road touring but we’re just enjoying being at home right now. We had the best time when spent the last two years touring The King Of Limbs. We all really enjoyed that. It was a really positive time. We definitely want to do it all again but we’ve just got to give it some time for the dust to settle. What I’m trying to say is everyone’s very happy and positive and looking forward to the next adventure.”

The Sixth Uncut Playlist Of 2014

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Another one of the annoying redacted albums uncovered this week, in the shape of Avey Tare’s Slasher Flicks, on the first few listens possibly superior to the last Animal Collective set. I wish you could hear more of Angel Deradoorian on it, though: her “Mind Raft” EP from a few years back is maybe my favourite release from the extended Dirty Projectors collective. Other notes. Chain & The Gang as will be obvious, are fronted by the irrepressible Ian Svenonius, there’s a new Woods track to check out, the Slint box features a version of “Cortez The Killer”, and Terry Waldo’s album is actually new. Strange times. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Beverley Martyn – The Phoenix And The Turtle (Les Cousins) 2 Arc Iris – Arc Iris(Bella Union) 3 Real Estate – Atlas (Domino) 4 Gruff Rhys – American Interior (Turnstile) 5 The Wolfhounds – Middle Aged Freak/Anthem (Oddbox) 6 Chain & The Gang – Minimum Rock’n’Roll (Fortuna Pop) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ss-MLCcoRDg 7 Stone Jack Jones – Ancestor (Western Vinyl) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KHV_6H2hQnM 8 Woods – With Light And With Love (Woodsist) 9 Ryley Walker – All Kinds Of You (Tompkins Square) 10 Smoke Fairies – Smoke Fairies (Full Time Hobby) 11 Dead Rider – Chills On Glass (Drag City) 12 Todd Terje – It’s Album Time (Olsen) 13 Avey Tare’s Slasher Flicks – Enter The Slasher House (Domino) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0VE_7o8GuPk 14 Bonnie Dobson – Bonnie Dobson And Her “Boys” (Hornbeam) 15 Sun Kil Moon – Benji (Caldo Verde) 16 Bruce Springsteen & The E-Street Band – Highway To Hell (Live in Perth) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D3rtFfGmH6Q 17 Duck Dive – Inner Projections (Space) 18 Suarasama – Timeline (Space) 19 Slint – Spiderland Box Set (Touch & Go) 20 Howlin Rain – Self Made Man (Agitated) 21 Terry Waldo – The Soul Of Ragtime (Tompkins Square) 22 Leyland Kirby - Breaks My Heart Each Time (Apollo) 23 Trans – Green EP (Rough Trade) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cMXIrZf4Q7Y&list=PLFs765sm0paYtI3tnDH3yX5umzZe_GHZr

Another one of the annoying redacted albums uncovered this week, in the shape of Avey Tare’s Slasher Flicks, on the first few listens possibly superior to the last Animal Collective set. I wish you could hear more of Angel Deradoorian on it, though: her “Mind Raft” EP from a few years back is maybe my favourite release from the extended Dirty Projectors collective.

Other notes. Chain & The Gang as will be obvious, are fronted by the irrepressible Ian Svenonius, there’s a new Woods track to check out, the Slint box features a version of “Cortez The Killer”, and Terry Waldo’s album is actually new. Strange times.

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

1 Beverley Martyn – The Phoenix And The Turtle (Les Cousins)

2 Arc Iris – Arc Iris(Bella Union)

3 Real Estate – Atlas (Domino)

4 Gruff Rhys – American Interior (Turnstile)

5 The Wolfhounds – Middle Aged Freak/Anthem (Oddbox)

6 Chain & The Gang – Minimum Rock’n’Roll (Fortuna Pop)

7 Stone Jack Jones – Ancestor (Western Vinyl)

8 Woods – With Light And With Love (Woodsist)

9 Ryley Walker – All Kinds Of You (Tompkins Square)

10 Smoke Fairies – Smoke Fairies (Full Time Hobby)

11 Dead Rider – Chills On Glass (Drag City)

12 Todd Terje – It’s Album Time (Olsen)

13 Avey Tare’s Slasher Flicks – Enter The Slasher House (Domino)

14 Bonnie Dobson – Bonnie Dobson And Her “Boys” (Hornbeam)

15 Sun Kil Moon – Benji (Caldo Verde)

16 Bruce Springsteen & The E-Street Band – Highway To Hell (Live in Perth)

17 Duck Dive – Inner Projections (Space)

18 Suarasama – Timeline (Space)

19 Slint – Spiderland Box Set (Touch & Go)

20 Howlin Rain – Self Made Man (Agitated)

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

22 Leyland Kirby – Breaks My Heart Each Time (Apollo)

23 Trans – Green EP (Rough Trade)

XTC: Crackers in Caracas

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There’s a very good feature in the current Uncut on the making of XTC’s “Making Plans For Nigel”, which reminded me of a time when I was often in their company, usually in far flung corners of the world, far from their Swindon homes, including the following adventure. Miami, May, 1981. America comes here to die. Me? I’ve here to link up with XTC, who’ve just finished a North American tour. This afternoon, we’re flying to South America. To Venezuela, in fact, where Swindon’s collective answer to Vasco da Gama will play two shows in Caracas with Jools Holland & His Millionaires. Last night, you would have found XTC drummer Terry Chambers in the bar of the Riviera Motel in Fort Lauderdale, firing back volleys of Budweiser and contemplating the prospect of this particular jaunt with typical circumspection. “Venezuela!” Chambers had roared, eyeballs rolling. “I don’t even know where the bastard is. I’m just a drummer. I didn’t think I’d need a degree in fucking geography to find out where we were playing. I used to get lost coming up to London to play the Nashville. Now they’re sending me up the bastard Amazon. Where,” he wanted to know, this quizzical Wiltshireman, “is it all going to end?” Terry had a point. The first time I met XTC was in a departure lounge at Heathrow. We had to wait five hours for an Air India flight to New York, where they were due to support Talking Heads at a special New Year’s Eve show at the Beacon Theatre. Next, we were off to Australia, XTC the first of Virgin’s so-called new wave bands to play the Antipodes. Further trips – including one epic four-day drive across America, from Texas to California – followed, XTC convinced they were being used as reluctant pioneers by Virgin, sent out to test the local waters for the rest of the label’s roster. On the flight now from Miami to Caracas, Chambers is still in furrowed-brow mode on the subject of Venezuela. “I mean - what’s it going to be like?” he wants to know. I don’t have a clue, frankly. “Is it going to be full of fucking Aztecs, or what?” he asks. “I fancy it’s going to be like something out of When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth or The Land That Time Forgot,” he finally decides, snapping on his safety belt, getting ready for landing. We emerge blinking into Venezuelan sunlight, groggy with beer. We are amused to learn that our own arrival at Simon Bolivar airport has recently been preceded by that of Prince Charles. His RAF jet is still cooling off on the runway. “What’s that bastard doing ‘ere?” Chambers, typically, wants to know. Colin Moulding suggests HRH may have jetted in to catch their show. Andy Partridge thinks this is unlikely: “I reckon Charlie’s more of a Black Sabbath man. I can’t see him freaking out to ‘Travels In Nihlon.’” Moulding agrees: “You’re right. Charlie’s definitely a ‘War Pigs’ man.” Chambers, however, is struck by the idea of Prince Charles attending one of XTC’s shows. It’s explained to him that HRH is here on an official visit. “He should still come to fucking see us,” Chambers insists. “We pay his fucking wages.” “He’s not one of our roadies, Terry” Colin says, shaking his head as we struggle through customs. Here to meet us is legendary Virgin PR, Al Clarke, who for many years heads up the Virgin press office before he goes off to Australia to make films, notably producing Priscilla, Queen Of The Desert. With Al this evening is Ian Reid, XTC’s manager, a cross between Terry-Thomas and Spinal Tap’s blustering Ian Faith. With Al leading the way, we are now somewhat whisked across Caracas at high speed to Radio Capitale, where local promoter Tony DeLuca has arranged an interview with top Caracas DJ Ramon Mata. Jools Holland & His Millionaires are already there, Jools teasing Ramon quite mercilessly. Ramon is a trouper, however, naturally ebullient. With Al Clark acting as interpreter he attempts to interview the assembled throng. “Ramon wants to know what each of you consider to be your principal characteristics as a group?” Al says. “Big willies,” says Jools, putting an end to that line of questioning. Al translates another question: are XTC and The Millionaires both promoting new albums. “Tell him in our case we’re flogging a dead horse,” suggests Andy partridge. Al passes this on to Ramon, who passes it on to his audience. Al then attempts to stifle an outburst of uncontrollable laughter. “’Flogging a dead horse,’” he explains, “has just been trtanslated as ‘selling a mule that has no life.’” The next day, we’re at the venue for XTC’s Caracas shows. The Poliedero is a concrete monstrosity in the mountains overlooking Caracas that’s as big as the Houston Astrodome. Ian Reid fears a low turn-out for the show. “I think Tony’s going to lose his shirt on this one,” he says. “The way this place is filling up, he’s going to lose his bastard trousers as well,” Chambers says, the vast interior of the Poliedero staring back at him, ominously vacant. Backstage, a rather busty television reporter is attempting to interview Jools Holland, the eternally suave Al Clark, obviously smitten by the reporter’s charms, again acting as interpreter. “She wants to know how long you’ve been Jools Holland & His Millionaires,” Al beams, batting an eyelid at the camera, now rolling. “I’ve always been Jools Holland,” says Jools Holland. “But these boys have only been Millionaires for a few months.” Chambers and I are wandering once more through the Poliedero when two military trucks roar into the stadium, lights flashing, dozens of riot police, formidably uniformed storm-troopers with machine guns and machetes, disembarking and forming rank. “Fuck me,” says Chambers. “What are these fucking swords all about? It’s like something you’d see at an Adam-and-the-bastard-Ants gig.” Later, Jools Holland & his Millionaires are finishing their set. “I’d just like to say we have had a wonderful time here in Caracas,” Jools tells the crowd. “We’ve stayed at your Hilton, we’ve drunk your wine, we’ve knobbed your tarts. Now we must say goodbye!” The audience looks on, puzzled. XTC, following, have a hard time with the crowd, don’t play well and seem relieved when the riot police, who have been a menacing presence throughout, start moving into the crowd, smacking people with the flats of their machetes, dispersing the crowd, finally bringing the show to a premature end when they turn on the house lights with a sudden blazing flash, the audience heading for the exits then in a rush. Backstage, Colin Moulding is dejected. “We couldn’t get through to them,” he says. “It was like trying to get your mum to listen to Captain Beefheart.” “That’s exactly what it was like,” Andy agrees. “Like trying to get your old dear to listen to ‘Dachau Blues’ when she’s doing the dusting.” “I just hope prince Charles wasn’t out there,” muses a worried Chambers. The next night, as these things usually go, XTC play an absolute blinder. The crowd are up for it, too – taunting the riot police into machete charges, lighting bonfires from which frenzied locals emerge with shirts and trousers blazing. The band finish on the stroke of midnight with the anthemic “Statue Of Liberty” and the houselights go up again, the smoke from the bonfires curling casually to the cavernous curve of the Poliedero’s huge and distant dome. Cue euphoric scenes backstage. Tony DeLuca is embracing everyone. He may indeed have lost his shirt, but at least he’s still wearing his trousers. Felipe Rodruigez, a Miami-based Cuban entrepreneur who’d helped coordinate these shows and who may have been a model for Pacino’s Tony Montana, is already planning his next stunt: The Clash in Nicaragua, playing for the Sandanistas. “Goddamfuck, man,” he says. “The kids, they would love it!” Even Chambers, earlier morose and homesick, is chipper. “A good gig and a beer in my hand – I’m a happy man,” he grins. He sinks his beer, looks around quizzically. “’Ere,” he says. “Did anyone see Prince Charles out there tonight?” No one had. “That’s all right,” Chambers says then, somewhat relieved. “Because I forgot to put the bastard’s name on the guest list.”

There’s a very good feature in the current Uncut on the making of XTC’s “Making Plans For Nigel”, which reminded me of a time when I was often in their company, usually in far flung corners of the world, far from their Swindon homes, including the following adventure.

Miami, May, 1981. America comes here to die. Me? I’ve here to link up with XTC, who’ve just finished a North American tour. This afternoon, we’re flying to South America. To Venezuela, in fact, where Swindon’s collective answer to Vasco da Gama will play two shows in Caracas with Jools Holland & His Millionaires.

Last night, you would have found XTC drummer Terry Chambers in the bar of the Riviera Motel in Fort Lauderdale, firing back volleys of Budweiser and contemplating the prospect of this particular jaunt with typical circumspection.

“Venezuela!” Chambers had roared, eyeballs rolling. “I don’t even know where the bastard is. I’m just a drummer. I didn’t think I’d need a degree in fucking geography to find out where we were playing. I used to get lost coming up to London to play the Nashville. Now they’re sending me up the bastard Amazon. Where,” he wanted to know, this quizzical Wiltshireman, “is it all going to end?”

Terry had a point. The first time I met XTC was in a departure lounge at Heathrow. We had to wait five hours for an Air India flight to New York, where they were due to support Talking Heads at a special New Year’s Eve show at the Beacon Theatre. Next, we were off to Australia, XTC the first of Virgin’s so-called new wave bands to play the Antipodes. Further trips – including one epic four-day drive across America, from Texas to California – followed, XTC convinced they were being used as reluctant pioneers by Virgin, sent out to test the local waters for the rest of the label’s roster.

On the flight now from Miami to Caracas, Chambers is still in furrowed-brow mode on the subject of Venezuela.

“I mean – what’s it going to be like?” he wants to know. I don’t have a clue, frankly.

“Is it going to be full of fucking Aztecs, or what?” he asks. “I fancy it’s going to be like something out of When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth or The Land That Time Forgot,” he finally decides, snapping on his safety belt, getting ready for landing. We emerge blinking into Venezuelan sunlight, groggy with beer. We are amused to learn that our own arrival at Simon Bolivar airport has recently been preceded by that of Prince Charles. His RAF jet is still cooling off on the runway.

“What’s that bastard doing ‘ere?” Chambers, typically, wants to know.

Colin Moulding suggests HRH may have jetted in to catch their show.

Andy Partridge thinks this is unlikely: “I reckon Charlie’s more of a Black Sabbath man. I can’t see him freaking out to ‘Travels In Nihlon.’”

Moulding agrees: “You’re right. Charlie’s definitely a ‘War Pigs’ man.”

Chambers, however, is struck by the idea of Prince Charles attending one of XTC’s shows. It’s explained to him that HRH is here on an official visit.

“He should still come to fucking see us,” Chambers insists. “We pay his fucking wages.”

“He’s not one of our roadies, Terry” Colin says, shaking his head as we struggle through customs.

Here to meet us is legendary Virgin PR, Al Clarke, who for many years heads up the Virgin press office before he goes off to Australia to make films, notably producing Priscilla, Queen Of The Desert. With Al this evening is Ian Reid, XTC’s manager, a cross between Terry-Thomas and Spinal Tap’s blustering Ian Faith. With Al leading the way, we are now somewhat whisked across Caracas at high speed to Radio Capitale, where local promoter Tony DeLuca has arranged an interview with top Caracas DJ Ramon Mata. Jools Holland & His Millionaires are already there, Jools teasing Ramon quite mercilessly.

Ramon is a trouper, however, naturally ebullient. With Al Clark acting as interpreter he attempts to interview the assembled throng. “Ramon wants to know what each of you consider to be your principal characteristics as a group?” Al says.

“Big willies,” says Jools, putting an end to that line of questioning.

Al translates another question: are XTC and The Millionaires both promoting new albums.

“Tell him in our case we’re flogging a dead horse,” suggests Andy partridge. Al passes this on to Ramon, who passes it on to his audience. Al then attempts to stifle an outburst of uncontrollable laughter.

“’Flogging a dead horse,’” he explains, “has just been trtanslated as ‘selling a mule that has no life.’”

The next day, we’re at the venue for XTC’s Caracas shows. The Poliedero is a concrete monstrosity in the mountains overlooking Caracas that’s as big as the Houston Astrodome. Ian Reid fears a low turn-out for the show.

“I think Tony’s going to lose his shirt on this one,” he says.

“The way this place is filling up, he’s going to lose his bastard trousers as well,” Chambers says, the vast interior of the Poliedero staring back at him, ominously vacant.

Backstage, a rather busty television reporter is attempting to interview Jools Holland, the eternally suave Al Clark, obviously smitten by the reporter’s charms, again acting as interpreter.

“She wants to know how long you’ve been Jools Holland & His Millionaires,” Al beams, batting an eyelid at the camera, now rolling.

“I’ve always been Jools Holland,” says Jools Holland. “But these boys have only been Millionaires for a few months.”

Chambers and I are wandering once more through the Poliedero when two military trucks roar into the stadium, lights flashing, dozens of riot police, formidably uniformed storm-troopers with machine guns and machetes, disembarking and forming rank.

“Fuck me,” says Chambers. “What are these fucking swords all about? It’s like something you’d see at an Adam-and-the-bastard-Ants gig.”

Later, Jools Holland & his Millionaires are finishing their set.

“I’d just like to say we have had a wonderful time here in Caracas,” Jools tells the crowd. “We’ve stayed at your Hilton, we’ve drunk your wine, we’ve knobbed your tarts. Now we must say goodbye!”

The audience looks on, puzzled.

XTC, following, have a hard time with the crowd, don’t play well and seem relieved when the riot police, who have been a menacing presence throughout, start moving into the crowd, smacking people with the flats of their machetes, dispersing the crowd, finally bringing the show to a premature end when they turn on the house lights with a sudden blazing flash, the audience heading for the exits then in a rush.

Backstage, Colin Moulding is dejected.

“We couldn’t get through to them,” he says. “It was like trying to get your mum to listen to Captain Beefheart.”

“That’s exactly what it was like,” Andy agrees. “Like trying to get your old dear to listen to ‘Dachau Blues’ when she’s doing the dusting.”

“I just hope prince Charles wasn’t out there,” muses a worried Chambers.

The next night, as these things usually go, XTC play an absolute blinder. The crowd are up for it, too – taunting the riot police into machete charges, lighting bonfires from which frenzied locals emerge with shirts and trousers blazing.

The band finish on the stroke of midnight with the anthemic “Statue Of Liberty” and the houselights go up again, the smoke from the bonfires curling casually to the cavernous curve of the Poliedero’s huge and distant dome.

Cue euphoric scenes backstage. Tony DeLuca is embracing everyone. He may indeed have lost his shirt, but at least he’s still wearing his trousers.

Felipe Rodruigez, a Miami-based Cuban entrepreneur who’d helped coordinate these shows and who may have been a model for Pacino’s Tony Montana, is already planning his next stunt: The Clash in Nicaragua, playing for the Sandanistas.

“Goddamfuck, man,” he says. “The kids, they would love it!”

Even Chambers, earlier morose and homesick, is chipper.

“A good gig and a beer in my hand – I’m a happy man,” he grins.

He sinks his beer, looks around quizzically.

“’Ere,” he says. “Did anyone see Prince Charles out there tonight?”

No one had.

“That’s all right,” Chambers says then, somewhat relieved. “Because I forgot to put the bastard’s name on the guest list.”

Watch trailer for Elton John’s new concert film, The Million Dollar Piano

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Elton John has released a trailer for his new concert film, The Million Dollar Piano. The film, which was recorded at The Colosseum, Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, which will be released in cinemas for one night only on March 22. The concert film will be shown in over 200 cinemas across the UK &...

Elton John has released a trailer for his new concert film, The Million Dollar Piano.

The film, which was recorded at The Colosseum, Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, which will be released in cinemas for one night only on March 22.

The concert film will be shown in over 200 cinemas across the UK & Ireland including Odeon, Cineworld and Vue Theatre; tickets are available here.

Meanwhile, Elton John releases a 40th anniversary edition of his Goodbye Yellow Brick Road album on March 25 featuring a remastered version of the album and rare demos and outtakes taken from the original recording sessions.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qWx1VzwJVJw

The Damned to play gig at 1977 ticket prices

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The Damned are to play a one-off London date later this year with tickets available at the 1977 price of £1.70 each. The gig will take place at The Forum on April 24 to celebrate guitarist Captain Sensible's 60th birthday. Ruts DC, Johnny Moped, TV Smith and Ed TudorPole will support on the night...

The Damned are to play a one-off London date later this year with tickets available at the 1977 price of £1.70 each.

The gig will take place at The Forum on April 24 to celebrate guitarist Captain Sensible‘s 60th birthday. Ruts DC, Johnny Moped, TV Smith and Ed TudorPole will support on the night.

Tickets for the show are strictly limited to two per person, and are paperless – with fans required to present the credit card they bought the ticket with on the night to gain entry.

In 2011, The Damned marked their 35th anniversary by playing two classic albums back to back on an 11-date UK tour. The band both 1977’s Damned, Damned, Damned and 1980 album Black Album at a string of dates across the country.

Surviving members of The Doors to reunite to honour Ray Manzarek

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The two surviving members of The Doors have confirmed that they will reunite to honour their fellow band member Ray Manzarek, who died last year aged 74. Speaking to Billboard, Robby Krieger said he has approached a number of other musicians to honour the late keyboardist to play a gig this summer. "We want to bring together those who Ray either idolised or guys who idolised Ray, maybe at the Greek or The Hollywood Bowl for a big concert this summer," he said. "We've teamed up with Live Nation and they are helping us get it all together. We just want it to be the best it can be." Krieger said that Manzarek's family will be present alongside other former bandmate John Densmore. "John and I will be there and we've had a lot of interest. Since he's been gone, we really haven't had any kind of real tribute for him, except at his funeral service. We want people to remember Ray for everything he has done. There are so many musicians and fans who have learned so much from him." Krieger says he has sent out letters to a number of musicians to see if they would be able to take part. "That's the hard part, coordinating everyone's schedules," he said. "To get everyone together on one day, in the summertime, when they are not on tour for a big venue, that's the challenge." Krieger and Densmore fell out in 2002 when Krieger and Manzarek began touring as The Doors Of The 21st Century, leading to a lawsuit over the use of band name, and a £25 million countersuit against Densmore for his refusal to sign off on multi-million-dollar licensing of band songs for commercials. The row has now ended, but the lawsuit is the subject of Densmore's new book, The Doors Unhinged. Commenting on their relationship, Krieger said: "John and I haven't been on the best of terms. Ray and I wanted to play as The Doors, and John didn't want to, and so we had a big lawsuit. But now John and I are back on track… too bad it took Ray's passing to cause that. But I am happy that we are."

The two surviving members of The Doors have confirmed that they will reunite to honour their fellow band member Ray Manzarek, who died last year aged 74.

Speaking to Billboard, Robby Krieger said he has approached a number of other musicians to honour the late keyboardist to play a gig this summer.

“We want to bring together those who Ray either idolised or guys who idolised Ray, maybe at the Greek or The Hollywood Bowl for a big concert this summer,” he said. “We’ve teamed up with Live Nation and they are helping us get it all together. We just want it to be the best it can be.”

Krieger said that Manzarek’s family will be present alongside other former bandmate John Densmore. “John and I will be there and we’ve had a lot of interest. Since he’s been gone, we really haven’t had any kind of real tribute for him, except at his funeral service. We want people to remember Ray for everything he has done. There are so many musicians and fans who have learned so much from him.”

Krieger says he has sent out letters to a number of musicians to see if they would be able to take part. “That’s the hard part, coordinating everyone’s schedules,” he said. “To get everyone together on one day, in the summertime, when they are not on tour for a big venue, that’s the challenge.”

Krieger and Densmore fell out in 2002 when Krieger and Manzarek began touring as The Doors Of The 21st Century, leading to a lawsuit over the use of band name, and a £25 million countersuit against Densmore for his refusal to sign off on multi-million-dollar licensing of band songs for commercials. The row has now ended, but the lawsuit is the subject of Densmore’s new book, The Doors Unhinged.

Commenting on their relationship, Krieger said: “John and I haven’t been on the best of terms. Ray and I wanted to play as The Doors, and John didn’t want to, and so we had a big lawsuit. But now John and I are back on track… too bad it took Ray’s passing to cause that. But I am happy that we are.”

Gary Oldman reveals he was paid “a sandwich and a bottle of pop” for David Bowie video role

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Gary Oldman has spoken out about his role in the video for David Bowie's "The Next Day", which he starred in last year, playing a priest opposite Marion Cotillard. He revealed that he was paid "a sandwich and a bottle of pop" for his part in the video, and no money changed hands. Speaking to the Da...

Gary Oldman has spoken out about his role in the video for David Bowie‘s “The Next Day”, which he starred in last year, playing a priest opposite Marion Cotillard.

He revealed that he was paid “a sandwich and a bottle of pop” for his part in the video, and no money changed hands. Speaking to the Daily Mail’s Event magazine, Oldman added that Bowie asked him to take part via an email. “Dave just shot me an email, out of the blue, saying, ‘Do you want to come and play a priest for a day?'” said the actor. “It was all done for a sandwich and a bottle of pop. We actually shot it in a place that’s about 10 minutes from my house. There was no money in it.”

The Next Day” was the third single to be taken from Bowie’s 2013 album of the same name. The video was directed by Floria Sigismundi, who also directed Bowie’s “The Stars (Are Out Tonight)” video.

Marion Cotillard also starred in the promo, which took place in a pub with a cast and crew of religious characters. Bowie played a Christ-like figure, Oldman portrayed a priest and Cotillard a saint-like character, whilst a Cardinal handed out cash and a nun prayed. “People can make what they want of it, that’s the point of a video like that. He’s an artist, he makes you think,” said Oldman of the controversial video.

Bowie and Oldman previously joined forces in 1995, when they recorded a duet of Bowie’s “You’ve Been Around” for guitarist Reeves Gabrels’ album The Sacred Squall Of Now. They worked together again in 1996 on the Jean-Michel Basquiat biopic Basquiat in which Bowie played Andy Warhol.

Morrissey accuses Princes William and Harry of hypocrisy over hunting trip

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Morrissey has accused members of the Royal Family of hypocrisy in an open letter addressing the issue of hunting. In a post authored by Morrissey on fansite True To You, he attacks Prince William and Prince Harry specifically and criticises William for going on a hunting trip to Spain the day afte...

Morrissey has accused members of the Royal Family of hypocrisy in an open letter addressing the issue of hunting.

In a post authored by Morrissey on fansite True To You, he attacks Prince William and Prince Harry specifically and criticises William for going on a hunting trip to Spain the day after launching United For Wildlife, a campaign to end the illegal hunting of animals on Sunday (February 9). There is no suggestion that William and Harry’s trip was illegal, but the timing of the excursion has been questioned.

Morrissey writes: “One day prior to giving a public plea on behalf of animal welfare (!), Prince William is to be found in Spain (with Prince Harry) shooting and killing as many deer and boar as they possibly can! Although William’s speech (no doubt written by his publicity aides at Clarence House) will concentrate on endangered species, William is too thickwit to realize that animals such as tigers and rhino are only driven to near extinction because people who are precisely like himself and his brother have shot them off the map – all in the name of sport and slaughter. Whenever you shoot an animal in the head the outcome is usually the same: death.”

He continued: “But the rationalists amongst us – who are never allowed to speak, are intelligent enough to realize that endangered species are dying out only because of people like William and Harry, and, for this we can only pray to God that their hunting guns backfire in their faces.” Read the full post here.

The Jesus And Mary Chain – The Vinyl Collection

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Limited edition box set to mark JAMC's 30th... When it was introduced in the early 1980s, the CD promised “perfect sound forever”, a claim as much about its robustness as its sonic superiority over vinyl. Still, at the heart of the current revival is the conviction that vinyl sounds infinitely better than a CD – less shrill, artificially loud and uncomfortably compressed, far warmer, more intimate and with a stronger perceived connectivity. On the evidence of The Vinyl Collection, it’s hard to disagree. Released to mark The Jesus And Mary Chain’s 30th anniversary, The Vinyl Collection is a limited-edition box set that features their six studio albums, remastered and pressed on heavyweight vinyl, plus one double LP of BBC Sessions, a live album and an LP comprised of B-sides and rarities voted for by fans – all packaged with a 32-page hardback book. Sumptuous presentation aside, it’s the sonics that matter and JAMC are a pretty strong argument for the merits of vinyl grain over CD gloss. Their 1985 debut, Psychocandy is certainly worth revisiting in all its cavernous, shrieking, feedback-sprayed glory, its application of the Phil Spector sound to a mix of the Velvet Underground’s art-pop ennui, ’60s girl group romance and the savage noise of The Stooges delivering a triumphant classic. Almost its equal is the drum-machine-driven Darklands of 1987. As the title suggests, it’s shrouded in gloom, but these meteorological metaphor-heavy songs pack an alluring, surf-guitar twang and a hooky pop punch, that returned a Number Five chart hit. Automatic – which features the almost comically cranked drawl ’n’ swagger of “Gimme Hell” – marks a turning point in 1989, after which JAMC’s sound fell victim to the law of diminishing returns, while their studied air of detached cool was increasingly at odds with the energy of Pixies, Mudhoney, Nirvana et al. Sporadic flares like “Reverence” somehow saw them navigate the jangle and chug of Honey’s Dead and the overlong, electro-acoustic and wash-y Stoned & Dethroned, featuring Hope Sandoval and Shane MacGowan, before their last gasp – 1998’s frankly unmemorable Munki. The BBC Sessions for John Peel and Janice Long, two random live UK recordings from the 1990’s (why?) and the necessarily mixed bag of fans’ favourites are for completists only, although happily, the latter includes nail-on-blackboard debut single “Upside Down” and its Syd Barrett-penned flip, “Vegetable Man”. Yes, the highlights of The Vinyl Collection are heavily front-loaded, but fate, not format is responsible for that. Sharon O'Connell

Limited edition box set to mark JAMC’s 30th…

When it was introduced in the early 1980s, the CD promised “perfect sound forever”, a claim as much about its robustness as its sonic superiority over vinyl. Still, at the heart of the current revival is the conviction that vinyl sounds infinitely better than a CD – less shrill, artificially loud and uncomfortably compressed, far warmer, more intimate and with a stronger perceived connectivity. On the evidence of The Vinyl Collection, it’s hard to disagree.

Released to mark The Jesus And Mary Chain’s 30th anniversary, The Vinyl Collection is a limited-edition box set that features their six studio albums, remastered and pressed on heavyweight vinyl, plus one double LP of BBC Sessions, a live album and an LP comprised of B-sides and rarities voted for by fans – all packaged with a 32-page hardback book. Sumptuous presentation aside, it’s the sonics that matter and JAMC are a pretty strong argument for the merits of vinyl grain over CD gloss. Their 1985 debut, Psychocandy is certainly worth revisiting in all its cavernous, shrieking, feedback-sprayed glory, its application of the Phil Spector sound to a mix of the Velvet Underground’s art-pop ennui, ’60s girl group romance and the savage noise of The Stooges delivering a triumphant classic. Almost its equal is the drum-machine-driven Darklands of 1987. As the title suggests, it’s shrouded in gloom, but these meteorological metaphor-heavy songs pack an alluring, surf-guitar twang and a hooky pop punch, that returned a Number Five chart hit.

Automatic – which features the almost comically cranked drawl ’n’ swagger of “Gimme Hell” – marks a turning point in 1989, after which JAMC’s sound fell victim to the law of diminishing returns, while their studied air of detached cool was increasingly at odds with the energy of Pixies, Mudhoney, Nirvana et al. Sporadic flares like “Reverence” somehow saw them navigate the jangle and chug of Honey’s Dead and the overlong, electro-acoustic and wash-y Stoned & Dethroned, featuring Hope Sandoval and Shane MacGowan, before their last gasp – 1998’s frankly unmemorable Munki.

The BBC Sessions for John Peel and Janice Long, two random live UK recordings from the 1990’s (why?) and the necessarily mixed bag of fans’ favourites are for completists only, although happily, the latter includes nail-on-blackboard debut single “Upside Down” and its Syd Barrett-penned flip, “Vegetable Man”. Yes, the highlights of The Vinyl Collection are heavily front-loaded, but fate, not format is responsible for that.

Sharon O’Connell

Bruce Springsteen adds new live dates

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Bruce Springsteen has added a fresh run of dates to his current itinerary. Springsteen and the E Street Band, who are currently in Australia, have announced dates for a spring 2014 American leg. The dates focus mostly on areas that Springsteen didn't play during his 2012 North American tour. The ...

Bruce Springsteen has added a fresh run of dates to his current itinerary.

Springsteen and the E Street Band, who are currently in Australia, have announced dates for a spring 2014 American leg.

The dates focus mostly on areas that Springsteen didn’t play during his 2012 North American tour.

The new run of dates begins on April 8 at Cincinnati, Ohio’s and finishes on May 18 in Uncasville, Connecticut.

No European dates have as yet been announced.

Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band will play:

April 8 – Cincinnati, OH – U.S. Bank Arena

April 12 – Virginia Beach, VA – Farm Bureau Live at Virginia Beach

April 15 – Columbus, OH – Nationwide Arena

April 17 – Nashville, TN – Bridgestone Arena

April 19 – Charlotte, NC – Time Warner Cable Arena

April 22 – Pittsburgh, PA – Consol Energy Center

April 24 – Raleigh, NC – PNC Arena

April 26 – Atlanta, GA – Aaron’s Amphitheatre at Lakewood

April 29 – Sunrise, FL – BB&T Center

May 1 – Tampa, FL – MidFlorida Credit Union Amphitheatre

May 3 – New Orleans, LA – Jazz & Heritage Festival

May 6 – Houston, TX – Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion

May 13 – Albany, NY – Times Union Center

May 14 – Hershey, PA – Hersheypark Stadium

May 17 – Uncasville, CT – Mohegan Sun

May 18 – Uncasville, CT – Mohegan Sun

Bill Callahan, London Royal Festival Hall, February 8, 2014

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Something like two decades ago, when I was Features Editor of NME and making some pragmatic decisions involving coverage of second and third-tier Britpop bands, I had a kind of argument with Laurence Bell, the owner of the Domino label. I can’t remember the provocation, but I suspect it was because I’d made an unpleasant professional choice to give a load of space in the magazine to the likes of Sleeper or Shed Seven, maybe, rather than the Palace Brothers or Smog, both at the time signed to Domino. “In 20 years’ time,” Laurence said, more or less, “people will be talking about Will Oldham and Bill Callahan as classic songwriters, and no-one will remember these bands.” I loved Oldham and Callahan’s records at the time, and disliked most Britpop beyond Pulp and Elastica, but I still thought his perspective was a bit far-fetched: the talk of a passionate label boss, single-mindedly obsessed with his artists. It occurs to me on Saturday night, though, how right Laurence turned out to be. For here is Bill Callahan playing his second night in a row at the Royal Festival Hall in London, an artist who has slowly manoeuvred his way sideways into the songwriting elite; an idiosyncratic voice whose songs have been covered by Gil Scott-Heron; who increasingly looks like a canonical successor to Leonard Cohen, Lou Reed, Mickey Newbury et al rather than an acolyte. These days, Callahan is a marginally more amenable figure than he was for most of his days as Smog. He says nice and polite things to the audience, rather than observe them with a withering mooncalf stare (I recall one uncannily silent solo show early on at the 12-Bar Club) or indulge them with intimations of sadism. I found a review I wrote of his show at the Old Vic late 2001, where he responded to an audience shout for “White Light/White Heat” by asking, “Who’s willing to die for their request? No-one? Who’s willing to let me punch them as hard as I can?” Nowadays, his band sound a good deal less like the Velvets than the 2001 edition, though Callahan’s brittle electric guitar lines still have a touch of Lou Reed to them, and they really do cover “White Light/White Heat” from time to time. For a long while, Callahan’s backing musicians actually seemed discreet to the point of invisibility, leaving acres of space and ceding almost all focus to the measured enunciation of the lyrics. It’s a sign of a different approach, though, that the 15 songs Callahan works through in two hours are as remarkable for their musical flourishes as they are to the lugubrious philosophising of the singer. A lot of this is down to guitarist Matt Kinsey, who circles Callahan’s wiry rhythm lines with a vast and flexible repertoire of styles, from reverberant ambient swells on the opening “Let Me See The Colts”, through the fluent, dancing lines of “Javelin Unlanding”, and on into staticky, avant-garde bouts of pure, controlled noise. His invention is matched, though, by Jaime Zurverza on bass and Adam Jones on minimalist drumkit: the former strumming and reclining, a curious inversion of orthodox rhythmic practices; the latter using his hands as often as sticks and brushes – you can imagine the hard skin bruising every time he smashes his palm onto the cymbal during “Spring”. Each member of the band takes an extended spot during a vamped take on Percy Mayfield’s “Please Send Me Someone To Love”, after Callahan has calmly delivered the hellfire lament - “Unless men put an end to this damnable sin/Hate will put the world in a flame” – as a sort of Zen koan. Generally erect of posture and authoritative of voice, middle age has endowed Callahan with a surprisingly trustworthy, near-governmental bearing, with most of the tics and eccentricities of old dialled back. He introduces the series of weird solos, though, with a pantomime of pointing and leaning towards each player in turn, contributes a stratospherically odd, atonal harmonica break himself, and slowly lapses back into a repertoire of knee-bends and awkward jogs that suggest he is not so much suppressing the old quirks, more using them stealthily as part of an incrementally adventurous, longform show. So while tonight’s concert opens with two still, relatively straightforward classics from “A River Ain’t Too Much To Love” in “Let Me See The Colts” and “Rock Bottom Riser”, the discordance and interventions gradually build up, through a notable “One Fine Morning”, until they reach a peak in “Please Send Me Someone To Love” and “America”, the latter’s abrasive nature being revealed as critical to the current band’s MO – and consequently to be a lot less jarring than it initially seemed to be on “Apocalypse”. Meanwhile, “Dress Sexy At My Funeral” (the oldest song by some distance in the set), isn’t so much rearranged as given a new tune to fit in with the evolved aesthetic of the “Apocalypse” and “Dream River” songs that proliferate. Even in the band’s wildest moments, though, there is an artfulness and subtlety to the music which still gives dues deference and gravity to Callahan himself: wise and allusive voice for a generation who fastidiously avoided anything so obvious as wanting a voice of their generation. In greying maturity, Callahan’s cruelty and melancholy has turned into a kind of generally serene, wry acceptance of things: “In conclusion, leaving is easy,” he notes in a magnificent version of “Riding For The Feeling”, now revealed as his own “Try A Little Tenderness”, “When you've got some place you need to be.” He cannot help, though, playing with traditional dynamics. “Winter Road” makes for a logical conclusion to affairs, with its closing exhortation that, “I have learned when things are beautiful/To just keep on, just keep on.” The song does not end there, though, and its sentiments are derailed by a wildly improvised passage in which Callahan recounts an afternoon visit to the Tate Modern. The relationships between “Tate”, “taint” and “paint” are explored, Tracey Emin is indicted, and an unlikely new conclusion is reached. “Too much abstraction for this man,” he sings, not traditionally an artist of unflinching realism. “I wanna see a face.” It’s not a neat way to end, but it might be a skilfully fitting one: for all the canonical acclaim, the brilliance, the relatively relaxed demeanour, Callahan’s taste for the perverse remains. He can draw more people in these days, but he’ll still make sure he wrongfoots a good few of them by the end. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey SETLIST 1 Let Me See The Colts 2 Rock Bottom Riser 3 Javelin Unlanding 4 The Sing 5 Spring 6 One Fine Morning 7 Dress Sexy At My Funeral 8 Drover 9 Ride My Arrow 10 Small Plane 11 Please Send Me Someone To Love 12 America 13 Riding For The Feeling 14 Seagull 15 Winter Road

Something like two decades ago, when I was Features Editor of NME and making some pragmatic decisions involving coverage of second and third-tier Britpop bands, I had a kind of argument with Laurence Bell, the owner of the Domino label.

I can’t remember the provocation, but I suspect it was because I’d made an unpleasant professional choice to give a load of space in the magazine to the likes of Sleeper or Shed Seven, maybe, rather than the Palace Brothers or Smog, both at the time signed to Domino. “In 20 years’ time,” Laurence said, more or less, “people will be talking about Will Oldham and Bill Callahan as classic songwriters, and no-one will remember these bands.”

I loved Oldham and Callahan’s records at the time, and disliked most Britpop beyond Pulp and Elastica, but I still thought his perspective was a bit far-fetched: the talk of a passionate label boss, single-mindedly obsessed with his artists.

It occurs to me on Saturday night, though, how right Laurence turned out to be. For here is Bill Callahan playing his second night in a row at the Royal Festival Hall in London, an artist who has slowly manoeuvred his way sideways into the songwriting elite; an idiosyncratic voice whose songs have been covered by Gil Scott-Heron; who increasingly looks like a canonical successor to Leonard Cohen, Lou Reed, Mickey Newbury et al rather than an acolyte.

These days, Callahan is a marginally more amenable figure than he was for most of his days as Smog. He says nice and polite things to the audience, rather than observe them with a withering mooncalf stare (I recall one uncannily silent solo show early on at the 12-Bar Club) or indulge them with intimations of sadism. I found a review I wrote of his show at the Old Vic late 2001, where he responded to an audience shout for “White Light/White Heat” by asking, “Who’s willing to die for their request? No-one? Who’s willing to let me punch them as hard as I can?”

Nowadays, his band sound a good deal less like the Velvets than the 2001 edition, though Callahan’s brittle electric guitar lines still have a touch of Lou Reed to them, and they really do cover “White Light/White Heat” from time to time. For a long while, Callahan’s backing musicians actually seemed discreet to the point of invisibility, leaving acres of space and ceding almost all focus to the measured enunciation of the lyrics. It’s a sign of a different approach, though, that the 15 songs Callahan works through in two hours are as remarkable for their musical flourishes as they are to the lugubrious philosophising of the singer.

A lot of this is down to guitarist Matt Kinsey, who circles Callahan’s wiry rhythm lines with a vast and flexible repertoire of styles, from reverberant ambient swells on the opening “Let Me See The Colts”, through the fluent, dancing lines of “Javelin Unlanding”, and on into staticky, avant-garde bouts of pure, controlled noise. His invention is matched, though, by Jaime Zurverza on bass and Adam Jones on minimalist drumkit: the former strumming and reclining, a curious inversion of orthodox rhythmic practices; the latter using his hands as often as sticks and brushes – you can imagine the hard skin bruising every time he smashes his palm onto the cymbal during “Spring”.

Each member of the band takes an extended spot during a vamped take on Percy Mayfield’s “Please Send Me Someone To Love”, after Callahan has calmly delivered the hellfire lament – “Unless men put an end to this damnable sin/Hate will put the world in a flame” – as a sort of Zen koan. Generally erect of posture and authoritative of voice, middle age has endowed Callahan with a surprisingly trustworthy, near-governmental bearing, with most of the tics and eccentricities of old dialled back.

He introduces the series of weird solos, though, with a pantomime of pointing and leaning towards each player in turn, contributes a stratospherically odd, atonal harmonica break himself, and slowly lapses back into a repertoire of knee-bends and awkward jogs that suggest he is not so much suppressing the old quirks, more using them stealthily as part of an incrementally adventurous, longform show.

So while tonight’s concert opens with two still, relatively straightforward classics from “A River Ain’t Too Much To Love” in “Let Me See The Colts” and “Rock Bottom Riser”, the discordance and interventions gradually build up, through a notable “One Fine Morning”, until they reach a peak in “Please Send Me Someone To Love” and “America”, the latter’s abrasive nature being revealed as critical to the current band’s MO – and consequently to be a lot less jarring than it initially seemed to be on “Apocalypse”.

Meanwhile, “Dress Sexy At My Funeral” (the oldest song by some distance in the set), isn’t so much rearranged as given a new tune to fit in with the evolved aesthetic of the “Apocalypse” and “Dream River” songs that proliferate. Even in the band’s wildest moments, though, there is an artfulness and subtlety to the music which still gives dues deference and gravity to Callahan himself: wise and allusive voice for a generation who fastidiously avoided anything so obvious as wanting a voice of their generation.

In greying maturity, Callahan’s cruelty and melancholy has turned into a kind of generally serene, wry acceptance of things: “In conclusion, leaving is easy,” he notes in a magnificent version of “Riding For The Feeling”, now revealed as his own “Try A Little Tenderness”, “When you’ve got some place you need to be.” He cannot help, though, playing with traditional dynamics. “Winter Road” makes for a logical conclusion to affairs, with its closing exhortation that, “I have learned when things are beautiful/To just keep on, just keep on.”

The song does not end there, though, and its sentiments are derailed by a wildly improvised passage in which Callahan recounts an afternoon visit to the Tate Modern. The relationships between “Tate”, “taint” and “paint” are explored, Tracey Emin is indicted, and an unlikely new conclusion is reached. “Too much abstraction for this man,” he sings, not traditionally an artist of unflinching realism. “I wanna see a face.” It’s not a neat way to end, but it might be a skilfully fitting one: for all the canonical acclaim, the brilliance, the relatively relaxed demeanour, Callahan’s taste for the perverse remains. He can draw more people in these days, but he’ll still make sure he wrongfoots a good few of them by the end.

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

SETLIST

1 Let Me See The Colts

2 Rock Bottom Riser

3 Javelin Unlanding

4 The Sing

5 Spring

6 One Fine Morning

7 Dress Sexy At My Funeral

8 Drover

9 Ride My Arrow

10 Small Plane

11 Please Send Me Someone To Love

12 America

13 Riding For The Feeling

14 Seagull

15 Winter Road

Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy to guest star in Parks And Recreation

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Wilco's Jeff Tweedy is set to make a guest appearance in US TV series Parks And Recreation. The singer will be the latest special guest to join series six of the show, following cameos from Kristen Bell and Heidi Klum. Tweedy will appear as the frontman of a fictional band called Land Ho!, who is ...

Wilco‘s Jeff Tweedy is set to make a guest appearance in US TV series Parks And Recreation.

The singer will be the latest special guest to join series six of the show, following cameos from Kristen Bell and Heidi Klum. Tweedy will appear as the frontman of a fictional band called Land Ho!, who is lobbied by Amy Poehler’s character, government worker Leslie Knope.

The programme’s producer Mike Schur explained further: “Leslie and Andy are trying to convince him to reunite for the big Unity Concert they are organising to solidify the merger of Pawnee and Eagleton.”

You can read Uncut‘s review of Parks And Recreation Series 4 here.

Read the setlist for Prince’s Shepherd’s Bush Empire show

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Prince continued his Hit And Run Tour last night (February 9) with a two-and-a-half hour spectacular at London's Shepherd's Bush Empire. Prince and 3rd Eye Girl played almost 40 tracks during the performance with a setlist comprised of hits, covers and new tracks from 'Plectrum Electrum'. Some mem...

Prince continued his Hit And Run Tour last night (February 9) with a two-and-a-half hour spectacular at London’s Shepherd’s Bush Empire.

Prince and 3rd Eye Girl played almost 40 tracks during the performance with a setlist comprised of hits, covers and new tracks from ‘Plectrum Electrum’.

Some members of the crowd had been queuing for 7 hours, from the time the surprise show was announced on BBC 6Music just before midday. The ticket price was rumoured to be £70 but fans were actually charged £10 on the door. ‘How much did you all pay to get in?” asked Prince to deafening applause. “That’s nice – that’s what we used to pay to get I to concerts when I was a kid.”

Hannah Ford Welton (drums) introduced the show at 8pm appealing to the audience not to use their phones and tablets to record or take photos during the performance. “We want to ask you one simple favour – no phones or cameras. We want you to get the full effect of this show and it makes the show so much better when you guys aren’t behind technology. Are you ready for the best show of your lives?”

Prince appeared on stage in an embroidered tunic before changing into the black waistcoat and peach-gold turtleneck he wore at last week’s shows. His gold platform shoes had LED lights that lit up red or white depending on the song. Lime green lasers, lilac lights, smoke machines and three fake flames were employed on stage.

For the most part, the show was a celebration of the electric guitar with Prince and his band shredding, soloing and using all types of effects. Tracks would unravel into hypnotic versions drawn out by Prince’s virtuoso solo skills to the crowd’s delight.

A piano medley starting with ‘How Come You Don’t Call Me‘ saw a change of tempo as Prince headed to the right of the stage to play stripped-down, jazzy versions of some of his best-loved songs: ‘The Beautiful Ones’, ‘Purple Rain’, ‘Diamonds And Pearls’ and ‘Do Me, Baby’. These were followed by ‘When Doves Cry’ and fan-favourite ‘Housequake’.

“Oh my goodness, London, seriously?” said Prince, in response to the audience’s wild applause, quipping whether he could send around his ‘big, black hat’ for some cash because the ticket price was so cheap. “That’s alright, we love doing this for you.”

Celebrities in the crowd included George Clinton – who Prince described as his ‘teacher’.

The first encore of the night was an extended rendition of ‘Something In The Water’ (Does Not Compute)’ before Prince came back to play ‘Cause and Effect’, ‘Endorphinmachinee’, ‘Dreamer’, ‘Screwdriver’, ‘I Like It There,’ and ‘Bambi’. During ‘I Like It There’ he split the male and female voices in the audience into different parts.

Prince revealed to BBC 6Music (Feb 4) other venues such as Ronnie Scott’s and the Bag O’ Nails Club in Soho. Either way, he will not be replicating the O2 Arena shows he played in 2007. “That was a different time, this is a different band,” he said. “We’ll work our way up, if people like us, to bigger venues.” Quizzed on how long he plans to stay in London, he said his trip was “open-ended”, explaining, “We’re going to be here until people don’t want to hear us any more.” Tickets for the upcoming shows will also be priced reasonably for fans. “We wanna charge about $10 a ticket. This is a new band, people are getting something new.”

Prince played:

‘Pretzelbodylogic’

‘Let’s Go Crazy’ (incl. ‘Frankenstein’ interpolation)

‘Funk’n’roll’

‘She’s Always In My Hair’

‘I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man’

‘Guitar’

‘Plectrum Electrum’

‘Fixurlifeup’

‘Marz’ (Incl. ‘Johnny B Goode’)

‘Colonized Mind’

‘Chaos And Disorder’

[Piano set]

‘How Come U Don’t Call Me Anymore’

‘The Beautiful Ones’

‘Diamonds And Pearls’

‘Purple Rain’

‘Do Me, Baby’

‘Adore’

‘Forever In My Life (instrumental)’

‘Thunderstorm’

‘When Doves Cry’

‘Sign O’ The Times’

‘Nasty Girl’ (instrumental)

‘Housequake’

‘A Love Bizarre’ (instrumental)

‘I Would Die 4 U’

‘Hot Thing’

‘777-9311’ (instrumental)

‘The Most Beautiful Girl In The World’ (sample)

‘Mr. Goodnight’ (sample)

‘Breakfast Can Wait’ (sample)

‘Play That Funky Music’

‘Something In The Water (Does Not Compute)’

‘Cause And Effect’ (incl. ‘Love 4 One Another’)

‘Endorphinmachine’

‘Dreamer’

‘Screwdriver’

‘I Like It There’

‘Bambi’