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Watch four songs from Neil Young’s January 12 2014 Massey Hall show

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Neil Young played the first night of his 'Honor The Treaties' run of concerts to raise money for the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation Legal Defense Fund. The show took place at Massey Hall, Toronto. The set list was almost identical to Young's recent run of shows at New York's Carnegie Hall, with ...

Neil Young played the first night of his ‘Honor The Treaties’ run of concerts to raise money for the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation Legal Defense Fund.

The show took place at Massey Hall, Toronto.

The set list was almost identical to Young’s recent run of shows at New York’s Carnegie Hall, with the addition of “Pocahontas”.

Scroll down to watch fan footage of “Ohio”, “Southern Man”, “Pocahontas” and “Heart Of Gold”.

The Honor The Treaties concerts will aid the native Canadians in their battle against oil companies and the government to preserve their land.

The remaining ‘Honor The Treaties’ shows take place on:

January 16 at Centennial Concert Hall, Winnipeg, Manitoba

January 17 at Conexus Arts Centre, Regina, Saskatchewan

January 19 at Jack Singer Concert Hall, Calgary, Alberta

Neil Young’s set list for January 12 2014 at Massey Hall show was:

From Hank To Hendrix

On The Way Home

Helpless

Love In Mind

Mellow My Mind

Are You Ready For The Country?

Someday

Changes

Harvest

Old Man

A Man Needs A Maid

Ohio

Southern Man

Mr. Soul

Pocahontas

After The Gold Rush

Journey Through The Past

Needle Of Death

Heart Of Gold

Encore:

Comes A Time

Long May You Run

Ohio

Southern Man

Pocahontas

Heart Of Gold

Iggy Pop, New Order, Patti Smith to play Tibet House benefit concert

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Iggy Pop, New Order and Patti Smith are among the names announced to play the Tibet House benefit gig. The Philip Glass-curated event will take place at New York’s Carnegie Hall on March 11 and will also see performances from The National’s Bryce Dessner, Joe Walsh and Nico Muhly, with more to be announced. Actress Maggie Gyllenhaal and her husband Peter Sarsgaard are to be the event’s honorary chairpersons, reports Rolling Stone. Last year’s concert saw performances from Ariel Pink, My Morning Jacket’s Jim James, tUne-yArDs and Patti Smith. Tickets to this year’s concert are available here. Meanwhile, former New Order bassist Peter Hook is to perform two more of the band's albums with his current band The Light. The band will play New Order's third and fourth albums 1985's 'Low-Life' and 1986's 'Brotherhood' from beginning to end at two special gigs in September. The shows will take place in London and Manchester and will also include classic singles dating from 1983 to 1987. The Light have previously performed Joy Division's 'Unknown Pleasures' and 'Closer' albums in full. At the beginning of last year (January 2013), they performed 1981' 'Movement' and 1983's 'Power, Corruption & Lies' too.

Iggy Pop, New Order and Patti Smith are among the names announced to play the Tibet House benefit gig.

The Philip Glass-curated event will take place at New York’s Carnegie Hall on March 11 and will also see performances from The National’s Bryce Dessner, Joe Walsh and Nico Muhly, with more to be announced. Actress Maggie Gyllenhaal and her husband Peter Sarsgaard are to be the event’s honorary chairpersons, reports Rolling Stone.

Last year’s concert saw performances from Ariel Pink, My Morning Jacket’s Jim James, tUne-yArDs and Patti Smith. Tickets to this year’s concert are available here.

Meanwhile, former New Order bassist Peter Hook is to perform two more of the band’s albums with his current band The Light. The band will play New Order’s third and fourth albums 1985’s ‘Low-Life’ and 1986’s ‘Brotherhood’ from beginning to end at two special gigs in September. The shows will take place in London and Manchester and will also include classic singles dating from 1983 to 1987.

The Light have previously performed Joy Division’s ‘Unknown Pleasures’ and ‘Closer’ albums in full. At the beginning of last year (January 2013), they performed 1981′ ‘Movement’ and 1983’s ‘Power, Corruption & Lies’ too.

Arcade Fire tease ‘Her’ film score in new trailer – video

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Arcade Fire’s film score features in the new Her trailer - you can watch the promo by scrolling down the page and clicking ‘play’. The soundtrack will feature instrumental versions of 'Porno' and 'Supersymmetry'. Both tracks appeared on the Canadian band’s UK Number One album, 'Reflektor'. The latter was apparently written for the film, according to its director Spike Jonze. In an interview with Hitfix, Jonze explained: "The [band] was working on [Reflektor] as they were working on this. Win and I started talking about the score about two years ago, and then it kinda seemed like the record sort of informed the soundtrack and the soundtrack informed the record a little bit, and there's like a song on [Reflektor]—the last one, 'Supersymmetry'—that he wrote for the movie, but then it sort of became something else. It's actually the last song in the end credits." The film, which stars Joaquin Phoenix in the lead role, tells the story of a man who falls in love with a computer operating system (voiced by Scarlett Johansson) following a difficult break-up with his ex-wife, as played by Rooney Mara. Amy Adams, Olivia Wilde and Chris Pratt will also all feature in the film, which is released in UK cinemas on January 24, 2014. It was revealed last this year that [a]Yeah Yeah Yeahs[/a] singer Karen O had also contributed a solo track titled 'The Moon Song' for the film's score. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xakaZwsUMio

Arcade Fire’s film score features in the new Her trailer – you can watch the promo by scrolling down the page and clicking ‘play’.

The soundtrack will feature instrumental versions of ‘Porno’ and ‘Supersymmetry’. Both tracks appeared on the Canadian band’s UK Number One album, ‘Reflektor’. The latter was apparently written for the film, according to its director Spike Jonze.

In an interview with Hitfix, Jonze explained: “The [band] was working on [Reflektor] as they were working on this. Win and I started talking about the score about two years ago, and then it kinda seemed like the record sort of informed the soundtrack and the soundtrack informed the record a little bit, and there’s like a song on [Reflektor]—the last one, ‘Supersymmetry’—that he wrote for the movie, but then it sort of became something else. It’s actually the last song in the end credits.”

The film, which stars Joaquin Phoenix in the lead role, tells the story of a man who falls in love with a computer operating system (voiced by Scarlett Johansson) following a difficult break-up with his ex-wife, as played by Rooney Mara. Amy Adams, Olivia Wilde and Chris Pratt will also all feature in the film, which is released in UK cinemas on January 24, 2014.

It was revealed last this year that [a]Yeah Yeah Yeahs[/a] singer Karen O had also contributed a solo track titled ‘The Moon Song’ for the film’s score.

Red Hot Chili Peppers to play Super Bowl half-time show

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Red Hot Chili Peppers will play this year’s Super Bowl half-time show. The band will join Bruno Mars as special guests at the American Football event, which this year takes place at the MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey. The news was announced by the official Super Bowl Twitter account on Saturday (January 11). They tweeted:

Red Hot Chili Peppers will play this year’s Super Bowl half-time show.

The band will join Bruno Mars as special guests at the American Football event, which this year takes place at the MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey. The news was announced by the official Super Bowl Twitter account on Saturday (January 11).

They tweeted:

Meanwhile, Foo Fighters will headline a special gig in the run up to the Super Bowl. Imagine Dragons, The Roots and Fall Out Boy will also perform at the event, which will be sponsored by the Bud Light Hotel, and will take place at New York’s Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum.

The Roots are celebrating New York hip-hop at the first gig on January 30, joined on the bill by Run-DMC and Busta Rhymes. Imagine Dragons headline the second concert the day after on January 31. Foo Fighters, meanwhile, will team up with the Zac Brown Band for the February 1 gig. Dave Grohl recently worked on the country band’s latest EP.

The festival-of-sorts comes to an end directly before the big game on February 2. That will be headlined by Fall Out Boy and Jake Owen.

David Bowie to release “Rebel Rebel” 40th anniversary picture disc

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David Bowie is to release a limited edition picture disc commemorating the 40th anniversary of "Rebel Rebel". This the latest in the run of 40th anniversary 7" picture discs released by Parlophone Records, following on from "Starman", "John I'm Only Dancing", "The Jean Genie", "Drive In Saturday", ...

David Bowie is to release a limited edition picture disc commemorating the 40th anniversary of “Rebel Rebel“.

This the latest in the run of 40th anniversary 7” picture discs released by Parlophone Records, following on from “Starman”, “John I’m Only Dancing”, “The Jean Genie”, “Drive In Saturday”, “Live On Mars” and “Sorrow”.

Rebel Rebel” was originally released in February 1974 and reached No 5 in the UK singles chart.

The A-side of the limited edition 7″ picture disc features the original single mix of the track which hasn’t been available on 7″ since the early 80’s and is still unavailable on CD to this day.

The AA-side has the US Version of “Rebel Rebel” which is a remixed version of the song with extra overdubs that was released in May 1974 three months after the first issue, but only in the US, Canada and Mexico.

The artwork for the picture disc features two shots from a session that took place in Amsterdam at the television show Top Pop in February 1974.

The single will be released on March 10.

Bottle Rockets – Bottle Rockets/The Brooklyn Side

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Blue-collar blast: Roots-rock masterpieces, back in print... The Jayhawks hewed closest to Gram Parsons’ cosmic vision. Uncle Tupelo were visionaries themselves. But Festus, Missouri quartet Bottle Rockets not only held the moral, working-class compass of the ’90s alt.country wave, they – with their ferocious Skynryd-meets-Crazy Horse thunder – rocked harder than the whole lot. Later, the Drive-By Truckers took their blueprint and ran with it. Nothing fancy: their amped-up country/rock is as meat-and-potatoes as you can get. But leader Brian Henneman’s hypocrisy detector and fierce identification with the downtrodden – tracing a line from Guthrie to Haggard to Springsteen – is regularly set to stun. The debut is rawer, combining bluegrass, hard country/rock and bar-band fare with the scoot-scatting country sound that drove Waylon Jennings’ more upbeat work. It’s not all memorable, but the pissed-off “Wave That Flag†and the abject horror of “Kerosene†in particular, make for withering commentary on society’s failures. By the time of 1995’s Brooklyn Side, the group was slicked-up a tick, courtesy of producer Eric Ambel, enough to unveil more range. Tears-in-your-beer balladry (“Queen Of The Worldâ€). Top-shelf rockabilly (“Idiot’s Revenge,†with that classic line: “She likes Dinosaur Jr but she can’t tell you whyâ€). Even ZZ Top boogie (“Radar Gunâ€). Henneman’s songs are yet sharper, mixing humour and pathos. There’s a rarely topped song about being poor (“1,000 Dollar Carâ€) and stories of wasted lives (“Welfare Musicâ€). Although populist rage and savage humour is never far beneath the surface, the group also reveals a surprising, almost power-poppy feel for ringing, sing-song hooks (“Gravity Failsâ€, “I’ll Be Comin’ Aroundâ€). In short – a monumental album. 19 bonus tracks – acoustic demos, live cuts, pre-Rockets material – plus generous notes, photos and testimonials, provide perspective amid an embarrassment of riches. Luke Torn

Blue-collar blast: Roots-rock masterpieces, back in print…

The Jayhawks hewed closest to Gram Parsons’ cosmic vision. Uncle Tupelo were visionaries themselves. But Festus, Missouri quartet Bottle Rockets not only held the moral, working-class compass of the ’90s alt.country wave, they – with their ferocious Skynryd-meets-Crazy Horse thunder – rocked harder than the whole lot. Later, the Drive-By Truckers took their blueprint and ran with it.

Nothing fancy: their amped-up country/rock is as meat-and-potatoes as you can get. But leader Brian Henneman’s hypocrisy detector and fierce identification with the downtrodden – tracing a line from Guthrie to Haggard to Springsteen – is regularly set to stun. The debut is rawer, combining bluegrass, hard country/rock and bar-band fare with the scoot-scatting country sound that drove Waylon Jennings’ more upbeat work.

It’s not all memorable, but the pissed-off “Wave That Flag†and the abject horror of “Kerosene†in particular, make for withering commentary on society’s failures. By the time of 1995’s Brooklyn Side, the group was slicked-up a tick, courtesy of producer Eric Ambel, enough to unveil more range. Tears-in-your-beer balladry (“Queen Of The Worldâ€). Top-shelf rockabilly (“Idiot’s Revenge,†with that classic line: “She likes Dinosaur Jr but she can’t tell you whyâ€). Even ZZ Top boogie (“Radar Gunâ€). Henneman’s songs are yet sharper, mixing humour and pathos. There’s a rarely topped song about being poor (“1,000 Dollar Carâ€) and stories of wasted lives (“Welfare Musicâ€). Although populist rage and savage humour is never far beneath the surface, the group also reveals a surprising, almost power-poppy feel for ringing, sing-song hooks (“Gravity Failsâ€, “I’ll Be Comin’ Aroundâ€). In short – a monumental album.

19 bonus tracks – acoustic demos, live cuts, pre-Rockets material – plus generous notes, photos and testimonials, provide perspective amid an embarrassment of riches.

Luke Torn

Read the set list for Neil Young’s fourth Carnegie Hall show

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Neil Young brought to a close his four-date residency at New York's Carnegie Hall last night [January 10]. The set was almost identical to the three previous shows, with the exception of the addition of Buffalo Springfield's "Out Of My Mind". Young's next live engagement will be on January 12, a...

Neil Young brought to a close his four-date residency at New York’s Carnegie Hall last night [January 10].

The set was almost identical to the three previous shows, with the exception of the addition of Buffalo Springfield‘s “Out Of My Mind”.

Young’s next live engagement will be on January 12, at Massey Hall, Toronto – the first of four shows in Canada under the title of ‘ Honor The Treatise .

Young and Crazy Horse will play London’s Hyde Park on July 12.

Neil Young’s set list for Carnegie Hall on January 10:

Set 1:

From Hank To Hendrix

On The Way Home

Only Love Can Break Your Heart

Love In Mind

Mellow My Mind

Are You Ready For The Country?

Someday

Changes

Harvest

Old Man

Set 2:

Goin’ Back

A Man Needs A Maid

Ohio

Southern Man

Mr. Soul

Out Of My Mind

Needle Of Death

The Needle And The Damage Done

Harvest Moon

Flying On The Ground Is Wrong

Journey Through The Past

Heart Of Gold

Encore:

Comes A Time

12 Years A Slave

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In the pre-Civil War United States, Solomon Northup, a free black man from upstate New York, is abducted and sold into slavery... 12 Years A Slave marks the big step-up for film director Steve McQueen, as he leaves behind hunger strikes and sex addicts for a larger project about another difficult yet hefty subject: slavery. Significant awards talk is in the air. McQueen is keen to make his mark on this material – but nevertheless is sensitive to the demands of the marketplace in which his film will be shown. On one hand, there is a silent tableau of slaves filmed standing by the side of a plantation, rich with the kind of experimental vibes you’d expect from a former Turner Prize winner. On the other, to acknowledge the milieu in which McQueen now moves, there is the score – a violin theme that, you suspect, in the hands of, say, Hans Zimmer, would have been delivered by a massed orchestra with added choirs. 12 Years A Slave is based on a memoir by Solomon Northup (Chiwetel Ejiofor), a free-born African American who was kidnapped in 1841 and sold into slavery. McQueen’s film follows his passage through a succession of owners – Paul Giamatti, Benedict Cumberbatch, Michael Fassbender. The worst of the lot is Fassbender – enjoying his Amon Goeth moment as cotton planter Master Epps, a man for whom money, power, lust and whiskey have stripped all morality. If he is to survive, Northup – an intelligent, educated man – must keep the truth about his abilities from his masters. As a corrective to Tarantino’s cartoon Django Unchained, 12 Years A Slave is entirely successful – it is a sober, non-judgmental study that does not preach to audiences. In contains many powerful and lasting images, not least a prolonged shot of Northup, strung up from a tree as punishment, his feet barely reaching the ground, while plantation life continues around him. But for all its commendable points, as a film it never quite hangs together cohesively. Its at least 20 minutes too long, while the episodic structure – as Northup passes from owner to owner – breaks the film’s pacing. A late cameo from Brad Pitt (incredibly, given star billing on an early version of the Italian film poster) jolts you out of the movie entirely. It's unflinching in its portrayal of the privations suffered during slavery, but some voices worry it's too unsparing for American audiences. It's certainly not as worthy as Spielberg's Amistad - or as syrupy as The Butler, which tells the history of the civil rights movement as witnessed by a black butler who served through eight White House administrations. In essence, this is a terrifically well-intended and necessarily difficult movie to watch: but I'm not entirely convinced McQueen has delivered quite the masterpiece some would suggest it is. Michael Bonner Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

In the pre-Civil War United States, Solomon Northup, a free black man from upstate New York, is abducted and sold into slavery…

12 Years A Slave marks the big step-up for film director Steve McQueen, as he leaves behind hunger strikes and sex addicts for a larger project about another difficult yet hefty subject: slavery. Significant awards talk is in the air. McQueen is keen to make his mark on this material – but nevertheless is sensitive to the demands of the marketplace in which his film will be shown. On one hand, there is a silent tableau of slaves filmed standing by the side of a plantation, rich with the kind of experimental vibes you’d expect from a former Turner Prize winner. On the other, to acknowledge the milieu in which McQueen now moves, there is the score – a violin theme that, you suspect, in the hands of, say, Hans Zimmer, would have been delivered by a massed orchestra with added choirs.

12 Years A Slave is based on a memoir by Solomon Northup (Chiwetel Ejiofor), a free-born African American who was kidnapped in 1841 and sold into slavery. McQueen’s film follows his passage through a succession of owners – Paul Giamatti, Benedict Cumberbatch, Michael Fassbender.

The worst of the lot is Fassbender – enjoying his Amon Goeth moment as cotton planter Master Epps, a man for whom money, power, lust and whiskey have stripped all morality. If he is to survive, Northup – an intelligent, educated man – must keep the truth about his abilities from his masters.

As a corrective to Tarantino’s cartoon Django Unchained, 12 Years A Slave is entirely successful – it is a sober, non-judgmental study that does not preach to audiences. In contains many powerful and lasting images, not least a prolonged shot of Northup, strung up from a tree as punishment, his feet barely reaching the ground, while plantation life continues around him. But for all its commendable points, as a film it never quite hangs together cohesively. Its at least 20 minutes too long, while the episodic structure – as Northup passes from owner to owner – breaks the film’s pacing. A late cameo from Brad Pitt (incredibly, given star billing on an early version of the Italian film poster) jolts you out of the movie entirely.

It’s unflinching in its portrayal of the privations suffered during slavery, but some voices worry it’s too unsparing for American audiences. It’s certainly not as worthy as Spielberg’s Amistad – or as syrupy as The Butler, which tells the history of the civil rights movement as witnessed by a black butler who served through eight White House administrations. In essence, this is a terrifically well-intended and necessarily difficult movie to watch: but I’m not entirely convinced McQueen has delivered quite the masterpiece some would suggest it is.

Michael Bonner

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

“Have Fun With God”: Bill Callahan in dub…

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Sometimes, with Bill Callahan, the focus on his records is so unwaveringly on his lyrics, it is tempting to treat them as recited poetry rather than actual music. On an old Smog record like “The Doctor Came At Dawnâ€, say, the music seems barely there; just a little shading to point up the melodic undertow of a baritone that often wanders closer to speech than song. And while his records have been generally warmer-sounding, more discreetly ornate, since the switch from Smog to his given name, Callahan still seems like an unlikely artist to entertain a dub makeover. Here, though, is “Have Fun With Godâ€, a complete version of the eight tracks on last year’s masterful “Dream River†- my favourite album of 2013, that I wrote about in this blog. There’s a small trend emerging of notionally rootsy/singer-songwriterish American artists making dub excursions, or adding production tricks learned from King Tubby and Lee Perry records to the sort of songs that seem built out of a quite different tradition – without, I should say, sounding either tokenistic, gimmicky or as ungainly hybrids. A couple of examples I thought of this morning: Hiss Golden Messenger’s reworking of “Jesus Shot Me In The Headâ€, and the version of Howard Ivans’ “Pillows†prepared by Trey Pollard and Matthew E White.

Sometimes, with Bill Callahan, the focus on his records is so unwaveringly on his lyrics, it is tempting to treat them as recited poetry rather than actual music. On an old Smog record like “The Doctor Came At Dawnâ€, say, the music seems barely there; just a little shading to point up the melodic undertow of a baritone that often wanders closer to speech than song.

And while his records have been generally warmer-sounding, more discreetly ornate, since the switch from Smog to his given name, Callahan still seems like an unlikely artist to entertain a dub makeover. Here, though, is “Have Fun With Godâ€, a complete version of the eight tracks on last year’s masterful “Dream River†– my favourite album of 2013, that I wrote about in this blog.

There’s a small trend emerging of notionally rootsy/singer-songwriterish American artists making dub excursions, or adding production tricks learned from King Tubby and Lee Perry records to the sort of songs that seem built out of a quite different tradition – without, I should say, sounding either tokenistic, gimmicky or as ungainly hybrids. A couple of examples I thought of this morning: Hiss Golden Messenger’s reworking of “Jesus Shot Me In The Headâ€, and the version of Howard Ivans’ “Pillows†prepared by Trey Pollard and Matthew E White.

Hiss Golden Messenger “Jesus Dub” Teaser from Harlan Campbell on Vimeo.

White’s notes on that Soundcloud page are eloquent and especially salient, I think: “At Spacebomb we are dedicated to [the dub] process and to the continuous redefinition of what a record can be. We want to see our recordings work in many different ways, in many different frames, maximizing what we do in the studio and demonstrating that a record can be malleable, bendable, and changeable. We are dedicated to improvisation not only as musicians, but as engineers, performers, producers, and creatures of imagination, and hope that our dubs stand as lively, fresh and courageous interactions…

“‘Pillows (Version)’ was given life on November 5th in the Spacebomb attic. We took our work on Howard Ivans’ satin-lined R&B and sent it through a kaleidoscope of delay and reverb, sailing it through the Spacebomb void, through circuits, tubes, tape and out the other side. Improvising, reimagining, and playing with electricity until we discovered something–recognizable and related, but sincerely new.

“Spacebomb holds tight to the idea that Dub is not a genre, but a way of interacting with recorded music–a process that becomes philosophy.â€

Callahan, meanwhile, chose to preview the release of “Dream River†by leaking the dub version of “Javelin Unlandingâ€, “Expanding Dubâ€, and at the time I wrote, “After 20 years of discreet obfuscations and evasions, “Expanding Dub†seemed to signal a new strategy in Callahan’s ongoing project to confound – and, in the process, delight – his loyal audience; a substantially more playful strategy, at that. Reggae does not feature noticeably on the finished version of “Dream Riverâ€, but the experiment does serve to draw attention to the enduring spaciousness of Callahan’s music; to the sense that the most significant details in his songs are unspoken, hidden in the interstices between his lines.â€

This last point is hammered home very hard when you hear the project in its entirety. Brian Beattie, who mixed “Dream River†and handled the remixes for “Have Fun With Godâ€, hasn’t wandered too far from the original: the eight songs run in the same order, and are recast not as reggae, exactly, but as reverb-heavy and mostly instrumental pieces that point up the rich musical subtleties that initially underpinned Callahan’s vocals. A lot of things I’ve read about Callahan’s recent live show – arriving here in the UK in a matter of weeks, excitingly – conscientiously draw attention to the excellence of his band (ie this cover of “White Light/White Heatâ€, a regular show opener, which also reminds me I need to plug our Lou Reed Ultimate Music Guide special which goes on sale next week…).

“Have Fun With God†is full of echo deck trickery, enhanced space, vaguely disorienting drop-outs, but it also pushes the textural detailing of the “Dream River†recordings to the fore: the willowy flute and violin cycles, Matt Kinsey’s always thoughtful and inventive guitar-playing. The mood of that original album remains, too, and is revealed as ideal for the washed-out treatments: a kind of contemplative mellowness that plays on the relaxing rather than unnerving possibilities of dub, even when Callahan’s voice drifts back into the mix to proclaim, more ominous than ever, “You look like worldwide Armageddon.â€

More of Callahan’s baritone than you might expect makes the cut, so much so that in some passages – in “Small Dub†(“Small Planeâ€), for instance – Beattie’s work feels more like an alternate version rather than a broadly instrumental dub one. It’s hard to imagine many people will prefer these takes to the “Dream River†ones, though there’s a lot of charm and wit to be found, not least from Callahan’s booming cameos, where the heavy reverb plays up his already stentorian tones into something thematically akin to the Voice Of a God. Most profound, perhaps, is the point in the opening remake of “The Singâ€, “Thank Dubâ€, when his command for “BEER!†becomes, uncannily, hilariously portentous.

Anyhow, a new reissue of The Upsetters’ “The Good, The Bad And The Upsetters†turned up in the post this morning. I really should play that now, shouldn’t I?

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

Classic photos of The Band to be collected in new book

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Elliott Landy's photographs for The Band's first two albums are to be collected in a fine art book, funded through Kickstarter. Landy shot over 8,000 frames of film of the group around the Music From The Big Pink and The Band albums, only about 30 of which have been widely published to date. Since...

Elliott Landy‘s photographs for The Band‘s first two albums are to be collected in a fine art book, funded through Kickstarter.

Landy shot over 8,000 frames of film of the group around the Music From The Big Pink and The Band albums, only about 30 of which have been widely published to date.

Since launching his Kickstarter campaign last month, Landy has raised over $100,000 – reportedly making it the second most funded photography project in the site’s history.

“Although I expected a really good response to this project, I’m as awed by the depth of feeling that people express for this work as I am for the amount of dollars that have been pledged thus far,†says Landy. “The pledges for a dollar, two or ten are as meaningful to me as the $1,000 pledges. I appreciate and continue to be inspired by this incredible expression of support. Because we are doing so well, I can start to think about expanding the project into new areas such as an electronic book or a dedicated website. The more we receive, the more real these expanded options become.”

The fine art book will be available in two hardcover versions: A Regular Edition and a Deluxe Limited Edition. Deluxe Limited Edition copies will come in a slipcase, signed and numbered and also will include an 8×10 print of “The Band with Hamlet”. This image will only be printed in this size for this Deluxe Edition. The Deluxe Edition will be limited to a maximum of 500 copies. Both of these versions will be from the first edition printing of the book, which will be printed on heavyweight, fine art paper.

You can find more information about the campaign here.

Danger Mouse – Album By Album

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Twelve years after he was pulling pints in a pub in London Bridge, Brian Burton is perhaps busier than ever – he has a new Broken Bells album out on Monday (January 13), he’s been working with U2 and is rumoured to be producing the next Black Keys record. It’s been a whirlwind decade for the w...

Twelve years after he was pulling pints in a pub in London Bridge, Brian Burton is perhaps busier than ever – he has a new Broken Bells album out on Monday (January 13), he’s been working with U2 and is rumoured to be producing the next Black Keys record. It’s been a whirlwind decade for the writer and producer better known as Danger Mouse: after making his name by daring to cross-breed The Beatles with Jay-Z, he’s gone on to work with everyone from Damon Albarn to David Lynch. “I don’t have a desire to stand onstage,†Burton tells Uncut in this archive piece from our June 2011 (Take 169) issue. “When I get up in the morning I want to create, it’s that simple.†Interview: Sam Richards

___________________

DANGER MOUSE & JEMINI

Ghetto Pop Life (Lex, 2003)

Aged 23, the Anglophile Burton is lured from Athens, Georgia, to London. After mailing out hundreds of demos, he is eventually signed by Warp offshoot Lex and uses his advance to recruit Brooklyn rapper Jemini for an album of steely orchestral hip-hop.

I’d always romanticised London because a lot of bands I liked were from there. I remember going into a big record store soon after I landed and seeing Björk and Super Furry Animals in the Top 5 album charts. I was never interested in making pop music, so that was my inspiration. I didn’t really know anyone in London. I was just working in a pub and going home and making music. I was always trying to make it sound professional – I didn’t want people to know I was making music in my bedroom. There’s nothing romantic to me about that.

I’d never really tried to make hip-hop beats before but the first time I put some of them on a demo I got a response right away. It was a huge deal for me to get signed, even though I used all the money to make the album and pay the rappers. I flew out to Los Angeles to have The Pharcyde and Tha Alkaholiks do their stuff and when I got out there I couldn’t believe it was still 20 degrees centigrade in November, so I ended up moving there not long after that.

DANGER MOUSE

The Grey Album (Bootleg, 2004)

As a challenge to himself, Burton spends three intense weeks chopping and splicing samples from The Beatles’ White Album with the a cappella tracks from Jay-Z’s Black Album. Although never intended for public consumption, the album goes viral, delighting critics and, on ‘Grey Tuesday’ (a day of ‘electronic civil disobedience’) 100,000-plus downloaders. The Beatles’ copyright holder EMI wasn’t happy, though…

I had the idea while cleaning up my apartment, listening to The White Album. I started messing around with stuff just out of curiosity and pretty soon I’d become completely obsessed. I worked on it for three weeks straight with only a few hours off each day. I felt like a lot people I knew didn’t really consider sampling to be an art form, so I thought I’d try to prove them wrong. Also it was mixing these two genres that were very inspiring to me growing up, whereas people usually pick one or the other. I thought it would just be a bootleg that I passed around to friends, a piece of pop concept art. I had no inkling of the controversy it would cause, and if I did I probably wouldn’t have done it. There’s nothing worse than starting off your career with a gimmick because then you have to work harder to be taken seriously. But I’m still proud of it. I’ve never done anything else that’s had so much put into it. I must have been a madman.

DANGER DOOM

The Mouse And The Mask (Epitaph, 2005)

Burton teams up with his favourite underground rapper – masked crusader, fellow workaholic and former Madlib collaborator MF Doom. The results are inspired, drawing influence from the pair’s shared love of the anarchic cartoons of the Adult Swim channel.

I was in the middle of exec-producing an album for Prince Po from Organized Konfusion. We were looking for guest rappers and eventually I got in touch with Doom and when he came over to record his part I was blown away. We got along pretty well – he lived in Atlanta at the time so when I went there to see my family I’d hang out with Doom as well. I started giving him music and he wrote some stuff to it and it happened really naturally right after that. What I like about Doom’s style is that he’s so obsessive. He’ll rhyme entire sentences, and not just the last word. All the reference points he uses are so unique. At first, it can just sound like stream-of-consciousness, but if you listen to his stuff enough, you’ll understand it. His delivery is very natural and there are no choruses on his songs. He’s not trying to get on the radio, he just does what he does. To me, he’s the best rapper out there. It’s becoming a pattern how I seem to end up working with all these obsessive people! But that’s how we relate to each other, I guess.

GORILLAZ

Demon Days (Parlophone, 2005)

The Grey Album might have brought with it some unwelcome attention but it also caught the ears of Damon Albarn, who invites Burton to work on the second – and best – Gorillaz extravaganza. Albarn is so impressed that Burton’s services are retained for the The Good, The Bad & The Queen project.

I’d sat down with a bunch of major labels after The Grey Album and it was all a bunch of bullshit to be honest. Separately, Damon got in contact to see if I’d be interested in the Gorillaz thing. I was a really big Blur fan and we just hit it off. We met up so he could play me some demos and afterwards he was like, “Let’s mess around, let’s make a song.†I didn’t have any of my usual equipment with me so I just had to wing it, but we put together the beginnings of what became “Dirty Harry†and that’s how it started. It was a free-for-all, there were no real rules. I got to record with Ike Turner, and to meet Dennis Hopper, and singers like Martina [Topley-Bird], who I later ended up doing a record with. It was a really adventurous, fun album to make.

It was probably the best thing that’s ever happened to me in my career. Damon gave me a lot of confidence and showed me ways of working that I’d never thought about before. There aren’t many people I’ve worked with whose work ethic is the same as mine, and that’s probably because they’re healthier people than me. Not to say Damon is unhealthy but he’s probably the only person who’s challenged me as far as work ethic is concerned. I can’t remember a time when we had an issue or an argument in the making of the music. Of course, nobody cares if you work hard and your music isn’t any good, but the more music you make, the more confidence you have that something great is going to come along.

The Good, The Bad & The Queen started pretty much right after Demon Days, and since that worked out so well, Damon decided that we might as well keep on working together. I’d met Simon [Tong] and Tony [Allen] briefly from working on Gorillaz, but obviously Paul [Simonon] was in The Clash, which made it a bit nerve-wracking. I remember saying to Damon, “I don’t know if I can do this, he’s probably set in his ways. I can’t work well like that, I need people who can take criticism and suggestion.†But Damon said, “No, trust me, he’s great,†and sure enough Paul was amazing. His instincts are so good that I didn’t even have to give him much direction. I haven’t ever worked with such a good bass player. It was mindblowing.

GNARLS BARKLEY

St. Elsewhere (Downtown/Atlantic, 2006)

Burton steps out from behind the mixing desk to form a band with charismatic Atlanta soul man Cee-Lo Green. After initial indifference, “Crazy†becomes a massive radio hit and installs itself at No 1 for nine weeks.

When I was in Georgia, OutKast and Goodie Mob were the biggest and best things in the South. Cee-Lo always had a voice that could cut through any kind of music and he was obviously this larger-than-life character, so I was a very big fan. I never thought in my dreams I’d get to work with him. But fast forward a few years and he guested on a remix of “What U Sittin’ On?†from Ghetto Pop Life and I gave him a demo of this music that I didn’t think was any good for rapping, or that the average singer could do anything with. He was into it and committed to a whole album right away.

I don’t think I’ve met anybody as naturally musical as him. He’d say, “I think I’ve got an idea,†and then he’d go in and do the whole song right then and there with no paper in front of him. The first time I ever heard him sing “Crazy†was the one take you hear on the record. Stuff like that doesn’t happen much. I always feel weird on stage, which is where the costumes came from. We didn’t want to take ourselves too seriously. I think the Wizard Of Oz costumes were my favourite, either those or Star Wars.

THE BLACK KEYS

Attack & Release (Nonesuch, 2008)

Now hot property, Burton is hired to produce his first straight-up rock record, courtesy of hip hop-loving Ohio blues-rockers The Black Keys.

It was the first time The Black Keys had recorded in a proper studio. They were already on their way to doing something special and I was lucky enough to be there when they were taking that leap. They were trying out a lot of new things, and I was one of them. It was very different from any project I’d worked on previously. We did pretty much the whole album in two weeks – recording it, tracking it, everything. But they have a very natural way of working and they’re really great musicians. I never really had to get into the details because pretty much all their takes were good.

I’m usually a pretty hands-on person when it comes to producing but I’ve learned the value of waiting for something magical to happen, because when you’re on the inside it’s a lot harder to judge. For the most part, making Attack & Release was just about collecting and grabbing those magical moments and happy accidents.

DANGER MOUSE & SPARKLEHORSE

Dark Night Of The Soul (EMI, 2010)

Burton and Mark Linkous recruit a stellar cast of vocal collaborators – Wayne Coyne, Frank Black, Iggy Pop – for an album of soul-searching trip hop, with David Lynch providing the wacky visuals. It’s the last album Linkous makes before committing suicide in 2010.

I know Mark was a troubled person but he was also kind and gentle. It was difficult [to make this album] because he was pretty sad for the most part. I wanted this to have a really strong visual element because I knew we weren’t going to be able to tour it. David [Lynch] lives in my neighbourhood, so I just took a chance and sent him what we’d been working on. He was joking about wanting to sing at first, but as it turned out he did two of the more interesting songs!

It doesn’t really mess with my head that I’m in the room with someone renowned, because it’s what they’re doing now that gets me going. I love David’s movies but he could have been a jerk. He wasn’t, and when he did agree to do the visuals for Dark Night… he did an amazing job. It pushed the project into unique territory.

BROKEN BELLS

Broken Bells (Columbia, 2010)

Having hooked up for one song on Dark Night…, Burton and Shins frontman James Mercer cement their relationship by making an album of downbeat, wistful indie-pop.

I met James at Roskilde festival in 2004. I’d just discovered The Shins’ Chutes Too Narrow album and I connected with it so much. As fellow Americans in a foreign country we instantly clicked and wound up watching Morrissey together and hanging out in Copenhagen. We became buddies, basically.

Later, I knew I wasn’t going to be doing Gnarls Barkley for a while but I wanted to do something that involved writing music. And James was also looking to do something new, so we started working together. James is probably one of my favourite singers of all time and I feel like almost everything he does is great, so the more challenging aspect of Broken Bells for me is to know when to ask him to try it again or do something else. As much as I feel like I’m involved as a producer, they’re still somebody else’s albums. Broken Bells is a chance for me to put more of my own ideas across.

DANGER MOUSE & DANIELE LUPPI

Rome (Parlophone, 2011)

Indulging their love of Spaghetti Western soundtracks, Burton and Italian composer Daniele Luppi hire Ennio Morricone’s studio and fill it with his crew. Jack White and Norah Jones come along for the ride.

I was a fan of an instrumental record Daniele Luppi had done called Italian Story, and he helped with some of my arrangements for Gnarls. Meanwhile I’d been writing these songs on piano and guitar that didn’t really fit anywhere else and he agreed that it would be a great idea to track down some of the guys who’d played on those old soundtracks. We started it in 2006 and went back to Rome every October for the next few years. The studio was a place called Forum Studios. We’d go up to the tape room and see the original tapes for Once Upon A Time In The West still there in their old boxes. When the musicians started playing we’d be transported into this time warp. We had Alessandro Alessandroni, the famous whistler, leading the chorus, and Edda Dell’Orso, Morricone’s main soprano. I barely understood the Italian, but we worked it out!

Liverpool Sound City confirms John Cale and Thurston Moore as keynote speakers

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Liverpool Sound City has confirmed John Cale and Thurston Moore as keynote speakers. The event, which takes place from May 1-2 at the Liverpool Hilton Hotel and Liverpool ONE will see Cale and Moore joined by a third keynote speaker, former Chief Executive of The Premier League and former CEO of Liverpool Football Club, Rick Parry. Speaking about the bookings, David Pichilingi, CEO of Sound City, commented: "We promised a step change this year and we have delivered. John and Thurston are two of the biggest global names in music – not just for the records they've made but the artists they have inspired and the sub-cultures they've inspired. For decades right up to the present day being into the Velvets or Sonic Youth isn't just a decision to buy a record – it's a lifestyle choice. These guys literally changed the world, what people listen to, what they think, how they dress." 45,000 attendees are expected to attend this year's conference. For more information, visit: Liverpoolsoundcity.co.uk

Liverpool Sound City has confirmed John Cale and Thurston Moore as keynote speakers.

The event, which takes place from May 1-2 at the Liverpool Hilton Hotel and Liverpool ONE will see Cale and Moore joined by a third keynote speaker, former Chief Executive of The Premier League and former CEO of Liverpool Football Club, Rick Parry.

Speaking about the bookings, David Pichilingi, CEO of Sound City, commented: “We promised a step change this year and we have delivered. John and Thurston are two of the biggest global names in music – not just for the records they’ve made but the artists they have inspired and the sub-cultures they’ve inspired. For decades right up to the present day being into the Velvets or Sonic Youth isn’t just a decision to buy a record – it’s a lifestyle choice. These guys literally changed the world, what people listen to, what they think, how they dress.”

45,000 attendees are expected to attend this year’s conference. For more information, visit: Liverpoolsoundcity.co.uk

Watch footage from Neil Young’s Carnegie Hall shows – plus third night set list

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Last night [January 9], Neil Young played the third show in his four-date residency at New York's Carnegie Hall. Young had played identical sets at the previous two shows. However, for last night's show he made three changes: dropping "Mr Soul" and adding "Helpless" and "Journey Through The Past". Scroll down to read the full set list. Set 1 Hank To Hendrix Helpless On The Way Home Only Love Can Break Your Heart Love In Mind Birds Mellow My Mind Are You Ready For The Country Someday Changes Harvest Old Man Part 2 Goin' Back A Man Needs A Maid Ohio Southern Man Needle Of Death The Needle And The Damage Done Harvest Moon Flying On The Ground Is Wrong After The Goldrush Journey Through The Past Heart Of Gold Encore Comes A Time Long May You Run Meanwhile, footage has appeared online from the January 7 Carnegie Hall show. You can watch Young play four songs below. Goin' Back http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZIeAXRYuZrc Southern Man http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XC-C_Uhz_60 On The Way Home http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tlMcQnn6Mpg Flying On The Ground Is Wrong http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YeBwlCXigjI

Last night [January 9], Neil Young played the third show in his four-date residency at New York’s Carnegie Hall.

Young had played identical sets at the previous two shows.

However, for last night’s show he made three changes: dropping “Mr Soul” and adding “Helpless” and “Journey Through The Past”.

Scroll down to read the full set list.

Set 1

Hank To Hendrix

Helpless

On The Way Home

Only Love Can Break Your Heart

Love In Mind

Birds

Mellow My Mind

Are You Ready For The Country

Someday

Changes

Harvest

Old Man

Part 2

Goin’ Back

A Man Needs A Maid

Ohio

Southern Man

Needle Of Death

The Needle And The Damage Done

Harvest Moon

Flying On The Ground Is Wrong

After The Goldrush

Journey Through The Past

Heart Of Gold

Encore

Comes A Time

Long May You Run

Meanwhile, footage has appeared online from the January 7 Carnegie Hall show. You can watch Young play four songs below.

Goin’ Back

Southern Man

On The Way Home

Flying On The Ground Is Wrong

Elbow’s Guy Garvey: “Our new album is our proggiest record yet”

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Guy Garvey, speaking in the new issue of Uncut, out now, reveals that Elbow’s new album is heavily inspired by progressive rock. “It’s very different from Build A Rocket Boys!,†he explains. “In some parts it’s choppier and tighter and harder than previous records. In other places itâ...

Guy Garvey, speaking in the new issue of Uncut, out now, reveals that Elbow’s new album is heavily inspired by progressive rock.

“It’s very different from Build A Rocket Boys!,†he explains. “In some parts it’s choppier and tighter and harder than previous records. In other places it’s a lot more experimental then we’ve been for the last couple of albums.

“We watched a prog rock documentary, then sampled some of it and made a new groove. I’d say this is our proggiest record.â€

Elbow’s The Take Off And Landing Of Everything is released in March.

The new issue of Uncut, dated February 2014, is out now.

Black Dirt Oak, “Wawayanda Patentâ€

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When you’re in the business of writing about/codifying/making up a musical scene, it always helps if you can locate its nexus. Reading the small print on record sleeves, a good few of the American musicians negotiating the space between roots music and avant-garde jamming these past few years - part of what used to be called free folk, for a while - all turn out to have recorded at Black Dirt Studios in upstate New York. A quick look at the client list at www.blackdirtstudio.com gives you a clue as to the type of music that comes out of this place, run by Jason Meagher (who used to be part of sprawling improve mystics The No-Neck Blues Band): Black Twig Pickers and Pelt, Blues Control, Charalambides, Hans Chew, Steve Gunn & John Truscinski, Rangda, Psychic Ills, D Charles Speer & The Helix and, perhaps most significantly, the ‘scene’’s late godfather, Jack Rose. There are a lot of blurs and overlaps in the discography, something Meagher evidently capitalised on a few years ago when he established the Natch Sessions: collaborative joints at Black Dirt that resulted in a series of free downloads that you can find at www.natchmusic.tumblr.com (the Black Twig Pickers/Steve Gunn set – which I wrote about here - and the one fronted by Michael Chapman are my personal favourites). Chapman was backed by an ad hoc group called The Woodpiles, featuring Steve Gunn, Marc Orleans, Jimmy SeiTang, and Nathan Bowles (from Pelt, the Black Twigs etc), and all but Orleans have now fetched up in the logical extension of the Black Dirt aesthetic; a supergroup, Black Dirt Oak, that also features Justin Tripp, Margot Bianca, Wednesday Knudsen and, maybe most prominently, Dave Shuford, another NNCK vet who now figures in Rhyton and fronts D Charles Speer & The Helix (their forthcoming album is killer, incidentally; I’ll try and write something about it soon). Anyhow, the first Black Dirt Oak album is called “Wawayanda Patent†and is probably out more or less now on MIE Music. If we’re going to continue perpetuating this idea of a scene, then “Wawayanda Patent†(I just looked it up: Wawayanda is a town in New York State) would work pretty well as a primer to it – a loose, quicksilver accumulation of tradition and improvisation, where new ideas seem to emerge out of a dense thicket of influences. Perhaps the easiest reference point is Pelt, particularly on the brackish likes of opener “The Real Crowâ€. But the patchwork jams touch on other antecedents: so “Peeled Egg Cigaretteâ€, with Margot Bianca (I think) making her distrait, ambulatory way around the outer edges of the tune, recalls Tower Recordings circa “Folk Sceneâ€, or maybe a great lost Faust record on Takoma. “Demon Directiveâ€, meanwhile, is closer in vibe to Sunburned Hand Of The Man’s classic “Jaybirdâ€, with its fractured, crypto-ritualistic Can-funk and seagull-cry free blowing. There are incantations from Shuford, intriguing murk, touches of dub, and a closer – “Crowning The Bard†– that begins like Pelt extemporising on the theme of a fire alarm, and develops into a fidgety psych free-for-all in the spirit of Finnish bands like Avarus and Kemialliset Ystävät before a Garcia-like spacerock solo (from Gunn?) gently cuts a path through the melee. There are also, though, more resolved pieces, like “Florian’s Wind Up†(you can hear it on the Soundcloud player above, with “Demon Directiveâ€) which, with its vague North African feel, is a kind of companion piece to “Old Strange†from Gunn’s great 2013 album, “Time Off†– a song, perhaps not coincidentally, which first surfaced as part of the Gunn/Black Twig Pickers Natch session: “The Drowned Lands†pursues that further, having a delicate touch of Ali & Toumani to its chamber desert blues alongside a start that feels aligned to Shuford’s solo D Charles Speer set of Greek-derived picking, “Arghiledesâ€, and an end that, bizarrely, resembles a weird, phantasmagorical take on smooth jazz. Best of all, there’s “From The Jaguar Priestâ€, in which the Sun City Girls/Master Musicians Of Bukkake-style ceremonials are given a distinct Appalachian hue. As the banjos, guitars and analog synths intertwine, there’s a great tangle of playing to unpick. Like, really, “Wawayanda Patent†all told; an album of depth, flight, spontaneity and mischief. See what you think… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

When you’re in the business of writing about/codifying/making up a musical scene, it always helps if you can locate its nexus. Reading the small print on record sleeves, a good few of the American musicians negotiating the space between roots music and avant-garde jamming these past few years – part of what used to be called free folk, for a while – all turn out to have recorded at Black Dirt Studios in upstate New York.

A quick look at the client list at www.blackdirtstudio.com gives you a clue as to the type of music that comes out of this place, run by Jason Meagher (who used to be part of sprawling improve mystics The No-Neck Blues Band): Black Twig Pickers and Pelt, Blues Control, Charalambides, Hans Chew, Steve Gunn & John Truscinski, Rangda, Psychic Ills, D Charles Speer & The Helix and, perhaps most significantly, the ‘scene’’s late godfather, Jack Rose. There are a lot of blurs and overlaps in the discography, something Meagher evidently capitalised on a few years ago when he established the Natch Sessions: collaborative joints at Black Dirt that resulted in a series of free downloads that you can find at www.natchmusic.tumblr.com (the Black Twig Pickers/Steve Gunn set – which I wrote about here – and the one fronted by Michael Chapman are my personal favourites).

Chapman was backed by an ad hoc group called The Woodpiles, featuring Steve Gunn, Marc Orleans, Jimmy SeiTang, and Nathan Bowles (from Pelt, the Black Twigs etc), and all but Orleans have now fetched up in the logical extension of the Black Dirt aesthetic; a supergroup, Black Dirt Oak, that also features Justin Tripp, Margot Bianca, Wednesday Knudsen and, maybe most prominently, Dave Shuford, another NNCK vet who now figures in Rhyton and fronts D Charles Speer & The Helix (their forthcoming album is killer, incidentally; I’ll try and write something about it soon).

Anyhow, the first Black Dirt Oak album is called “Wawayanda Patent†and is probably out more or less now on MIE Music. If we’re going to continue perpetuating this idea of a scene, then “Wawayanda Patent†(I just looked it up: Wawayanda is a town in New York State) would work pretty well as a primer to it – a loose, quicksilver accumulation of tradition and improvisation, where new ideas seem to emerge out of a dense thicket of influences.

Perhaps the easiest reference point is Pelt, particularly on the brackish likes of opener “The Real Crowâ€. But the patchwork jams touch on other antecedents: so “Peeled Egg Cigaretteâ€, with Margot Bianca (I think) making her distrait, ambulatory way around the outer edges of the tune, recalls Tower Recordings circa “Folk Sceneâ€, or maybe a great lost Faust record on Takoma. “Demon Directiveâ€, meanwhile, is closer in vibe to Sunburned Hand Of The Man’s classic “Jaybirdâ€, with its fractured, crypto-ritualistic Can-funk and seagull-cry free blowing.

There are incantations from Shuford, intriguing murk, touches of dub, and a closer – “Crowning The Bard†– that begins like Pelt extemporising on the theme of a fire alarm, and develops into a fidgety psych free-for-all in the spirit of Finnish bands like Avarus and Kemialliset Ystävät before a Garcia-like spacerock solo (from Gunn?) gently cuts a path through the melee.

There are also, though, more resolved pieces, like “Florian’s Wind Up†(you can hear it on the Soundcloud player above, with “Demon Directiveâ€) which, with its vague North African feel, is a kind of companion piece to “Old Strange†from Gunn’s great 2013 album, “Time Off†– a song, perhaps not coincidentally, which first surfaced as part of the Gunn/Black Twig Pickers Natch session:

“The Drowned Lands†pursues that further, having a delicate touch of Ali & Toumani to its chamber desert blues alongside a start that feels aligned to Shuford’s solo D Charles Speer set of Greek-derived picking, “Arghiledesâ€, and an end that, bizarrely, resembles a weird, phantasmagorical take on smooth jazz. Best of all, there’s “From The Jaguar Priestâ€, in which the Sun City Girls/Master Musicians Of Bukkake-style ceremonials are given a distinct Appalachian hue. As the banjos, guitars and analog synths intertwine, there’s a great tangle of playing to unpick. Like, really, “Wawayanda Patent†all told; an album of depth, flight, spontaneity and mischief. See what you think…

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

Eric Clapton – Give Me Strength: The ’74/’75 Recordings

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Six-disc set from the 'identity crisis' years - three albums, outtakes, lives and a session with Freddie King... In his 2007 autobiography, Eric Clapton revealed the unconventional manner in which he prepared for his '74 comeback after three years lost to heroin addiction. As part of his rehabilitation, he went to work on a Shropshire farm owned by Lord Harlech, the father of his then girlfriend Alice Ormsby-Gore, rising at dawn and "working like a maniac, baiing hay, chopping logs, sawing trees and mucking out the cows." While regaining physical and mental fitness, the simplicities of farm life also gave Clapton untroubled space to collect his thoughts and assemble them into songs and ideas for a new album, his first studio recording since '70's Layla And Other Assorted Love Songs. By the time he arrived in Miami to record 461 Ocean Boulevard, he had a portfolio of well-chosen covers and a handful of original compositions and a new minimalist approach, heavily influenced by J.J. Cale. On the album's release in July '74, opinion immediately divided into two opposing camps. To those whose idea of heavy rock heaven was a pummelling, 20 minute version of "Crossroads", his laidback mellowness was an ambition-free under-selling of his talent. More discerning fans who shared Clapton's admiration for the rootsier sounds of Cale, The Band, Leon Russell et al welcomed the humbler aesthetic and the tightly structured songs and hailed a career highlight. The follow up, '75's There's One In Every Crowd - the original title The World's Greatest Guitar Player (There's One In Every Crowd) was abbreviated by Robert Stigwood who thought the irony too subtle for Clapton's more lumpen fans - was cut from similar cloth and recorded in Jamaica, a choice of location which reflected the success of "I Shot The Sheriff" which had topped the Billboard singles chart. To promote the two studio albums, he toured with his American studio band, shows which were recorded for the '75 live album, E.C. Was Here. This six disc set presents those three original albums, all recorded within a fertile 15 month period, as an inter-linked trilogy, augmented by 29 bonus tracks, including studio out-takes, additional live material and a famous session with Freddie King, recorded in summer '74 for the bluesman's Burglar album. 5.1 surround sound and quadrophonic mixes of both studio releases complete the package. Marketed as a celebration of a "watershed era" that marked a "spectacular creative resurgence", the truth behind the record company hyperbole is somewhat more complex and interesting. Clapton's own description of his return is distinctly more modest, a sketchy, tentative process to find "a way to restore my playing capabilities in the company of proper musicians". But trying to break from his past and forge a new musical identity was a confusing and contradictory experience, as he was pushed and pulled in different directions by the expectations and demands placed upon him. Nowhere is this more evident than in the live material, when faced with an American stadium rock crowd yelling for his old warhorses, that's exactly what Clapton gave them. Of the 16 concert tracks, only three feature material from 461 Ocean Boulevard/There's One In Every Crowd. The rest constitutes a Cream/Blind Faith/Derek & The Dominos greatest hits set, which even when the old material is given a loping Tulsa groove cannot disguise a lack of confidence in his 'new' material. It didn't help that back on the road he was soon on autopilot once more, swapping heroin for brandy to self-medicate himself. At times the '74 tour found him so drunk he played while lying on the floor. A less severe judgement might hold that his new musical direction required smaller, more intimate venues than the same enormodomes he'd played and so hated with Blind Faith five years earlier. That he could still peel off technically brilliant extended guitar solos when called upon is evident from the Freddie King session and, in particular, a previously unreleased 22 minute jam on "Gambling Woman Blues". But almost 40 years on, it's the two studio solo albums that continue to fascinate most, as we hear him resolutely attempting to bury the 'old' Eric Clapton and trying on different musical personas to see what fits, from the reggae-lite of "Swing Low Sweet Chariot" and "Knockin' On Heaven's Door" to the J.J. Cale pastiche of "Steady Rollin' Man" and "Little Rachel" via the Harrison-cloned "High" and the lovely "Let It Grow", which bore the unintended influence of "Stairway To Heaven" by Led Zeppelin, a band he famously loathed. Paradoxically, out of this identity crisis, he fashioned some of the most coherent music of his career. Nigel Williamson

Six-disc set from the ‘identity crisis’ years – three albums, outtakes, lives and a session with Freddie King…

In his 2007 autobiography, Eric Clapton revealed the unconventional manner in which he prepared for his ’74 comeback after three years lost to heroin addiction. As part of his rehabilitation, he went to work on a Shropshire farm owned by Lord Harlech, the father of his then girlfriend Alice Ormsby-Gore, rising at dawn and “working like a maniac, baiing hay, chopping logs, sawing trees and mucking out the cows.” While regaining physical and mental fitness, the simplicities of farm life also gave Clapton untroubled space to collect his thoughts and assemble them into songs and ideas for a new album, his first studio recording since ’70’s Layla And Other Assorted Love Songs.

By the time he arrived in Miami to record 461 Ocean Boulevard, he had a portfolio of well-chosen covers and a handful of original compositions and a new minimalist approach, heavily influenced by J.J. Cale. On the album’s release in July ’74, opinion immediately divided into two opposing camps. To those whose idea of heavy rock heaven was a pummelling, 20 minute version of “Crossroads”, his laidback mellowness was an ambition-free under-selling of his talent. More discerning fans who shared Clapton’s admiration for the rootsier sounds of Cale, The Band, Leon Russell et al welcomed the humbler aesthetic and the tightly structured songs and hailed a career highlight.

The follow up, ’75’s There’s One In Every Crowd – the original title The World’s Greatest Guitar Player (There’s One In Every Crowd) was abbreviated by Robert Stigwood who thought the irony too subtle for Clapton’s more lumpen fans – was cut from similar cloth and recorded in Jamaica, a choice of location which reflected the success of “I Shot The Sheriff” which had topped the Billboard singles chart. To promote the two studio albums, he toured with his American studio band, shows which were recorded for the ’75 live album, E.C. Was Here.

This six disc set presents those three original albums, all recorded within a fertile 15 month period, as an inter-linked trilogy, augmented by 29 bonus tracks, including studio out-takes, additional live material and a famous session with Freddie King, recorded in summer ’74 for the bluesman’s Burglar album. 5.1 surround sound and quadrophonic mixes of both studio releases complete the package.

Marketed as a celebration of a “watershed era” that marked a “spectacular creative resurgence”, the truth behind the record company hyperbole is somewhat more complex and interesting. Clapton’s own description of his return is distinctly more modest, a sketchy, tentative process to find “a way to restore my playing capabilities in the company of proper musicians”. But trying to break from his past and forge a new musical identity was a confusing and contradictory experience, as he was pushed and pulled in different directions by the expectations and demands placed upon him.

Nowhere is this more evident than in the live material, when faced with an American stadium rock crowd yelling for his old warhorses, that’s exactly what Clapton gave them. Of the 16 concert tracks, only three feature material from 461 Ocean Boulevard/There’s One In Every Crowd. The rest constitutes a Cream/Blind Faith/Derek & The Dominos greatest hits set, which even when the old material is given a loping Tulsa groove cannot disguise a lack of confidence in his ‘new’ material. It didn’t help that back on the road he was soon on autopilot once more, swapping heroin for brandy to self-medicate himself. At times the ’74 tour found him so drunk he played while lying on the floor. A less severe judgement might hold that his new musical direction required smaller, more intimate venues than the same enormodomes he’d played and so hated with Blind Faith five years earlier.

That he could still peel off technically brilliant extended guitar solos when called upon is evident from the Freddie King session and, in particular, a previously unreleased 22 minute jam on “Gambling Woman Blues”. But almost 40 years on, it’s the two studio solo albums that continue to fascinate most, as we hear him resolutely attempting to bury the ‘old’ Eric Clapton and trying on different musical personas to see what fits, from the reggae-lite of “Swing Low Sweet Chariot” and “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door” to the J.J. Cale pastiche of “Steady Rollin’ Man” and “Little Rachel” via the Harrison-cloned “High” and the lovely “Let It Grow”, which bore the unintended influence of “Stairway To Heaven” by Led Zeppelin, a band he famously loathed. Paradoxically, out of this identity crisis, he fashioned some of the most coherent music of his career.

Nigel Williamson

The Hold Steady announce new album Teeth Dreams

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The Hold Steady are set to release their new album, 'Teeth Dreams', on March 25. The Hold Steady are set to release their new album, Teeth Dreams, on March 25. The US rock band will put out the follow-up to 2010's Heaven Is Whenever this spring, reports Billboard. The LP will be released Stateside on Razor & Tie's new imprint, Washington Square. Speaking about the new record, frontman Craig Finn commented: "We're excited for this new chapter. Tad Kubler of the band added: "We're really proud of our new record, this is an exciting time for us. Making the new record has been a journey for the band, and the results exceeded even our own expectations. Can't wait for people to hear it." The band, who will celebrate their 10th anniversary this year, will tour the US starting later this month, kicking off the run of gigs in Memphis on January 29. Photo: Pieter M Van Hattem

The Hold Steady are set to release their new album, ‘Teeth Dreams’, on March 25.

The Hold Steady are set to release their new album, Teeth Dreams, on March 25.

The US rock band will put out the follow-up to 2010’s Heaven Is Whenever this spring, reports Billboard. The LP will be released Stateside on Razor & Tie’s new imprint, Washington Square.

Speaking about the new record, frontman Craig Finn commented: “We’re excited for this new chapter. Tad Kubler of the band added: “We’re really proud of our new record, this is an exciting time for us. Making the new record has been a journey for the band, and the results exceeded even our own expectations. Can’t wait for people to hear it.” The band, who will celebrate their 10th anniversary this year, will tour the US starting later this month, kicking off the run of gigs in Memphis on January 29.

Photo: Pieter M Van Hattem

Paul McCartney pays tribute to one of his ‘great heroes’ Phil Everly

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Paul McCartney has paid tribute to Phil Everly, who died last week aged 74. In a statement on his website, McCartney said that Everly was one of his "great heroes" and cited the Everly Brothers as a key influence on The Beatles. "Phil Everly was one of my great heroes," he wrote. "With his brothe...

Paul McCartney has paid tribute to Phil Everly, who died last week aged 74.

In a statement on his website, McCartney said that Everly was one of his “great heroes” and cited the Everly Brothers as a key influence on The Beatles.

Phil Everly was one of my great heroes,” he wrote. “With his brother Don, they were one of the major influences on The Beatles. When John and I first started to write songs, I was Phil and he was Don.”

He added: “Years later when I finally met Phil, I was completely starstruck and at the same time extremely impressed by his humility and gentleness of soul. I will always love him for giving me some of the sweetest musical memories of my life.”

Robert Plant announces first live dates for 2014

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Robert Plant Presents the Sensational Space Shifters has announced the first of their 2014 European tour dates. The tour will support a new album out this year, with dates beginning June 10 in Gothenberg, Sweden and across Europe including Russia, Ireland, Germany and more, with a special date at G...

Robert Plant Presents the Sensational Space Shifters has announced the first of their 2014 European tour dates.

The tour will support a new album out this year, with dates beginning June 10 in Gothenberg, Sweden and across Europe including Russia, Ireland, Germany and more, with a special date at Glastonbury Abbey on August 9.

The Sensational Space Shifters are: Justin Adams – guitar, bendir, vocals John Baggott – keyboards Juldeh Camara – ritti (one stringed African violin), kologo (African Banjo), talking drum, vocals Billy Fuller – bass guitar, vocals Dave Smith – drums and percussion Liam ‘Skin’ Tyson – guitar, vocals.

Robert Plant recently told Uncut that “touring with the Sensational Space Shifters is so much better than bathing in a tepid bathtub of old hits”.

You can read an exclusive interview with Robert Plant about the new album in the new issue of Uncut.

Robert Plant Presents the Sensational Space Shifters will play:

JUNE

10 SWEDEN, Gothenburg TRAGARN

12 NORWAY, Bergen BERGEN FEST

14 SWEDEN, Rattvik DALHALLA

16 ESTONIA, Tallin SAKU ARENA

18 RUSSIA, St. Petersburg NEW ARENA

20 RUSSIA, Moscow CROCUS HALL

25 IRELAND, Cork LIVE AT THE MARQUEE

JULY

5 FRANCE, Cognac COGNAC BLUES PASSION

16 GERMANY, Berlin ZITADELLE

17 GERMANY, Dresden JUNGE GARDE

19 CZECH REP., Ostrava COLURS OF OSTRAVA

AUGUST

9 ENGLAND, Glastonbury GLASTONBURY ABBEY

16 & 17 JAPAN SUMMER SONIC

The Dead Weather to release two new songs next week

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The Dead Weather are to release two new songs next week. According to a Tweet from their Third Man label, "Open Up (That's Enough)" and "Rough Detective" will be available for purchase digitally worldwide next Tuesday [January 14]. Scroll down to hear "Open Up (That's Enough)". http://www.youtube...

The Dead Weather are to release two new songs next week.

According to a Tweet from their Third Man label, “Open Up (That’s Enough)” and “Rough Detective” will be available for purchase digitally worldwide next Tuesday [January 14].

Scroll down to hear “Open Up (That’s Enough)“.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3lYstaUzjHs