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Ask Richard Hell!

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Ahead of the release of his memoir I Dreamed I Was A Very Clean Tramp, Richard Hell - the pioneer of New York punk - 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 him? What are his memories of playing CBGBs in its heyday? What was it like touring the UK with The Clash in 1977? Does he regret not touring with the Dim Stars, his band with Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore and Steve Shelley? Send up your questions by 5pm GMT, Wednesday, June 12 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com. The best questions, and Richard's answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

Ahead of the release of his memoir I Dreamed I Was A Very Clean Tramp, Richard Hell – the pioneer of New York punk – 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 him?

What are his memories of playing CBGBs in its heyday?

What was it like touring the UK with The Clash in 1977?

Does he regret not touring with the Dim Stars, his band with Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore and Steve Shelley?

Send up your questions by 5pm GMT, Wednesday, June 12 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com.

The best questions, and Richard’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine.

Please include your name and location with your question.

Tom Petty show shut down by fire marshals

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Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers had their show on Saturday (June 8) at Los Angeles' Fonda Theatre shut down by fire marshals. The concert was the fourth of a six-date residency at the 1,300 capacity venue. The setlist had included a mix of A-list Petty songs like "Here Comes My Girl" alongside r...

Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers had their show on Saturday (June 8) at Los Angeles’ Fonda Theatre shut down by fire marshals.

The concert was the fourth of a six-date residency at the 1,300 capacity venue.

The setlist had included a mix of A-list Petty songs like “Here Comes My Girl” alongside rarities including “Angel Dream (No. 2)”, the Traveling Wilburys “Tweeter And The Monkey Man” and covers including Paul Revere & The Raiders’ “(I’m Not Your) Stepping Stone”.

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/tom-petty-show-cut-short-by-fire-marshal-20130609#ixzz2Vo6dV3JE

Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook

The band had played a cover of the Grateful Dead‘s “Friend Of The Devil”, when Petty was warned by officials at 10.30pm that the venue was over capacity by 100 people.

Petty told the crowd that hundred people had to voluntarily head to a balcony upstairs or leave; no one did.

The band played one more song, “Melinda“, before Petty was summoned to the wings, only to return to his microphone to announce “We’re being told we have to go.”

The band left the stage immediately.

The following day, Sunday (June 9), Petty and the Heartbreakers issued the following statement, reprinted in full below:

“Statement From Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers Regarding Last Night’s Early Conclusion To The Concert At The Fonda Theatre In Los Angeles

“First and foremost, the safety of our fans is our primary concern and the most important consideration.

“To those fans who attended last night’s show at the Fonda Theatre, we are as frustrated as you are!

“While we are still investigating exactly what happened we do know the following as of right now:

“1) The number of tickets sold was NOT above the legal capacity of the building. The venue and Ticketmaster documentation confirms this.

“2) The Fire Marshal decided that the number of people on the floor (as opposed to on the upstairs balcony or terrace) was unsafe.

“Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers and our representatives rely on the concert promoter and venue representatives to give us an accurate breakdown of the legal capacity for every part of the building and to provide security and other staff to enforce this.

“We are still investigating all details of last night’s situation and will keep you informed.

“The shows at the Fonda tonight and Tuesday will go ahead as planned and we are working with the venue, the promoter and the Fire Marshal to ensure that this problem will not repeat itself.

“We thank you for your support.

“Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers”

Top Petty & The Heartbreakers played:

“Rock & Roll Star”

“Love Is A Long Road”

“Here Comes My Girl”

“Cabin Down Below”

“Something Big”

“Best Of Everything”

“(‘m Not Your) Stepping Stone”

“Woman In Love”

“Billy The Kid”

“I’d Like To Love You”

“Tweeter And The Monkey Man”

“Rebels”

“Angel Dream (No 2)”

“Two Gunslingers”

“Friends Of The Devil”

“Melinda”

Atoms For Peace unveil new track plus more rehearsal footage

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Thom Yorke and Nigel Godrich shared unheard song 'Honey Pot' in a DJ set broadcast earlier today on American radio station KCRW. You can listen to the track on Soundcloud by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking play. The pair, who are currently out in America promoting Atoms For P...

Thom Yorke and Nigel Godrich shared unheard song ‘Honey Pot’ in a DJ set broadcast earlier today on American radio station KCRW. You can listen to the track on Soundcloud by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking play.

The pair, who are currently out in America promoting Atoms For Peace‘s first full-length record, Amok, also played music by Charles Mingus, Joe Jackson, James Holden and the Beastie Boys as they joined the Morning Becomes Eclectic show. Introducing their takeover, Yorke described their set as having a “slow and peculiar start”.

As “Honey Pot” began, Yorke asked his co-host “I’m not supposed to say what it is, right?” Godrich replied: “Well no, I’m just saying don’t talk over it.” As the song came to a close, Yorke then revealed “This is a remix of [In Rainbows track] ‘All I Need’ that turned into a new song that we didn’t know what to do with.”

Discussing some of their choices, Yorke said Holden was “a bit of an idol of mine” and revealed they were hoping to get the electronic musician to support them at the Hollywood Bowl date of Atoms For Peace’s US tour in October.

The duo also discussed how DJing affects how they think about music. Godrich explained: “It definitely changes the way you listen to music, I think, when you start thinking about the way people listen to music and what you like, why you would play something. If you had a gun at your head, what is the tune you would play to get out of this situation.”

You can listen to the whole hour takeover on KCRW’s website. Atoms For Peace play a number of dates across Europe and the US this year, including three at London’s Roundhouse (July 24, 25 and 26).

Atoms For Peace have also released two new rehearsal clips via Youtube, of “Atoms For Peace” and “The Clock” – both of which you can watch below.

Watch Arcade Fire’s Win Butler perform with the Rolling Stones

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Arcade Fire's Win Butler performed with The Rolling Stones on stage in Montreal last night. Montreal resident Butler joined the band to sing "The Last Time" alongside Mick Jagger. Video footage of the performance from the band's 50 & Counting tour at Montreal's Bell Centre can be seen below. Butler joins a growing list of musicians who have appeared on stage with the Stones on this tour, including cameos from Tom Waits, Taylor Swift, Katy Perry, and Gwen Stefani. The band recently denied that Adele is set to join them when they play two shows at London's Hyde Park. Arcade Fire are currently working on their fourth album, the follow-up to 2010’s The Suburbs, and have been recording with James Murphy and long-time collaborator Markus Dravs. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WYvoumfbn2c

Arcade Fire’s Win Butler performed with The Rolling Stones on stage in Montreal last night.

Montreal resident Butler joined the band to sing “The Last Time” alongside Mick Jagger. Video footage of the performance from the band’s 50 & Counting tour at Montreal’s Bell Centre can be seen below.

Butler joins a growing list of musicians who have appeared on stage with the Stones on this tour, including cameos from Tom Waits, Taylor Swift, Katy Perry, and Gwen Stefani. The band recently denied that Adele is set to join them when they play two shows at London’s Hyde Park.

Arcade Fire are currently working on their fourth album, the follow-up to 2010’s The Suburbs, and have been recording with James Murphy and long-time collaborator Markus Dravs.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WYvoumfbn2c

Legends of The Canyon

Laurel Canyon’s summer of Crosby, Stills, and Nash remembered.... As eyewitnesses go, they don’t get much closer than Henry Diltz, a founder member of the Modern Folk Quartet who accidentally found a second career in photography when he snapped a picture of a group of snazzily-dressed young men who turned out to be the Buffalo Springfield. Diltz is now a proprietor of the Morrison Hotel gallery, selling fine art rock photography, but in the late 1960s, he was a fixture of the Los Angeles music scene centred round clubs such as the Troubadour and the Whisky A Go Go, where the revivalist sounds of the folk revival were turning into something less traditional. His proximity to the action is captured in the DVD extras, which include footage of the Byrds playing the Troubadour, and Stephen Stills acting the country squire at his Surrey mansion. Joni Mitchell can also be observed administering emergency surgery to Graham Nash’s ripped backside, somewhere near Big Bear. And there’s something terribly poignant about his footage of the construction of the Woodstock stage in an alfalfa field in upstate New York (he was the official photographer). Alas, the 8mm footage is silent, so the bulk of this documentary is peopled with talking heads. Mama Cass and Joni Mitchell are talked up (Diltz has beautiful stills of Joni), but the broader story of Laurel Canyon gives way to a familiar retelling of the early careers of Crosby, Stills, Nash and – in the periphery, not interviewed – Young. Prefaced by the assassination of JFK, an event that is said to have prompted a generation to turn to the Beatles (who agent John Hartman characterises fondly as “long-haired dirty bugs from England”), the film settles into a tale of competing personalities and wasted talent. David Crosby, whose reputation was sealed by his smart green cape, notes, of the way the Byrds dismissed Gene Clark, “we had a lot of money, big egos, no brains.” Crosby, Stills and Nash don’t always agree on the order of events, but they are well-schooled in telling their own story. More telling interventions are made by less central figures. Van Dyke Parks makes an unusually ill-tempered claim to have named the Buffalo Springfield, while (sacked) CSN drummer Dallas Taylor is amusingly acerbic about the “total hippie shit” he witnessed. There’s a show-stealing cameo, too, from club boss Mario Maglieri, who lives up to his nickname, “The Godfather of Sunset Strip”. In the end, Diltz’s argument seems to be that the legends of the strip were Crosby, Stills, and Nash, an analysis that the group are in no rush to disprove. There’s very little music in the film, so only true believers are likely to be convinced. Still, it’s worth it just to observe Stills’ reaction when informed of Dallas Taylor’s suggestion that George Harrison, and not Neil Young, might have joined as the fourth voice of CSN. Mirth is only the half of it. EXTRAS: 8mm silent footage, photo library, extended interviews, booklet. 5/10 Alastair McKay Photo: Henry Diltz

Laurel Canyon’s summer of Crosby, Stills, and Nash remembered….

As eyewitnesses go, they don’t get much closer than Henry Diltz, a founder member of the Modern Folk Quartet who accidentally found a second career in photography when he snapped a picture of a group of snazzily-dressed young men who turned out to be the Buffalo Springfield.

Diltz is now a proprietor of the Morrison Hotel gallery, selling fine art rock photography, but in the late 1960s, he was a fixture of the Los Angeles music scene centred round clubs such as the Troubadour and the Whisky A Go Go, where the revivalist sounds of the folk revival were turning into something less traditional. His proximity to the action is captured in the DVD extras, which include footage of the Byrds playing the Troubadour, and Stephen Stills acting the country squire at his Surrey mansion. Joni Mitchell can also be observed administering emergency surgery to Graham Nash’s ripped backside, somewhere near Big Bear. And there’s something terribly poignant about his footage of the construction of the Woodstock stage in an alfalfa field in upstate New York (he was the official photographer).

Alas, the 8mm footage is silent, so the bulk of this documentary is peopled with talking heads. Mama Cass and Joni Mitchell are talked up (Diltz has beautiful stills of Joni), but the broader story of Laurel Canyon gives way to a familiar retelling of the early careers of Crosby, Stills, Nash and – in the periphery, not interviewed – Young. Prefaced by the assassination of JFK, an event that is said to have prompted a generation to turn to the Beatles (who agent John Hartman characterises fondly as “long-haired dirty bugs from England”), the film settles into a tale of competing personalities and wasted talent. David Crosby, whose reputation was sealed by his smart green cape, notes, of the way the Byrds dismissed Gene Clark, “we had a lot of money, big egos, no brains.”

Crosby, Stills and Nash don’t always agree on the order of events, but they are well-schooled in telling their own story. More telling interventions are made by less central figures. Van Dyke Parks makes an unusually ill-tempered claim to have named the Buffalo Springfield, while (sacked) CSN drummer Dallas Taylor is amusingly acerbic about the “total hippie shit” he witnessed. There’s a show-stealing cameo, too, from club boss Mario Maglieri, who lives up to his nickname, “The Godfather of Sunset Strip”.

In the end, Diltz’s argument seems to be that the legends of the strip were Crosby, Stills, and Nash, an analysis that the group are in no rush to disprove. There’s very little music in the film, so only true believers are likely to be convinced. Still, it’s worth it just to observe Stills’ reaction when informed of Dallas Taylor’s suggestion that George Harrison, and not Neil Young, might have joined as the fourth voice of CSN. Mirth is only the half of it.

EXTRAS: 8mm silent footage, photo library, extended interviews, booklet. 5/10

Alastair McKay

Photo: Henry Diltz

Human folly and megalomania – Werner Herzog’s Aguirre: The Wrath Of God

The appearance of Werner Herzog as the icy criminal mastermind in Tom Cruise’s most recent film, Jack Reacher, may have come as a surprise to those who assumed that the German director wouldn’t have much interest in such conventional film making. After all, during the course of his extraordinary career stretching back 50 years, Herzog has travelled to the most remote parts of the planet, eaten his own shoes, been shot, dragged a steamship across a mountain and threatened to murder his leading actor… why on earth would be want to star opposite Tom Cruise in a Hollywood action film? But we’ve come to expect the unexpected from Herzog. A retrospective of his films opens today at London’s BFI Southbank and runs until July 31, showcasing in abundance the director’s unique worldview and multiple interests. During the course of the season, you’ll meet the blind, the deaf, obsessives and transgressives, visited the Amazon and the Sahara, watched suicidal penguins in Antarctica and heard the confessions of inmates on Death Row. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJDuicFyJPg Launching the season is 1972’s Aguirre: The Wrath Of God, the first of five films Herzog made with Klaus Kinski – and the story if it’s arduous, five-week shoot in the Amazon, with director and star coming close to murdering each other, has passed into cinematic lore. The story is loosely based on the exploits of a group of 16th century South American privateers searching for El Dorado in the Amazon and are led deep into hostile Indian country by Lope de Aguirre, a conquistador who went mad during the journey round each bend of the river. As with Apocalypse Now six years later, the shoot of Aguirre: The Wrath Of God mirrored the human folly and megalomania unfolding on screen. The crew went days without water, were besieged by insects and in genuine fear of losing their lives in the fast-moving river. Herzog built a ship 120 feet up in a tree to use for a 30 second shot. On top of that, of course, there was Herzog and Kinski, whose disagreements on every aspect of the film threatened to spill into violence. The film itself is an incredible monument to Herzog’s ambition – a feat of cinema that the director only matched a decade later shooting Fitzcarraldo, which required his crew to manoeuvre a 320-ton steamship up and over a 40° hillside in the Amazon. As Aguirre, Kinski – for all his mad yammering off-camera – has the deranged posturing of a mystical shaman, hallucinating ships in trees, while Popal Vuh’s drone score adds to the fever dream atmosphere. From the opening sequence of the Spanish expedition descending through the clouds out of the Andes to the final shot of Aguirre, alone on his raft, ranting at the sky, this is a fantastic, audacious cinema, well worth seeing on the big screen. Aside from screening at the BFI Southbank, Aguirre, Wrath of God is at cinemas nationwide now; The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser opens nationwide on 5 July Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The appearance of Werner Herzog as the icy criminal mastermind in Tom Cruise’s most recent film, Jack Reacher, may have come as a surprise to those who assumed that the German director wouldn’t have much interest in such conventional film making.

After all, during the course of his extraordinary career stretching back 50 years, Herzog has travelled to the most remote parts of the planet, eaten his own shoes, been shot, dragged a steamship across a mountain and threatened to murder his leading actor… why on earth would be want to star opposite Tom Cruise in a Hollywood action film?

But we’ve come to expect the unexpected from Herzog. A retrospective of his films opens today at London’s BFI Southbank and runs until July 31, showcasing in abundance the director’s unique worldview and multiple interests. During the course of the season, you’ll meet the blind, the deaf, obsessives and transgressives, visited the Amazon and the Sahara, watched suicidal penguins in Antarctica and heard the confessions of inmates on Death Row.

Launching the season is 1972’s Aguirre: The Wrath Of God, the first of five films Herzog made with Klaus Kinski – and the story if it’s arduous, five-week shoot in the Amazon, with director and star coming close to murdering each other, has passed into cinematic lore. The story is loosely based on the exploits of a group of 16th century South American privateers searching for El Dorado in the Amazon and are led deep into hostile Indian country by Lope de Aguirre, a conquistador who went mad during the journey round each bend of the river.

As with Apocalypse Now six years later, the shoot of Aguirre: The Wrath Of God mirrored the human folly and megalomania unfolding on screen. The crew went days without water, were besieged by insects and in genuine fear of losing their lives in the fast-moving river. Herzog built a ship 120 feet up in a tree to use for a 30 second shot. On top of that, of course, there was Herzog and Kinski, whose disagreements on every aspect of the film threatened to spill into violence. The film itself is an incredible monument to Herzog’s ambition – a feat of cinema that the director only matched a decade later shooting Fitzcarraldo, which required his crew to manoeuvre a 320-ton steamship up and over a 40° hillside in the Amazon. As Aguirre, Kinski – for all his mad yammering off-camera – has the deranged posturing of a mystical shaman, hallucinating ships in trees, while Popal Vuh’s drone score adds to the fever dream atmosphere. From the opening sequence of the Spanish expedition descending through the clouds out of the Andes to the final shot of Aguirre, alone on his raft, ranting at the sky, this is a fantastic, audacious cinema, well worth seeing on the big screen.

Aside from screening at the BFI Southbank, Aguirre, Wrath of God is at cinemas nationwide now; The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser opens nationwide on 5 July

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Watch The Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach share his guitar secrets

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In a new episode of the Noisey series Guitar Moves, Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys teaches the show's host Matt Sweeney how to play slide guitar. He also shares tricks he learnt from The Rolling Stones, Fleetwood Mac and Mississippi Fred McDowell. In the show, which you can watch above, Auerbach reveals that he learnt to play guitar from studying original bluesmen on footage recorded by folklorist Alan Lomax. "You know what was great, the Alan Lomax videos of those guys," he says. "That's how I learned to play this stuff. I went to the library and I would get the VHS tapes and I would watch. 'Cos the best way to learn is to watch." The Black Keys are currently working on their brand new studio album. The band, who released their seventh album El Camino in 2011, have a provisional release date of late 2013. Speaking to Uncut about their plans at the start of the year, Auerbach said: "We're going to start making the new album in the second week of January and we're hoping to have it done by some time in March." He added: "Then we're going to take the summer off, which we haven't done for a while. The record isn't written yet, we'll do it when we get into the studio. This is when we both work best, when we're dying to make an album. All of our records take place in the studio, in that we make stuff up while we're there." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=elK0jHNAcR4

In a new episode of the Noisey series Guitar Moves, Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys teaches the show’s host Matt Sweeney how to play slide guitar.

He also shares tricks he learnt from The Rolling Stones, Fleetwood Mac and Mississippi Fred McDowell. In the show, which you can watch above, Auerbach reveals that he learnt to play guitar from studying original bluesmen on footage recorded by folklorist Alan Lomax. “You know what was great, the Alan Lomax videos of those guys,” he says. “That’s how I learned to play this stuff. I went to the library and I would get the VHS tapes and I would watch. ‘Cos the best way to learn is to watch.”

The Black Keys are currently working on their brand new studio album. The band, who released their seventh album El Camino in 2011, have a provisional release date of late 2013. Speaking to Uncut about their plans at the start of the year, Auerbach said: “We’re going to start making the new album in the second week of January and we’re hoping to have it done by some time in March.”

He added: “Then we’re going to take the summer off, which we haven’t done for a while. The record isn’t written yet, we’ll do it when we get into the studio. This is when we both work best, when we’re dying to make an album. All of our records take place in the studio, in that we make stuff up while we’re there.”

Behind The Candelabra

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Behind The Candelabra reminds me a little of a Scorsese film, with Michael Douglas’ toupe in particular bringing to mind the extraordinary hairpieces worn by the elderly Midwestern crime bosses in Casino. This is Steven Soderbergh’s frequently hilarious biopic about Liberace and his 6-year relat...

Behind The Candelabra reminds me a little of a Scorsese film, with Michael Douglas’ toupe in particular bringing to mind the extraordinary hairpieces worn by the elderly Midwestern crime bosses in Casino. This is Steven Soderbergh’s frequently hilarious biopic about Liberace and his 6-year relationship with the much younger Scott Thorson. It is a world of palatial kitsch, excess and small dogs, Lear jets, plastic surgeons and boogie woogie piano. Everything dazzles, from Liberace and Scott’s white suits to the polished mirrored surfaces of their Palm Springs home and the harsh glare of the desert itself.

Michael Douglas – never an actor I’ve been particularly bothered about – does tremendous work as Liberace, delivering lines like “I personally support the entire Austrian rhinestone business” with more pride than camp. Free from the usual roles he’s more associated with, you get to glimpse Douglas’ intelligence and wit as an actor, and it makes me wish he made more, interesting films like this and less disposable pot/bunny-boiler thrillers. Matt Damon plays Scott with the right degree of youthful naivety and sense of entitlement.

Liberace, then 57, is looking for a surrogate son; Scott, a 17-year-old whose grown up in foster care, is looking for a father figure. This is the nub of their relationship, played out against a theatrical rhinestone-encrusted backdrop. Soderbergh finds much that’s interesting and diverting here, especially in the characters orbiting Liberace and Scott – Rob Lowe, as a plastic surgeon, gets a terrific extended cameo – what did they do to his face..?

Debbie Reynolds is on sprightly form as Liberace’s mother, along with Dan Ayrkoyd as Liberace’s blustery lawyer and Scott Bakula as the mutual friend who introduces Liberace to Scott. The film’s second half darkens, as Scott becomes addicted to painkillers and Liberace drifts into a series of assignations with other young boys, his enormous appetite for sex undimmed by his advancing years and the cost it eventually takes on his life.

Michael Bonner

Paul Simonon: “Bob Dylan used to come to a lot of Clash shows”

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Paul Simonon has spoken about recording with Bob Dylan. Interviewed by Rolling Stone about the forthcoming Clash box set, the bassist also discussed his work on Dylan's 1988 album, Down In The Groove. "Bob used to come to a lot of Clash shows, so I met him prior to that situation," explained Simon...

Paul Simonon has spoken about recording with Bob Dylan.

Interviewed by Rolling Stone about the forthcoming Clash box set, the bassist also discussed his work on Dylan’s 1988 album, Down In The Groove.

“Bob used to come to a lot of Clash shows, so I met him prior to that situation,” explained Simonon. “I actually arrived in Los Angeles with a friend of mine named Nigel Dixon, who was in a rockabilly band. We both left to live in El Paso and form a new band together. We bought two old motorcycles and we journeyed to Los Angeles and met up with Steve Jones from the Sex Pistols. After a couple of days Steve said to me, ‘Paul, they need a bass player and it’s for Bob Dylan. Do you fancy coming along?'”

“I went along and met Bob and we started to record,” continued Simonon. “It was quite difficult in some ways. We’d do three songs, and by the third song I’d just about remember how the songs went before we started recording them. But instead of recording them we went on with another three songs, and then another three songs and then another three songs. So after about 12 songs he said, ‘Let’s start from the beginning.’ And my memory of the first song was so vague. It was a difficult one, but it was enjoyable, and it was nice to see Bob and it was really nice to part of something unique and special.”

You can read Rolling Stone’s full interview with Simonon here.

Brian Wilson working on new solo album

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Brian Wilson has announced he is working on a new solo album. Wilson is currently recording and self-producing the album at Ocean Way Studios in Hollywood, he revealed in a press release on his official site. He has been joined in the studio by musicians including Jeff Beck and two of his former Th...

Brian Wilson has announced he is working on a new solo album.

Wilson is currently recording and self-producing the album at Ocean Way Studios in Hollywood, he revealed in a press release on his official site. He has been joined in the studio by musicians including Jeff Beck and two of his former The Beach Boys bandmates, Al Jardine and David Marks.

Wilson revealed he was inspired to make another solo record by the success of The Beach Boys‘ comeback album, That’s Why God Made The Radio, and reunion tour last year. Following the tour, he, Jardine and Marks were effectively ousted from the band’s lineup by Mike Love and Bruce Johnston.

“I was really moved by the fans’ excitement about The Beach Boys’ album and tour last year,” Wilson said in the press release. “It charged me up and my head was full of music – I just couldn’t wait to get back into the studio to let it out.”

The album will be Wilson’s 11th solo album and first since 2011’s In The Key Of Disney, a covers collection on which he tackled Disney film favourites including “The Bare Necessities” and “Can You Feel The Love Tonight?”. Wilson’s last solo collection of original material, That Lucky Old Sun, came out in 2008.

Meanwhile, Wilson is due to play a short series of US gigs this summer with Jardine and Marks, beginning in Atlantic City, New Jersey on July 20 and wrapping up at the Ravina Festival in Highland Park, Illinois on July 26.

The Making Of… Richard Hell & The Voidoids’ Blank Generation

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Television and Heartbreakers legend Richard Hell’s autobiography, I Dreamed I Was A Very Clean Tramp, is reviewed by editor Allan Jones in the new issue of Uncut (dated July 2013 and out now) – in this piece from Uncut’s September 2009 issue (Take 148), Hell and his bandmates explain how they ...

Television and Heartbreakers legend Richard Hell’s autobiography, I Dreamed I Was A Very Clean Tramp, is reviewed by editor Allan Jones in the new issue of Uncut (dated July 2013 and out now) – in this piece from Uncut’s September 2009 issue (Take 148), Hell and his bandmates explain how they created “Blank Generation”, the nihilistic, coruscating punk anthem first written as a “My Generation” for the ’70s New York scene. Words: Damien Love

________________________

By the summer of 1976, Richard Hell had formed then quit arguably the two most exciting bands of the original CBGBs scene – Television and The Heartbreakers. If those bands personified first-wave punk’s extremes of brains and balls, Hell’s next unit neatly synthesised the two. The key was Robert Quine, a friend since they’d worked in a bookstore together, who “looked like a deranged insurance salesman”. Teaming Quine with Ivan Julian, a dreadlocked kid recently arrived from touring Europe with The Foundations (of “Build Me Up Buttercup” fame), The Voidoids’ wired two-guitar attack was as sophisticated as Television’s, but more driving and angular.

Based on “I Belong To The Beat Generation” – a novelty send-up of Kerouac and crew by Rod McKuen – Hell’s “Blank Generation” had been a staple of early Television and Heartbreakers sets. It appeared on The Voidoids’ debut three-track EP, co-produced by Hell and Ramones producer Craig Leon, and released on Stiff in the UK. A reworked version became the title track of their 1977 LP, produced by Richard Gottehrer, co-founder of Sire Records, and the man who wrote “My Boyfriend’s Back”.

Blank Generation surpassed all the expectations on Hell, but, following one unhappy tour of the UK supporting The Clash, The Voidoids soon came to a halt. Within months of the album’s release, Hell sued Sire to get out of his contract. He wouldn’t make another album until 1982’s Destiny Street. “There was a lot of friction with Sire,” says Julian. “Then Richard also had his drug problem, which eventually made things more difficult than they had to be.”

Still, the song stands as the definitive anthem of New York’s ’70s moment – even if the questions remains of what exactly the “blank generation” means, and who belongs to it.

“Y’know, when I get letters, people often say, ‘I’m blank, too,’” laughs Hell. “And I don’t know what they’re referring to. I don’t know whether people are deriving the same import, whether it corresponds to how I felt when I was writing it. If people are saying that song is about being numb… I dunno. You can be in a stunned state and express it as anger and pain.”

_____________________

Richard Hell, writer, vocals, bass: “Blank Generation” is the first song I wrote that didn’t have music by Tom Verlaine. But it was a transitional thing, because it was based on this “Beat Generation” single by Rod McKuen that Tom had. He collected obscure, kitschy singles. The chord changes on that McKuen thing, though, there’s a thousand songs with those changes.

Ivan Julian, guitar, backing vocals: Like, “Hit The Road Jack”. And not The Stray Cats’ “Stray Cat Strut”, which a thousand people have said.

Hell: The McKuen thing was an in-joke, a pretty obscure one. No-one figured that out for 10 years. But my sentiments and attitude were committed. Sometimes people refer to it as like lounge music, tongue-in-cheek. But it wasn’t a joke to me.

Craig Leon, producer: I always thought the New York thing in the ’70s was a continuation of the Beat thing of the ’40s and ’50s, so it was very cool for him to take a bad, mass-produced novelty song about the Beat Generation, and turn it around into a real anthemic thing. Richard was always a literary personality, someone who could paint the scene, similar to Kerouac in the ’50s.

Richard Gottehrer, record company owner: I first became aware of Richard through hanging out at CBGBs. Seymour Stein and I started Sire Records, and I’d left and formed Instant Records with Marty Thau, who’d managed the New York Dolls. Marty was into that CBGBs scene, told me about it. The one that stood out was Richard. Everyone looked to him.

Leon: All of us thought of him as the quintessential figure, the CBGBs mentality personified. A lot of his natural persona is what Malcolm McLaren carried back to become British punk. After Television and The Heartbreakers, people were keen to see what he was going to do. I don’t know how he hooked up with Bob Quine, but it was a really good move.

Hell: I wanted to play with Quine. I was ready to leave The Heartbreakers, and we’d become really good friends. I used to go over to his house and drink Martinis and listen to his records and talk, he had this spectacular record collection. Finally, he played me tapes of bands he’d been in years before, and his playing was everything I hoped it might be from knowing his tastes. He hadn’t been in bands for years. The guy was already in his early thirties, and he’d never had success, ’cos people would say, “You can’t be in my band – you’re bald.”

Julian: I’d just come over from Europe. When I walked in to audition, Richard was nodding out and burning his hair with cigarettes, Quine was there looking like Quine, and Marc [Bell, aka Marky Ramone] was there with two women who were both like eight feet tall and wearing ripped fishnet stockings. During the songs, these two girls would start pulling each other’s hair out, having knock-down, drag-out fights. And I thought: ‘Oh – this is New York.’

Leon: The Voidoids recorded the EP before anyone saw them live. I first saw them in rehearsal – very impressive. More advanced than Television, that free-form jamming. Quine was like an avant-garde jazzer. He added a degree of dementia, very introspective, closer to something like John Coltrane. He brought an element of New York that wasn’t punk, but became punk. And he looked like a university professor.

Hell: I knew a lot of people were going to be less interested because there was this old bald guy in the group. But that was a statement in itself: Grow Up. But the reason I wanted to play with Quine was simply that Quine was a fucking genius. But he did not get the respect from ordinary bands back then.

Julian: When I first walked into the rehearsal room, I’m thinking, ‘God, that guy really can’t play.’ Because Quine was doing such abstract things. That was my first impression of him: ‘What the fuck is this?’ Guitar-wise, we used The Yardbirds as a model. Two guitar players, you can’t tell who’s playing rhythm and lead, two parts interwoven.

Leon: “Blank Generation” we worked up in an old studio, Bell Sounds. We’d get in for $10 an hour, ’cos the guy looking after it at nights would let us in. Great studio, where Shadow Morton did The Shangri-Las. There was a negotiation going to get Instant affiliated with Stiff in the UK. Stiff was interested in getting the EP out because punk was coming up in Britain. So there was a sense of urgency. It was done in three days.

Hell: The EP… y’know, the only recording of “Blank Generation” I really take seriously is the one on the album.

Julian: I listened to the EP recently, and thought, ‘This doesn’t sound as bad as I recall.’ I was shocked. Y’know, it’s kind of better than the album version.

Hell: The EP’s like the caveman version. Crude. But, then, caveman art is beautiful. There’s a big distance between the EP and the LP version, but it’s mostly our playing, not the production. I really thought the producer had to be somebody who could just capture what we sounded like, no frills. Gottehrer was really appropriate, because that’s where he comes from, garage music.

Gottehrer: The rawness and roughness of the music, it was kind of basic, but we didn’t just burn through it. We did it with real attitude. Those sessions were very wired. That album, it would make me nervous to hear it, the aggression, this wired edge that never went away. It’s almost more a document of the time than a rock’n’roll record.

Julian: We recorded the album twice. First at Electric Lady. Then there was this delay, and Richard wasn’t happy with it, so we recorded the whole thing again at Plaza Sound. Sire was negotiating a distribution deal with Warners, and the delay caused friction between us and Seymour. We were like, “Ok, we’ve finished a record, we want it out, we wanna work, we wanna play – what’s going on?” It was months before the record came out. When we opened for The Clash in the UK, our first tour, the record came out the last day of the tour.

Hell: As far as “Blank Generation” having an impact – it was very delayed. That’s probably my fault, because I stopped playing right away. I mean, we sued Sire to get out of our contract. The band members hated Sire, Quine hated Gottehrer and Seymour Stein, and I felt fucked over by them. So we vanished. We didn’t tour. We refused. We just did gigs in New York that would pay the rent.

Gottehrer: Richard was the complete example of what that era was like. Blondie, Talking Heads, these people used punk to get in the door, then became something else. But Richard was that. He just had this attitude and artistic bent. He was respected for that, but he might have gotten passed over because of it. Because, in the end, the record companies wanted to do business. Richard may have been a little too early.

Hell: If you look at the Ramones – nobody was noticing them either back then. In terms of the larger culture, they were a joke. But they plugged away. “Blank Generation” might have had more presence if we’d continued. But it’s still gaining impact. Every year it penetrates deeper, arises more often.

Gottehrer: It never sold much, but its impact was far greater than sales. But, back then, I was sure it’d be a hit single. I was naive enough to believe the world was ready for that. It just was ahead of its time. Or perhaps not in any time – it just exists in its own space.

Hell: I try to evade the issue of what the song “means”. I tried to make it as subtle and complex as I could, and to paraphrase it is dumb. But since the ’70s one small statement I made has been repeated over and over. Always, people write: “Richard insists it’s not negative, it’s about the chance to reinvent yourself.” Well – that’s not true. I said something along those lines in one little interview with Lester Bangs, as he was coming down on me for being a nihilist. But it wasn’t the essence. Obviously, that whole song is about hopelessness: “I was saying let me out of here before I was even born!”

Julian: Eventually, the press started talking about it as being The New York Punk Anthem – but that didn’t happen until years later. But does it encapsulate what everyone was feeling? Yes.

Hell: I wanted to write a “generation” song, y’know “My Generation” for what people like me were feeling. Although, I knew it was unlikely that a lot of people were going to rally around the concept of… being nothing. But I did have this feeling I might… make a few friends?

________________________

FACTFILE

Written by: Richard Hell

Performers: Richard Hell (bass, lead vocals), Robert Quine (guitar, backing vocals), Ivan Julian (guitar, backing vocals), Marc Bell (aka Marky Ramone, drums)

Produced by: Craig Leon and Richard Hell (EP version), Richard Gottehrer (album version)

Recorded at: Bell Studios, New York (EP), Plaza Sound Studios, New York (album)

Released as a single: November 1976

Highest chart position: n/a

TIMELINE

1973: Hell writes “Blank Generation” while he and Television co-founder Tom Verlaine still call their band The Neon Boys.

March 1974: The Hell/Verlaine Television take up a residency at CBGBs.

March 1975: Hell quits Television. The following month he forms The Heartbreakers with Johnny Thunders. They record a demo of “Blank Generation” in January 1976.

April 1976: Hell leaves The Heartbreakers.

June 1976: Hell signs with Marty Thau and Richard Gottehrer’s production company, Instant Records. The Voidoids record their first EP, released November.

March 1977: The Voidoids record the Blank Generation LP.

June 1977: Frustrated when the LP’s release is delayed while the Sire label negotiates a new distribution deal, they re-record practically the entire album. It’s finally released November 1977.

The Best Of 2013: Halftime Report

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Around this time in 2012, I came up with 40 records, released between January and June, that I liked enough to include in a six-month Best-Of list. Either I’m being more diligent, or less discerning, or else 2013 is shaping up to be a better year: as you can see, I’ve managed 67 here. Once again, I’ve gone for alphabetical order, rather than trying to fiddle them into any kind of order. Hopefully they all fall within the Jan-June period, though apologies in advance if any rogue releases have sneaked under the wire; I haven’t been exactly obsessive at factchecking this. Parquet Courts and Matt White show up as a result of their UK releases coming in 2013, before you start. Links point to longer pieces I’ve written about those specific albums. Doubtless I’ve missed a few things, so please list your own favourites in the comments thread below – plus you can tell me off for being disappointed by the Queens Of The Stone Age album or whatever. Seriously, though, it’s always nice to see your comments. And thanks, as ever, for all your loyalty, encouragement and recommendations. Be amazing if the back end of 2013 turns out to be as strong as this, I think… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1. A Hawk And A Hacksaw - You Have Already Gone To The Other World (Lm Dupli-Cation) 2. Arbouretum – Coming Out Of The Fog (Thrill Jockey) 3. Atoms For Peace – Amok (XL) 4. Bitchin Bajas – Krausened (Permanent) 5. Bitchin Bajas – Bitchitronics (Drag City) 6. Black Twig Pickers – Rough Carpenters (Thrill Jockey) 7. James Blackshaw & Lubomyr Melnyk – The Watchers (Important) 8. Boards Of Canada – Tomorrow’s Harvest (Warp) 9. Broadcast – Berberian Sound Studio (Warp) 10. The Cairo Gang – Tiny Rebels (Empty Cellar) 11. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Push The Sky Away (Bad Seed Ltd) 12. Chelsea Light Moving - Chelsea Light Moving (Matador) 13. Cool Ghouls - Cool Ghouls (Empty Cellar) 14. Mikal Cronin – MCII (Merge) 15. Daft Punk – Random Access Memories (Columbia) 16. Date Palms – The Dusted Sessions (Thrill Jockey) 17. Elephant Micah - Globe Rush Progressions (Product Of Palmyra) 18. Endless Boogie – Long Island (No Quarter) 19. Lawrence English - Lonely Woman's Club (Important) 20. Eleanor Friedberger – Personal Record (Merge) 21. Golden Gunn – Golden Gunn (Three Lobed Recordings) 22. Steve Gunn – Time Off (Paradise Of Bachelors) 23. The Handsome Family – Wilderness (Loose) 24. Liam Hayes – A Glimpse Inside The Mind Of Charles Swan III (Night Fever) 25. Hiss Golden Messenger – Haw (Paradise Of Bachelors) 26. Houndstooth – Ride Out The Dark (No Quarter) 27. Jim James - Regions Of Light And Sound Of God (V2) 28. Chuck Johnson - Crows In The Basilica (Three Lobed Recordings) 29. Glenn Jones – My Garden State (Thrill Jockey) 30. Goran Kajfeš Subtropic Arkestra - The Reason Why Vol. 1 (Headspin) 31. The Knife – Shaking The Habitual (Rabid) 32. Mark Kozelek & Jimmy Lavalle – Perils From The Sea (Caldo Verde) 33. Mark Kozelek - Like Rats (Caldo Verde) 34. Mark Lanegan & Duke Garwood – Black Pudding (Heavenly) 35. Low – The Invisible Way (Sub Pop) 36. Laura Marling – Once I Was An Eagle (Virgin) 37. The Master Musicians Of Bukkake – Far West (Important) 38. Matmos – The Marriage Of True Minds (Thrill Jockey) 39. Dawn McCarthy & Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – What The Brothers Sang (Domino) 40. Lubomyr Melnyk – Corollaries (Erased Tapes) 41. Mountains – Centralia (Thrill Jockey) 42. μ-Ziq – Chewed Corners (Planet Mu) 43. My Bloody Valentine – m b v (My Bloody Valentine) 44. The Oblivians – Desperation (In The Red) 45. Thee Oh Sees – Floating Coffin (Castleface) 46. Pantha Du Prince & The Bell Laboratory – Elements Of Light (Rough Trade) 47. Van Dyke Parks – Songs Cycled (Bella Union) 48. Parquet Courts – Light Up Gold (What’s Your Rupture) 49. Duane Pitre – Bridges (Important) 50. Purling Hiss – Water On Mars (Drag City) 51. Rangda/Dead C – Rangda/Dead C (Ba Da Bing) 52. Retribution Gospel Choir – 3 (Chaperone) 53. Gregor Schwellenbach – Gregor Schwellenbach Spielt 20 Jahre Kompakt (Kompakt) 54. Ravi Shankar - The Living Room Sessions Part 2 (East Meets West Music) 55. The Shouting Matches – Grownass Man (Middle West) 56. Splashgirl – Field Day Rituals (Hubro) 57. These New Puritans – Field Of Reeds (Infectious) 58. Richard Thompson – Electric (Proper) 59. Justin Timberlake – The 20/20 Experience (RCA) 60. William Tyler – Impossible Truth (Merge) 61. Unknown Mortal Orchestra - II (Jagjaguwar) 62. Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats – Mind Control (Rise Above) 63. Vampire Weekend - Modern Vampires Of The City (XL) 64. Jozef Van Wissem - Nihil Obstat (Important) 65. Kurt Vile - Wakin On A Pretty Daze (Matador) 66. Matthew E White – Big Inner (Domino) 67. White Fence – Cyclops Reap (Castleface)

Around this time in 2012, I came up with 40 records, released between January and June, that I liked enough to include in a six-month Best-Of list. Either I’m being more diligent, or less discerning, or else 2013 is shaping up to be a better year: as you can see, I’ve managed 67 here.

Once again, I’ve gone for alphabetical order, rather than trying to fiddle them into any kind of order. Hopefully they all fall within the Jan-June period, though apologies in advance if any rogue releases have sneaked under the wire; I haven’t been exactly obsessive at factchecking this. Parquet Courts and Matt White show up as a result of their UK releases coming in 2013, before you start. Links point to longer pieces I’ve written about those specific albums.

Doubtless I’ve missed a few things, so please list your own favourites in the comments thread below – plus you can tell me off for being disappointed by the Queens Of The Stone Age album or whatever. Seriously, though, it’s always nice to see your comments. And thanks, as ever, for all your loyalty, encouragement and recommendations. Be amazing if the back end of 2013 turns out to be as strong as this, I think…

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

1. A Hawk And A Hacksaw – You Have Already Gone To The Other World (Lm Dupli-Cation)

2. Arbouretum – Coming Out Of The Fog (Thrill Jockey)

3. Atoms For Peace – Amok (XL)

4. Bitchin Bajas – Krausened (Permanent)

5. Bitchin Bajas – Bitchitronics (Drag City)

6. Black Twig Pickers – Rough Carpenters (Thrill Jockey)

7. James Blackshaw & Lubomyr Melnyk – The Watchers (Important)

8. Boards Of Canada – Tomorrow’s Harvest (Warp)

9. Broadcast – Berberian Sound Studio (Warp)

10. The Cairo Gang – Tiny Rebels (Empty Cellar)

11. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Push The Sky Away (Bad Seed Ltd)

12. Chelsea Light Moving – Chelsea Light Moving (Matador)

13. Cool Ghouls – Cool Ghouls (Empty Cellar)

14. Mikal Cronin – MCII (Merge)

15. Daft Punk – Random Access Memories (Columbia)

16. Date Palms – The Dusted Sessions (Thrill Jockey)

17. Elephant Micah – Globe Rush Progressions (Product Of Palmyra)

18. Endless Boogie – Long Island (No Quarter)

19. Lawrence English – Lonely Woman’s Club (Important)

20. Eleanor Friedberger – Personal Record (Merge)

21. Golden Gunn – Golden Gunn (Three Lobed Recordings)

22. Steve Gunn – Time Off (Paradise Of Bachelors)

23. The Handsome Family – Wilderness (Loose)

24. Liam Hayes – A Glimpse Inside The Mind Of Charles Swan III (Night Fever)

25. Hiss Golden Messenger – Haw (Paradise Of Bachelors)

26. Houndstooth – Ride Out The Dark (No Quarter)

27. Jim James – Regions Of Light And Sound Of God (V2)

28. Chuck Johnson – Crows In The Basilica (Three Lobed Recordings)

29. Glenn Jones – My Garden State (Thrill Jockey)

30. Goran Kajfeš Subtropic Arkestra – The Reason Why Vol. 1 (Headspin)

31. The Knife – Shaking The Habitual (Rabid)

32. Mark Kozelek & Jimmy Lavalle – Perils From The Sea (Caldo Verde)

33. Mark Kozelek – Like Rats (Caldo Verde)

34. Mark Lanegan & Duke Garwood – Black Pudding (Heavenly)

35. Low – The Invisible Way (Sub Pop)

36. Laura Marling – Once I Was An Eagle (Virgin)

37. The Master Musicians Of Bukkake – Far West (Important)

38. Matmos – The Marriage Of True Minds (Thrill Jockey)

39. Dawn McCarthy & Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – What The Brothers Sang (Domino)

40. Lubomyr Melnyk – Corollaries (Erased Tapes)

41. Mountains – Centralia (Thrill Jockey)

42. μ-Ziq – Chewed Corners (Planet Mu)

43. My Bloody Valentine – m b v (My Bloody Valentine)

44. The Oblivians – Desperation (In The Red)

45. Thee Oh Sees – Floating Coffin (Castleface)

46. Pantha Du Prince & The Bell Laboratory – Elements Of Light (Rough Trade)

47. Van Dyke Parks – Songs Cycled (Bella Union)

48. Parquet Courts – Light Up Gold (What’s Your Rupture)

49. Duane Pitre – Bridges (Important)

50. Purling Hiss – Water On Mars (Drag City)

51. Rangda/Dead C – Rangda/Dead C (Ba Da Bing)

52. Retribution Gospel Choir – 3 (Chaperone)

53. Gregor Schwellenbach – Gregor Schwellenbach Spielt 20 Jahre Kompakt (Kompakt)

54. Ravi Shankar – The Living Room Sessions Part 2 (East Meets West Music)

55. The Shouting Matches – Grownass Man (Middle West)

56. Splashgirl – Field Day Rituals (Hubro)

57. These New Puritans – Field Of Reeds (Infectious)

58. Richard Thompson – Electric (Proper)

59. Justin Timberlake – The 20/20 Experience (RCA)

60. William Tyler – Impossible Truth (Merge)

61. Unknown Mortal Orchestra – II (Jagjaguwar)

62. Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats – Mind Control (Rise Above)

63. Vampire Weekend – Modern Vampires Of The City (XL)

64. Jozef Van Wissem – Nihil Obstat (Important)

65. Kurt Vile – Wakin On A Pretty Daze (Matador)

66. Matthew E White – Big Inner (Domino)

67. White Fence – Cyclops Reap (Castleface)

Jefferson Airplane drummer Joey Covington dies aged 67

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Joey Covington, who played drums with Jefferson Airplane, has died aged 67 following a car accident in Palm Springs, California. Covington replaced Spencer Dryden in Jefferson Airplane during the recording of 1969′s Volunteers album. He later played on the band's albums Bark - for which he wrote...

Joey Covington, who played drums with Jefferson Airplane, has died aged 67 following a car accident in Palm Springs, California.

Covington replaced Spencer Dryden in Jefferson Airplane during the recording of 1969′s Volunteers album.

He later played on the band’s albums Bark – for which he wrote and sang the track “Pretty As You Feel” – and Long John Silver. He left the group in 1972 to pursue a solo career.

He helped form the Jefferson Airplane side project Hot Tuna in 1969, along with Jorma Kaukonen, Jack Casady and Paul Kantner.

Covington also co-wrote the 1976 Jefferson Starship single “With Your Love”, from the band’s Spitfire album.

Suede add dates to autumn tour

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Suede have added a trio of new shows to their October tour of the UK and Ireland. The band will now play additional shows in Southampton, Southend and Bristol, as well as previously announced dates in Leeds, Glasgow, Dublin, Manchester and Birmingham. Tickets for the new shows go on sale May 17 at ...

Suede have added a trio of new shows to their October tour of the UK and Ireland.

The band will now play additional shows in Southampton, Southend and Bristol, as well as previously announced dates in Leeds, Glasgow, Dublin, Manchester and Birmingham. Tickets for the new shows go on sale May 17 at 9am [BST].

They will play tracks from their sixth album Bloodsports, which was released in March. The LP was the band’s first in over 10 years and entered the Official UK Albums Chart at Number 10, giving them their first Top 10 hit since 1999’s Head Music. The band release their new single, “Hit Me”, on May 27.

Suede will play:

Southampton Guildhall (October 22)

Southend Cliff Pavilion (23)

Bristol O2 Academy (24)

Leeds O2 Academy (26)

Glasgow Barrowlands (27)

Dublin Olympia (27)

Manchester Academy 1 (30)

Birmingham Academy 1 (31)

Smashing Pumpkins box set The Aeroplane Flies High to be reissued with 90 bonus tracks

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Smashing Pumpkins' 1996 box set The Aeroplane Flies High is to be reissued on July 23 with 90 bonus tracks. The original 1996 edition was a five-disc set featuring expanded versions of the five singles from the band's Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness album, which came out the previous year. T...

Smashing Pumpkins‘ 1996 box set The Aeroplane Flies High is to be reissued on July 23 with 90 bonus tracks.

The original 1996 edition was a five-disc set featuring expanded versions of the five singles from the band’s Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness album, which came out the previous year. The bumper reissue adds a total of 90 unreleased demos, alternate versions and live recordings and everything has been fully remastered.

The reissue also includes a sixth disc featuring a live recording from the band’s 1996 tour and a DVD of their performance in Belfort, France on July 4, 1997. The new box set apparently boasts “unique packaging with embossed foil wrap and twinkle stock for jackets” and will be available to buy from July 23.

Billy Corgan has contributed track-by-track notes to the reissue’s 46-page booklet. “What I like about The Aeroplane Flies High is that it’s almost the existential backwater of the Mellon Collie album. Listening to the music gathered here is a little bit like seeing what goes on behind the walls of Disneyland,” he writes. “At least for me, the behind the scenes feel heard on The Aeroplane Flies High represents something revealing not found on the made album.”

Meanwhile, Smashing Pumpkins are heading over to the UK next month for live dates. The band will play Glastonbury‘s Other Stage on June 30, Manchester on July 1 and Glasgow on July 2 before returning later in the month for a London show on July 22. Corgan revealed in March that the band had started writing their next album, the follow-up to 2012’s Oceania, and recording will start “soon”, a news item on their official website confirms.

Tim Burgess: “The Charlatans’ ‘One To Another’ was our ‘Love Will Tear Us Apart'”

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Tim Burgess has compared The Charlatans’ ‘One To Another’ to Joy Division’s ‘Love Will Tear Us Apart’ in the new issue of Uncut (dated July 2013 and out now). The group tell the full triumphant and tragic story of their biggest hit, their last recording before keyboardist Rob Collins ...

Tim Burgess has compared The Charlatans’ ‘One To Another’ to Joy Division’s ‘Love Will Tear Us Apart’ in the new issue of Uncut (dated July 2013 and out now).

The group tell the full triumphant and tragic story of their biggest hit, their last recording before keyboardist Rob Collins was killed in a car accident in July 1996.

“I felt that [the song] had taken on another thing. I thought it was our ‘Love Will Tear Us Apart’,” Burgess explains. “I felt it was part of that club, of deaths that put a myth around a record. And I wanted to make sure that we kept Rob’s name alive.”

You can read the full story of ‘One To Another’ in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

Patty Griffin – American Kid

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Understated and emotive country-folk from lauded Austin songstress... On stage at an Austin benefit gig last December, Patty Griffin introduced new beau Robert Plant as “my driver”. It’s a relationship that began when she was backing singer on his 2010 album Band Of Joy, and subsequent US tour, and one that carried through to live dates as deconstructivist rockers the Sensational Shape Shifters. Last summer Plant appeared to suggest they were married, only to refute everything days later. But whatever the detail, disclosed or otherwise, it’s a combination that looks set to run on. The couple have promised another Band Of Joy opus, the mood this time being “far out with psychedelic pedal steel”. In the meantime it’s no great surprise to learn that Plant crops up on Griffin’s new solo album. The life of her father, a WWII vet and sometime Trappist monk who also found time to raise seven children, provides the back story to American Kid, Griffin’s first all-new offering since 2007. It’s a record that manages to sound deeply affectionate without being sentimental. The tender rumination of songs like “Wild Old Dog” and “Mom and Dad’s Waltz” accentuates the gentle ache in Griffin’s voice. It’s one that invites obvious comparisons with Alison Krauss, albeit packed with a little more weight and muscle. Ohio is the pick of three tunes that also feature Plant. Though, unlike his work with Krauss on 2007’s Raising Sand, his is a more discreet, less tangible presence. It’s a yearning ballad set to the rustic buzz of a picked guitar, with Plant bringing soft backing harmonies to Griffin’s lead. He reprises the role on similarly low-key efforts “Faithful Son” and “Highway Song”. American Kid’s most striking moments instead lay elsewhere. Not least on “Don’t Let Me Die In Florida”, whose driving electric guitar and trilling mandolin signal an uptempo note to an otherwise downtempo theme. Or the delicate choral stillness of “Gonna Miss You When You’re Gone”. Griffin’s elegant phrasing and nuanced delivery make this a bewitching piece of work all round, with or without the hired help. Rob Hughes

Understated and emotive country-folk from lauded Austin songstress…

On stage at an Austin benefit gig last December, Patty Griffin introduced new beau Robert Plant as “my driver”. It’s a relationship that began when she was backing singer on his 2010 album Band Of Joy, and subsequent US tour, and one that carried through to live dates as deconstructivist rockers the Sensational Shape Shifters. Last summer Plant appeared to suggest they were married, only to refute everything days later. But whatever the detail, disclosed or otherwise, it’s a combination that looks set to run on. The couple have promised another Band Of Joy opus, the mood this time being “far out with psychedelic pedal steel”. In the meantime it’s no great surprise to learn that Plant crops up on Griffin’s new solo album.

The life of her father, a WWII vet and sometime Trappist monk who also found time to raise seven children, provides the back story to American Kid, Griffin’s first all-new offering since 2007. It’s a record that manages to sound deeply affectionate without being sentimental. The tender rumination of songs like “Wild Old Dog” and “Mom and Dad’s Waltz” accentuates the gentle ache in Griffin’s voice. It’s one that invites obvious comparisons with Alison Krauss, albeit packed with a little more weight and muscle.

Ohio is the pick of three tunes that also feature Plant. Though, unlike his work with Krauss on 2007’s Raising Sand, his is a more discreet, less tangible presence. It’s a yearning ballad set to the rustic buzz of a picked guitar, with Plant bringing soft backing harmonies to Griffin’s lead. He reprises the role on similarly low-key efforts “Faithful Son” and “Highway Song”.

American Kid’s most striking moments instead lay elsewhere. Not least on “Don’t Let Me Die In Florida”, whose driving electric guitar and trilling mandolin signal an uptempo note to an otherwise downtempo theme. Or the delicate choral stillness of “Gonna Miss You When You’re Gone”. Griffin’s elegant phrasing and nuanced delivery make this a bewitching piece of work all round, with or without the hired help.

Rob Hughes

Stephen Stills forms new group, covers Neil Young and the Stooges

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Stephen Stills has formed a new group, The Rides. Playing alongside guitarist Kenny Wayne Shepherd and Electric Flag keyboardist Barry Goldberg, The Rides are due to release their debut album, Can't Get Enough, on August 26 through Provogue Records. The 10-track album has been produced by former T...

Stephen Stills has formed a new group, The Rides.

Playing alongside guitarist Kenny Wayne Shepherd and Electric Flag keyboardist Barry Goldberg, The Rides are due to release their debut album, Can’t Get Enough, on August 26 through Provogue Records.

The 10-track album has been produced by former Talking Head, Jerry Harrison.

The line up on Can’t Get Enough is augmented by Chris Layton, Shepherd’s drummer, and CSN bassist, Kevin McCormick.

Scroll down to watch Stills, Goldberg and Shepherd discuss the album.

Can’t Get Enough was inspired by the 1968 collaboration with Mike Bloomfield and Al Kooper. The Super Sessions album featured Stills’ guitar work on one side, and Bloomfield’s on the other.

Tracks include covers of Neil Young‘s “Rockin’ In The Free World” and Iggy and the Stooges’ “Search And Destroy” alongside Muddy Waters’ “Honey Bee” and Elmore James’ “Talk To Me Baby” and a previously unrecorded Buffalo Springfield-era Stills song, “Word Game”.

“In the spirit of that simple, raw authentic 40s and 50s blues music the three of us love, we got in there and boom! A few takes and we were done,” says Stills. “The songs have muscle; they don’t sound dated or contrived. They’re very natural and organic. I can’t wait to tour with these guys and start recording again.”

The full track-listing for Can’t Get Enough is:

Mississippi Road House

That’s A Pretty Good Love

Don’t Want Lies

Search And Destroy

Can’t Get Enough of Loving You

Honey Bee

Rockin’ In The Free World

Talk To Me Baby

Only Teardrops Fall

Word Game

The Rides will begin on a world tour beginning in September, with UK November dates to be confirmed in the coming weeks.

Jack White saves Detroit Masonic Temple by paying its back taxes

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Jack White has been revealed as the anonymous donor who saved the Detroit Masonic Temple from foreclosure. White apparently paid off $142,000 (£92,798) in back taxes so his hometown venue - the world's largest Masonic Temple - could stay in business. The Detroit Free Press reports that White's mo...

Jack White has been revealed as the anonymous donor who saved the Detroit Masonic Temple from foreclosure.

White apparently paid off $142,000 (£92,798) in back taxes so his hometown venue – the world’s largest Masonic Temple – could stay in business. The Detroit Free Press reports that White’s mother formerly worked as an usher at the venue. White – now based in Nashville – also played the venue with The White Stripes.

The venue’s 1586 capacity Cathedral Theater will now be named the Jack White Theater to honour the star. The Detroit Masonic Temple Association President Roger Sobran stated: “Jack’s donation could not have come at a better time and we are eternally grateful to him for it. Jack’s magnanimous generosity and unflinching loyalty to this historic building and his Detroit roots is appreciated beyond words.”

He continued: “In light of Jack’s generosity and belief in the importance of a strong, vital Temple that should and will be available to future generations of Detroiters, the Masonic Temple Association will be naming, in Jack’s honour, our Cathedral Theater, the Jack White Theater. We could not be more humbled to bestow this honour on Jack.”

Jack White’s Third Man Records recently joined forces with Sun Records for a series of releases. Third Man reissued a number of songs from Sun’s back catalogue on 7″ black vinyl, including Johnny Cash’s 1956 single “Get Rhythm”, which was originally backed with “I Walk The Line”. The initial three 45rpm releases will include Rufus Thomas’ “Bear Cat” and The Prisonaires’ “Just Walking In The Rain” – both originally released in 1953 – alongside the Johnny Cash reissue.

The Third Man blog says: “This will be an ongoing partnership between Sun and Third Man and future releases are already in the works.” They add: “Each release remains faithful to its original issue on Sun, replicating the classic logo and label design coupled with a striking Sun company sleeve that dutifully employs the rooster Sam Philips lamented losing as labels switched from 78’s to 45’s.”

Hear new Beck single, “Defriended”

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Beck has unveiled a brand new, stand-alone single called "Defriended". Click below to listen to track, which Spin reports will not feature on either of the artist's forthcoming two albums. They also state that there will be another stand-alone single release ahead of his next studio album and the a...

Beck has unveiled a brand new, stand-alone single called “Defriended”.

Click below to listen to track, which Spin reports will not feature on either of the artist’s forthcoming two albums. They also state that there will be another stand-alone single release ahead of his next studio album and the acoustic LP which is also in the works.

Beck will be heading up a special Song Reader night at London’s Barbican on July 4, in which songs from last year’s sheet music release will be performed. The line-up for the night will include Beck himself, alongside Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker, Franz Ferdinand and Charlotte Gainsbourg. Beth Orton, Joan Wasser aka Joan As Police Woman, Villagers frontman Conor J O’Brien, The Staves, Guillemots, Michael Kiwanuka and singer-songwriters James Yorkston and The Pictish Trail will all also perform on the night with more guests to be announced.

A house band comprising of Seb Rochford, Tom Herbert and The Invisible’s Dave Okumu will perform, with music direction courtesy of Ed Harcourt and David Coulter. In the lead up to the event, the Barbican and Faber Social will host an exhibition of the artwork involved with ‘Song Reader’, as well as a presentation of a selection of some the best amateur interpretations of the songs.

Beck recently performed tracks from his Song Reader sheet music project live in public for the very first time at the Rio Theater in Santa Cruz. Song Reader was released in December 2012. It includes 20 songs and more than 100 pages of art. Beck’s idea for the release is that the listener becomes the artist, with all 20 songs open to interpretation by different individuals.