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Watch Tom Waits play his first show in five years

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Tom Waits played his first live show in five years on Sunday [October 27] at Neil Young's Bridge School benefit concert. Scroll down to watch fan footage of the entire 10 song set. Waits was accompanied by David Hidalgo on guitar and accordion, Les Claypool on bass and Casey Waits on drums. Waits...

Tom Waits played his first live show in five years on Sunday [October 27] at Neil Young’s Bridge School benefit concert.

Scroll down to watch fan footage of the entire 10 song set.

Waits was accompanied by David Hidalgo on guitar and accordion, Les Claypool on bass and Casey Waits on drums.

Waits has played the Bridge School Benefit concerts twice before, first in 1999 and then in 2007, when he performed with the Kronos Quartet.

Earlier in the concert, held at the Shoreline Ampitheater, Neil Young, Elvis Cotello and Jim James had led a tribute to Lou Reed, covering the Velvet Underground song, “Oh! Sweet Nuthin'”. You can watch the performance here. Other performers included Queens Of The Stone Age, CSNY and Arcade Fire .

Tom Waits played:

Raised Right Men

Singapore

Talking At The Same Time

Chicago

Lucky Day

Tom Traubert’s Blues

Lucinda / Ain’t Goin Down

Last Leaf

Cemetery Polka

Come On Up to the House

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hVFCNYm6cfI

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OAi0X2MlCHo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P4xdUDFYMDE

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j84R-pHti7A

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-NHZg56_U8

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gpbfMebKCR0

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rIk04XBYejE

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6SyIbznCVTc

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ek576cW_ycg

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

Watch Neil Young, Elvis Costello and Jim James pay tribute to Lou Reed

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Neil Young, Elvis Costello and Jim James paid tribute to Lou Reed last night [October 27] at the Bridge School Benefit concert. They performed a cover of "Oh! Sweet Nuthin'", which originally appears on the Velvet Underground's fourth album, Loaded. Reed died yesterday. As yet, the cause of his de...

Neil Young, Elvis Costello and Jim James paid tribute to Lou Reed last night [October 27] at the Bridge School Benefit concert.

They performed a cover of “Oh! Sweet Nuthin’“, which originally appears on the Velvet Underground’s fourth album, Loaded.

Reed died yesterday. As yet, the cause of his death has not been announced.

You can read tributes to Reed from David Bowie and John Cale here.

You can read Morrissey‘s statement on Reed’s death here.

You can read Patti Smith and David Byrne’s tributes here.

You can read a 2002 interview with Reed from the Uncut archives here.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IFaTN9V833o

Nils Lofgren: “Danny Whitten could sing and play well. He just couldn’t do much else”

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Nils Lofgren discusses his career as “a band guy”, performing with Neil Young and Bruce Springsteen, in the new issue of Uncut (dated December 2013), out now. Lofgren takes us through the making of the pivotal albums of his career, from Young’s After The Gold Rush and Tonight’s The Night ...

Nils Lofgren discusses his career as “a band guy”, performing with Neil Young and Bruce Springsteen, in the new issue of Uncut (dated December 2013), out now.

Lofgren takes us through the making of the pivotal albums of his career, from Young’s After The Gold Rush and Tonight’s The Night to Springsteen’s The Rising and his own Old School, in the piece.

He discusses Crazy Horse’s 1971 debut album, recalling the late Danny Whitten, who would die from a heroin overdose in November 1972: “Danny could sing and play well. He just couldn’t do much else. He wrecked cars and he was pretty messed up.”

Lofgren also reveals that the “crown jewel of the unreleased tracks” in his boxset is a version of “Keith Don’t Go” featuring Neil Young playing piano and singing.

The new issue of Uncut (dated December 2013) is out now.

Photo: Fotex/Rainer Drechsler

Morrissey on Lou Reed: “His music will outlive time itself”.

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Morrissey is the latest artist to pay tribute to Lou Reed, who died yesterday [October 27], aged 71. Morrissey's follows David Bowie and John Cale, among others, who have paid tribute to Reed. In a post on the quasi-official site, True To You, Morrissey wrote: 'Oh Lou / why did you leave us this ...

Morrissey is the latest artist to pay tribute to Lou Reed, who died yesterday [October 27], aged 71.

Morrissey’s follows David Bowie and John Cale, among others, who have paid tribute to Reed.

In a post on the quasi-official site, True To You, Morrissey wrote:

‘Oh Lou / why did you leave us this way?’

No words to express the sadness at the death of Lou Reed. He had been there all of my life. He will always be pressed to my heart. Thank God for those, like Lou, who move within their own laws, otherwise imagine how dull the world would be. I knew the Lou of recent years and he was always full of good heart. His music will outlive time itself.

We are all timebound, but today, with the loss of liberating Lou, life is a pigsty.

‘7 glasses used to be

called for six good mates and me

now we only call for three’

-Patrick MacGill

MORRISSEY

27 October 2013

You can read Patti Smith and David Byrne’s tributes here.

And you can hear Neil Young, Elvis Costello and Jim James cover a Lou Reed song here.

You can read a 2002 interview with Reed from the Uncut archives here.

Photo credit: Julian Schnabel

Fleetwood Mac’s John McVie diagnosed with cancer

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Fleetwood Mac's John McVie has been diagnosed with cancer. The band have now cancelled their Australian and New Zealand tour so that McVie, one of the co-founding members of the legendary group, can seek treatment for the illness. A statement, posted on the band's official Facebook page earlier this morning (October 27), read: "Fleetwood Mac who has just completed the European leg of their phenomenally successful worldwide tour has announced the cancellation of their upcoming 14 date tour of Australia and New Zealand. John McVie, one of the co-founding and original members of Fleetwood Mac is now scheduled to be in treatment for cancer during that period of time." The band added: "We are sorry to not be able to play these Australian and New Zealand dates. We hope our Australian and New Zealand fans as well as Fleetwood Mac fans everywhere will join us in wishing John and his family all the best." You can read our review of Fleetwood Mac live at London's 02 Arena from September 27, 2013 here.

Fleetwood Mac’s John McVie has been diagnosed with cancer.

The band have now cancelled their Australian and New Zealand tour so that McVie, one of the co-founding members of the legendary group, can seek treatment for the illness.

A statement, posted on the band’s official Facebook page earlier this morning (October 27), read: “Fleetwood Mac who has just completed the European leg of their phenomenally successful worldwide tour has announced the cancellation of their upcoming 14 date tour of Australia and New Zealand. John McVie, one of the co-founding and original members of Fleetwood Mac is now scheduled to be in treatment for cancer during that period of time.”

The band added: “We are sorry to not be able to play these Australian and New Zealand dates. We hope our Australian and New Zealand fans as well as Fleetwood Mac fans everywhere will join us in wishing John and his family all the best.”

You can read our review of Fleetwood Mac live at London’s 02 Arena from September 27, 2013 here.

Watch Neil Young perform with Arcade Fire

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Arcade Fire performed with Neil Young at Young's Bridge School Benefit concert on Saturday, October 26. The band played a full acoustic set at the Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, California. Before they were joined by Young, Win Butler said he had a dream in which he wrote a new song, on ...

Arcade Fire performed with Neil Young at Young’s Bridge School Benefit concert on Saturday, October 26.

The band played a full acoustic set at the Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, California.

Before they were joined by Young, Win Butler said he had a dream in which he wrote a new song, on awake he realised it sounded like a Neil Young song.

Butler then declared that the song was called “I Dreamed A Neil Young Song”, before inviting Young on stage.

You can watch the full benefit concert, including Arcade Fire’s surprise duet with Neil Young (6:06:00), by scrolling down the page and clicking on the ‘play’ button.

Arcade Fire have announced a string of performances in the UK under the psudonym The Reflektors.

The band will play Blackpool’s Empress Ballroom on November 27, and two nights at Glasgow’s Barrowlands on November 15 and 16. Tickets will go on sale on Friday (November 1) at 9am.

A listing on Live Nation’s website now reveals that The Reflektors will play two nights at London’s Roundhouse on November 11 and 12.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tLnOxq-Gydw

George Harrison “was an easy touch… he had a load of Krishnas living at his house”

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The making of George Harrison’s debut solo single, “My Sweet Lord”, is examined in the new issue of Uncut, dated December 2013, and out tomorrow (October 29). A host of musicians who performed on the hugely successful, and hugely controversial, record, produced by Phil Spector, talk about the recording, including Bobby Whitlock, Bobby Keys, Dave Mason, Peter Frampton and engineer Ken Scott. Recalling Harrison’s mindset around that time, Whitlock explains: “He was zeroing in on the inner kingdom. He seemed to be pretty much focused on an inner world, a spiritual journey. “He had a load of Krishnas living at his house. He was an easy touch. They were just a bunch of moochers as far as I was concerned.” The new issue of Uncut, dated December 2013, is out tomorrow (October 29).

The making of George Harrison’s debut solo single, “My Sweet Lord”, is examined in the new issue of Uncut, dated December 2013, and out tomorrow (October 29).

A host of musicians who performed on the hugely successful, and hugely controversial, record, produced by Phil Spector, talk about the recording, including Bobby Whitlock, Bobby Keys, Dave Mason, Peter Frampton and engineer Ken Scott.

Recalling Harrison’s mindset around that time, Whitlock explains: “He was zeroing in on the inner kingdom. He seemed to be pretty much focused on an inner world, a spiritual journey.

“He had a load of Krishnas living at his house. He was an easy touch. They were just a bunch of moochers as far as I was concerned.”

The new issue of Uncut, dated December 2013, is out tomorrow (October 29).

David Bowie and John Cale lead tributes to Lou Reed

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David Bowie is among many artists who have paid tribute to Lou Reed, who died yesterday [October 27] aged 71. A post on Bowie's website read: "R.I.P. LOU REED "It is with great sadness that we report the death of Lou Reed who died today aged 71. (March 2, 1942 – October 27, 2013) David Bowie ...

David Bowie is among many artists who have paid tribute to Lou Reed, who died yesterday [October 27] aged 71.

A post on Bowie’s website read:

“R.I.P. LOU REED

“It is with great sadness that we report the death of Lou Reed who died today aged 71. (March 2, 1942 – October 27, 2013)

David Bowie said of his old friend: ‘He was a master.'”

Meanwhile, John Cale took to Twitter to offer these words on Reed: “The world has lost a fine songwriter and poet…I’ve lost my ‘school-yard buddy’ – john cale”

He then wrote a fuller tribute, saying: “The news I feared the most, pales in comparison to the lump in my throat and the hollow in my stomach. Two kids have a chance meeting and 47 years later we fight and love the same way — losing either one is incomprehensible. No replacement value, no digital or virtual fill…broken now, for all time. Unlike so many with similar stories — we have the best of our fury laid out on vinyl, for the world to catch a glimpse. The laughs we shared just a few weeks ago, will forever remind me of all that was good between us.”

Elsewhere, artists including The Who, Pixies and The Black Keys have paid their respects to Reed via Twitter.

The Who: “R.I.P. Lou Reed. Walk on the peaceful side.”

Pixies: “R.I.P. LOU REED….A LEGEND”

The Black Keys’ Patrick Carney: “R.I.P. Lou Reed.”

Lee Renaldo: “RIP Lou Reed. Irreplaceable.”

Jim James: “RIP Lou Reed.

you made the world a better place.

we are forever grateful.”

Flea: “I love Lou reed so much. Always”

At their show at the Baltimore Arena, Pearl Jam dedicated “Man Of The Hour” to Reed, with Eddie Vedder saying “He was a game changer and a life changer.” The band also played “Waiting For The Man” in Reed’s honour.

Other Twitter tributes came from Salman Rushdie, Stephen Fry and film maker Judd Apatow.

Salman Rushdie: “My friend Lou Reed came to the end of his song. So very sad.But hey, Lou, you’ll always take a walk on the wild side. Always a perfect day.”

Judd Apatow: “I met Lou Reed and told him he gave me tinnitus at a concert in 1989 that never went away and it was worth it. Dirty Blvd. Love to Lou.”

Stephen Fry: “Oh it’s such an imperfect day.”

You can read Morrissey‘s statement on Reed’s death here.

You can read Patti Smith and David Byrne’s tributes here.

You can hear Neil Young, Elvis Costello and Jim James cover a Lou Reed song here.

You can read a 2002 interview with Reed from the Uncut archives here.

Lou Reed dies aged 71

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Lou Reed has died, aged 71. Reed died at his home on Long Island of an ailment that stemmed from his recent liver transplant. The New York Times reports that Dr. Charles Miller, the surgeon who performed the transplant on Reed at the Cleveland Clinic in April this year, revealed that Reed was back...

Lou Reed has died, aged 71.

Reed died at his home on Long Island of an ailment that stemmed from his recent liver transplant.

The New York Times reports that Dr. Charles Miller, the surgeon who performed the transplant on Reed at the Cleveland Clinic in April this year, revealed that Reed was back in Ohio last week for further treatment.

It was determined that Reed’s end-stage liver disease could no longer be treated, and he decided to return to the home he shared with his wife, Laurie Anderson. “We all agreed that we did everything we could,” Dr. Miller said.

In June, Anderson revealed news of the life-saving liver transplant but suggested that he might not “ever totally recover” from the surgery.

Reed later posted a message on Facebook, where he described himself as a “triumph of modern medicine” and announced that he is looking forward to playing live again.

Reed returned to the stage on June 20, after canceling a string of live dates “due to unavoidable complications”. He appeared at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity. “The other day I was 19,” he told the crowd. “I could fall down and get back up. Now if I fall down you are talking about nine months of physical therapy. Make sure you take your vitamins.”

On Sunday, June 30, Reed was admitted to Long Island’s Southampton Hospital suffering from severe dehydration. He was released the following day.

Reed had recently been in London to promote a book of photography by Mick Rock. He had also been working with John Cale on an anniversary special edition of The Velvet Underground‘s White Light/White Heat album, which is due for release in December.

You can read tributes to Reed from David Bowie and John Cale here.

You can read Morrissey‘s statement on Reed’s death here.

You can read Patti Smith and David Byrne’s tributes here.

You can hear Neil Young, Elvis Costello and Jim James cover a Lou Reed song here.

You can read a 2002 interview with Reed from the Uncut archives here.

The Flaming Lips announce split – then say Twitter was hacked

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The Flaming Lips shocked fans last night (October 24) by announcing that they were to split. The Oklahoma-based band apparently changed their minds 18 minutes later. The news came via two tweets from the band's official Twitter account, which have both since been deleted. The first, as Rolling S...

The Flaming Lips shocked fans last night (October 24) by announcing that they were to split.

The Oklahoma-based band apparently changed their minds 18 minutes later.

The news came via two tweets from the band’s official Twitter account, which have both since been deleted. The first, as Rolling Stone reports, said: “We have sad news. We’ve broken up…”.

As fans and media reacted to the shock news, a second Tweet appeared reading: “lol just joking guys.” A spokesperson for the band confirmed that the first announcement was “not true”.

A further tweet, which remains on the page, says “That last announcement was a bit premature,” accompanied by a picture marking the band’s 30 year anniversary this year. Amid the confusion, singer Wayne Coyne tweeted from his personal account: “The Flaming Lips twitter has been hijacked!!!!”

Flaming Lips recently recorded a four-track EP with Tame Impala, with each band covering two of the other’s tracks. The EP is a special release marking shows the bands are joint headlining in October and November in Boston, Philadelphia, New York and Columbia.

Flaming Lips meanwhile, are working on an “extended play 6 song thang..” to go with a track they’ve written for the upcoming film adaptation of military science fiction novel Ender’s Game, Coyne recently revealed.

The Who announce they will quit touring after 50th anniversary gig in 2015

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The Who have announced that they will quit touring after a final series of live shows in 2015 to mark their 50th anniversary. Guitarist Pete Townshend told the Evening Standard at the screening for their documentary Sensation, which tells the story of the band's rock opera Tommy, that they will u...

The Who have announced that they will quit touring after a final series of live shows in 2015 to mark their 50th anniversary.

Guitarist Pete Townshend told the Evening Standard at the screening for their documentary Sensation, which tells the story of the band’s rock opera Tommy, that they will use the tour to visit places they have rarely played in their five decade history.

“For the 50th anniversary we’ll tour the world. It’ll be the last big one for us. There are still plenty of places we’ve not played. It would be good to go to eastern Europe and places that haven’t heard us play all the old hits,” Townshend said.

This summer, The Who played their 1973 double album ‘Quadrophenia’ in full alongside their classic hits at a string of arena dates around the UK and Ireland, after a big US tour.

Released in 1973, ‘Quadrophenia’ was The Who’s sixth studio album and second “rock opera” after 1969’s ‘Tommy’. ‘Quadrophenia’ was later made into a 1979 film starring Phil Daniels, Toyah Willcox and Sting.

A special-edition boxset of Tommy is out on November 11.

Graham Parker: “I cried when Amy Winehouse died, the same as when Otis Redding died”

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Graham Parker reveals his admiration for Amy Winehouse in the new issue of Uncut (dated November 2013), out now. Explaining that the singer’s 2006 album Back To Black made the biggest impression on him since hearing The Wailer’s Catch A Fire in the ’70s, Parker says he cried when Winehouse di...

Graham Parker reveals his admiration for Amy Winehouse in the new issue of Uncut (dated November 2013), out now.

Explaining that the singer’s 2006 album Back To Black made the biggest impression on him since hearing The Wailer’s Catch A Fire in the ’70s, Parker says he cried when Winehouse died.

“It’s not that often an artist that great comes along,” he explains. “I cried when she died, the same as when Otis died.

“It was a great loss; I’d love to have seen where she’d gone with it.”

Parker charts his life in music in the piece, talking about monumental records such as The Rolling Stones’ debut album, Van Morrison’s Astral Weeks and Otis Redding’s Otis Blue.

The November 2013 issue of Uncut is out now.

Volcano Choir – Repave

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Justin Vernon and his able mates set sail, under a strong wind, on what could prove to be an epic musical odyssey... Though he may indeed be “winding it down” (as he put it a year ago) in terms of Bon Iver, Justin Vernon’s sonic and spiritual adventures are ongoing under another nameplate. The tellingly titled Repave, the second collaboration between Vernon and Collections Of Colonies Of Bees, doesn’t appear to be merely another diversion in Vernon’s ever-unfolding narrative, which, since the release of 2011’s Bon Iver, has encompassed key roles on album projects with Megafaun, Kathleen Edwards, Colin Stetson and Shouting Matches, as well as guest appearances with Kanye West and POS. No, this record has all the earmarks of Vernon’s next big thing. Unlike Volcano Choir's test run, 2009’s Unmap, the new follow-up is a proper album – and a bona fide rock album at that. “I felt like I was in a rock band almost for the first time”, Vernon says in Dan Hunting’s mini-documentary on the making of the LP. COCOC, comprising Volcano Choir’s other members – drummer/percussionist Jon Mueller, guitarists Chris Rosenau and Dan Spack, keyboard player Tom Wincek and bassist Matthew Skemp – is, of course, hardly a standard rock band, with an extensive discog of envelope-pushing experimental music. This project is a different exercise for both parties – the result of a back-and-forth between instrumental pieces made by Rosenau, Wincek and other bandmembers, which Vernon then manipulated (as he’s shown, he’s a masterful manipulator), with Mueller’s percussion and Vernon’s vocals as the final ingredients. The first sound we hear is an oversized liturgical organ, out of which float those familiar stacked falsetto harmonies, but here, on “Tideways”, the groove throbbing beneath the airborne voices is wilder and more aggressive than we’ve come to expect from Vernon, more four-square than previous COCOC efforts. On the following “Acetate”, he introduces his lower register amid tribal drums, Gregorian chanting and twinkling piano notes in
a syncopated yet regal arrangement, with a twist of Motown in the climax. He stays with his natural voice, an earthy baritone, in the intro to “Comrade”, then slides upward, as the track churns along in symphonic splendour. At mid-song, the arrangement enlarges into all-out majesty as Vernon conjoins his low end and falsetto into an eerie hybrid, which in turn gives way to the rumble of an Auto-Tune-created humanoid, as the surrounding sounds wither away. “Byegone”, the first single, is lush from the get-go, a lilting plucked acoustic setting the mood before it’s surrounded by the massed ensemble, the whole of it sounding like a pastoral Windham Hill piece enlarged to arena-rock scale. Vernon nestles into the plush aural tapestry with the most natural-sounding vocal he’s ever recorded; doubled in the classic Lennon style, it’s grand and intimate at once. On “Alaskans”, we enter calm waters after the preceding series of crashing waves, but there’s something unsettling here, too, as Vernon’s vocal morphs from a sort of Gordon Lightfoot-like burnished folksiness to an ominous, all but demonic growl. 
The groove comes to the fore on the playfully titled “Dancepack”, but it’s implied before Mueller begins to pound it out. Vernon’s vocal is playful, theatrical, Bruce-like, as he powers into the incantatory refrain, “Take note, there’s still a hole in your heart”, while an electric guitar flirts with dissonance, forming lemon-tangy chords. “Keel” begins in suspended animation, with Vernon’s falsetto gliding over an implied expanse of woodland, as muted instrumental sounds weave a beckoning still life below him. The sustained sonic foreplay is released with “Almanac”, a titanic, shape-shifting universe of thunder-crack percussion and soulful vocal signifying that opens into a celestial chorale of burbling, over-lapping voices. There’s a revelatory moment in mid-song, as Vernon sings “ALL NIGHT/It’s on, RIGHT/SO FRESH that it sizzles”, as if marveling at the open-ended beauty they’re creating as it’s happening, 
and imagining where these art/soul brothers can take it from here. There’s little doubt at this point that Vernon’s overarching ambition is matched by his limitless inventiveness, and now, that of his co-conspirators. On this monumental outing, as he’s noted, he’s fronting a real rock band. My guess: there’s no turning back now. Bud Scoppa Q+A Justin Vernon, Chris Rosenau Is your commitment to Volcano Choir as deep as Repave suggests? Rosenau: Right now, we’re in the moment. We’re trying to figure out how to play this stuff live and make it gigantic. At some point, someone’s gonna get a bug up their ass and write another Volcano Choir song. There won’t be a timeline, but it’s too much fun not to play with these guys. Vernon: I’m getting a Volcano Choir tattoo next week! No, it’s been central to me. It’s been a way to take all of the confusion of the other things I’ve been doing on my own. It’s been shaping more than anything I’ve done; emotionally and [in terms of] reflection and reacting. I don’t think I’ve ever sung like this before. It was challenging, but it revealed itself to me, and it was because of these guys. It’s here to stay. Where did the band name come from? Rosenau: Vernon had been sending me choral stuff under the name Fall Creek Boys Choir, and that “choir” thing stuck with me. And even on Unmap, there were moments that were a portent of how huge this could be musically. John came up with Volcano Choir, and it instantly resonated. Vernon: It also has a lot to do with marijuana!  INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

Justin Vernon and his able mates set sail, under a strong wind, on what could prove to be an epic musical odyssey…

Though he may indeed be “winding it down” (as he put it a year ago) in terms of Bon Iver, Justin Vernon’s sonic and spiritual adventures are ongoing under another nameplate. The tellingly titled Repave, the second collaboration between Vernon and Collections Of Colonies Of Bees, doesn’t appear to be merely another diversion in Vernon’s ever-unfolding narrative, which, since the release of 2011’s Bon Iver, has encompassed key roles on album projects with Megafaun, Kathleen Edwards, Colin Stetson and Shouting Matches, as well as guest appearances with Kanye West and POS.

No, this record has all the earmarks of Vernon’s next big thing. Unlike Volcano Choir‘s test run, 2009’s Unmap, the new follow-up is a proper album – and a bona fide rock album at that. “I felt like I was in a rock band almost for the first time”, Vernon says in Dan Hunting’s mini-documentary on the making of the LP. COCOC, comprising Volcano Choir’s other members – drummer/percussionist Jon Mueller, guitarists Chris Rosenau and Dan Spack, keyboard player Tom Wincek and bassist Matthew Skemp – is, of course, hardly a standard rock band, with an extensive discog of envelope-pushing experimental music. This project is a different exercise for both parties – the result of a back-and-forth between instrumental pieces made by Rosenau, Wincek and other bandmembers, which Vernon then manipulated (as he’s shown, he’s a masterful manipulator), with Mueller’s percussion and Vernon’s vocals as the final ingredients.

The first sound we hear is an oversized liturgical organ, out of which float those familiar stacked falsetto harmonies, but here, on “Tideways”, the groove throbbing beneath the airborne voices is wilder and more aggressive than we’ve come to expect from Vernon, more four-square than previous COCOC efforts. On the following “Acetate”, he introduces his lower register amid tribal drums, Gregorian chanting and twinkling piano notes in
a syncopated yet regal arrangement, with a twist of Motown in the climax. He stays with his natural voice, an earthy baritone, in the intro to “Comrade”, then slides upward, as the track churns along in symphonic splendour. At mid-song, the arrangement enlarges into all-out majesty as Vernon conjoins his low end and falsetto into an eerie hybrid, which in turn gives way to the rumble of an Auto-Tune-created humanoid, as the surrounding sounds wither away.

Byegone”, the first single, is lush from the get-go, a lilting plucked acoustic setting the mood before it’s surrounded by the massed ensemble, the whole of it sounding like a pastoral Windham Hill piece enlarged to arena-rock scale. Vernon nestles into the plush aural tapestry with the most natural-sounding vocal he’s ever recorded; doubled in the classic Lennon style, it’s grand and intimate at once. On “Alaskans”, we enter calm waters after the preceding series of crashing waves, but there’s something unsettling here, too, as Vernon’s vocal morphs from a sort of Gordon Lightfoot-like burnished folksiness to an ominous, all but demonic growl. 
The groove comes to the fore on the playfully titled “Dancepack”, but it’s implied before Mueller begins to pound it out. Vernon’s vocal is playful, theatrical, Bruce-like, as he powers into the incantatory refrain, “Take note, there’s still a hole in your heart”, while an electric guitar flirts with dissonance, forming lemon-tangy chords.

Keel” begins in suspended animation, with Vernon’s falsetto gliding over an implied expanse of woodland, as muted instrumental sounds weave a beckoning still life below him. The sustained sonic foreplay is released with “Almanac”, a titanic, shape-shifting universe of thunder-crack percussion and soulful vocal signifying that opens into a celestial chorale of burbling, over-lapping voices. There’s a revelatory moment in mid-song, as Vernon sings “ALL NIGHT/It’s on, RIGHT/SO FRESH that it sizzles”, as if marveling at the open-ended beauty they’re creating as it’s happening, 
and imagining where these art/soul brothers can take it from here. There’s little doubt at this point that Vernon’s overarching ambition is matched by his limitless inventiveness, and now, that of his co-conspirators. On this monumental outing, as he’s noted, he’s fronting a real rock band. My guess: there’s no turning back now.

Bud Scoppa

Q+A

Justin Vernon, Chris Rosenau

Is your commitment to Volcano Choir as deep as Repave suggests?

Rosenau: Right now, we’re in the moment. We’re trying to figure out how to play this stuff live and make it gigantic. At some point, someone’s gonna get a bug up their ass and write another Volcano Choir song. There won’t be a timeline, but it’s too much fun not to play with these guys.

Vernon: I’m getting a Volcano Choir tattoo next week! No, it’s been central to me. It’s been a way to take all of the confusion of the other things I’ve been doing on my own. It’s been shaping more than anything I’ve done; emotionally and [in terms of] reflection and reacting. I don’t think I’ve ever sung like this before. It was challenging, but it revealed itself to me, and it was because of these guys. It’s here to stay.

Where did the band name come from?

Rosenau: Vernon had been sending me choral stuff under the name Fall Creek Boys Choir, and that “choir” thing stuck with me. And even on Unmap, there were moments that were a portent of how huge this could be musically. John came up with Volcano Choir, and it instantly resonated.

Vernon: It also has a lot to do with marijuana! 

INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

Listen to Arcade Fire’s Reflektor album

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Arcade Fire are streaming their new album, Reflektor. Click below to hear the record in its entirety. An official YouTube stream became available today, set to footage from the 1959 film Black Orpheus. "It's one of my favorite films of all time," Win Butler recently told Rolling Stone. The album ...

Arcade Fire are streaming their new album, Reflektor.

Click below to hear the record in its entirety.

An official YouTube stream became available today, set to footage from the 1959 film Black Orpheus. “It’s one of my favorite films of all time,” Win Butler recently told Rolling Stone.

The album is released this coming Monday [October 28].

The tracklist for Reflektor is:

“Reflektor”

“We Exist”

“Flashbulb Eyes”

“Here Comes the Night Time”

“Normal Person”

“You Already Know”

“Joan of Arc”

“Here Comes the Night Time II”

“Awful Sound (Oh Eurydice)”

“It’s Never Over (Oh Orpheus)”

“Porno”

“Afterlife”

“Supersymmetry”

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

We want your questions for Kevin Shields

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Kevin Shields is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With… feature. So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the legendary leader of My Bloody Valentine? How many pedals does he own? Would he ever consider making an acoustic record? Just when can we ...

Kevin Shields is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the legendary leader of My Bloody Valentine?

How many pedals does he own?

Would he ever consider making an acoustic record?

Just when can we expect another new album?

Send up your questions by 5pm GMT, Monday, October 28 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com.

The best questions, and Kevin’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

Bob Dylan, Pink Floyd, Rolling Stones rarities for Record Store Day’s Black Friday

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Bob Dylan, Pink Floyd and the Rolling Stones are among the acts releasing exclusive titles for this year's Black Friday event held by the organisers of Record Store Day. Black Friday takes place on November 29, 2013. There will be around 100 releases, ranging from classic albums reissued on vinyl, ...

Bob Dylan, Pink Floyd and the Rolling Stones are among the acts releasing exclusive titles for this year’s Black Friday event held by the organisers of Record Store Day.

Black Friday takes place on November 29, 2013. There will be around 100 releases, ranging from classic albums reissued on vinyl, rarities and exclusives.

The full list of titles released can be found here.

Here are some of the highlights:

Bob Dylan, Side Tracks

A limited-edition triple-LP set contains tracks that will appear for the first time on the two-CD set Bob Dylan Complete Album Collection Vol. One. The album compiles non-album singles, soundtrack songs and other recordings that never made it onto a studio album.

Zabriskie Point Soundtrack

Long out of print, this soundtrack to Michelangelo Antonioni’s 1970 film features music by Pink Floyd, the Grateful Dead. Reissued here as a two-album set, it also includes four tracks by Pink Floyd and Jerry Garcia that did not make it on the original edition.

Rolling Stones, Got Live If You Want It

The third and final Rolling Stones 7″ EP release from ABKCO exclusively for indie record stores. The Rolling Stones EP was released for Black Friday 2012, Five By Five was released for Record Store Day 2013.) This is the first release in the original 7″ format since June 1965 and it includes tracks not found on the US album of the same name. Recorded on the Rolling Stones’ 5th British Tour at dates in London, Liverpool and Manchester in early March 1965.

The Doors, Curated by Record Store Day

This album was compiled from tracks suggested by record store owners and the individual tracks were selected by Bruce Botnick and includes rare mono mixes and live tracks. This Doors’ album is completely unique and was made especially by the band for record stores only. Two variations of the artwork each feature a hand written track list by one of the surviving band members, John Densmore or Robby Krieger.

Nirvana, In Utero 2013 mix

With the approval of Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic, original album producer Steve Albini remixed and remastered the album at Abbey Road Studios this year, and that mix is being issued on clear vinyl, at 45 RPM, cut to copper plates for this special indie record store exclusive, for Record Store Day’s Black Friday event.

Unfortunately, Black Friday is restricted to American and Canadian record shops only.

Van Morrison – Moondance Deluxe Edition

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How much of a good thing is too much..? “It’s too late to stop now,” sang Van Morrison on Moondance in 1970, and he was right: here we are again in its aura, drawn back like wanderers to the light of an inn. Recorded when he and his wife Janet (pregnant with their daughter, Shana) lived in the mountains near Woodstock, Moondance was the third LP in a solo career that stretches to this day. Morrison had already made his first masterpiece, Astral Weeks, and was assiduously cultivating his five-decade grudge against those he deemed the enemies of his music. It was far too late to stop. Astral Weeks and Moondance are profoundly different works, apparently unconnected by theme or progression. If you didn’t know, you might suppose Moondance was created first, since Astral Weeks is the more Joycean, the one with bigger ideas, while the 10 songs on Moondance have conventional structures and fall into recognisable genres (soul, country, jazz). But as this 60-track, 4CD/1 Blu-Ray boxset reveals, Morrison was aiming for something quite ambitious on Moondance: a combination of understated music and consummate ‘feel’, which would be locked down and given modest embellishment (flute, harpsichord), leaving the framework just flexible enough to allow the musicians to produce little moments of magic. Moondance transports and elevates. Atmospherically fluid (it starts with pouring rain but the sun soon shines), it turns a boyhood swim into a transcendental episode (“And It Stoned Me”), finds impossible romance in the life of a gypsy (“Caravan”) and uses its own vocabulary (“fantabulous”, “magnificently”) to raise a homespun insight or a pleasant evening to the stature of an epiphany. Even the unwelcome businessmen shaking hands and talking in numbers (“Glad Tidings”) can’t spoil the wild beauty of Morrison’s landscapes. Moondance has always been huge in his body of work. Years of demand for remasters of Moondance and Astral Weeks were answered in 2008 with Japanese CDs that can still be found on Amazon. The lure of this Deluxe Edition is not so much sound quality (you may feel the remastering is too intense and bass-y) but access to the Moondance vaults. So, for example, the second disc (‘The Sessions’) has eight takes of “Caravan” – three of which break down almost immediately – and the third disc (‘More Sessions’) has eight takes of “Into The Mystic” and seven of “Brand New Day”. Far from being fragments or sketches, most of these are complete performances with vocals. The problem is that Morrison worked painstakingly with acoustic guitar, bass and drums for six or seven takes at a time, making only minor adjustments as he went. Don’t expect stunning new arrangements every time. “Into The Mystic”, as it happens, is an elegant piece that can withstand being heard a number of times in a row. The heart leaps each time it begins, and some takes are so fine that it’s not easy to hear the faults that Morrison detected in them. Whatever he was after, it was obviously something subtle. Finally, piano, horns and electric guitar are added on Take 17, by which time the song is almost home. But seven takes in the company of “Brand New Day” are not nearly as thrilling. Its arrangement is dependent on a piano and gospel vocal trio and it sounds barren without them. By Take 4, a five-minute instrumental, facetiousness set in and I started lustily singing “A Whiter Shade Of Pale” over the chords. “Glad Tidings” is more interesting because they can’t decide on a tempo and the song vacillates between a lively, “Brown Eyed Girl”-style canter and a more ballad-like tempo that’s all wrong for the lyrics’ optimistic message. By Take 7 they’re getting into minute specifics (“Van – one hair slower”, suggests someone over the intercom) but are no closer to finding the solution. The fourth disc (‘Sessions, Alternates & Mixes’) puts “Come Running” and “Moondance” under the microscope (six and two takes, respectively), with a few takes where one of the musicians sings a prominent high harmony on “Come Running”. It could be seen as a foretaste of the interplay that Morrison would later adopt with Brian Kennedy, but the idea was scrapped for the LP version. Some songs from the Moondance sessions didn’t make it onto the album. “I’ve Been Working” was given a total rethink and held over for the follow-up, His Band And The Street Choir. On the takes here, it’s a funky vamp like The Bar-Kays with Morrison improvising lyrics about Jesse James and Lord Tennyson. But 11 mins (Take 1) and 10 mins (Take 5) are a long time to sit through a jam that’s clearly not suitable for Moondance. “Nobody Knows You When You’re Down And Out” doesn’t get far either. In the hesitant run-through we hear, only Van and the pianist sound confident of the song’s changes. The much-bootlegged “I Shall Sing”, meanwhile, is a catchy tune with a buoyant calypso flavour in the horn part. We quickly become very familiar with this horn part, because “I Shall Sing” extends to 13 maddening takes. The song falters; they start again. Van stops it; it resumes. There’s a mistake; the mistake is corrected. Precisely 15 minutes elapse before our stoicism cracks and we turn into John Cleese shouting at the bouzouki players in the Cheese Shop sketch. No wonder it was left off the album. Morrison must have been sick of hearing it. Perennially disgruntled that Warner Bros, and not he, owns the masters of Moondance, Morrison has condemned the Deluxe Edition as “unauthorised” and akin to the theft of his music. It might have been better to leave it alone. Yes, it’s fascinating at times to be a witness to the meticulous construction of great music, but the contents of this boxset feel a mite desperate, rather than generous, and the flabbiness of its 11-minute jams is entirely inappropriate for an album that famously doesn’t contain an ounce of fat. The 2CD Expanded Edition, featuring 11 tracks from the Deluxe, would be a less expensive option for the non-obsessive Moondance fan. David Cavanagh

How much of a good thing is too much..?

“It’s too late to stop now,” sang Van Morrison on Moondance in 1970, and he was right: here we are again in its aura, drawn back like wanderers to the light of an inn. Recorded when he and his wife Janet (pregnant with their daughter, Shana) lived in the mountains near Woodstock, Moondance was the third LP in a solo career that stretches to this day. Morrison had already made his first masterpiece, Astral Weeks, and was assiduously cultivating his five-decade grudge against those he deemed the enemies of his music. It was far too late to stop.

Astral Weeks and Moondance are profoundly different works, apparently unconnected by theme or progression. If you didn’t know, you might suppose Moondance was created first, since Astral Weeks is the more Joycean, the one with bigger ideas, while the 10 songs on Moondance have conventional structures and fall into recognisable genres (soul, country, jazz). But as this 60-track, 4CD/1 Blu-Ray boxset reveals, Morrison was aiming for something quite ambitious on Moondance: a combination of understated music and consummate ‘feel’, which would be locked down and given modest embellishment (flute, harpsichord), leaving the framework just flexible enough to allow the musicians to produce little moments of magic.

Moondance transports and elevates. Atmospherically fluid (it starts with pouring rain but the sun soon shines), it turns a boyhood swim into a transcendental episode (“And It Stoned Me”), finds impossible romance in the life of a gypsy (“Caravan”) and uses its own vocabulary (“fantabulous”, “magnificently”) to raise a homespun insight or a pleasant evening to the stature of an epiphany. Even the unwelcome businessmen shaking hands and talking in numbers (“Glad Tidings”) can’t spoil the wild beauty of Morrison’s landscapes. Moondance has always been huge in his body of work.

Years of demand for remasters of Moondance and Astral Weeks were answered in 2008 with Japanese CDs that can still be found on Amazon. The lure of this Deluxe Edition is not so much sound quality (you may feel the remastering is too intense and bass-y) but access to the Moondance vaults. So, for example, the second disc (‘The Sessions’) has eight takes of “Caravan” – three of which break down almost immediately – and the third disc (‘More Sessions’) has eight takes of “Into The Mystic” and seven of “Brand New Day”. Far from being fragments or sketches, most of these are complete performances with vocals. The problem is that Morrison worked painstakingly with acoustic guitar, bass and drums for six or seven takes at a time, making only minor adjustments as he went. Don’t expect stunning new arrangements every time.

Into The Mystic”, as it happens, is an elegant piece that can withstand being heard a number of times in a row. The heart leaps each time it begins, and some takes are so fine that it’s not easy to hear the faults that Morrison detected in them. Whatever he was after, it was obviously something subtle. Finally, piano, horns and electric guitar are added on Take 17, by which time the song is almost home. But seven takes in the company of “Brand New Day” are not nearly as thrilling. Its arrangement is dependent on a piano and gospel vocal trio and it sounds barren without them. By Take 4, a five-minute instrumental, facetiousness set in and I started lustily singing “A Whiter Shade Of Pale” over the chords. “Glad Tidings” is more interesting because they can’t decide on a tempo and the song vacillates between a lively, “Brown Eyed Girl”-style canter and a more ballad-like tempo that’s all wrong for the lyrics’ optimistic message. By Take 7 they’re getting into minute specifics (“Van – one hair slower”, suggests someone over the intercom) but are no closer to finding the solution. The fourth disc (‘Sessions, Alternates & Mixes’) puts “Come Running” and “Moondance” under the microscope (six and two takes, respectively), with a few takes where one of the musicians sings a prominent high harmony on “Come Running”. It could be seen as a foretaste of the interplay that Morrison would later adopt with Brian Kennedy, but the idea was scrapped for the LP version.

Some songs from the Moondance sessions didn’t make it onto the album. “I’ve Been Working” was given a total rethink and held over for the follow-up, His Band And The Street Choir. On the takes here, it’s a funky vamp like The Bar-Kays with Morrison improvising lyrics about Jesse James and Lord Tennyson. But 11 mins (Take 1) and 10 mins (Take 5) are a long time to sit through a jam that’s clearly not suitable for Moondance. “Nobody Knows You When You’re Down And Out” doesn’t get far either. In the hesitant run-through we hear, only Van and the pianist sound confident of the song’s changes. The much-bootlegged “I Shall Sing”, meanwhile, is a catchy tune with a buoyant calypso flavour in the horn part. We quickly become very familiar with this horn part, because “I Shall Sing” extends to 13 maddening takes. The song falters; they start again. Van stops it; it resumes. There’s a mistake; the mistake is corrected. Precisely 15 minutes elapse before our stoicism cracks and we turn into John Cleese shouting at the bouzouki players in the Cheese Shop sketch. No wonder it was left off the album. Morrison must have been sick of hearing it.

Perennially disgruntled that Warner Bros, and not he, owns the masters of Moondance, Morrison has condemned the Deluxe Edition as “unauthorised” and akin to the theft of his music. It might have been better to leave it alone. Yes, it’s fascinating at times to be a witness to the meticulous construction of great music, but the contents of this boxset feel a mite desperate, rather than generous, and the flabbiness of its 11-minute jams is entirely inappropriate for an album that famously doesn’t contain an ounce of fat. The 2CD Expanded Edition, featuring 11 tracks from the Deluxe, would be a less expensive option for the non-obsessive Moondance fan.

David Cavanagh

The 39th Uncut Playlist Of 2013

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After raving about the new Alasdair Roberts and White Fence albums on the past few lists, I’m pleased to have some tracks from them this week, along with really excellent new arrivals from Kevin Morby and Ryley Walker. Morby plays in Woods, and you can hear Cate Le Bon with him on the track below (White Fence’s Tim Presley also figures on the album). Walker, meanwhile, is an associate of Daniel Bachman who’s had a few strong Tim Buckley comparisons thrown at him in the last day or so. Not inaccurately, it turns out; if I’d been told “The West Wind” was one of those great lost records from 1971, I’d have totally fallen for it. Couple more things to flag up, that I don’t have links to share as yet: the Steve Gunn & Mike Gangloff jam recalls the most elevated and accessible bits of Pelt and is tremendous, and Duane Pitre’s pristine live rendering of one of my favourite 2012 albums is almost the equal of the original. Incoming in the next few days, too, should be the follow-up to one of my most played albums of the last decade: the new album by Suarasama, a devotional folk group from Sumatra who I can never recommend enough. Right at the bottom of the list, I’ve included the title track of their last album, and would really encourage you to give it a go before playing anything else here. Yesterday I posted my top 50 albums of all time. If I were compiling a chart of my favourite songs, “Fajar Di Atas Awan” would be very close to the top. Let me know what you think… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Lobi Traore – Bamako Nights: Live At Bar Bozo 1995 (Glitterbeat) 2 Steve Gunn & Mike Gangloff - Melodies For A Savage Fix (Important) 3 Duane Pitre – Feel Free: Live At Cafe OTO (Important) 4 Kevin Morby – Harlem River (Woodsist) 5 Trampolene –Under The Strobe Light (Mi7) 6 Royal Trux – Veterans Of Disorder (Domino) 7 Alasdair Roberts & Robin Robertson – Hrta Songs (Stone Tape) 8 North Mississippi All Stars – World Boogie Is Coming (Songs Of The South) 9 Jon Hopkins – How I Live Now: Motion Picture Soundtrack (Just Music) 10 The Necks – Open (Northern Spy) 11 Peter Walker – Has Anybody Seen Our Freedoms? (Delmore) 12 Cian Nugent – September 7, 2013 Hopscotch Music Festival (www.nyctaper.com) 13 Damien Jurado – Brothers And Sisters Of The Eternal Son (Secretly Canadian) 14 Shellac – Dude, Incredible (Live 2009) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IopeQ-4PpGo 15 Boards Of Canada – Tomorrow’s Harvest (Warp) 16 Dawn Of Midi – Dysnomia (Thirsty Ear) 17 Ryley Walker – The West Wind (Tompkins Square) 18 White Fence – Live In San Francisco (Castleface) 19 Trouble Books – Love At Dusk (MIE Music) 20 Al Green – I’m Still In Love With You (Hi/Fat Possum) 21 Al Green – Let’s Stay Together (Hi/Fat Possum) 22 Suarasama - Fajar Di Atas Awan (Drag City)

After raving about the new Alasdair Roberts and White Fence albums on the past few lists, I’m pleased to have some tracks from them this week, along with really excellent new arrivals from Kevin Morby and Ryley Walker.

Morby plays in Woods, and you can hear Cate Le Bon with him on the track below (White Fence’s Tim Presley also figures on the album). Walker, meanwhile, is an associate of Daniel Bachman who’s had a few strong Tim Buckley comparisons thrown at him in the last day or so. Not inaccurately, it turns out; if I’d been told “The West Wind” was one of those great lost records from 1971, I’d have totally fallen for it.

Couple more things to flag up, that I don’t have links to share as yet: the Steve Gunn & Mike Gangloff jam recalls the most elevated and accessible bits of Pelt and is tremendous, and Duane Pitre’s pristine live rendering of one of my favourite 2012 albums is almost the equal of the original. Incoming in the next few days, too, should be the follow-up to one of my most played albums of the last decade: the new album by Suarasama, a devotional folk group from Sumatra who I can never recommend enough.

Right at the bottom of the list, I’ve included the title track of their last album, and would really encourage you to give it a go before playing anything else here. Yesterday I posted my top 50 albums of all time. If I were compiling a chart of my favourite songs, “Fajar Di Atas Awan” would be very close to the top. Let me know what you think…

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

1 Lobi Traore – Bamako Nights: Live At Bar Bozo 1995 (Glitterbeat)

2 Steve Gunn & Mike Gangloff – Melodies For A Savage Fix (Important)

3 Duane Pitre – Feel Free: Live At Cafe OTO (Important)

4 Kevin Morby – Harlem River (Woodsist)

5 Trampolene –Under The Strobe Light (Mi7)

6 Royal Trux – Veterans Of Disorder (Domino)

7 Alasdair Roberts & Robin Robertson – Hrta Songs (Stone Tape)

8 North Mississippi All Stars – World Boogie Is Coming (Songs Of The South)

9 Jon Hopkins – How I Live Now: Motion Picture Soundtrack (Just Music)

10 The Necks – Open (Northern Spy)

11 Peter Walker – Has Anybody Seen Our Freedoms? (Delmore)

12 Cian Nugent – September 7, 2013 Hopscotch Music Festival (www.nyctaper.com)

13 Damien Jurado – Brothers And Sisters Of The Eternal Son (Secretly Canadian)

14 Shellac – Dude, Incredible (Live 2009)

15 Boards Of Canada – Tomorrow’s Harvest (Warp)

16 Dawn Of Midi – Dysnomia (Thirsty Ear)

17 Ryley Walker – The West Wind (Tompkins Square)

18 White Fence – Live In San Francisco (Castleface)

19 Trouble Books – Love At Dusk (MIE Music)

20 Al Green – I’m Still In Love With You (Hi/Fat Possum)

21 Al Green – Let’s Stay Together (Hi/Fat Possum)

22 Suarasama – Fajar Di Atas Awan (Drag City)

Watch new Arctic Monkeys video: “One For The Road”

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Arctic Monkeys ride tractors in the black and white video for new single 'One For The Road' The song, which features on the band's latest album 'AM', is accompanied by a new video shot by Focus Creeps, who also made the videos for 'R U Mine?' and 'Why'd You Only Call Me When You're High?' The vide...

Arctic Monkeys ride tractors in the black and white video for new single ‘One For The Road’

The song, which features on the band’s latest album ‘AM’, is accompanied by a new video shot by Focus Creeps, who also made the videos for ‘R U Mine?’ and ‘Why’d You Only Call Me When You’re High?’

The video starts with guitarist Jamie Cook riding a tractor slowly through an empty field before joining his bandmates for a performance of the song, surrounded by models and fireworks exploding in the background.

One For The Road” will be released on December 9 and comes with new B-Side ‘You’re So Dark’.

Roger Taylor confirms Brian May is finishing ‘great’ Michael Jackson/Freddie Mercury duets

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Queen drummer Roger Taylor has confirmed Brian May is finishing work on a number of tracks Freddie Mercury and Michael Jackson duetted on. Earlier this year it was reported that around three tracks Mercury and Jackson recorded in 1983 will be made available to fans. Speaking in July, Brian May said there will be, "something for folks to hear" in two months time. However, though the songs have not yet emerged, Taylor has said in a new interview that the songs are being worked on at the moment, primarily by Brian May. "Brian especially has been active working on old tracks. A couple of tracks that Freddie did with Michael Jackson," he said. Adding: "They've been hanging around for years and years and Michael's estate haven't really been able to make their mind up about what to do with them. So we suggested we finish them and see. They're pretty good - one of them is great." Mercury and Jackson worked together 30 years ago in California but failed to release anything substantial as they could not secure time to record further tracks. Roger Taylor recently let slip the band want actor Ben Whishaw to take on the role vacated by Sacha Baron Cohen in the forthcoming Freddie Mercury biopic. Sacha Baron Cohen had been set to star as Mercury since the film was announced in September 2010 but this summer he pulled out of the project, reportedly because he and Queen, who have script and director approval, were unable to agree on the type of movie they wanted to make.

Queen drummer Roger Taylor has confirmed Brian May is finishing work on a number of tracks Freddie Mercury and Michael Jackson duetted on.

Earlier this year it was reported that around three tracks Mercury and Jackson recorded in 1983 will be made available to fans. Speaking in July, Brian May said there will be, “something for folks to hear” in two months time.

However, though the songs have not yet emerged, Taylor has said in a new interview that the songs are being worked on at the moment, primarily by Brian May. “Brian especially has been active working on old tracks. A couple of tracks that Freddie did with Michael Jackson,” he said. Adding: “They’ve been hanging around for years and years and Michael’s estate haven’t really been able to make their mind up about what to do with them. So we suggested we finish them and see. They’re pretty good – one of them is great.”

Mercury and Jackson worked together 30 years ago in California but failed to release anything substantial as they could not secure time to record further tracks.

Roger Taylor recently let slip the band want actor Ben Whishaw to take on the role vacated by Sacha Baron Cohen in the forthcoming Freddie Mercury biopic. Sacha Baron Cohen had been set to star as Mercury since the film was announced in September 2010 but this summer he pulled out of the project, reportedly because he and Queen, who have script and director approval, were unable to agree on the type of movie they wanted to make.