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Slowdive confirm reunion + live shows

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Slowdive has confirmed they are to reunite. The band's original line-up - Neil Halstead, Rachel Goswell, Christian Savill, Simon Scott and Nick Chaplin - will perform at London'sVillage Underground on May 19. Tickets will be available here from Friday, January 31 at 9am. They will also play the Pr...

Slowdive has confirmed they are to reunite.

The band’s original line-up – Neil Halstead, Rachel Goswell, Christian Savill, Simon Scott and Nick Chaplin – will perform at London’sVillage Underground on May 19. Tickets will be available here from Friday, January 31 at 9am.

They will also play the Primavera Festival in Barcelona on May 30 on a bill that includes Pixies, The National and Slint.

Further live dates will be announced in the coming weeks.

Eric Clapton announces new UK dates

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Eric Clapton has announced two new UK shows. Clapton will play the SSE Hydro in Glasgow on June 21 and the First Direct Arena in Leeds on June 22. According to a post on Clapton's website, these are Clapton's only UK concerts and the final shows to be announced for the UK and Europe this year. Are...

Eric Clapton has announced two new UK shows.

Clapton will play the SSE Hydro in Glasgow on June 21 and the First Direct Arena in Leeds on June 22.

According to a post on Clapton’s website, these are Clapton’s only UK concerts and the final shows to be announced for the UK and Europe this year. Arena box office pre-sales begin for both dates on 29 January at 9AM (local to venue). Tickets go on sale to the general public 31 January at 9AM. Tickets will be sold by Ticketmaster UK. Other official ticket sellers are pending and information will be available later this week.

Peggy Seeger pays tribute to her half-brother Pete Seeger

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Peggy Seeger has released a statement following the death of her half-brother Pete on January 27. "As most of you will know by now, my beloved brother Pete died peacefully, surrounded by close family members, at the Presbyterian Hospital (Columbia), New York City, on January 27th at 9:17 pm. His da...

Peggy Seeger has released a statement following the death of her half-brother Pete on January 27.

“As most of you will know by now, my beloved brother Pete died peacefully, surrounded by close family members, at the Presbyterian Hospital (Columbia), New York City, on January 27th at 9:17 pm. His daughter Tinya, who had been caring for him for some time, was lovingly holding his hand. I was still in mid-air making a frantic attempt to get there from New Zealand. I arrived four hours too late. I take solace from our last phone calls where much was said but unspoken. I know many of you will be saddened by Pete’s death but we must remember that he led a very full and productive life. He leaves a prodigious body of work for us to enjoy, a legacy the enormity of which will continue to grow. He touched so many people’s lives, from children to the golden oldies like myself. As for me, I have lost the last person who has known me from birth and who has always been there for me. I cannot express how heavy losing Pete lies with me. My thanks to all for your kind and thoughtful condolences. Peggy.”

You can read an interview with Pete Seeger from the Uncut archives here.

The Fourth Uncut Playlist Of 2014

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Strong haul of rad gumbo here, as we’ve taken to saying. Never thought I’d want to hear another Hold Steady album after the last one, but “Teeth Dreams” pretty much reaffirmed the faith. And if you’re that way inclined, I can recommend the new Men album, too; their best, I think. Then there are the deep new Woods jams, and the small matter of the firs Afghan Whigs album in 16 years, to be discussed somewhere further down the line. This amazing Holly Herndon single. And three, maybe four, things I didn’t really like at all. Not bad, really. As is the new issue of Uncut, due any day now. The Ramones are on the cover, and I can especially recommend the feature on great American punk records that goes with it. Full details here. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Vertical Scratchers – Daughter Of Everything (Merge) 2 The Hold Steady – Teeth Dreams (Washington Square) 3 Jimi Goodwin – Odulek (Heavenly) 4 Death – Death III (Drag City) 5 The Men – Tomorrow’s Hits (Sacred Bones) 6 Real Estate – Atlas (Domino) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pNvj_VLkEBg 7 Red House Painters – Old Ramon (Sub Pop) 8 Bohren & Der Club Of Gore – Piano Nights (PIAS) 9 Pye Corner Audio – Black Mill Tapes (Type) 10 Ned Doheny – Separate Oceans (Numero Group) 11 Woods – With Light And With Love (Woodsist) 12 Fat White Family – Touch The Leather (Hate Hate Hate) 13 EMA – The Future’s Void (City Slang) 14 Alice Boman – Waiting (Adrian)

Strong haul of rad gumbo here, as we’ve taken to saying. Never thought I’d want to hear another Hold Steady album after the last one, but “Teeth Dreams” pretty much reaffirmed the faith. And if you’re that way inclined, I can recommend the new Men album, too; their best, I think.

Then there are the deep new Woods jams, and the small matter of the firs Afghan Whigs album in 16 years, to be discussed somewhere further down the line. This amazing Holly Herndon single. And three, maybe four, things I didn’t really like at all. Not bad, really.

As is the new issue of Uncut, due any day now. The Ramones are on the cover, and I can especially recommend the feature on great American punk records that goes with it. Full details here.

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

1 Vertical Scratchers – Daughter Of Everything (Merge)

2 The Hold Steady – Teeth Dreams (Washington Square)

3 Jimi Goodwin – Odulek (Heavenly)

4 Death – Death III (Drag City)

5 The Men – Tomorrow’s Hits (Sacred Bones)

6 Real Estate – Atlas (Domino)

7 Red House Painters – Old Ramon (Sub Pop)

8 Bohren & Der Club Of Gore – Piano Nights (PIAS)

9 Pye Corner Audio – Black Mill Tapes (Type)

10 Ned Doheny – Separate Oceans (Numero Group)

11 Woods – With Light And With Love (Woodsist)

12 Fat White Family – Touch The Leather (Hate Hate Hate)

13 EMA – The Future’s Void (City Slang)

14 Alice Boman – Waiting (Adrian)

Alice Boman – Waiting from Jesper Berg on Vimeo.

15 Afghan Whigs – Do To The Beast (Sub Pop)

16 Weekend – The ’81 Demos (Blackest Ever Black)

17 Claypipe – A Daylight Blessing (MIE Music)

18 Hans Chew – Life And Love (At The Helm)

19 Little Feat – Rad Gumbo (Rhino)

20 Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy (No label)

21 Holly Herndon – Chorus (RVNG INTL)

The Ramones “were mightier than Led Zeppelin over 23 minutes”

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Television’s Richard Lloyd, speaking in the new issue of Uncut, says the Ramones were, over a short period, more powerful than Led Zeppelin. On the eve of the band’s 40th anniversary, Uncut pieces together the complete story of the Ramones, with the surviving members, collaborators and friend...

Television’s Richard Lloyd, speaking in the new issue of Uncut, says the Ramones were, over a short period, more powerful than Led Zeppelin.

On the eve of the band’s 40th anniversary, Uncut pieces together the complete story of the Ramones, with the surviving members, collaborators and friends explaining how the four weirdest kids in New York revolutionised rock.

“It requires a great deal of physical strength to play those downstrokes for half-an-hour,” notes Lenny Kaye. “It’s exhausting to keep that sense of metric propulsion going.”

“Over 23 minutes Led Zeppelin couldn’t match them,” says Lloyd.

The new issue of Uncut is out on Friday (January 31).

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Pete Seeger: “You should never give up!”

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From Uncut's February 2013 issue (Take 189), the incredible Pete Seeger on Woody Guthrie, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen and the enduring power of protest songs. Interview: Neil Spencer __________________ If there were other 92-year-old dissidents on the Occupy Wall Street march, the only one to m...

From Uncut’s February 2013 issue (Take 189), the incredible Pete Seeger on Woody Guthrie, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen and the enduring power of protest songs. Interview: Neil Spencer

__________________

If there were other 92-year-old dissidents on the Occupy Wall Street march, the only one to make headlines was Pete Seeger. Veteran of a thousand demonstrations stretching back to the 1930s, the godfather of folk protest marched 30 New York blocks in winter cold to prove not everyone’s politics mellow with age. “I wanted to make the point – you should never give up!” Seeger told Uncut from his New York State home. “There’s a quote I like by a writer, Robert Fulghum: ‘There’s no hope, but I may be wrong.’”

In that indefatigable spirit come two new Seeger albums. To honour the centenary of friend and fellow legend Woody Guthrie, there’s Pete Remembers Woody, while A More Perfect Union, a collaboration with fellow folkie Lorre Wyatt, is a collection of gentle but serious songs tackling issues from Hurricane Katrina to the BP oil spill in the Gulf Of Mexico. Its guest voices include Arlo Guthrie, Emmylou Harris and Bruce Springsteen, the last having previously championed Seeger on 2006’s The Seeger Sessions, a record its namesake says he’s never heard. “I haven’t listened to any recorded music since I was 19,” claims Pete, a tad improbably. “I prefer to experience music live!”

Fulsome in his praise for Springsteen, Seeger swerves when asked about Bruce’s campaigning for President Obama. “I was singing with someone last week, and they had a song that went, ‘You’re not the man I voted for…’” This seems oblique for a man who was a guest at Obama’s 2008 inauguration, but one of Seeger’s aphorisms goes; ‘Be wary of great leaders.’ Raised by an intellectual, left-wing family, Seeger has always allied himself with ordinary people, joining the Communist Party as a young man (disgust with the Soviets later led him to leave) and becoming a musical emissary for left-wing causes. He still thinks of himself as a small ‘c’ communist – “which simply means, no poor, no rich”.

Seeger’s activism frequently landed him in trouble. In the 1950s he was blacklisted and his records banned, and when he refused to co-operate with the red-hunting House Un-American Activities Committee he was threatened with prison. He remained defiant. “I told the committee that asking someone to reveal who they voted for and who their friends were was a deeply un-American thing, entirely at odds with the constitution.”

As the author of such abiding anthems as “Where Have All The Flowers Gone” and “Turn! Turn! Turn!”, and one of the best Vietnam War protests, “Waist Deep In The Big Muddy”, Seeger’s mark on American history is etched deep. He’s still the godfather of folk, though Seeger doesn’t care much for the ‘f’ word. “We called what we played People’s Music, but it didn’t catch on.”

Perhaps one reason it didn’t is that the music enjoyed by regular US Joes and Janes was often anathema to the austere folkies, seen as tainted by commerce and capitalism. Rock’n’roll was plain vulgar. Hence the outrage when Bob Dylan ’went electric’ at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival. The story that Seeger was stalking around backstage with an axe, threatening to cut the electricity cable, is, alas, too good to be true, but Seeger admits he wanted to turn down the sound “because you couldn’t hear the lyrics”. Dylan, who had grown up with Seeger and Woody Guthrie as guiding lights (though he also dug Little Richard), described Seeger’s reaction to his set as “like a dagger through the heart”. No melodrama, then.

Bob Dylan was yet to be born when the 21-year-old Seeger first met Woody Guthrie at a 1940 benefit concert. Guthrie was six years his senior and already the Dustbowl Balladeer of legend. The pair became friends and co-activists, and their story is recounted on Pete Remembers Woody, its absorbing spoken tales interspersed with polite versions of Guthrie standards like “Do Re Mi” and “This Land Is Your Land”.

Seeger’s testimony dispels some myths about the hard-travelling folk hero, less the singing hobo of his songs than a shrewd sophisticate. “Woody must have been the most creative person of the 20th Century,” says Seeger. “There wasn’t a day he wasn’t writing stories, rhymes, songs, making jokes or pictures. I recall flying with him to Pittsburgh to play for strikers at the Westinghouse plant. He had written down the thoughts of the people below as our metal bird soared above them, then written what the stewardess would be doing that night. He threw away the paper but I picked it up.

“He read voraciously. He came across the French poet Rabelais in my sister’s library and read everything in a couple of days. Over the coming weeks I noticed he was imitating Rabelais, piling on the adjectives. He gave me a big education about America, right down to how to make money singing in saloons! He was funny but angry. He knew tragedy. His

four-year-old daughter died after setting herself on fire.”

What does he say to those who complain that protest changes nothing? “What I’ve always said – that it’s a see-saw with the establishment at one end and the people at the other, and that you might be the grain of sand that tips the scales.”

Seeger also cites the success of the Clearwater organisation he founded in 1969 to combat pollution of the Hudson River, on whose banks he lives, its ongoing grassroots campaign being supported by the annual Clearwater music festival. Most recently, Seeger joined Harry Belafonte, Jackson Browne and others in a New York concert to petition for the release of Native American activist Leonard Peltier, who has spent the last 37 years in jail after a trial widely held to be a miscarriage of justice. What’s next? “My hope for the future is unusual. I note that the Agricultural Revolution took centuries, the Industrial Revolution took a hundred years, but the Information Revolution has taken just decades. If we are creative with it, we can achieve a great deal quickly.”

Photo: Rex/Globe Photos

Afghan Whigs announce new album ‘Do To The Beast’

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Afghan Whigs will release their first new album in 16 years later this year. The band, fronted by Greg Dulli, will release 'Do To The Beast' on April 14 via Sub Pop. It is their first album of new material since '1965' was released in 1998. The band reunited briefly in 2012 for a series of festiv...

Afghan Whigs will release their first new album in 16 years later this year.

The band, fronted by Greg Dulli, will release ‘Do To The Beast’ on April 14 via Sub Pop. It is their first album of new material since ‘1965’ was released in 1998. The band reunited briefly in 2012 for a series of festival dates.

The Afghan Whigs will play live at Coachella around the release, performing at the Californian festival on April 11 and 18.

Speaking about his decision to reform the band with Spin in 2012, frontman Dulli revealed: “I did this acoustic tour about a year and a half ago and [Whigs bassist] John Curley did six of the shows with me, and we had a great time. We hadn’t spent any time on the road together since the band. In the spring, I spent a couple days in Minneapolis with [Whigs guitarist] Rick McCullom, and that was also a great time. Plus, I had nothing really pressing this summer, so it gives me something to do. ”

After forming in Ohio in 1986, The Afghan Whigs released six studio albums. Their debut album ‘Big Top Halloween’ was released in 1988 and was subsequently followed by albums including ‘Gentleman’ in 1993, ‘Black Love’ in 1996 and ‘1965’ in 1998. The band recorded a cover of Frank Ocean’s ‘Lovecrimes’ in 2012 and performed at South By Southwest in 2013.

Photo: Danny Clinch

Fleetwood Mac reveal plans to record new album with Christine McVie

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Fleetwood Mac have said that they will be recording a brand new album with former member Christine McVie, who it was recently revealed is set to rejoin the band. Earlier this year a spokesperson for the band announced McVie, who originally left Fleetwood Mac in 1998, was returning to the fold and...

Fleetwood Mac have said that they will be recording a brand new album with former member Christine McVie, who it was recently revealed is set to rejoin the band.

Earlier this year a spokesperson for the band announced McVie, who originally left Fleetwood Mac in 1998, was returning to the fold and that a 2014 tour featuring the reunited line-up would be announced soon.

Now, speaking to Maui News – via Fleetwoodmacnews.com – Mick Fleetwood of the band said that McVie has been writing new songs for the group, and they will be recording together in March.

McVie joined the band in 1970 after marrying the group’s bassist, John McVie. She continued on with the group for the next 28 years as main songwriter, vocalist and keyboard player. She’s responsible for some of the band’s biggest hits, including ‘Say You Love Me’, ‘Don’t Stop’, ‘You Make Loving Fun’, ‘Little Lies’ and ‘Everywhere’.

Rumours surfaced last year that McVie was contemplating rejoining Fleetwood Mac, and she appeared on stage when they played London’s O2 last September to perform ‘Don’t Stop’. In an interview with The Guardian after the concerts last year, McVie said she would be “delighted” if the band were to ask her to perform with them again.

Photo: Sam Emerson

Pete Seeger dies aged 94

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Pete Seeger has died aged 94. The American folk singer and musician died in a New York hospital after a short illness, his grandson Kitama Cahill-Jackson confirmed (via BBC News). Born in New York City on May 3, 1919, Seeger said he fell in love with folk music when he was 16, at a music festiva...

Pete Seeger has died aged 94.

The American folk singer and musician died in a New York hospital after a short illness, his grandson Kitama Cahill-Jackson confirmed (via BBC News).

Born in New York City on May 3, 1919, Seeger said he fell in love with folk music when he was 16, at a music festival in North Carolina in 1935. He learned the five-string banjo and after dropping out of Harvard in 1938, he hitchhiked around America, where he met Woody Guthrie and joined the Almanac Singers, who performed benefits for disaster relief and other causes.

Seeger’s initial success came with The Weavers, who formed in 1948. He wrote or co-wrote political anthems ‘If I Had A Hammer,’ ‘Turn, Turn, Turn’, ‘Where Have All The Flowers Gone’ and ‘Kisses Sweeter Than Wine’ and is credited with making while ‘We Shall Overcome’ an anthem of resistance.

Seeger was blacklisted in the 1950s for his left-wing activism and denied broadcast exposure. After this, he toured US college campuses to spread the music and ideology of the folk protest movement.

“The most important job I did was go from college to college to college to college, one after the other, usually small ones,” he told The Associated Press in 2006. “…And I showed the kids there’s a lot of great music in this country they never played on the radio.”

Throughout his career, Seeger became a figurehead for numerous political causes – from nuclear disarmament to the Occupy Wall Street movement in 2011. His influence continued down the decades – in 1996 he was inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame and a decade later Bruce Springsteen released ‘We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions’ – a reinterpretation of the folk singer’s songs. At this weekend’s Grammys (2014), he was nominated in the Best Spoken Word category, which was won by Stephen Colbert.

A 2009 concert at Madison Square Garden to mark Seeger’s 90th birthday featured Springsteen, Dave Matthews, Eddie Vedder and Emmylou Harris among the performers.

Photo: Rex/Globe Photos

Revealed! The New Uncut! Ramones, Small Faces, Beck, Neil Young, The Beatles + The 50 Greatest American Punk Albums!

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The new issue of Uncut arrives in UK shops this Friday – though subscribers should hopefully find their copies plonking through the letter box a day or two early. We celebrate 40 years of the Ramones with an extensive cover story by Peter Watts, who’s interviewed surviving band members as well as many of their co-conspirators, friends and peers. To compliment Peter’s terrific piece, we’ve compiled a list of the 50 Greatest American Punk Albums (plus singles and compilations), from the pivotal years of 1975 to 1983. Also in the issue, Ian McLagan and Kenney Jones talk to Garry Mulholland about the Small Faces’ peerless run of singles from “Whatcha Gonna Do About It?” to “Afterglow (Of Your Love)”. Elsewhere, John Robinson tracks down Bob Johnston, the irrepressible producer who presided over a slew of legendary albums by Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Johnny Cash and –of course – Lindisfarne. Sharon O’Connell, meanwhile, travels to Portland, Oregon to hang out with Stephen Malkmus in sub-zero temperatures. In An Audience With… the mighty Jim Jarmusch answers your questions on – deep breath – Neil Young, Tom Waits and Jack White as well as his run of awesome movies. In our Album By Album feature, Jefferson Airplane reminisce about their many career highlights and in Making Of… XTC revisit the story behind “Making Plans For Nigel”. In our packed reviews section, Beck tells us about his new release Morning Phase, we celebrate The Beatles’ American albums, and bring you a wealth of new albums by Tinariwen, Sun Kil Moon, Tom Petty’s impeccably connected keyboardist Benmont Tench, Wild Beasts, St Vincent and Angel Olsen. In reissues, there’s a long overdue box set compiling the best of Mike Bloomfield and also a welcome reissue for some choice material from Ronnie Lane’s Slim Chance, while live we catch Neil Young on his old stomping ground at Massey Hall and The Waterboys as they bring their Fisherman’s Blues anniversary tour to Hammersmith. In film, I’m delighted to finally get a chance to write about Dallas Buyers Club, the latest mesmerizing performance from Matthew McConaughey, and in DVD John Mulvey celebrates the genius of Parks & Recreation. Richard Williams remember the late Phil Everly, Neneh Cherry picks the records that changed her life in My Life In Music and we meet the radical new faces of mainstream country music, Kacey Musgraves and Brandy Clark. On the front of the issue, our CD is crammed full of great new music from Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, Marissa Nadler, Angel Olsen, Glenn Tilbrook and many more. The issue of Uncut is in shops from Friday, January 31 and is also available digitally from the usual outlets. We’re off to watch the first three episodes of HBO’s True Detective – but in the meantime, I’ll leave you with a couple of Ramones-related clips to get you in the mood for this month’s cover story, including a recent performance from Bruce Springsteen and Jesse Malin covering “Do You Remember Rock And Roll Radio?”… Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner. Live, CBGB’s, 1974 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xI4EDSw3K3A Live, Max’s Kansas City, 1976 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r0a22CrMf4s Ramones interview, The Tomorrow Show, 1981 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GyVmdYtvWgk Bruce Springsteen & Jesse Malin, “Do You Remember Rock And Roll Radio?” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l-xKjFWPvhs

The new issue of Uncut arrives in UK shops this Friday – though subscribers should hopefully find their copies plonking through the letter box a day or two early. We celebrate 40 years of the Ramones with an extensive cover story by Peter Watts, who’s interviewed surviving band members as well as many of their co-conspirators, friends and peers. To compliment Peter’s terrific piece, we’ve compiled a list of the 50 Greatest American Punk Albums (plus singles and compilations), from the pivotal years of 1975 to 1983.

Also in the issue, Ian McLagan and Kenney Jones talk to Garry Mulholland about the Small Faces’ peerless run of singles from “Whatcha Gonna Do About It?” to “Afterglow (Of Your Love)”. Elsewhere, John Robinson tracks down Bob Johnston, the irrepressible producer who presided over a slew of legendary albums by Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Johnny Cash and –of course – Lindisfarne. Sharon O’Connell, meanwhile, travels to Portland, Oregon to hang out with Stephen Malkmus in sub-zero temperatures. In An Audience With… the mighty Jim Jarmusch answers your questions on – deep breath – Neil Young, Tom Waits and Jack White as well as his run of awesome movies. In our Album By Album feature, Jefferson Airplane reminisce about their many career highlights and in Making Of… XTC revisit the story behind “Making Plans For Nigel”.

In our packed reviews section, Beck tells us about his new release Morning Phase, we celebrate The Beatles’ American albums, and bring you a wealth of new albums by Tinariwen, Sun Kil Moon, Tom Petty’s impeccably connected keyboardist Benmont Tench, Wild Beasts, St Vincent and Angel Olsen. In reissues, there’s a long overdue box set compiling the best of Mike Bloomfield and also a welcome reissue for some choice material from Ronnie Lane’s Slim Chance, while live we catch Neil Young on his old stomping ground at Massey Hall and The Waterboys as they bring their Fisherman’s Blues anniversary tour to Hammersmith. In film, I’m delighted to finally get a chance to write about Dallas Buyers Club, the latest mesmerizing performance from Matthew McConaughey, and in DVD John Mulvey celebrates the genius of Parks & Recreation. Richard Williams remember the late Phil Everly, Neneh Cherry picks the records that changed her life in My Life In Music and we meet the radical new faces of mainstream country music, Kacey Musgraves and Brandy Clark.

On the front of the issue, our CD is crammed full of great new music from Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, Marissa Nadler, Angel Olsen, Glenn Tilbrook and many more.

The issue of Uncut is in shops from Friday, January 31 and is also available digitally from the usual outlets. We’re off to watch the first three episodes of HBO’s True Detective – but in the meantime, I’ll leave you with a couple of Ramones-related clips to get you in the mood for this month’s cover story, including a recent performance from Bruce Springsteen and Jesse Malin covering “Do You Remember Rock And Roll Radio?”…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

Live, CBGB’s, 1974

Live, Max’s Kansas City, 1976

Ramones interview, The Tomorrow Show, 1981

Bruce Springsteen & Jesse Malin, “Do You Remember Rock And Roll Radio?”

Stephen Malkmus: “The Rolling Stones seemed like really poncey carpetbaggers of sounds”

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Stephen Malkmus describes The Rolling Stones as “poncey carpetbaggers of sounds” in the new issue of Uncut. The ex-Pavement frontman, currently performing with Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, also discusses life in Berlin, his new album Wig Out At Jagbags and why Pavement were “sports-obse...

Stephen Malkmus describes The Rolling Stones as “poncey carpetbaggers of sounds” in the new issue of Uncut.

The ex-Pavement frontman, currently performing with Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, also discusses life in Berlin, his new album Wig Out At Jagbags and why Pavement were “sports-obsessed music fans in touch with their feminine side”, talking in the new issue.

“I like ’70s Stones better,” explains Malkmus, talking about the difference between the ’60s and ’70s, “although I did watch this documentary about Muscle Shoals Sound Studios, and the Stones, who went there in 1969, seemed like really poncey carpetbaggers of sounds.

“There’s Sir Mick now talking about that time and I imagine the Stones’ PR would wish that this didn’t exist. It doesn’t really go with the way the covers look on those albums.”

The new issue of Uncut is out on Friday (January 31).

March 2014

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His many fans will no doubt wonder at the absence of anything by Wayne County from the list of Top 50 American punk albums we've compiled as part of this month's cover story on the Ramones. After all, Wayne – who by 1980 was Jayne County, following the necessary surgery – was with his band Queen...

His many fans will no doubt wonder at the absence of anything by Wayne County from the list of Top 50 American punk albums we’ve compiled as part of this month’s cover story on the Ramones. After all, Wayne – who by 1980 was Jayne County, following the necessary surgery – was with his band Queen Elizabeth part of the same Max’s Kansas City, Mercer Arts Center and Club 82 scene that nurtured the early New York Dolls. With his subsequent band, Wayne County & The Backstreet Boys, he was a regular at CBGB’s and in 1976 appeared in the film The Blank Generation that documented the beginning of New York punk that grew around the Bowery venue.

He had to come to London, though, to record an album, after a deal with David Bowie’s management went sour, arriving here in March 1977. We met at the Soho digs of Leee Black Childers, who’d worked previously with Bowie and was now managing Johnny Thunders, who Wayne later took me to see at The Roxy, where Johnny was playing with The Heartbreakers. What an entertaining date this turned out to be, especially after we bumped into Speedy Keen of “Something In The Air” and Thunderclap Newman fame. Speedy, who’s become a bit of a pal after I wrote something in Melody Maker about his first solo album, the little-heard Previous Convictions, was just back from recording a new record in America with Little Feat that’s never been released and here to see The Heartbreakers prior to producing LAMF for Track. Needless to say, things were quickly a blur.

But I digress, not for the first time. Back at Black Childers’ pad, Wayne’s telling me how much his act’s been toned down since a 1972 report in MM described a somewhat depraved spectacle. “I’ve stopped doing the really crazy out-and-out disgusting stuff,” he says in a surprisingly sweet Georgia accent. “I used to come onstage, sit on a toilet bowl and simulate a shit and I got a reputation for really shitting onstage!” He sounded aghast that anyone would think him capable of public defecation. “It never happened! That would be disgusting. From the audience, it looked like I was taking a shit. I’d squat on a bowl and then reach into it and bring out this mess that looked like shit but was actually dog food and the audience would go into shock. If they hadn’t already left the theatre or the club or whatever, that’s when a lot of them would run.”

Before forming a band, Wayne was busy in off-Broadway productions, including a couple of things with Patti Smith. “She played the same kind of character she is now: rough butch types. We were in a thing together called Femme Fatale, written by Jackie Curtis. It was set in a women’s prison. Patti was a gun moll, I was a dyke. In another play, she was a speed freak and I was a transvestite revolutionary. She wasn’t in any of my plays. Cherry Vanilla was in one where she played one of those girls who do it with dead people. Her little dog got run over when she was a little girl and that turned her on. So whenever anyone died in the play she went down on them.”

I ask about his association with David Bowie, who Wayne’s manager, Peter Crowley, describes as “the evilest person on the planet, completely without a soul”. Wayne doesn’t want to talk about Bowie, but refers colourfully to the Wayne At The Trucks! stage show, bankrolled by Bowie’s management, who paid $200,000 to make a never-released film of it.

“The Trucks is a very, very depraved area in New York,” he says. “There are all these bars where everyone’s got short hair and they all dress in leather and have sex shows. Places like The Claw and The Mineshaft, very S&M. People tied to walls and all that. This was a parody of that scene. I had dancers and slaves dressed in leather and chains, with little dildos tied to their whips. There was this huge set with a picture of me with my mouth wide open and for my entrance I’d crawl out of it. It was like I’d been thrown up out of my own mouth.”

Enjoy the issue.

Uncut is now available as a digital edition, download it now

Arctic Monkeys announce new single + new outdoor date

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Arctic Monkeys have announced a new single, "Arabella". The track is taken from their latest album, AM, and will be released on March 10, 2014. The band have also announced details of a new outdoor live show, at Marlay Park, Dublin, Ireland on Saturday July 12, 2014. They have sold out two shows ...

Arctic Monkeys have announced a new single, “Arabella“.

The track is taken from their latest album, AM, and will be released on March 10, 2014.

The band have also announced details of a new outdoor live show, at Marlay Park, Dublin, Ireland on Saturday July 12, 2014.

They have sold out two shows at London’s Finsbury Park on May 23 and 24.

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Live From KCRW

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Radio on - the dons of magisterial cool get up-close and personal... With a blunt honesty and disregard for the conventions of PR that’s perhaps typically Australian, Warren Ellis has admitted that what appealed to the Bad Seeds when the idea of playing a live set for LA radio station KCRW was first mooted was precisely nothing. “Actually,” he told Uncut, “we were all determined to not do it because the tour up to that point had been intense. But then we decided to do a couple of Grinderman shows at Coachella and figured anything was fair game.” Hence this set, recorded last April by Bob Clearmountain at Apogee Studio in Santa Monica. The live album customarily struggles with an identity crisis. It’s often painfully obvious that it has no real purpose save to remind fans of an act’s existence in the gap between studio albums. It’s also hard to see the point of recording a show that has no emotional resonance for those who weren’t there, while those who were can presumably recall it at will. And although live sound quality hasn’t been an issue for decades, replicating the immediacy of the live experience always will be. Which is where the alluring warmth and peculiar, in-ear intimacy of the made-for-radio recording comes into its own. Live From KCRW sees the Bad Seeds’ current lineup stripped down to its cornerstones of Nick Cave, Warren Ellis, Martyn Casey and Jim Sclavunos – plus former member Barry Adamson, who joined for the Push The Sky Away tour – and in rare close-up. The 10-song session (the limited vinyl release adds “Into My Arms” and “God Is In The House”) digs as far back into their catalogue as Your Funeral… My Trial, which is represented by the hypnotic and woozily mysterious “Stranger Than Kindness” and it features only four songs from their recent studio album. All have been either adapted to the environment or chosen because they suit it, although audience requests apparently played a small part. “Eventually,” deadpans Cave, as titles are shouted out by the small crowd of fans, “you’ll say one of the songs on this very short list here.” They open with “Higgs Boson Blues”, a skewed and witty but affecting narrative with an existential core, its compelling slow burn rendered even more chimeric than usual, allowing surreal visions of Hannah Montana crying with dolphins and Cave in yellow patent leather shoes to swim in and out of focus. Piano, underplayed violin, gently lapping keys and the softest brushwork constitute the rueful “Far From Me”, from The Boatman’s Call and underline its debt to Jimmy Webb, while that album’s quietly philosophical, seldom-visited “People Ain’t No Good” also gets a showing. What’s most apparent is the band’s mastery of mood and pacing. Of course, that’s central to the mix of shock and awe and exposed vulnerability that has always been the Bad Seeds live experience, but this intimate shared space makes any changes in a song’s treatment more dramatic and amplifies their emotional impact. Thus “The Mercy Seat” is minus its familiar declamatory fury, manic energy and accelerating sturm und drang – made over as a stately, piano-led funeral ballad, it’s somehow more in line with Johnny Cash’s minimalist cover. “Push The Sky Away” – in which Cave’s splendidly grazed baritone is offset by winnowing organ, electronics and the most sombre of beats – addresses both creative motivation and the dying of the light and is devastatingly poignant in its simplicity. When Ellis said of the session “it’s the most beautiful [I’ve] heard Nick sing outside of the recording environment”, he might well have had this song in mind. The quiet is finally upset by an almost comically raucous set-closer. “Hammer it, Jim”, Cave instructs Sclavunos and he does, counting into the cacophony and lurching near-chaos of “Jack The Ripper”. If most live albums are dispensable, ending up as the lesser played records in a completist’s collection, then Live From KCRW is rare. More than standing as a document of a particular time and place, it makes not having been there feel like a real loss. Sharon O'Connell Q+A Warren Ellis What were the particularities of playing a live set for radio? We wanted to strip the group down, make the versions leaner and quieter; the size of the room and format dictated this. Also, it made a break from the Push The Sky Away tour and the enormity of the show with strings and choirs. It was nice to get to the heart of the songs. How did you fix on a setlist? Some were obvious, as we were playing them in the live set and wanted a fair representation of the new album. Others we had played in a smaller format prior to this; it was very loose on the night. Some we dialled up on the spot as people requested them. How did Bob Clearmountain end up on board? It’s his studio, so I guess he does all the sessions for KCRW. We wanted it mastered in the States, so we asked Howie Weinberg to see it through – he’s the Joe Pesci of rock’n’roll. “The Mercy Seat” is a strikingly less thunderous and urgent version. Did the room call for that? It’s about the song, not the thunder. The environment called for all the songs to be treated that way – shorn of cacophony and theatrics. KCRW’s website notes that you declined a request for the videoing of the performance. Why was that? Cameras make you aware of where you are. Live recordings are historically problematic and it’s difficult to get the good stuff un-self-consciously. Video felt like a deal breaker and it’s nice to think that visually, this exists as a memory only. INTERVIEW BY SHARON O'CONNELL

Radio on – the dons of magisterial cool get up-close and personal…

With a blunt honesty and disregard for the conventions of PR that’s perhaps typically Australian, Warren Ellis has admitted that what appealed to the Bad Seeds when the idea of playing a live set for LA radio station KCRW was first mooted was precisely nothing. “Actually,” he told Uncut, “we were all determined to not do it because the tour up to that point had been intense. But then we decided to do a couple of Grinderman shows at Coachella and figured anything was fair game.” Hence this set, recorded last April by Bob Clearmountain at Apogee Studio in Santa Monica.

The live album customarily struggles with an identity crisis. It’s often painfully obvious that it has no real purpose save to remind fans of an act’s existence in the gap between studio albums. It’s also hard to see the point of recording a show that has no emotional resonance for those who weren’t there, while those who were can presumably recall it at will. And although live sound quality hasn’t been an issue for decades, replicating the immediacy of the live experience always will be. Which is where the alluring warmth and peculiar, in-ear intimacy of the made-for-radio recording comes into its own.

Live From KCRW sees the Bad Seeds’ current lineup stripped down to its cornerstones of Nick Cave, Warren Ellis, Martyn Casey and Jim Sclavunos – plus former member Barry Adamson, who joined for the Push The Sky Away tour – and in rare close-up. The 10-song session (the limited vinyl release adds “Into My Arms” and “God Is In The House”) digs as far back into their catalogue as Your Funeral… My Trial, which is represented by the hypnotic and woozily mysterious “Stranger Than Kindness” and it features only four songs from their recent studio album. All have been either adapted to the environment or chosen because they suit it, although audience requests apparently played a small part. “Eventually,” deadpans Cave, as titles are shouted out by the small crowd of fans, “you’ll say one of the songs on this very short list here.”

They open with “Higgs Boson Blues”, a skewed and witty but affecting narrative with an existential core, its compelling slow burn rendered even more chimeric than usual, allowing surreal visions of Hannah Montana crying with dolphins and Cave in yellow patent leather shoes to swim in and out of focus. Piano, underplayed violin, gently lapping keys and the softest brushwork constitute the rueful “Far From Me”, from The Boatman’s Call and underline its debt to Jimmy Webb, while that album’s quietly philosophical, seldom-visited “People Ain’t No Good” also gets a showing.

What’s most apparent is the band’s mastery of mood and pacing. Of course, that’s central to the mix of shock and awe and exposed vulnerability that has always been the Bad Seeds live experience, but this intimate shared space makes any changes in a song’s treatment more dramatic and amplifies their emotional impact. Thus “The Mercy Seat” is minus its familiar declamatory fury, manic energy and accelerating sturm und drang – made over as a stately, piano-led funeral ballad, it’s somehow more in line with Johnny Cash’s minimalist cover. “Push The Sky Away” – in which Cave’s splendidly grazed baritone is offset by winnowing organ, electronics and the most sombre of beats – addresses both creative motivation and the dying of the light and is devastatingly poignant in its simplicity. When Ellis said of the session “it’s the most beautiful [I’ve] heard Nick sing outside of the recording environment”, he might well have had this song in mind. The quiet is finally upset by an almost comically raucous set-closer. “Hammer it, Jim”, Cave instructs Sclavunos and he does, counting into the cacophony and lurching near-chaos of “Jack The Ripper”.

If most live albums are dispensable, ending up as the lesser played records in a completist’s collection, then Live From KCRW is rare. More than standing as a document of a particular time and place, it makes not having been there feel like a real loss.

Sharon O’Connell

Q+A

Warren Ellis

What were the particularities of playing a live set for radio?

We wanted to strip the group down, make the versions leaner and quieter; the size of the room and format dictated this. Also, it made a break from the Push The Sky Away tour and the enormity of the show with strings and choirs. It was nice to get to the heart of the songs.

How did you fix on a setlist?

Some were obvious, as we were playing them in the live set and wanted a fair representation of the new album. Others we had played in a smaller format prior to this; it was very loose on the night. Some we dialled up on the spot as people requested them.

How did Bob Clearmountain end up on board?

It’s his studio, so I guess he does all the sessions for KCRW. We wanted it mastered in the States, so we asked Howie Weinberg to see it through – he’s the Joe Pesci of rock’n’roll.

“The Mercy Seat” is a strikingly less thunderous and urgent version. Did the room call for that?

It’s about the song, not the thunder. The environment called for all the songs to be treated that way – shorn of cacophony and theatrics.

KCRW’s website notes that you declined a request for the videoing of the performance. Why was that?

Cameras make you aware of where you are. Live recordings are historically problematic and it’s difficult to get the good stuff un-self-consciously. Video felt like a deal breaker and it’s nice to think that visually, this exists as a memory only.

INTERVIEW BY SHARON O’CONNELL

Watch Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr perform together at the Grammys

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Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr reunited to perform on stage at the 56th Grammy Awards. McCartney and Starr took to the stage at Los Angeles' Staples Center and played "Queenie Eye", a recent single from McCartney's latest album New. The performance marked 50 years since The Beatles' career-making ...

Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr reunited to perform on stage at the 56th Grammy Awards.

McCartney and Starr took to the stage at Los Angeles’ Staples Center and played “Queenie Eye”, a recent single from McCartney’s latest album New. The performance marked 50 years since The Beatles’ career-making performance on The Ed Sullivan Show.

The Beatles, along with Clifton Chenier, The Isley Brothers, Kraftwerk, Kris Kristofferson, Armando Manzanero and Maud Powell, were also honoured with the Lifetime Achievement Award by the Recording Academy, the body that awards the Grammys.

It was the first time McCartney and Starr had played together in public since a 2009 benefit concert for film director David Lynch. The time before that was at the Royal Albert Hall in 2002 for the George Harrison tribute, A Concert For George.

The performance was introduced by Julia Roberts, who also previewed a forthcoming two-hour tribute, The Beatles: The Night That Changed America – A Grammy Salute, which will be broadcast on February 9, 50 years to the day, and in the same timeslot on CBS, the channel that originally showed The Ed Sullivan Show.

Watch McCartney and Starr performing together below.

Bob Johnston: “You couldn’t make Bob Dylan do anything!”

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Producer Bob Johnston has recalled his time working with Bob Dylan on a run of his classic ’60s albums in the new Uncut. Speaking in the new issue, out on January 31, Johnston says that the singer-songwriter knew exactly what he wanted and could not be moved from his course. “I didn’t get him there,” says Johnston today of Dylan’s decision to record in Nashville. “You couldn’t make him do anything. “I had the best in the world in my hand – there was no place I couldn’t go with him, so that’s where I went. I think [Blonde On Blonde is] the best record Dylan ever cut… Blonde On Blonde was the first symphony cut in Nashville!” Johnston also recalls his time working with Leonard Cohen, Johnny Cash (above, with Dylan and Johnston) and Lindisfarne in the feature. The new issue of Uncut is out on Friday (January 31). Picture: Al Clayton

Producer Bob Johnston has recalled his time working with Bob Dylan on a run of his classic ’60s albums in the new Uncut.

Speaking in the new issue, out on January 31, Johnston says that the singer-songwriter knew exactly what he wanted and could not be moved from his course.

“I didn’t get him there,” says Johnston today of Dylan’s decision to record in Nashville. “You couldn’t make him do anything.

“I had the best in the world in my hand – there was no place I couldn’t go with him, so that’s where I went. I think [Blonde On Blonde is] the best record Dylan ever cut… Blonde On Blonde was the first symphony cut in Nashville!”

Johnston also recalls his time working with Leonard Cohen, Johnny Cash (above, with Dylan and Johnston) and Lindisfarne in the feature.

The new issue of Uncut is out on Friday (January 31).

Picture: Al Clayton

First Look – Brendan Gleeson in Calvary

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There’s a story about Brendan Gleeson meeting unsuccessfully with a Hollywood agent to discuss furthering his acting career overseas. This was in the mid-Nineties, and until then Gleeson had largely worked in television, mostly in his native Ireland, with only a handful of minor film roles to his credit. Admittedly, Gleeson had come late to acting: he’d been a secondary school teacher in Dublin before taking up acting full time in 1991 and was now in his early forties. Gleeson recounted the meeting to The Independent’s Ryan Gilbey in 2001, admitting that the agent passed, telling the actor he was “too old and too ugly.” It’s a story you’d like to imagine Gleeson now tells with a degree of pleasure. After all, he has gone from being a salty, supporting presence in films like 28 Days Later, Gangs Of New York, Cold Mountain and the Harry Potter series to enjoy top billing in a handful of smaller but nonetheless significant films. The first indication of his leading man status came when he played prominent Dublin crime boss Martin Cahill in John Boorman’s boisterous 1998 caper, The General. It made full use of Gleeson’s teddy-bear build and doughy face, his mischievous, almost anarchic temperament that seemed capable of both big-hearted warmth and unflinching violence. The kind of man you could happily spend several hours with in the pub, but whom you would most certainly not wish to cross under any circumstances. Incredibly, it was a decade before Gleeson got another lead role – as a tremendous double act with Colin Farrell in playwright Martin McDonagh’s comedy noir, In Bruges. Gleeson and Farrell played hitmen ordered to lie low in Belgium: Gleeson a man of sombre decency next to Farrell’s none-too-bright big kid. But it’s Gleeson’s relationship with McDonagh’s brother, John that continues to prove creatively profitable. First in The Guard (2011) and now with Calvary, McDonagh and Gleeson have set about exploring the rich landscape of Ireland and the idiosyncratic characters one might encounter there. The events of The Guard took place in Galway while the setting for Calvary is a village close to Sligo. The population are drug addicts, nymphomaniacs, arsonists and wife-beaters, going about their business untroubled by discretion or morality. In the middle of this is Gleeson’s father James, the only notionally ‘good’ man for miles around, who is marked for death by one his parishioners: “There’s no point in killing a bad priest. I’m going to kill you because you’re innocent.” What ensues is a kind of whodunit as father James traverses his parish, and we meet the potential suspects – including Dylan Moran’s alcoholic country squire, Aiden Gillen’s embittered doctor and Chris O’Dowd’s cuckolded butcher. Father James knows them all, arguably better than they know themselves: “You’re too smart for this parish,” he is told. As in any work of fiction set in rural Ireland that concerns itself with ecumenical matters, there is a pleasing Father Ted reference in the form of actor Pat Shortt, who plays a publican here but is better known for his sterling work as Craggy Island’s unibrowed village idiot Tom. McDonagh’s script – a more substantial and mature piece than The Guard – is preoccupied with Catholicism, its impact or its absence. We learn early on that the would-be killer was abused as an alter boy and is seeking revenge, father James’ parishioners are comprehensively indifferent to the Church (and lack any kind of moral compass), while the old priest himself retains a quiet dignity throughout. Father James is a character of extraordinary grace and pragmatism. Grizzled, looking uncannily like Orson Welles at times, he moves through emotional beats spanning exasperation to resignation. It is a rich and believable performance from Gleeson who, at 58, appears to be doing the best work of his late-flowering career. Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner. CALVARY OPENS IN THE UK ON APRIL 11 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8UlI6wJzOpc

There’s a story about Brendan Gleeson meeting unsuccessfully with a Hollywood agent to discuss furthering his acting career overseas. This was in the mid-Nineties, and until then Gleeson had largely worked in television, mostly in his native Ireland, with only a handful of minor film roles to his credit. Admittedly, Gleeson had come late to acting: he’d been a secondary school teacher in Dublin before taking up acting full time in 1991 and was now in his early forties. Gleeson recounted the meeting to The Independent’s Ryan Gilbey in 2001, admitting that the agent passed, telling the actor he was “too old and too ugly.”

It’s a story you’d like to imagine Gleeson now tells with a degree of pleasure. After all, he has gone from being a salty, supporting presence in films like 28 Days Later, Gangs Of New York, Cold Mountain and the Harry Potter series to enjoy top billing in a handful of smaller but nonetheless significant films. The first indication of his leading man status came when he played prominent Dublin crime boss Martin Cahill in John Boorman’s boisterous 1998 caper, The General. It made full use of Gleeson’s teddy-bear build and doughy face, his mischievous, almost anarchic temperament that seemed capable of both big-hearted warmth and unflinching violence. The kind of man you could happily spend several hours with in the pub, but whom you would most certainly not wish to cross under any circumstances. Incredibly, it was a decade before Gleeson got another lead role – as a tremendous double act with Colin Farrell in playwright Martin McDonagh’s comedy noir, In Bruges. Gleeson and Farrell played hitmen ordered to lie low in Belgium: Gleeson a man of sombre decency next to Farrell’s none-too-bright big kid.

But it’s Gleeson’s relationship with McDonagh’s brother, John that continues to prove creatively profitable. First in The Guard (2011) and now with Calvary, McDonagh and Gleeson have set about exploring the rich landscape of Ireland and the idiosyncratic characters one might encounter there. The events of The Guard took place in Galway while the setting for Calvary is a village close to Sligo. The population are drug addicts, nymphomaniacs, arsonists and wife-beaters, going about their business untroubled by discretion or morality. In the middle of this is Gleeson’s father James, the only notionally ‘good’ man for miles around, who is marked for death by one his parishioners: “There’s no point in killing a bad priest. I’m going to kill you because you’re innocent.” What ensues is a kind of whodunit as father James traverses his parish, and we meet the potential suspects – including Dylan Moran’s alcoholic country squire, Aiden Gillen’s embittered doctor and Chris O’Dowd’s cuckolded butcher. Father James knows them all, arguably better than they know themselves: “You’re too smart for this parish,” he is told. As in any work of fiction set in rural Ireland that concerns itself with ecumenical matters, there is a pleasing Father Ted reference in the form of actor Pat Shortt, who plays a publican here but is better known for his sterling work as Craggy Island’s unibrowed village idiot Tom.

McDonagh’s script – a more substantial and mature piece than The Guard – is preoccupied with Catholicism, its impact or its absence. We learn early on that the would-be killer was abused as an alter boy and is seeking revenge, father James’ parishioners are comprehensively indifferent to the Church (and lack any kind of moral compass), while the old priest himself retains a quiet dignity throughout. Father James is a character of extraordinary grace and pragmatism. Grizzled, looking uncannily like Orson Welles at times, he moves through emotional beats spanning exasperation to resignation. It is a rich and believable performance from Gleeson who, at 58, appears to be doing the best work of his late-flowering career.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

CALVARY OPENS IN THE UK ON APRIL 11

Mick Jagger on writing a memoir: ‘Look it up on Wikipedia’

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Mick Jagger has said he may never publish a memoir as he'd rather be "doing something new". Jagger revealed that he doesn't have any plans to follow Keith Richards' best-selling 2010 autobiography, Life. "I think the rock'n'roll memoir is a glutted market. I'd rather be doing something new," he ...

Mick Jagger has said he may never publish a memoir as he’d rather be “doing something new”.

Jagger revealed that he doesn’t have any plans to follow Keith Richards‘ best-selling 2010 autobiography, Life.

“I think the rock’n’roll memoir is a glutted market. I’d rather be doing something new,” he told The Hollywood Reporter. “I’d rather be making new films, making new music, be touring. If someone wants to know what I did in 1965, they can look it up on Wikipedia without even spending any money.”

Jagger is currently working on a number of film and TV projects, including producing the James Brown biopic Get On Up and Kevin Macdonald’s upcoming Elvis Presley biopic Last Train To Memphis. He will also star as a “Rupert Murdoch-esque media mogul” in the upcoming film Tabloid and is collaborating with Martin Scorsese on an HBO TV series chronicling rock’n’roll “through the eyes of a fast-talking A&R executive”, for which Breaking Bad screenwriter George Mastras is writing the pilot.

The Rolling Stones will play a series of live dates in 2014 in the Far East, Asia and Australasia.

Neil Young’s new album A Letter Home to be released on Jack White’s Third Man Records

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It has been confirmed that Neil Young's forthcoming album A Letter Home will be released on the Third Man Records label owned by Jack White. A message posted on the Third Man and Neil Young websites confirmed the news. Credited to 'Homer Grosvenor', the message reads: "Third Man Records unearths Neil Young's A Letter Home. "An unheard collection of rediscovered songs from the past recorded on ancient electro mechanical technology captures and unleashes the essence of something that could have been gone forever…" While further details on the album are in short supply, Young has said that the record will be released in March. He was recently pictured with the 1947 Voice-o-Graph machine located at Third Man's Nashville headquarters, which could be the ancient electro mechanical technology referred to in the message. The machine allows users to make a vinyl recording of their own voice in real time. Young has said that recording the album was "one of the lowest-tech experiences I've ever had".

It has been confirmed that Neil Young‘s forthcoming album A Letter Home will be released on the Third Man Records label owned by Jack White.

A message posted on the Third Man and Neil Young websites confirmed the news.

Credited to ‘Homer Grosvenor’, the message reads: “Third Man Records unearths Neil Young’s A Letter Home.

“An unheard collection of rediscovered songs from the past recorded on ancient electro mechanical technology captures and unleashes the essence of something that could have been gone forever…”

While further details on the album are in short supply, Young has said that the record will be released in March. He was recently pictured with the 1947 Voice-o-Graph machine located at Third Man’s Nashville headquarters, which could be the ancient electro mechanical technology referred to in the message. The machine allows users to make a vinyl recording of their own voice in real time.

Young has said that recording the album was “one of the lowest-tech experiences I’ve ever had”.