Home Blog Page 515

Van Morrison on Moondance reissue: “I did not endorse this”

0
Van Morrison has spoken out about the forthcoming reissue of his album, Moondance. The album is due for a deluxe reissue on September 30 through Warner Bros. However, in a statement posted on his website, Van Morrison has this to say about the reissue. "Yesterday Warner Brothers stated that 'Van ...

Van Morrison has spoken out about the forthcoming reissue of his album, Moondance.

The album is due for a deluxe reissue on September 30 through Warner Bros.

However, in a statement posted on his website, Van Morrison has this to say about the reissue.

“Yesterday Warner Brothers stated that ‘Van Morrison was reissuing Moondance‘. It is important that people realise that this is factually incorrect. I did not endorse this, it is unauthorised and it has happened behind my back.

“My management company at that time gave this music away 42 years ago and now I feel as though it’s being stolen from me again

“18th July 2013”

Sinatra, Brando, Elvis, James Dean, Buddy Holly, Orson Welles , Miles Davis Alfred Hitchcock and the 1950s in music and movies

0

One of the projects we have just finished working on for the next issue of Uncut, on sale next week, was a special promotional feature we have produced in association with hmv, which is newly returned to robust high street health after recent rough times. In other words, hmv’s music and film catalogues music are back to full strength, its stock of classic albums and movies rebuilt. What better moment, then, for hmv in collaboration with Uncut to celebrate ‘six decades of unforgettable entertainment’, with great prices on many albums and films that have defined the times and continue to inspire and excite. In our next issue, we look at 60 of the albums and films that have shaped popular culture and with it our lives, since the 1950s, that decade of dramatic change and upheaval that saw the birth of rock’n’roll, a cool new modernism introduced to jazz and the first fault lines appear in the Hollywood studio system. To preface the appearance of the feature in our next issue, and coincide with the launch this week of hmv’s special offers on thousands of albums and films, I’ve made up my own 50s’ playlist, as follows, just to get, you know, in the mood. Music Frank Sinatra In The Wee Small Hours (1955) Elvis Presley Elvis Presley (1956) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uke1B0FpIZ8 Little Richard Here’s Little Richard (1957) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X7pjP_XkK4U Buddy Holly Buddy Holly (1958) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j0VPxYAM698 Billie Holiday Lady In Satin (1958) Bo Diddley Bo Diddley (1958) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yeZHB3ozglQ Jerry Lee Lewis Jerry Lee Lewis 1958 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8yRdDnrB5kM Miles Davis Kinda Blue (1959) Howlin’ Wolf Moanin’ In the Moonlight (1959) Chuck Berry Chuck Berry Is On Top (1959) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WLMK9-Ns-TY Films Sunset Boulevard Billy Wilder 1950 On The Waterfront Elia Kazan 1954 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3QsNXd57Ppw Night Of The Hunter Charles Laughton 1955 Rebel Without A Cause Nicholas Ray 1955 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rpm4NGSWH2I The Searchers John Ford 1956 Invasion of the Body Snatchers Don Siegel 1956 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WuL2QwsNeM8 12 Angry Men Sidney Lumet 1957 Touch Of Evil Orson Welles 1958 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yg8MqjoFvy4 Vertigo Alfred Hitchcock 1958 Have a good week.

One of the projects we have just finished working on for the next issue of Uncut, on sale next week, was a special promotional feature we have produced in association with hmv, which is newly returned to robust high street health after recent rough times.

In other words, hmv’s music and film catalogues music are back to full strength, its stock of classic albums and movies rebuilt. What better moment, then, for hmv in collaboration with Uncut to celebrate ‘six decades of unforgettable entertainment’, with great prices on many albums and films that have defined the times and continue to inspire and excite.

In our next issue, we look at 60 of the albums and films that have shaped popular culture and with it our lives, since the 1950s, that decade of dramatic change and upheaval that saw the birth of rock’n’roll, a cool new modernism introduced to jazz and the first fault lines appear in the Hollywood studio system.

To preface the appearance of the feature in our next issue, and coincide with the launch this week of hmv’s special offers on thousands of albums and films, I’ve made up my own 50s’ playlist, as follows, just to get, you know, in the mood.

Music

Frank Sinatra

In The Wee Small Hours

(1955)

Elvis Presley

Elvis Presley

(1956)

Little Richard

Here’s Little Richard

(1957)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X7pjP_XkK4U

Buddy Holly

Buddy Holly

(1958)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j0VPxYAM698

Billie Holiday

Lady In Satin

(1958)

Bo Diddley

Bo Diddley

(1958)

Jerry Lee Lewis

Jerry Lee Lewis

1958

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8yRdDnrB5kM

Miles Davis

Kinda Blue

(1959)

Howlin’ Wolf

Moanin’ In the Moonlight

(1959)

Chuck Berry

Chuck Berry Is On Top (1959)

Films

Sunset Boulevard

Billy Wilder

1950

On The Waterfront

Elia Kazan

1954

Night Of The Hunter

Charles Laughton

1955

Rebel Without A Cause

Nicholas Ray

1955

The Searchers

John Ford

1956

Invasion of the Body Snatchers

Don Siegel

1956

12 Angry Men

Sidney Lumet

1957

Touch Of Evil

Orson Welles

1958

Vertigo

Alfred Hitchcock

1958

Have a good week.

“What did I say that for?”: 25 minutes with Mick Jagger

Yesterday's news that the Stones have released an album of material drawn from their recent Hyde Park shows reminded me to dust down this interview I did last year with Mick Jagger, which ran in our December 2012 issue. I had 25 minutes with Mick - about as long an interview as he'll do these days -...

Yesterday’s news that the Stones have released an album of material drawn from their recent Hyde Park shows reminded me to dust down this interview I did last year with Mick Jagger, which ran in our December 2012 issue. I had 25 minutes with Mick – about as long an interview as he’ll do these days – ostensibly to chat about Crossfire Hurricane and GRRR!, which were both about to be released. Along the way, we chatted about fighting in train carriages, writing with Keith and whether or not Mick is comfortable watching himself on television…

What did you want to achieve with Crossfire Hurricane?

It’s a big leap of faith choosing the director, ’cos I’m not going to sit there in LA telling him what to do. It’s not my job and I’m too close to the material. If you’re making a film that’s got lots of you in it, you’ve got to let someone contribute their ideas. You’re gonna chip in comments, but not sit there overseeing the minutiae. Obviously, you say, “Oh, I love that bit…†But they always end up being too long at the start and unmanageable, mostly.

The film covers 1962-1981. Why just focus on those years?

We didn’t have enough time. We’d have needed another six months to go up to the present. I was disappointed we weren’t going to do the whole story, but Brett [Morgen, director] was more interested in the early history. If we want to do a second part, then we can.

Keep something in your back pocket for later?

Exactly.

What stories from the ’62-’81 period appealed most to you?

One is how the band made a breakthrough in the early days. How they saw themselves, how people thought they should be positioned, how much was a set-up, how much of that was pure chance. The ups and downs, the successes and failures, the buffets of outside and inside influence. How you made it through to the other side. It’s not an upward graph! It’s got downward bits.

Has watching the film made you nostalgic for a particular period in 
The Rolling Stones’ history?

You have a laugh at some of the footage, but you get over it when you’ve seen it quite a few times. You’ve got to take a step back, which is easy to say but not always easy to do, and start referring to yourself in the third person. “Take that bit of Mick out, put that bit in here, then leave that until later.â€

Do you have a favourite “Mick†in the film?

There are some pretty funny Micks in there. The very young one is so odd. One minute, he’s completely there, the next he says something so stupid… I suppose you’re watching yourself getting used to dealing with the media. Mostly, when you see yourself in these clips, you’re either being interviewed or on stage. On stage, you can kind of control things, but it was quite hard dealing with those media people. It’s easy to laugh now and say, “What did I say that for?†But people used to say the stupidest things then, compared to now. It was idiotic…

It was all new territory to bands, back then. Now everyone’s media trained 
to within an inch of their life…

Yes, exactly. So it’s very naïve, the press people trying to be clever, but they’re pretty idiotic, and we respond in quite idiotic ways, and rise to the bait and come off with a few good replies. It’s mostly quite combative. It makes you remember how antagonistic some people were.

In the film you say, “If you’ve got heroes, you’ve got an anti-hero, so it’s good to have an actor who can play the part.†At what part do you think it stopped being an act and became real?

Or it was real, and then it became an act. There was so much media scrutiny. You’re finding your feet, being questioned in very odd ways and you have to try to protect yourself, to keep yourself a bit shrouded. People were very, very hard hitting. It wasn’t a tough life, but you had to be on your guard.

Are you comfortable watching yourself?

I don’t enjoy it that much, to be honest [laughs]. I wouldn’t play it over and over. I wouldn’t say I’m jumping up and down every time I see myself going, “Yeah, you’re great! You look fantastic! Why did you wear that jacket? The check tweed?â€

Tweed is in this season, Mick.

I got a new check tweed jacket the other week… It’s always a bit cringey, but there are some very funny moments.

Is there anything particularly that stands out to you?

We’re fighting this guy on a train. Not physically, but batting this guy. Then Brian says something about Georgia. It’s a kind of a Punch & Judy thing… everyone’s having a go at him. All in this very tight compartment. Hilarious. It’s hard to believe you’d put yourself in that position, of having this guy in your face like that. Why? Who convinced you it was a good idea? It’s very funny.

Were there any topics you found it difficult to address in the film?

We did a lot of interviews with Brett, and like all film directors, he brought up things he thought would get a reaction. But you weren’t on live TV, you had time to bat them off or delay your answer. But he didn’t hold back, just because it’s our film. There were a lot of moments. In the end, I answered them all, either truthfully or untruthfully. As you would.

Moving on to GRRR!, when you put together a compilation album is it always obvious to you which tracks will be on there? Or do you look on some songs afresh and think – yes, that one should definitely be included this time?

It’s not always completely obvious. This is available in three versions. The two-CD, 24-track version. Then there’s a long version and a very long version. The 24-song one is a bit obvious, the slightly expanded one gets a few less obvious things in, and then the 50-track version gets a few oddball things in it. That’s quite a nice package. And then there’s the two tracks we recorded last month.

Yes, “Doom And Gloom†and “One Last Shotâ€. What can we expect from those?

They’re both quite up-tempo rockers. “Doom And Gloom†is a bit faster. We recorded them in Paris in a few days then mixed them in LA. I hope you like them. They’re quite spirited, which is what you want, quite full of energy. Can I sing them to you? [laughs – starts going up and down a scale – there is some kind of singing – more laughter].

How do the Stones write these days?

These two were done separately. We came together to do this very quickly. Keith said, “I’ve got this one song I think you’re gonna like.†I said, “Well, how fast is it?†It’s sort of medium fast. So I thought I’ll pick one more up-tempo. I didn’t think a ballad would be suitable. It needed to be two energetic songs. It was a good process, in the studio, it was easy and fun. No hanging about, which is good.

How has songwriting changed for you over 
the years?

You can write songs in a lot of different ways. You can write songs sitting waiting for a train on the back of an envelope, then you can put it to music on your own. Or you can sit down with Keith and have nothing, and I’ll just fill in the verses or I can play a song to Keith on a guitar or a piano or just sing it and ask if he’s got suggestions. As many permutations as you can think of, really.

Do you have a preferred way of working?

I like doing it all different ways. If I get an idea for a song after I get off the phone with you, I’m not going to wait to have someone to work with, I’m going to sit down and finish it. But then I might sit down with Keith for a session where you start from scratch, trying to write a song from nothing. As a writer, you keep writing all the time. I don’t live anywhere near Keith, so I don’t have time to sit down and write with him unless we make writing dates. When we were on the road all the time, we had a lot of time to do that. But we’re not like that any more, so we don’t do it.

Talking of dates. Any plans to tour, or at least play some shows?

I think we’re going to do some dates this year, and very soon we’ll be trying to 
firm them up. Ask Ronnie, he’ll tell you [laughs].

Any idea when and where they’re likely to be?

Well, it’s going to be this year! We’re in October, so it has to be quite soon.

Keith recently published his autobiography, as you’ve been asked to do on several occasions. Do you think the time will come when you’ll want to write your own account?

No, I don’t think so… I’d have to do it again! I was offered a huge sum of money… I don’t think so at the moment. Is that alright?

You can read our round up of the Stones’ recent 50 & Counting tour here, which includes reviews of both the July 6 and 13 Hyde Park shows.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

Sacha Baron Cohen quits Freddie Mercury biopic over creative differences with Queen

0
Sacha Baron Cohen has reportedly quit the forthcoming biopic of Freddie Mercury over creative differences with Queen. The actor has been attached to star as Mercury since September 2010, but Deadline reports that he's now pulled out of the project because he and Queen, who have script and director ...

Sacha Baron Cohen has reportedly quit the forthcoming biopic of Freddie Mercury over creative differences with Queen.

The actor has been attached to star as Mercury since September 2010, but Deadline reports that he’s now pulled out of the project because he and Queen, who have script and director approval, can’t agree on the type of movie they want to make.

The band apparently want the biopic to be a PG affair, while the actor is keen to delve into the grittier aspects of Mercury’s lifestyle.

In March 2013, it was reported that The King’s Speech director Tom Hooper, who recently worked with Baron Cohen on Les Misérables, was eyeing the project. However, Deadline says that Queen failed to approve him and also turned down Peter Morgan, the Oscar-nominated screenwriter behind The Queen and Frost/Nixon. Morgan’s script, it was reported in March, would begin with the formation of Queen in the early ’70s and end with their Live Aid set in 1985.

Watch Elvis Costello and the Roots video for “Walk Us Uptown”

0
Elvis Costello and the Roots have released a new lyric video for "Walk Us Uptown," the first single from their forthcoming album, Wise Up Ghost. Wise Up Ghost, which will be released on September 16 on Blue Note Records, will be Costello's first since 2010's National Ransom. Speaking to Rolling St...

Elvis Costello and the Roots have released a new lyric video for “Walk Us Uptown,” the first single from their forthcoming album, Wise Up Ghost.

Wise Up Ghost, which will be released on September 16 on Blue Note Records, will be Costello’s first since 2010’s National Ransom.

Speaking to Rolling Stone about the album in June, Costello said, “We had no deadline, no labels involved. We were just doing it on our own.”

Atoms For Peace exhibition to take place during London residency

0
Atoms For Peace are set to stage a pop-up exhibition while their three London shows take place this week. The Atoms For Peace Drawing Room has been created by the band's collaborator, artist Stanley Donwood, and will take place Upstairs at The Enterprise, opposite The Roundhouse in Camden, where At...

Atoms For Peace are set to stage a pop-up exhibition while their three London shows take place this week.

The Atoms For Peace Drawing Room has been created by the band’s collaborator, artist Stanley Donwood, and will take place Upstairs at The Enterprise, opposite The Roundhouse in Camden, where Atoms For Peace play their first UK shows on July 24-26. The exhibition will be open from midday-8pm [BST] from July 24-27.

The exhibit will see the room turned into a gallery and a shop as well as a ‘hanging-out space’, featuring vinyl and ‘live-printed’ posters for sale, which will be made on a specially-installed silkscreen printing press. A handwritten note regarding the exhibition from Donwood states: “…At the moment I’m in a room full of Atoms For Peace artwork, merchandise, records and all I feel is trepidation and perhaps mild peril. But I’m sure it’ll be fine.”

Atoms For Peace will broadcast two of their upcoming gigs at London’s Roundhouse via the new mobile app Soundhalo. The Soundhalo app, which was premiered by Alt-J in May of this year and is aimed at discouraging gig-goers from recording concerts on their phones, allows users to download high quality MP4 videos and audio tracks to their phones as the show they are attending is taking place. Fans are then able to download each track to a desktop or portable device, for 99p per track or £9.99 for the whole performance.

The Rolling Stones release ‘Hyde Park Live’ album on iTunes

0
The Rolling Stones today announce the exclusive iTunes release of The Rolling Stones – Hyde Park Live album, taken from their two concerts in London’s Hyde Park on July 6 and 13. The album is now available to download from today exclusively from the band's iTunes store. You can read our round ...

The Rolling Stones today announce the exclusive iTunes release of The Rolling Stones – Hyde Park Live album, taken from their two concerts in London’s Hyde Park on July 6 and 13.

The album is now available to download from today exclusively from the band’s iTunes store.

You can read our round up of the Stones’ recent 50 & Counting tour here, which includes reviews of both the July 6 and 13 Hyde Park shows.

The tracklisting for Hyde Park Live is:

Start Me Up

It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll

Tumbling Dice

Emotional Rescue

Street Fighting Man

Ruby Tuesday

Doom And Gloom

Paint It Black

Honky Tonk Women

You Got The Silver

Before They Make Me Run

Miss You

Midnight Rambler

Gimme Shelter

Jumpin’ Jack Flash

Sympathy For The Devil

Brown Sugar

You Can’t Always Get What You Want

(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction

The Shouting Matches – Grownass Man

0

Justin Vernon's trio of old compadres play Southern blues-rock under jazz conditions... Justin Vernon has not said much publicly about The Shouting Matches, his collaboration with Megafaun’s Phil Cook and Brian Moen of Peter Wolf Crier/Laarks. But the little he has said, via Twitter, is eloquent enough. As the album was released, he Tweeted a note of thanks from “Brian and Phil and I’s band†adding the hashtags #trio, #notasideproject, #beenaroundlongerthanbon. Later, as early reviews appeared, he added, sarcastically, “I love being in a band with three people in it, but really I’m the only one.†So, to be clear. Grownass Man is not a Bon Iver record (the title is a clue). It is not Justin Vernon’s Tin Machine. It is a collaboration in a career full of collaborations (see Volcano Choir, Gayngs, Anais Mitchell). And, it’s a reunion of sorts. The Shouting Matches do predate Bon Iver. They flickered for an evening in 2006. Moen was the second person to hear Bon Iver’s debut album For Emma, Forever Ago when he visited Vernon’s Wisconsin cabin for a Shouting Matches rehearsal. Cook also laboured in Vernon’s pre-Bon Iver outfit, DeYarmond Edison. But it is hard to resist the suggestion that Vernon’s decision to reunite with his old compadres is a reaction to the success of Bon Iver, and the expectations aroused by it. Bon Iver's second, self-titled album was every bit as personal as that cabin-recorded debut, though Vernon employed a private language to mask his intentions (or, more charitably, to make then universal). It won him two Grammies, and made him a mainstream star, an unlikely outcome for a musician whose approach is almost anthropological, even when he’s goofing around. (And, contrary to the public perception, he likes to goof). But this is a trio, a band with three people in it. And if Grownass Man doesn’t sound like Bon Iver, it doesn’t sound like Megafaun either. Or Peter Wolf Crier. On first impressions, which are misleading, it sounds like a bar band in Clarksdale, Mississippi playing for beer. Generically, it is blues-rock, though over the full span of the album, that definition is stretched to include bursts of Afro-pop (‘’I’ll Be Trueâ€) and fairground Northern Soul (“New Themeâ€). Vernon chooses not to employ his falsetto, falling back into a soulful growl or, when he does go high (on “Three Dollar Billâ€) delivering the vocal through a hail of distortion. “Heaven Knows†is ZZ Top at 16 rpm. The closing ballad, “I Need A Change†could, just about, fit on a Bon Iver record, though the lyrics are more generic, and there’s a playful Prince impersonation halfway through. Generally, the playing is under-rehearsed and agreeably rough. It’s a jam. Moen’ s drums don’t drive the beat so much as shuffle sideways, and Cook’s organ adds a playful note, pitched somewhere between the church and the carnival. The biggest surprise, at least for listeners who only know Vernon through his work with Bon Iver, is the guitar. True, there’s a hint of Fleetwood Mac’s Albatross circling around the standout track, “Gallup NMâ€, but the guitar break is exhilarating and beautiful. The song itself explores the poetry of place names – maybe it’s a road song – but Vernon’s solo drives it. You can hear a bit of Neil Young in there, and that’s a name worth remembering in any consideration of the shape of Vernon’s career. Respecting the muse is clearly more important to him than sticking to the grid. What’s it’s all about? Well, on the surface, it seems as if The Shouting Matches is primarily about the underrated joy of making music with friends. But it’s also similar to the experiments Vernon and Cook used to employ in DeYarmond Edison, where they would select a genre, and perform in that vein: today’s dish being Southern blues. It’s rock’n’roll, played under jazz conditions: spontaneous, under-thought, fast. At most, it’s a sketch for a concept which is unlikely to be fleshed-out. It’s nostalgic, and frivolous, and surprisingly endearing. Alastair McKay

Justin Vernon’s trio of old compadres play Southern blues-rock under jazz conditions…

Justin Vernon has not said much publicly about The Shouting Matches, his collaboration with Megafaun’s Phil Cook and Brian Moen of Peter Wolf Crier/Laarks. But the little he has said, via Twitter, is eloquent enough. As the album was released, he Tweeted a note of thanks from “Brian and Phil and I’s band†adding the hashtags #trio, #notasideproject, #beenaroundlongerthanbon. Later, as early reviews appeared, he added, sarcastically, “I love being in a band with three people in it, but really I’m the only one.â€

So, to be clear. Grownass Man is not a Bon Iver record (the title is a clue). It is not Justin Vernon’s Tin Machine. It is a collaboration in a career full of collaborations (see Volcano Choir, Gayngs, Anais Mitchell). And, it’s a reunion of sorts. The Shouting Matches do predate Bon Iver. They flickered for an evening in 2006. Moen was the second person to hear Bon Iver’s debut album For Emma, Forever Ago when he visited Vernon’s Wisconsin cabin for a Shouting Matches rehearsal. Cook also laboured in Vernon’s pre-Bon Iver outfit, DeYarmond Edison.

But it is hard to resist the suggestion that Vernon’s decision to reunite with his old compadres is a reaction to the success of Bon Iver, and the expectations aroused by it. Bon Iver‘s second, self-titled album was every bit as personal as that cabin-recorded debut, though Vernon employed a private language to mask his intentions (or, more charitably, to make then universal). It won him two Grammies, and made him a mainstream star, an unlikely outcome for a musician whose approach is almost anthropological, even when he’s goofing around. (And, contrary to the public perception, he likes to goof).

But this is a trio, a band with three people in it. And if Grownass Man doesn’t sound like Bon Iver, it doesn’t sound like Megafaun either. Or Peter Wolf Crier. On first impressions, which are misleading, it sounds like a bar band in Clarksdale, Mississippi playing for beer. Generically, it is blues-rock, though over the full span of the album, that definition is stretched to include bursts of Afro-pop (‘’I’ll Be Trueâ€) and fairground Northern Soul (“New Themeâ€). Vernon chooses not to employ his falsetto, falling back into a soulful growl or, when he does go high (on “Three Dollar Billâ€) delivering the vocal through a hail of distortion. “Heaven Knows†is ZZ Top at 16 rpm. The closing ballad, “I Need A Change†could, just about, fit on a Bon Iver record, though the lyrics are more generic, and there’s a playful Prince impersonation halfway through.

Generally, the playing is under-rehearsed and agreeably rough. It’s a jam. Moen’ s drums don’t drive the beat so much as shuffle sideways, and Cook’s organ adds a playful note, pitched somewhere between the church and the carnival. The biggest surprise, at least for listeners who only know Vernon through his work with Bon Iver, is the guitar. True, there’s a hint of Fleetwood Mac’s Albatross circling around the standout track, “Gallup NMâ€, but the guitar break is exhilarating and beautiful. The song itself explores the poetry of place names – maybe it’s a road song – but Vernon’s solo drives it. You can hear a bit of Neil Young in there, and that’s a name worth remembering in any consideration of the shape of Vernon’s career. Respecting the muse is clearly more important to him than sticking to the grid.

What’s it’s all about? Well, on the surface, it seems as if The Shouting Matches is primarily about the underrated joy of making music with friends. But it’s also similar to the experiments Vernon and Cook used to employ in DeYarmond Edison, where they would select a genre, and perform in that vein: today’s dish being Southern blues. It’s rock’n’roll, played under jazz conditions: spontaneous, under-thought, fast. At most, it’s a sketch for a concept which is unlikely to be fleshed-out. It’s nostalgic, and frivolous, and surprisingly endearing.

Alastair McKay

Marc Bolan’s son sues music publisher over alleged T Rex copyright violation

0

The son of Marc Bolan is suing a music publisher, claiming they have violated copyright laws regarding his late father's music. Rolan Seymour Feld has filed a case against Westminster Music Limited, after stating he is the sole owner of his father's back catalogue, claiming the publishers did not renew their one year contract with the singer, which was signed in 1968. Feld is suing for $2m (£1.3m), reports BBC News. The case is being filed in Los Angeles and Feld's court documents claim that the publishers falsely attempted to renew copyright on the music. The papers allege: "In an attempt to cover up their conduct and mislead the public as to the true owner and administrator of the United States copyright in and to each of the Compositions, Defendants falsely registered with the Copyright Office a claim to the renewed and extended term of copyright for each of the Compositions." The documents add that Feld "has been damaged in an amount that is not as yet fully ascertained but which Plaintiff believes exceeds $2,000,000". Marc Bolan died in 1977, a year after the birth of his son.

The son of Marc Bolan is suing a music publisher, claiming they have violated copyright laws regarding his late father’s music.

Rolan Seymour Feld has filed a case against Westminster Music Limited, after stating he is the sole owner of his father’s back catalogue, claiming the publishers did not renew their one year contract with the singer, which was signed in 1968. Feld is suing for $2m (£1.3m), reports BBC News.

The case is being filed in Los Angeles and Feld’s court documents claim that the publishers falsely attempted to renew copyright on the music. The papers allege: “In an attempt to cover up their conduct and mislead the public as to the true owner and administrator of the United States copyright in and to each of the Compositions, Defendants falsely registered with the Copyright Office a claim to the renewed and extended term of copyright for each of the Compositions.”

The documents add that Feld “has been damaged in an amount that is not as yet fully ascertained but which Plaintiff believes exceeds $2,000,000”.

Marc Bolan died in 1977, a year after the birth of his son.

Watch Paul McCartney play “Helter Skelter” with three members of Nirvana

0
Paul McCartney was joined by the three surviving members of Nirvana at his gig in Seattle last night (July 19). See below for footage of McCartney and the Nirvana trio performing "Helter Skelter". McCartney was giving the first ever concert at the Safeco Field in Seattle, the city whose grunge scen...

Paul McCartney was joined by the three surviving members of Nirvana at his gig in Seattle last night (July 19). See below for footage of McCartney and the Nirvana trio performing “Helter Skelter”.

McCartney was giving the first ever concert at the Safeco Field in Seattle, the city whose grunge scene Nirvana became an integral part of. To mark the occasion, he welcomed Dave Grohl, Krist Novoselic and Pat Smear on stage during his encore to play “Cut Me Some Slack”, the track they recorded together last year (2012) for Grohl’s Sound City film project.

The Nirvana trio stayed on to play a selection of Beatles’ songs with McCartney: “Get Back”, “Long Tall Sally” [a song the The Beatles covered], “Helter Skelter”, “Golden Slumbers”, “Carry That Weight” and “The End”.

McCartney first played live with Grohl and Novoselic at a Hurricane Sandy benefit gig in New York last December. A few days later, they played ‘Cut Me Some Slack’ again on American TV show Saturday Night Live – this time joined by Smear on guitar.

However, the Seattle gig marks the first time McCartney and the Nirvana members have played multiple songs together – and the first time they’ve joined forces on Beatles material.

Pearl Jam debut two new songs at Chicago gig – watch

0
Pearl Jam debuted two new songs at a concert in Chicago on Friday (July 19). Scroll down and click 'play' to watch fan footage of both songs being played live. The band were just seven songs into their gig at Chicago's Wrigley Field, Consequence of Sound reports, when torrential rain forced them of...

Pearl Jam debuted two new songs at a concert in Chicago on Friday (July 19). Scroll down and click ‘play’ to watch fan footage of both songs being played live.

The band were just seven songs into their gig at Chicago’s Wrigley Field, Consequence of Sound reports, when torrential rain forced them offstage.

After a delay of three hours, the band were finally able to return and rewarded the crowd by playing two previously unheard songs from their forthcoming album Lightning Bolt: the title track and “Future Days”. On the latter, the band were joined by producer Brendan O’Brien on keyboards.

Earlier this month (July), Pearl Jam announced that they will release Lightning Bolt, produced by O’Brien, on October 15.

Lightning Bolt will be the US band’s 10th studio album and their first since 2009’s Backspacer.

Morrissey cancels remaining South American tour dates

0
Morrissey has cancelled his remaining tour dates in South America. Last week (July 13) the singer apologised for pulling a number of tour dates in Peru and Chile after being struck down with food poisoning. At the time, he said he would be well enough to return for a run of four dates in Argentina ...

Morrissey has cancelled his remaining tour dates in South America.

Last week (July 13) the singer apologised for pulling a number of tour dates in Peru and Chile after being struck down with food poisoning. At the time, he said he would be well enough to return for a run of four dates in Argentina and Brazil beginning in Buenos Aires on July 28.

However, none of these shows will now take place, Morrissey has confirmed. “I am informed today that the projected tour of South America is snuffed out, thus euthanized – due, I’m reliably advised, to lack of funding. It’s quite easy to sell tickets, yet impossible to transport band and crew from F to G,” the singer writes in a post on the True To You fansite.

“In a year when far too many disappointments have been buried this really is the last of many final straws, and I am not alone in feeling this,” the singer continues. “The future is suddenly absent, and my apologies are now so frequent as to be somewhat ridiculous, and it is I who apologize because no one else would bother.”

Later in the blog post, the singer adds: “Cancellations and illness have sucked the life out of all of us, and the only sensible solution seems to be the art of doing nothing.”

Over the past year Morrissey has postponed and cancelled a host of tour dates because of his mother’s and his own ill health. He recently revealed that he nearly died earlier this year due to medical problems.

Wadjda

0
Wadjda is the first full-length feature film shot entirely inside Saudi Arabia, a conservative Islamic country where women are denied civic freedoms or any public role. It’s director is Haifaa Al-Mansour, a Saudi-born female filmmaker who now lives in Bahrain. While shooting on location in the Sau...

Wadjda is the first full-length feature film shot entirely inside Saudi Arabia, a conservative Islamic country where women are denied civic freedoms or any public role. It’s director is Haifaa Al-Mansour, a Saudi-born female filmmaker who now lives in Bahrain. While shooting on location in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, Al-Mansour had to hide in a production van, directing her actors via walkie-talkie, because she could not publicly mix with her male crew. Although her film is ostensibly an intimate story about an 11-year old girl living in Riyadh who dreams of owning a bike, nevertheless it projects a deeper message about Saudi society.

Wadjda, played by Waad Mohammed, is a precocious young Saudi girl from a lower-middle-class family in Riyadh; her spirit and tenacity are considered problematic by her school teachers, while Wadjda herself is perplexed by the Kingdom’s restrictive culture towards women. Much as women are not allowed to drive cars, girls – Wadjda leans – cannot ride bikes. Seeing no logic in this, Wadjda sets out to learn passages for the Quran for a school competition, her plan to use the prize money on offer to buy a bike.

With its simplicity and clarity, Al-Mansour’s film owes much to Italian noerealism – a plucky young child and a bicycle notwithstanding – but also Jafar Panahi’s films about the experiences of women and children in modern day Iran. Wadjda – and her mother, played by Reem Abdullah – are both struggling with the social barriers they face in Saudi society. Wadjda’s mother appears to be unable to conceive another child, so her husband is looking to take another wife. This is a country where the trappings of contemporary living are prized – high end cars, giant flat screen televisions, shopping malls –yet where an 11 year-old girl isn’t allowed under law to ride a bicycle. “Don’t leave the Quran open,†warns her mother, “in case the Devil spits inside it.†Unmissable.

Michael Bonner

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

Steely Dan on recording new album: “We’ve been talking”

0
Steely Dan's Donald Fagen and Walter Becker have been speaking about recording a new album. Interviewed separately by Rolling Stone ahead of the opening show on their 53-date Mood Swings American tour, Fagen discussed the possibility of a new Steely Dan album - which would be their first since 2003...

Steely Dan‘s Donald Fagen and Walter Becker have been speaking about recording a new album.

Interviewed separately by Rolling Stone ahead of the opening show on their 53-date Mood Swings American tour, Fagen discussed the possibility of a new Steely Dan album – which would be their first since 2003’s Everything Must Go.

Fagen said: “Yeah. We’ve been talking. We always talk about it on airplane rides. Usually we forget what we talked about before we do anything about it. But yeah, we actually had a conversation about it the other day, so who knows?”

Becker, meanwhile, when told of Fagen’s comments, replied: “Donald, Donald, Donald. Always Donald. Yeah, whatever Donald says, he’s right. Yeah.”

The interview is available online here.

Extremely rare 1986 Radiohead demo tape to be auctioned in September

0

An extremely rare Radiohead demo cassette from 1986 is to be sold at auction this September. The demo cassette features six songs that have never appeared on any official Radiohead releases: "Fragile Friend", "Girl (In The Purple Dress)", "Everybody Knows", "Mountains (On The Move)", "Lemming Trail" and "Lock The Door". The nine-track demo cassette is rounded off by remixes of "Fragile Friend", "Lemming Trail" and "Lock The Door". At the time of recording, Radiohead were still known as On A Friday. Tracks from the demo cassette have appeared online in recent years and you can listen to "Lemming Trail" at the bottom of this article. The demo cassette will go to auction at 10.30am on Saturday, September 14 at Omega Auctions in Stockport. Auctioneer Paul Fairweather told NME that he expects the sale price to exceed £1,000 and also clarified the origins of the item. "It has come directly from an old friend of the band who was at school with them at Abingdon School. We have copies of his school yearbook from 85/86 showing him and all four members of the band," Fairweather explained. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=09oGj1pPXDY

An extremely rare Radiohead demo cassette from 1986 is to be sold at auction this September.

The demo cassette features six songs that have never appeared on any official Radiohead releases: “Fragile Friend”, “Girl (In The Purple Dress)”, “Everybody Knows”, “Mountains (On The Move)”, “Lemming Trail” and “Lock The Door”.

The nine-track demo cassette is rounded off by remixes of “Fragile Friend”, “Lemming Trail” and “Lock The Door”. At the time of recording, Radiohead were still known as On A Friday. Tracks from the demo cassette have appeared online in recent years and you can listen to “Lemming Trail” at the bottom of this article.

The demo cassette will go to auction at 10.30am on Saturday, September 14 at Omega Auctions in Stockport. Auctioneer Paul Fairweather told NME that he expects the sale price to exceed £1,000 and also clarified the origins of the item.

“It has come directly from an old friend of the band who was at school with them at Abingdon School. We have copies of his school yearbook from 85/86 showing him and all four members of the band,” Fairweather explained.

John Cooper Clarke awarded honorary degree

0
John Cooper Clarke has been awarded an honorary degree by the University of Salford. The honour was given to the poet yesterday (July 18) at a ceremony at The Lowry in Salford. The Salford native was awarded a doctorate of arts to pay tribute to his lengthy career. "What a thrill – who'd have th...

John Cooper Clarke has been awarded an honorary degree by the University of Salford.

The honour was given to the poet yesterday (July 18) at a ceremony at The Lowry in Salford. The Salford native was awarded a doctorate of arts to pay tribute to his lengthy career. “What a thrill – who’d have thought it? Now I’m a doctor, finally my dream of opening a cosmetic surgery business can become a reality!” he said.

“There’ve been lots of positive changes in the city since I worked at Salford Tech in the seventies, and I’m pleased to be known as Salford’s Bard and to have helped put it on the map,” he added.

Cooper Clarke features on the new Arctic Monkeys album, AM, on a track called “I Wanna Be Yours”.

John Martyn – Album By Album

From Uncut’s November 2006 issue (Take 114), the legendary singer-songwriter talks us through the cream of his crop of exceptional albums, including Solid Air, One World and Grace And Danger. “It’s about that need to be disconnected, to get somewhere else. The source of the sauce, if you likeâ...

From Uncut’s November 2006 issue (Take 114), the legendary singer-songwriter talks us through the cream of his crop of exceptional albums, including Solid Air, One World and Grace And Danger. “It’s about that need to be disconnected, to get somewhere else. The source of the sauce, if you like…â€

___________________

“It’s not been a good morning,†growls John Martyn at home in Kilkenny. “I’ve just been done for speeding!†Just as Uncut is pondering the advisability of the pickled bard of the Echoplex tearing through the rural lanes of south-east Ireland, he grudgingly reveals that it was in fact his partner, Theresa, who has just attracted the attentions of the local Gardaí. Not that the old rascal remains averse to a little white line fever. At 58, Glasgow-born John Martyn remains the great outlaw figure of British music, architect of an unrivalled back catalogue blending blues, folk and rock, constructed with the aid of a pharmacy full of drugs and oceans of hard liquor. While pivotal albums Stormbringer! and Solid Air ensure he’s fêted by subsequent generations of musicians ranging from Paul Weller to Bright Eyes, Martyn keeps the trappings of stardom at a healthy distance. Indeed, when we first meet, he’s a little spiky, and looks at me as if he’s eyeing me up for a scrap.

As he guides us through his career, though, you realise that the abrasive bonhomie disguises a finely tuned bullshit detector. Less a slave to wanderlust since the amputation of his right leg below the knee in 2003, Martyn still plays live regularly, confessing “playing gigs is all I ever wanted to doâ€. And as an hour’s worth of ribald reminiscences comes to an end, spirits are high. The sun has crossed over the yardarm, and the great man has got more practical matters on his mind. “All this talk about drinking has made me thirsty,†he exclaims. “I’m off down the pub! Now, go forth and prosper!â€

___________________

JOHN MARTYN – LONDON CONVERSATION

(Island, 1968)

Recorded for the princely sum of £158, London Conversation was released without fanfare in February 1968 on the fledgling Island label (later home to Fairport Convention and Nick Drake). An accurate reflection of his live set at the time, songs like “Fairytale Lullaby†highlight the influence of early heroes Bert Jansch and Davey Graham.

MARTYN: “It was a big step for me coming to London. I was from a folk background and, when I turned up, the hippy thing was in full swing. It didn’t bother me in the least. I was a hippy long before that: I used to go to school barefoot; I was already in my own little world. I was living in my stepfather’s house in Surbiton at the time, sleeping between two boilers. Not very comfortable, to say the least! I played all the established London folk clubs: Cousins… Bunjies off Charing Cross Road, but I wasn’t fussy. I’d play anywhere that would have me.

“Ten minutes away from where I lived was this club called the Kingston Folk Barge, where I’d play all the time. One night this guy called Theo Johnson came down and asked if Island could do my publishing. I said, ‘No’, but they could put an album out if they wanted. I knew that if I had a record in the shops, that it would get bums on seats. I recorded my live set in just four days flat. They’re good songs – it’s where I was at the time.â€

JOHN AND BEVERLEY MARTYN – STORMBRINGER!

(Island, 1970)

Having fallen in love with fellow folk singer Beverley Kutner, the pair headed to Woodstock in the summer of ’69. A marriage of his folk roots and cosmic notions du jour, Stormbringer! also reflected his increasing interest in guitar effects on “Would You Believe Meâ€.

“Joe Boyd at [production company] Witchseason never really liked me. I think he thought I was vulgar because I was working-class. But he sent me to New York to record Stormbringer! and that was the nicest thing he could ever have done. I was 19 and New York blew my mind. We stayed in the Chelsea Hotel for a couple of weeks before we started. It was 98°F and I had all the windows open and the air-conditioning on full blast; I didn’t have a clue. Woodstock was amazing. Dylan was living up the road, Hendrix used to arrive in a purple helicopter. Levon Helm from The Band just happened to be in the area and he ended up on the record. That was how it was in those days. Up until that point I’d been trying to be like Ray Davies or the Pet Shop Boys of folk, quintessentially British. But the American influences came through on Stormbringer!. The sleeve photo was taken by this little Japanese feller on Hampstead Heath. People say I look really young and angelic, and I suppose I was. It was all happening so fast: I’d meet Cat Stevens, Steve Winwood, and I wouldn’t think twice about it. Wonderful times. I was an innocent abroad, in every sense.â€

JOHN MARTYN – BLESS THE WEATHER

(Island, 1971)

With the newly recruited ex-Pentangle bassist Danny Thompson, and eager to distance himself from the burgeoning folk-rock movement, Bless The Weather saw Martyn display a new found maturity with simple, atmospheric songs and an increasing use of effects.

“Danny Thompson is on this one. He’s a miserable bastard, but he’s a great bass player. He really made a difference; on those sessions he was unbelievable. I hadn’t got the Echoplex yet – I was still using a WEM Copicat. I was feeling my way.

“As I remember it, the recording was pretty light-hearted. We’d put the songs down, then go out. People ask me what Bless The Weather is about, but it was just how I was feeling – there’s no specific incident I can put it down to. Like all the good ones, it just popped out of the old brainbox. I never question why they arrive – it’s a non-negotiable contract with the future. I was drinking a bit by then – I felt as though I’d be letting the side down if I didn’t – but I wasn’t what you’d call serious. For me, it goes back to the blues tradition of the 1920s and acoustic players like Robert Johnson. It’s about that need to be disconnected, to get somewhere else. The source of the sauce, if you like. The really heavy stuff came afterwards when we went on tour. Did Danny lead me down that path? No, mate. I found it myself – and I was very glad to see it.â€

JOHN MARTYN – SOLID AIR

(Island, 1973)

A musical antidote to glam, Solid Air’s woozy delivery and sombre lyrics made it a ubiquitous presence in halls of residence throughout the ’70s. The prototype for everything from ambient to trip-hop, its bleak mix of blues, jazz and rock is now universally regarded as a classic.

“We’d moved to Hastings by then and I loved the whole feel of the place. I come from a fishing family – my grandad had seven boats – and I liked the attitude of the people. You could live there for 50 years and the locals would still consider you a blow-hard. I was happy and the songs just flowed. Looking back, I knew at the time it was a good album. People would come down to visit and I’d play them ‘May You Never’.

“The stories about the drinking while I recorded Solid Air are all true. They would mostly start with bets. Danny Thompson would say something like, ‘I bet you’d like a bucket of whisky in here, wouldn’t you?’ I’d said yeah, and before I knew it I’d be sitting there drinking spirits out of a bucket. I’m not sure if I ever finished it or not. It was mostly done at night; I’d record the vocals and the guitar at the same time. It’s well documented that the song ‘Solid Air’ is about Nick Drake. I didn’t see him so much around that time, and he died the next year, but he probably heard it. It seemed apposite; he was just too delicate for this world.â€

JOHN MARTYN – ONE WORLD

(Island, 1977)

Inspired by a sabbatical at label boss Chris Blackwell’s home in Jamaica, the dub inflections of One World saw Martyn hit a chord during the height of punk. Boasting an all-star cast (Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, Steve Winwood) and recorded in a fug of narcotics, it pleased the critics (NME called it “mean, moody and magnificent… just plain better than everything elseâ€) and inspired everyone from Jah Wobble to Massive Attack.

“This was recorded at [Island Records founder] Chris Blackwell’s house at Woolwich Green Farm in Berkshire. He’s been an incredibly influential figure for me throughout my life. I think we did it in 10 or 12 days. It was a beautiful place. There was a lovely garden and a lake you could look out onto. I was really lonely at the time, and you can tell – it’s in the music. There’s some nice chords there, though. If you listen closely, on the song ‘Small Hours’ you can hear the 2.39 to Windsor going past in the distance. It was wonderful – three o’clock in the morning, sitting outside, looking over this lake, smoking opium. That’s what I call ambient!

“I’ve always taken things in the studio to get the right atmosphere, and you can tell we were somewhere else when we made this one! One World is still one of my favourites. Musically speaking I was really pleased with it. I knew that I’d moved on.â€

JOHN MARTYN – GRACE & DANGER

(Island, 1980)

With pain and despair as the driving force – prompted by the dissolution of his marriage to Beverley – Martyn delivered an autobiographical outpouring to match Dylan’s Blood On The Tracks. Legend has it that the album’s release was delayed for a year by Chris Blackwell because he found it “too depressingâ€.

“I was in a strange position when I recorded Grace & Danger. I didn’t have to make an album, I just did. It’s terribly sad but it’s an accurate reflection of what was going on in my life at the time. I’d been on the road a long time and, as a result, me and Bev broke up. I didn’t have the intention of that happening, but when I went on the road I had intent, if you know what I mean. I was peripatetic at the time. Chris Blackwell had a flat in Basing Street he let me stay in. A very cool gaff. It had a bath the size of a swimming pool! I really like ‘Some People Are Crazy’. It’s true. There are very few people I can get along with; or can get along with me. I have no idea why. I call it Joe Boyd syndrome.

“Phil Collins played the drums on it. He was a great friend to me. Very sweet. I think he was going through the same thing at that time with his wife. I was drinking the cooking sherry, anything I could get my hands on. It’s a very heartfelt album. But then they’re all love songs, really.â€

Richard Hell: “I don’t know what Tom Verlaine does now… but there’s still a connection”

0
Richard Hell answers your questions in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2013 and out now. The co-founder of Television, the Heartbreakers and the Voidoids discusses punk, drugs, Madonna and the afterlife in the piece, and also reveals his current relationship (or lack of one) with his former ...

Richard Hell answers your questions in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2013 and out now.

The co-founder of Television, the Heartbreakers and the Voidoids discusses punk, drugs, Madonna and the afterlife in the piece, and also reveals his current relationship (or lack of one) with his former Television bandmate, Tom Verlaine.

“What level of connection there is, is just some kind of inevitable consequence of the friendship that we once had,†Hell explains.

“I don’t even know what he does now. I never see him or talk to him, and after my book I’m sure that’s even less likely. But, yes, sure, there’s a connection in the sense that we spent so much time together in a period that was really crucial for me.

“He is just necessarily built into who I am.â€

As well as queries from readers, Hell answers questions from famous acquaintances, including Thurston Moore and Richard Lloyd.

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

The 27th Uncut Playlist Of 2013

No, unfortunately “Bright Phoebus†isn’t being reissued. But what prompted me to dig it out this week was the news of Bright Phoebus Revisited, a concert tour this autumn that promises the album recreated live by every Waterson they could find, along with various guests including Jarvis Cocker and Richard Hawley. The dates are London Barbican (11), Warwick Arts Centre (12), Liverpool Philharmonic Hall (14), Brighton Dome (15) and Bristol Colston Hall (16). Could be interesting: amazing record. Some good new arrivals at the back end of this list, as you’ll see. Fuzz, in case you don’t know, are Ty Segall’s latest alternative manifestation. Also please note new ones by Tim Hecker and Tony Joe White, and the strong Mazzy Star track. I’ll let you know when I get the album… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Chris Thile – Bach: Sonatas And Partitas, Volume One (Nonesuch) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wAUoI49Ndmk 2 Promised Land Sound - Promised Land Sound (Paradise Of Bachelors) 3 Moon Duo – High Over Blue (Souterrain Transmissions) 4 Desert Heat – Cat Mask At Huggie Temple (MIE Music) 5 Roy Harper – Man & Myth (Bella Union) 6 Matthew E White – Big Love (Hot Chip Remix) (Domino) 7 The Weeknd – Belong To The World (Island) 8 Ultramarine – This Time Last Year (Real Soon) 9 Nilsson – Nilsson Sings Newman (RCA) 10 Dustin Wong – Mediation Of Ecstatic Energy (Thrill Jockey) 11 Trentemoller/Low – The Dream (In My Room) 12 Fuzz – Fuzz (In The Red) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1ArAo23mdo 13 Frank Ocean – Nostalgia, Ultra (Self-released) 14 Bill Evans – Symbiosis (MPS) 15 16 Mazzy Star – California (Rhymes Of An Hour) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oEf1Qq6upEU 17 Mountains – Mountains Mountains Mountains (Thrill Jockey) 18 Donso – Denfila (Comet) 19 Willis Earl Beal – Nobody Knows (XL) 20 Factory Floor – Factory Floor (DFA) 21 Tony Joe White – Hoodoo (Yeproc) 22 Tim Hecker – Virgins (Kranky) 23 Lal & Mike Waterson – Bright Phoebus (Trailer) 24 Bill Callahan – Dream River (Drag City) 25 Goldfrapp – Tales Of Us (Mute)

No, unfortunately “Bright Phoebus†isn’t being reissued. But what prompted me to dig it out this week was the news of Bright Phoebus Revisited, a concert tour this autumn that promises the album recreated live by every Waterson they could find, along with various guests including Jarvis Cocker and Richard Hawley. The dates are London Barbican (11), Warwick Arts Centre (12), Liverpool Philharmonic Hall (14), Brighton Dome (15) and Bristol Colston Hall (16). Could be interesting: amazing record.

Some good new arrivals at the back end of this list, as you’ll see. Fuzz, in case you don’t know, are Ty Segall’s latest alternative manifestation. Also please note new ones by Tim Hecker and Tony Joe White, and the strong Mazzy Star track. I’ll let you know when I get the album…

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

1 Chris Thile – Bach: Sonatas And Partitas, Volume One (Nonesuch)

2 Promised Land Sound – Promised Land Sound (Paradise Of Bachelors)

3 Moon Duo – High Over Blue (Souterrain Transmissions)

4 Desert Heat – Cat Mask At Huggie Temple (MIE Music)

5 Roy Harper – Man & Myth (Bella Union)

6 Matthew E White – Big Love (Hot Chip Remix) (Domino)

7 The Weeknd – Belong To The World (Island)

8 Ultramarine – This Time Last Year (Real Soon)

9 Nilsson – Nilsson Sings Newman (RCA)

10 Dustin Wong – Mediation Of Ecstatic Energy (Thrill Jockey)

11 Trentemoller/Low – The Dream (In My Room)

12 Fuzz – Fuzz (In The Red)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1ArAo23mdo

13 Frank Ocean – Nostalgia, Ultra (Self-released)

14 Bill Evans – Symbiosis (MPS)

15

16 Mazzy Star – California (Rhymes Of An Hour)

17 Mountains – Mountains Mountains Mountains (Thrill Jockey)

18 Donso – Denfila (Comet)

19 Willis Earl Beal – Nobody Knows (XL)

20 Factory Floor – Factory Floor (DFA)

21 Tony Joe White – Hoodoo (Yeproc)

22 Tim Hecker – Virgins (Kranky)

23 Lal & Mike Waterson – Bright Phoebus (Trailer)

24 Bill Callahan – Dream River (Drag City)

25 Goldfrapp – Tales Of Us (Mute)

Former HMV worker opens music store called HVM

0

A former HMV worker has opened a music store in Derry called HVM. Entertainment.ie reports that Tony Cregan has opened up the replacement shop after his branch of HMV closed down earlier this year. Cregan, who ran the Derry HMV, opened the new store after he got 15,000 signatures on a petition in order to save the original branch of the high street music store and saw a gap in the market. Of the store name, he commented: "We thought what is the point calling the new show Local CDs, or whatever, we'll just call it HVM. HMV is gone." However, Cregan was contacted by Hilco, the restructuring company who bought out HMV, who asked him to change the name. A letter from Hilco stated that the "continued presence in the market of your business operating under the name HVM has caused and will continue to cause substantial damage to our client's reputation and goodwill." Cregan responded by turning the store's sign upside down and the shop is now called WAH. Cregan said: "People are saying the vibe here is great, it's really friendly. I'd love to say that was our intention all along and we're really smart, but that wasn't the plan at all." Meanwhile, HMV is reportedly looking to return to its Oxford Street flagship store in London. The retailer which went into administration earlier this year, is in negotiation to move back into the 20,000 sq ft store at 363 Oxford Street. The site is currently occupied by the US chain Footlocker. According to the Evening Standard, HMV has exchanged contracts on the shop's lease, subject to landlord approval. A relaunch of the retailer, which went into administration in January saddled with £176 million debt, is expected later this year. While no exact details have been confirmed, it is expected that a new HMV website will focus on a music and film streaming service similar to The Vault, the digital streaming platform offered by its sister company in Canada. Previously, HMV UK lost money selling CDs and DVDs from its website because of distribution and postage costs. Photo credit: PA

A former HMV worker has opened a music store in Derry called HVM.

Entertainment.ie reports that Tony Cregan has opened up the replacement shop after his branch of HMV closed down earlier this year. Cregan, who ran the Derry HMV, opened the new store after he got 15,000 signatures on a petition in order to save the original branch of the high street music store and saw a gap in the market. Of the store name, he commented: “We thought what is the point calling the new show Local CDs, or whatever, we’ll just call it HVM. HMV is gone.”

However, Cregan was contacted by Hilco, the restructuring company who bought out HMV, who asked him to change the name. A letter from Hilco stated that the “continued presence in the market of your business operating under the name HVM has caused and will continue to cause substantial damage to our client’s reputation and goodwill.” Cregan responded by turning the store’s sign upside down and the shop is now called WAH. Cregan said: “People are saying the vibe here is great, it’s really friendly. I’d love to say that was our intention all along and we’re really smart, but that wasn’t the plan at all.”

Meanwhile, HMV is reportedly looking to return to its Oxford Street flagship store in London. The retailer which went into administration earlier this year, is in negotiation to move back into the 20,000 sq ft store at 363 Oxford Street. The site is currently occupied by the US chain Footlocker. According to the Evening Standard, HMV has exchanged contracts on the shop’s lease, subject to landlord approval.

A relaunch of the retailer, which went into administration in January saddled with £176 million debt, is expected later this year. While no exact details have been confirmed, it is expected that a new HMV website will focus on a music and film streaming service similar to The Vault, the digital streaming platform offered by its sister company in Canada. Previously, HMV UK lost money selling CDs and DVDs from its website because of distribution and postage costs.

Photo credit: PA