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Scott Walker “had a horror of being compared to Sinatra or Tom Jones”

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Scott Walker had “a horror of being compared to Sinatra or Tom Jones” in the '60s, his publicist reveals in the new issue of Uncut (dated July 2013 and out now). Keith Altham, also a famed music journalist, explains that Walker "didn’t want to do 'trivia'." "He had managers who didn’t re...

Scott Walker had “a horror of being compared to Sinatra or Tom Jones” in the ’60s, his publicist reveals in the new issue of Uncut (dated July 2013 and out now).

Keith Altham, also a famed music journalist, explains that Walker “didn’t want to do ‘trivia’.”

“He had managers who didn’t really understand him. Maurice King and Barry Clayman. They’d seen this golden goose called The Walker Brothers and that was all they wanted to promote.

“And that was exactly the thing that Scott didn’t want to be. He had a horror of being compared to Sinatra or Tom Jones.”

Along with Altham, a number of Walker’s ’60s collaborators recall their time with the singer, including bassist Herbie Flowers and arranger Keith Roberts.

Scott Walker’s five-album boxset, The Collection 1967-1970, is also reviewed at length in the new issue.

Ian Dury on his favourite things…

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Reissues of Ian Dury’s Lord Upminster and 4,000 Weeks Holiday albums are reviewed in the latest Uncut (dated July 2013, and out now) – and a new exhibition, Ian Dury – More Than Fair: Paintings, Drawings and Artworks 1961-1972, takes place at the Royal College Of Art, Kensington, from July 23-...

Reissues of Ian Dury’s Lord Upminster and 4,000 Weeks Holiday albums are reviewed in the latest Uncut (dated July 2013, and out now) – and a new exhibition, Ian Dury – More Than Fair: Paintings, Drawings and Artworks 1961-1972, takes place at the Royal College Of Art, Kensington, from July 23-September 1, 2013.

So this week’s archive feature, taken from Uncut’s August 1998 issue (Take 15), sees the lead Blockhead enthuse about Sweet Gene Vincent, sizzled Max Wall, sexy Marilyn Monroe and the stiff upper lips of Dickie Attenborough and Johnny Mills. Interview: Terry Staunton

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BRITISH WAR FILMS

“I really rate ’em. You get drama, you get aeroplanes, you get the sea quite often. I think John Mills, Richard Attenborough, Bryan Forbes, Anthony Steele – usually in the desert with shorts on – are true artists. I think I like them because they reminded me of the first few times I ever went to a cinema when I was a kid after the war. Most British films recently are designed to go on television, they just don’t work on a big screen – 70mm doesn’t suit ’em. Angels On Fire was a good ‘un, but The Dambusters has the worst special effects I’ve ever seen in my life. In the cinema it don’t matter, but for some reason they show up on the telly – you can spot the wigs and everything. Also I prefer black and white films. Colour kills tone and tone creates space. With colour films, you get no sense of space at all, no sense of depth, or drama. And lighting goes up the wall.”

WOODY ALLEN

“I’m really a fan of Woody Allen the comedian, rather than Woody Allen the filmmaker. There’s a live album of his stand-up act from about 1963 or ’64, and it’s basically all you really need. Anything in his subsequent output that’s been any good was on that first album. You can spot it sometimes in his films – he keeps going back to the stuff from that record, or at least variations on it. Every joke he ever made is on that first album, or the couple that followed. He was probably about 23 when he was doin’ the stand-up, and those jokes have sustained him for well over 30 years. We used to sit around smokin’ a few spliffs listening to those albums – absolutely blindin’. I can’t stand Woody Allen’s movies, I’ve never liked any of ’em. The earlier ones are too amateurish, the lighting’s flat and the sound’s terrible, and then even the later ones are just stultifyingly boring.”

GENE VINCENT

“There’s a few parallels with Elvis Presley here. Just as Elvis was at his best on Sun, Gene was at his peak when he was with the guitarist, Gallopin’ Cliff Gallup, sort of pre-1958. After then, forget it. When he started dressing head to toe in black leather, he’d really lost it. He was better when he was wearing the pale blue bowling shirts, the light fabrics. He was probably the first rock’n’roller to smash up hotels. One of the first was this place called the Knickerbocker Hotel, which I mentioned in ‘Sweet Gene Vincent’. When the saxophone was introduced to his records, I essentially stopped liking him, same with Elvis. It was ‘Lotta Lovin” with Gene and ‘King Creole’ with Elvis. Two black days in music. The rockabilly guys had a pure sound which just disappeared after a while. Gene was a very quiet man offstage, and a polite man. I spoke to Chas Hodges of Chas & Dave, who’d played with Gene in the Sixties, and he told me that Gene would call everybody ‘Sir’, even the musicians he employed.”

SOME LIKE IT HOT

“I knew the art director on that film – in fact, he actually designed it as if it was being shot in colour, but then the producers ran out of dosh and switched to black and white. I wonder if it was because of the amount of money they had to pay Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon and Marilyn Monroe, I dunno. He told me this story about the day he did a painting on the set and left it on a chair, then Marilyn came in and sat on it while it was still wet. Got paint all over her black slinky dress. Left a lovely impression of her arse on the painting – imagine havin’ that on your wall. You can tell that Some Like It Hot should have been in colour, a lot of it looks too plush to be black and white – things like the scenes on the train when the girl band is rehearsin’ their number.”

ORNETTE COLEMAN

“One of the most important jazz innovators ever. When me and Chaz Jankel wrote ‘Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll’, we nicked the riff from a Charlie Haden bass solo off an Ornette Colman record. I met Haden in the late ’70s and admitted to him that I’d nicked his riff. He said, ‘Wasn’t my riff, I nicked it off a Cajun folk tune.’ I remember when I first went to the Royal College Of Art, there were four of us sharin’ a flat, all jazz freaks, each of us had a different room for the particular style of jazz we liked. Charlie Watts was a big mate of ours and every time he went to America with the Stones he’d come back with about 10 albums each for us, real far-out stuff that was too heavy duty for his own tastes. I’ve always loved ’50s jazz with a bluesy vibe to it. Charles Mingus was a genius. There’s a great track called ‘What Love’ which is basically a musical conversation between Mingus and his alto sax player, Eric Dolphy, asking him why he was leavin’ the band. Mingus actually makes his bass talk. They row, they fight, they bicker, without words at all. It’s spine-tingling, unbelievable.”

MEMPHIS SOUL

“There was a lot of Jazz in the Memphis soul scene. Stax and Atlantic had a couple of great house bands, and then there were producers like Willie Mitchell who was just great. Al Jackson was probably the best popular music drummer that ever lived – he was so on it, so funky, and so full of feel. He wrote songs with Al Green, he’d actually write a specific tom-tom part. When him and the MGs were backing Otis Redding, something double special happened. There’s stories of him gettin’ into a groove during recording sessions and just carry on playin’ all dat, even when everyone else went out for a cup of tea. His music was everythin’, he’d go there and stay there. He was on the last really good Rod Stewart LP, Atlantic Crossing. He died a violent death, as a lot of the Memphis crowd did, bizarrely enough.”

MAX WALL

“One of the funniest visual comedians ever, him and Tommy Cooper were the best. He recorded one of my songs once, ‘England’s Glory’, on Stiff. I didn’t actually write it for him – it was originally sent to Warren Mitchell, who didn’t want to do it, neither did Ronnie Barker. Then someone had the brilliant idea of sending it to Max. I always thought he was a genius. He was wonderful, but when he got near the Guinnesses it could all go a bit awry. He didn’t quite get the hang of ‘England’s Glory’, ’cause it was a bit fast and there were was a lot of verbal in it, so he kept running out of breath. He introduced The Blockheads a couple of times. I literally had to drag him off stage at the Hammersmith Odeon because I thought our fans were gonna kill ‘im. He’d had a couple of Guinnesses and he wasn’t on the case. A bit later, I bumped into Tommy Cooper and asked him to work with us. He said, ‘No fuckin’ way. Max told me what happened to him, I don’t want beer cans bouncin’ off me ‘ead.’ I don’t find any recent British comedians funny, none of ’em. Steve Coogan and Harry Enfield I rate, because I see them more as character actors than comics. Eric Skyes’ little finger is funnier than all the recent British comedians lumped together.”

KENWOOD HOUSE

“This is the National Trust property up by Hampstead Heath, near my mum’s flat. I go there a lot, it’s lovely. There’s one room where they’ve got a Rembrandt, a Vermeer and a Frans Hals – and there’s only 14 Vermeers in the world, and some of those are supposed to be forgeries. Quite breathtakin’. They’re three amazin’ paintings, but there’s other stuff in there: Gainsborough, Joshua Reynolds and fuck knows what else. The whole place is very inspiring, there’s no other way to describe it. Most people who come here probably just think, ‘Nice house’, but there are three of the best paintings in the world, all in the same room. There was a plot to kill the geezer who lived there a couple of hundred years ago, and the team that was sent to do the job stopped off at a pub down the road called The Spaniards. Anyway, the landlord got them all pissed, called the police and they were all nicked. Their muskets are still on the pub wall. Now, that’s history.”

Bob Dylan confirmed for Coen Brothers film soundtrack

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Bob Dylan is among the artists appearing on the soundtrack for Inside Llewyn Davis, the new film from the Coen Brothers. The film, which is set in Greenwich Village in the early 1960s and stars Oscar Isaac as an upcoming folk singer, contains contemporaneous music by Dylan and Dave Van Ronk alongsi...

Bob Dylan is among the artists appearing on the soundtrack for Inside Llewyn Davis, the new film from the Coen Brothers.

The film, which is set in Greenwich Village in the early 1960s and stars Oscar Isaac as an upcoming folk singer, contains contemporaneous music by Dylan and Dave Van Ronk alongside material performed by members of the cast, including Isaac and Justin Timberlake, and Marcus Mumford.

As with the Coens other great period movie, O Brother, Where Art Thou?, the soundtrack has been overseen by T Bone Burnett.

The Dylan track which appears on the soundtrack is a rare cut, “Farewell”, which was originally recorded for The Times They Are a-Changin’ sessions.

The release for the soundtrack is September 16 in the UK.

The film itself recently won the Grand Prix at this year’s Cannes Film Festival and will be released in the UK in January 2014. You can read our first look review of the film here.

The soundtrack listing for Inside Llewyn Davis is:

Oscar Isaac – “Hang Me, Oh Hang Me” (Traditional; Arranged by T Bone Burnett)

Marcus Mumford and Oscar Isaac – “Fare Thee Well (Dink’s Song)” (Traditional; Arranged by Oscar Isaac and T Bone Burnett)

Stark Sands – “The Last Thing on My Mind” (Tom Paxton)

Justin Timberlake, Carey Mulligan and Stark Sands – “Five Hundred Miles” (Hedy West)

Oscar Isaac, Justin Timberlake and Adam Driver – “Please Mr. Kennedy” (Ed Rush, George Cromarty, T Bone Burnett, Justin Timberlake, Joel Coen and Ethan Coen)

Oscar Isaac – “Green, Green Rocky Road” (Len Chandler and Robert Kaufman)

Oscar Isaac – “The Death of Queen Jane” (Traditional; Arranged by Oscar Isaac and T Bone Burnett)

John Cohen with the Down Hill Strugglers – “The Roving Gambler” (Traditional)

Oscar Isaac – “The Shoals of Herring” (Ewan MacColl)

Chris Thile, Chris Eldridge, Marcus Mumford, Justin Timberlake and Gabe Witcher – “The Auld Triangle” (Brendan Behan)

Nancy Blake – “The Storms Are on the Ocean” (A.P. Carter)

Oscar Isaac – “Fare Thee Well (Dink’s Song) (Traditional; Arranged by Oscar Isaac and T Bone Burnett)

Bob Dylan – “Farewell” (Bob Dylan)

Dave Van Ronk – “Green, Green Rocky Road” (Len Chandler and Robert Kaufman)

Earl Slick: “There’s no conspiracy about David Bowie live shows”

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Earl Slick says there are no secret plans in place for David Bowie to tour before the end of the year. The guitarist, who has played with Bowie since 1974, says there's no conspiracy about live dates, there is just nothing scheduled. Speaking to NME, he said: "I get asked all the time. And I say...

Earl Slick says there are no secret plans in place for David Bowie to tour before the end of the year.

The guitarist, who has played with Bowie since 1974, says there’s no conspiracy about live dates, there is just nothing scheduled.

Speaking to NME, he said: “I get asked all the time. And I say ‘Do you know something I don’t know?’ Really though, there’s no big secret we’re keeping from everyone. There’ll definitely be no shows this year, I can tell you that. There’s no conspiracy about a tour, there just is no tour, and that’s all I got for you.

“As for whether I want him to tour, well, I always want to go out, I love to tour, but I’ve got my own thing going at the moment too. If he goes out on the road and I get the call, then all well and good. At the moment, and let’s be clear on this, there is no conspiracy about a tour, there are no surprises, there is just no tour.”

Slick was in the UK to perform with Yoko Ono at this year’s Meltdown Festival, where he joined her to perform John Lennon and Ono’s Double Fantasy album live for the first time ever. Slick, real name Frank Madeloni, played on the original album.

Slick is recording a solo album this summer, and has another project called Earl Slick & Friends on the horizon. He said: “It’s going to be a live show where I’m getting some of my favourite people together and we’re taking that on the road for a short tour.

“I want to start in the States and go elsewhere. It’s more an interactive thing, like a living room on stage and I’ll get my favourite singers to come and join us. It’ll be a different show in each city, we’re just going to invite whoever can get to each show in whatever city. We’re going to play the music I love to do, it’s all about fun.”

Kim Gordon’s Body/Head to release debut album

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Body/Head, the electric guitar duo comprised of Kim Gordon and Bill Nace (X.O.4, Vampire Belt, Ceylon Mange), have announced details of their debut album, Coming Apart. The album will be released as a double LP, CD and digital album by Matador Records on September 16. Body/Head began as a largely ...

Body/Head, the electric guitar duo comprised of Kim Gordon and Bill Nace (X.O.4, Vampire Belt, Ceylon Mange), have announced details of their debut album, Coming Apart.

The album will be released as a double LP, CD and digital album by Matador Records on September 16.

Body/Head began as a largely instrumental project after Gordon announced her separation from Thurston Moore in late 2011.

According to a press release reported on Spin, Gordon sings a great deal on the new album. “[Her] vocals now have become an intrinsic part of their musical architecture,” the statement reads. “They have even started writing and playing ‘songs’ now, compositionally distinct from their purely aleatory origins, but still featuring lots of built-in improvisational space.”

“It feels a little like rebuilding or starting over in some way, but I have a whole kind of vocabulary of music and experiences to bring to that,” Gordon said of Body/Head’s new direction. “It’s just music — just more music.”

So far, Body/Head have put out three limited-pressing releases.

Rolling Stones’ Mick Taylor and Black Keys’ Patrick Carney play together

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The Rolling Stones' Mick Taylor and The Black Keys' Patrick Carney appear together on a new track by Stephen Dale Petit called "Holla". Petit, a London-based American blues singer, enlisted the help of his famous pals to record the song, which is taken from his forthcoming album Cracking The Code, which also features a track with Dr. John. Speaking about the collaboration, Stephen Dale Petit said: "It’s been mind blowing to get to work with the best musicians & producers in the world, the crème de la crème. I can't wait for people to hear it." Cracking The Code will be released by 333 Records on September 9, 2013.

The Rolling Stones’ Mick Taylor and The Black Keys’ Patrick Carney appear together on a new track by Stephen Dale Petit called “Holla”.

Petit, a London-based American blues singer, enlisted the help of his famous pals to record the song, which is taken from his forthcoming album Cracking The Code, which also features a track with Dr. John.

Speaking about the collaboration, Stephen Dale Petit said: “It’s been mind blowing to get to work with the best musicians & producers in the world, the crème de la crème. I can’t wait for people to hear it.”

Cracking The Code will be released by 333 Records on September 9, 2013.

Vampire Weekend – Modern Vampires Of The City

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New Yorkers at the top of their game on elaborate love letter to their hometown... Earlier this year, on Easter Saturday, the four members of Vampire Weekend took a stroll along New York’s Fifth Avenue accompanied by the actor Steve Buscemi. It was the occasion of the Easter Parade, and so the band wore slightly brighter threads than usual, topped off with bunny ears and silver top hats, and each carried a basket full of sweets to hand to children on the way. Buscemi wore a dark blue suit and top hat and sang the bluesy chorus of Vampire Weekend’s new single “Diane Young” – “Baby, baby, baby, baby right on time” – through an old-fashioned loud hailer. Of course, this was a filmed publicity stunt to draw attention to the upcoming Vampire Weekend live concert stream Buscemi would be directing, but it neatly illustrated the remarkable appeal of the New York band in 2013: significant enough to attract a star of Buscemi’s calibre – their last album Contra topped the US charts three years ago, remember – but more than happy to goof around in fancy dress for the kids. Right from the start, through their madcap videos, fizzing afropop and preppy attire, there’s been a Disneyish quality to Vampire Weekend. Gifted melodically and openly influenced by non-Western music, they sing of obscure grammar, foreign objects and social status, their records underpinned by a tremendous flair for rhythm. In Ezra Koenig, they’re fronted by a real-life Ferris Bueller, a Twitter wit and star of Instagram, who appeared in a recent episode of Girls as himself, a handsome twentysomething New Yorker wisecracking at a house party (Koenig has known the show’s creator Lena Dunham for years). They’re different – special, even – and they know it: when forming the band while studying at Columbia University in 2006, they composed a manifesto for the group that featured a rule stating that no member would ever be seen onstage or in the press wearing jeans or a t-shirt. Question Koenig’s regular Ivy League combo of polo shirt and chinos and he’ll gladly point out Ralph Lauren’s Polish-Jewish immigrant roots. If the hallmark of any great band is that they make what they do look effortless, then Vampire Weekend have barely broken sweat in the six years they’ve been in public. By the same token, this is all ammunition for their detractors. Few bands in recent memory have polarised opinion quite like them. Perceived by some as privileged imperialists, smug purveyors of “Upper West Side Soweto” who holiday in the Hamptons, they were in danger of turning into a caricature; in terms of their clean-cut, primary-coloured Americanness, as fellow pop-realists they’d make an interesting subject for Jeff Koons. Had they continued in the vein of their self-titled debut and its swift successor (i)Contra(i), zipping through ska-infused synthpop and sugary teen-punk while dipping into Schott’s Miscellany for esoteric topics, chances are, as perfectionists, they’d tire from it sooner than us. In this respect, one of the reasons Modern Vampires Of The City is such a triumph – and it’s comfortably their most stimulating and rewarding album – is the sense that this ambitious band took their time to push themselves absolutely in order to make the record as thrilling as possible. Viewed as the culmination of a trilogy, we find VW in reflective mood, taking stock of their achievements. Happy to be home after four years on the road, this is, loosely, a love letter to New York. The title of the album was revealed in the New York Times classifieds, and the city was foremost in Koenig’s thoughts as he wrote the lyrics. Easing off the reggaeton and calypso, the band pick up on styles closer to home such as gospel and country, which when added to Rostam Batmanglij’s dextrous arrangements, give these new songs emotional depth and a broader appeal while still possessing VW’s knack for startling pop hooks. It’s revealing that they delayed the album for a year so they could polish and tweak the dozen songs until each one sparkles. “We really challenge ourselves to make sure the recording is as exciting as the songwriting, and vice versa,” says Koenig, and it shows. From the tick-tock of opening track “Obvious Bicycle” that leads to Koenig’s swooning chorus of “So listen/ Don’t wait” through to the Satie-like saunter and creamy harmony of closing number “Young Lion”, there’s not a dull moment. Particular attention should be paid to “Step” and “Diane Young”. The latter, a wild rockabilly shimmy, highlights their obsession with sound design to spice things up, with Koenig’s voice pitchshifted from Barry White up to Paul Simon, a trick employed later on to almost ludicrous effect for the chipmunk chorus of “Ya Hey”. “Step” is notable not only because its origin can be traced retrospectively, via samples and covers, from New Jersey rapper YZ to hip-hop crew Souls Of Mischief to Grover Washington Jr and ultimately to Bread’s “Aubrey”, but because the band then weave a melody from “Aubrey” with their own composition that appears to blend Ravel with doo-wop. And if the music doesn’t seduce you, Koenig’s lyrics surely will. To select a few lines from “Step”: “Ancestors told me that their girl was better/ She’s richer than Croesus and tougher than leather/ I just ignored all the tales of a past life/ Stale conversation deserves but a bread knife”. Koenig is on vintage form throughout. Whether you focus on a single line or attempt to unpick an entire song, there’s plenty to delight and confound. In “Hudson”, a spooked affair that dwells on the death of the 17th century British explorer Henry Hudson, he mentions a Euro 2012 quarter-final: “We watched the Germans play the Greeks”. Even with more traditional fare they keep things fresh. “Unbelievers” and “Worship You” might trespass on Mumford’s haybaled land, but soon a drunken saxophone wanders over the clattering rhythm of “Worship You”, while Koenig pokes the Lord on “Unbelievers”: “Girl, you and I will die unbelievers/ Bound on the tracks of the train”. If in the past you’ve admired Vampire Weekend from a distance, this is the album that should have you falling in love with them. A more enjoyable pairing of words and music this year it’s hard to imagine. Piers Martin

New Yorkers at the top of their game on elaborate love letter to their hometown…

Earlier this year, on Easter Saturday, the four members of Vampire Weekend took a stroll along New York’s Fifth Avenue accompanied by the actor Steve Buscemi. It was the occasion of the Easter Parade, and so the band wore slightly brighter threads than usual, topped off with bunny ears and silver top hats, and each carried a basket full of sweets to hand to children on the way. Buscemi wore a dark blue suit and top hat and sang the bluesy chorus of Vampire Weekend’s new single “Diane Young” – “Baby, baby, baby, baby right on time” – through an old-fashioned loud hailer. Of course, this was a filmed publicity stunt to draw attention to the upcoming Vampire Weekend live concert stream Buscemi would be directing, but it neatly illustrated the remarkable appeal of the New York band in 2013: significant enough to attract a star of Buscemi’s calibre – their last album Contra topped the US charts three years ago, remember – but more than happy to goof around in fancy dress for the kids.

Right from the start, through their madcap videos, fizzing afropop and preppy attire, there’s been a Disneyish quality to Vampire Weekend. Gifted melodically and openly influenced by non-Western music, they sing of obscure grammar, foreign objects and social status, their records underpinned by a tremendous flair for rhythm. In Ezra Koenig, they’re fronted by a real-life Ferris Bueller, a Twitter wit and star of Instagram, who appeared in a recent episode of Girls as himself, a handsome twentysomething New Yorker wisecracking at a house party (Koenig has known the show’s creator Lena Dunham for years). They’re different – special, even – and they know it: when forming the band while studying at Columbia University in 2006, they composed a manifesto for the group that featured a rule stating that no member would ever be seen onstage or in the press wearing jeans or a t-shirt. Question Koenig’s regular Ivy League combo of polo shirt and chinos and he’ll gladly point out Ralph Lauren’s Polish-Jewish immigrant roots. If the hallmark of any great band is that they make what they do look effortless, then Vampire Weekend have barely broken sweat in the six years they’ve been in public.

By the same token, this is all ammunition for their detractors. Few bands in recent memory have polarised opinion quite like them. Perceived by some as privileged imperialists, smug purveyors of “Upper West Side Soweto” who holiday in the Hamptons, they were in danger of turning into a caricature; in terms of their clean-cut, primary-coloured Americanness, as fellow pop-realists they’d make an interesting subject for Jeff Koons. Had they continued in the vein of their self-titled debut and its swift successor (i)Contra(i), zipping through ska-infused synthpop and sugary teen-punk while dipping into Schott’s Miscellany for esoteric topics, chances are, as perfectionists, they’d tire from it sooner than us. In this respect, one of the reasons Modern Vampires Of The City is such a triumph – and it’s comfortably their most stimulating and rewarding album – is the sense that this ambitious band took their time to push themselves absolutely in order to make the record as thrilling as possible.

Viewed as the culmination of a trilogy, we find VW in reflective mood, taking stock of their achievements. Happy to be home after four years on the road, this is, loosely, a love letter to New York. The title of the album was revealed in the New York Times classifieds, and the city was foremost in Koenig’s thoughts as he wrote the lyrics. Easing off the reggaeton and calypso, the band pick up on styles closer to home such as gospel and country, which when added to Rostam Batmanglij’s dextrous arrangements, give these new songs emotional depth and a broader appeal while still possessing VW’s knack for startling pop hooks.

It’s revealing that they delayed the album for a year so they could polish and tweak the dozen songs until each one sparkles. “We really challenge ourselves to make sure the recording is as exciting as the songwriting, and vice versa,” says Koenig, and it shows. From the tick-tock of opening track “Obvious Bicycle” that leads to Koenig’s swooning chorus of “So listen/ Don’t wait” through to the Satie-like saunter and creamy harmony of closing number “Young Lion”, there’s not a dull moment. Particular attention should be paid to “Step” and “Diane Young”. The latter, a wild rockabilly shimmy, highlights their obsession with sound design to spice things up, with Koenig’s voice pitchshifted from Barry White up to Paul Simon, a trick employed later on to almost ludicrous effect for the chipmunk chorus of “Ya Hey”.

“Step” is notable not only because its origin can be traced retrospectively, via samples and covers, from New Jersey rapper YZ to hip-hop crew Souls Of Mischief to Grover Washington Jr and ultimately to Bread’s “Aubrey”, but because the band then weave a melody from “Aubrey” with their own composition that appears to blend Ravel with doo-wop. And if the music doesn’t seduce you, Koenig’s lyrics surely will. To select a few lines from “Step”: “Ancestors told me that their girl was better/ She’s richer than Croesus and tougher than leather/ I just ignored all the tales of a past life/ Stale conversation deserves but a bread knife”.

Koenig is on vintage form throughout. Whether you focus on a single line or attempt to unpick an entire song, there’s plenty to delight and confound. In “Hudson”, a spooked affair that dwells on the death of the 17th century British explorer Henry Hudson, he mentions a Euro 2012 quarter-final: “We watched the Germans play the Greeks”. Even with more traditional fare they keep things fresh. “Unbelievers” and “Worship You” might trespass on Mumford’s haybaled land, but soon a drunken saxophone wanders over the clattering rhythm of “Worship You”, while Koenig pokes the Lord on “Unbelievers”: “Girl, you and I will die unbelievers/ Bound on the tracks of the train”.

If in the past you’ve admired Vampire Weekend from a distance, this is the album that should have you falling in love with them. A more enjoyable pairing of words and music this year it’s hard to imagine.

Piers Martin

Keith Richards says The Rolling Stones were ‘destined’ to headline Glastonbury

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Keith Richards has said that The Rolling Stones were "destined" to headline Glastonbury. Speaking via a video released through the band's official YouTube channel, Richards says the band have declined the chance to play the festival in the past but explains how much it means to him to be headlining...

Keith Richards has said that The Rolling Stones were “destined” to headline Glastonbury.

Speaking via a video released through the band’s official YouTube channel, Richards says the band have declined the chance to play the festival in the past but explains how much it means to him to be headlining this year. “It’s almost as if you were destined to play Glastonbury,” the guitarist says. “There were many years we were offered it and turned it down. I look upon it as the culmination of our British heritage. It had to be done and it’s gonna be done. We’ll see what happens.”

Also in the same video is Mick Jagger, who says: “All my kids are going to be there so I’m going to be visiting them in the days before the actual show and they’ve got all sorts of activities lined up for me to do. My brother lives in Glastonbury too.”

The BBC are set to broadcast an hour of the Stones’ Saturday night headline set at next weekend’s Glastonbury Festival. It was previously thought that the festival’s official TV media partner would only be showing four songs from the show, but the festival’s founder Michael Eavis has now revealed that a full hour of the band’s performance will be broadcast.

The end of the band’s set – which will run for a total of two hours and 15 minutes – will be seen by festival attendees only, and will include a fireworks display. Eavis also said that the Pyramid Stage area has been extended to make sure the site doesn’t become overcrowded during their performance, although he added he is still concerned about how popular the set will be, saying: “There might be a problem with the size of the crowd so it’s slightly worrying for me, in a way.”

This year’s Glastonbury festival is to be live streamed for the first time with viewers able to watch different stages as they happen. The BBC will use the latest digital technology to allow viewers to choose from simultaneous live streams from all the major stages and has announced that over 250 hours of footage will be broadcast across the weekend.

First Look – Ridley Scott and Cormac McCarthy’s The Councellor trailer

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In among short stories from Annie Proulx, Ed Park and Dashiell Hammett in The New Yorker’s recent “Crimes & Misdemeanours” fiction special was, unexpectedly, new material by Cormac McCarthy. Called “Scenes Of The Crime”, the piece turned out to be excerpts from McCarthy’s script for The Counsellor - at 79, his first original screenplay. The scenes, written in McCarthy’s stark, lyrical prose, detail some typically unpleasant goings-on along the US-Mexico border, the location for many of McCarthy’s most well-known novels, from Blood Meridian through the Border Trilogy and No Country For Old Men. Now the first trailer for The Counsellor has been released – it’s due in UK cinemas in November – and it’s interesting to see how some of the scenes that appeared in The New Yorker piece have translated onto the screen. The New Yorker piece (you can read it here, incidentally) is itself pretty detailed. This, for instance, accounts for the opening two seconds of the teaser trailer: “Desert. The sun has just set. Bare purple mountains are dark against a darkening sky streaked with deep red. There is the high, thin scream of a motorcycle in the far distance, very slowly becoming louder. Then it streaks across the middle distance in a small part of a second, really just a blink of lights, and whines away.” Interestingly, Amazon are currently listing a publication date of October 8 for the screenplay. The blurb (presumably written by the publishers, Vintage) gives away a little bit of detail about the film’s plot. “It is the story of a lawyer, the Counselor, a man who is so seduced by the desire to get rich, to impress his fiancee Laura, that he becomes involved in a drug-smuggling venture that quickly takes him way out of his depth. His contacts in this are the mysterious and probably corrupt Reiner and the seductive Malkina, so exotic her pets of choice are two cheetahs. As the action crosses the Mexican border, things become darker, more violent and more sexually disturbing than the Counselor has ever imagined.” Anyway, my thoughts on The Counsellor so far are broadly pretty positive. It’s hard to find fault with a cast headed up by Michael Fassbender, Javier Bardem, Brad Pitt, Penelope Cruz and Cameron Diaz, and I still think that on a good day Ridley Scott is a great filmmaker. For several years Scott had an option to film McCarthy’s Blood Meridian, which at least suggests he’s familiar with the author’s sensibilities. I’ve occasionally wondered what Scott would have made of Blood Meridian – a vision of the Old West full of Gothic violence, including a tree hung with the bodies of dead children, and not the stuff mainstream cinema audiences would comfortably stomach. I found some quotes from Scott, from a 2008 interview in Empire, where he admits the difficulty in faithfully adapting the book: "I think it's a really tricky one, and maybe it's something that should be left as a novel. If you're going to do Blood Meridian you've got to go the whole nine yards into the blood bath, and there's no answer to the blood bath, that's part of the story, just the way it is and the way it was. When you start to scalp Mexican wedding parties that'll draw the line." At any rate, the movies came late to Cormac McCarthy: as Scott appears to have found with Blood Meridian, it's hard to figure a way round the violence of the early novels. The first film of one of his books - All The Pretty Horses - came in 1996, thirty years on from the publication of his debut, The Orchard Keeper. It was less successful than later adaptations of his novels. Later, I remember reading No Country For Old Men and thinking it felt more like a screenplay than a novel. Of course, the Coen Brothers film won four Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director, and - amazingly - John Hillcoat made a pretty successful take on The Road, a book so relentlessly dark and so relentlessly nasty it was almost parody. Quite how "things become darker, more violent and more sexually disturbing" in The Counsellor we'll have to see. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8FX1bn1U-SY Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

In among short stories from Annie Proulx, Ed Park and Dashiell Hammett in The New Yorker’s recent “Crimes & Misdemeanours” fiction special was, unexpectedly, new material by Cormac McCarthy.

Called “Scenes Of The Crime”, the piece turned out to be excerpts from McCarthy’s script for The Counsellor – at 79, his first original screenplay. The scenes, written in McCarthy’s stark, lyrical prose, detail some typically unpleasant goings-on along the US-Mexico border, the location for many of McCarthy’s most well-known novels, from Blood Meridian through the Border Trilogy and No Country For Old Men.

Now the first trailer for The Counsellor has been released – it’s due in UK cinemas in November – and it’s interesting to see how some of the scenes that appeared in The New Yorker piece have translated onto the screen. The New Yorker piece (you can read it here, incidentally) is itself pretty detailed. This, for instance, accounts for the opening two seconds of the teaser trailer:

“Desert. The sun has just set. Bare purple mountains are dark against a darkening sky streaked with deep red. There is the high, thin scream of a motorcycle in the far distance, very slowly becoming louder. Then it streaks across the middle distance in a small part of a second, really just a blink of lights, and whines away.”

Interestingly, Amazon are currently listing a publication date of October 8 for the screenplay. The blurb (presumably written by the publishers, Vintage) gives away a little bit of detail about the film’s plot.

“It is the story of a lawyer, the Counselor, a man who is so seduced by the desire to get rich, to impress his fiancee Laura, that he becomes involved in a drug-smuggling venture that quickly takes him way out of his depth. His contacts in this are the mysterious and probably corrupt Reiner and the seductive Malkina, so exotic her pets of choice are two cheetahs. As the action crosses the Mexican border, things become darker, more violent and more sexually disturbing than the Counselor has ever imagined.”

Anyway, my thoughts on The Counsellor so far are broadly pretty positive. It’s hard to find fault with a cast headed up by Michael Fassbender, Javier Bardem, Brad Pitt, Penelope Cruz and Cameron Diaz, and I still think that on a good day Ridley Scott is a great filmmaker. For several years Scott had an option to film McCarthy’s Blood Meridian, which at least suggests he’s familiar with the author’s sensibilities. I’ve occasionally wondered what Scott would have made of Blood Meridian – a vision of the Old West full of Gothic violence, including a tree hung with the bodies of dead children, and not the stuff mainstream cinema audiences would comfortably stomach. I found some quotes from Scott, from a 2008 interview in Empire, where he admits the difficulty in faithfully adapting the book: “I think it’s a really tricky one, and maybe it’s something that should be left as a novel. If you’re going to do Blood Meridian you’ve got to go the whole nine yards into the blood bath, and there’s no answer to the blood bath, that’s part of the story, just the way it is and the way it was. When you start to scalp Mexican wedding parties that’ll draw the line.”

At any rate, the movies came late to Cormac McCarthy: as Scott appears to have found with Blood Meridian, it’s hard to figure a way round the violence of the early novels. The first film of one of his books – All The Pretty Horses – came in 1996, thirty years on from the publication of his debut, The Orchard Keeper. It was less successful than later adaptations of his novels. Later, I remember reading No Country For Old Men and thinking it felt more like a screenplay than a novel. Of course, the Coen Brothers film won four Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director, and – amazingly – John Hillcoat made a pretty successful take on The Road, a book so relentlessly dark and so relentlessly nasty it was almost parody.

Quite how “things become darker, more violent and more sexually disturbing” in The Counsellor we’ll have to see.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The 24th Uncut Playlist Of 2013

Over a week on, I suppose we’re still dealing with a kind of Neil Young & Crazy Horse feedback. This week’s major live distraction in the office, though, has been a stream/download of Wilco’s covers set from their festival last Friday night. The whole thing is hugely recommended but, if you’re pressed for time, please have a listen to the uncanny version of “Marquee Moon” I’ve embedded below. Lots more to try out here, as you can see. A good week, in general, but worth dropping the monthly caveat that I’ve just listed the records I’ve played, and not limited it to the ones I liked. It’s in playing order rather than any rank, too: ie Nils Frahm got an airing first thing on Monday morning, so that’s why it’s Number One, not because it was my favourite out of the 18 (I did like it, though, especially the Clark remix). Enough pedantry. Unexpected appearance of the week is Judy Dyble from the first Fairports lineup singing with Füxa. Unexpected shift of the week comes from Arp, who’s mostly ditched the kosmische jams and reconstructed himself, not unpleasantly, in the image of Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci. Have a listen… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Nils Frahm – Juno Reworked (Erased Tapes) 2 Jon Hopkins – Immunity (Domino) 3 Wilco – June 21, 2013 Solid Sound Festival (http://networkedblogs.com/MrPpi) 4 Sebadoh – Defend Yourself (Domino) 5 Hoi’ Polloi – Hoi’ Polloi (Family Vineyard) 6 Arp – More (Smalltown Supersound) 7 Ed Askew – For The World (Tin Angel) 8 Ensemble Economique – Fever Logic (Not Not Fun) 9 Disappears – Era (Kranky) 10 Sonny & The Sunsets – Antenna to the Afterworld (Polyvinyl) 11 Food Pyramid – Ecstasy & Refreshment (Holy Mountain) 12 Kandodo – k2o (Thrill Jockey) 13 MIA – Bring The Noize (NEET/Virgin) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cCkIYkaLBGs 14 Oneohtrix Point Never – Still Life (Warp) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGcoDGljrRs 15 Bill Callahan – Apocalypse (Drag City) 16 Füxa – Dirty D (Rocket Girl) 17 Daft Punk – Get Lucky Remix (Columbia) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LquuPcRDMNo 18 Vieux Farka Touré – Mon Pays (Six Degrees)

Over a week on, I suppose we’re still dealing with a kind of Neil Young & Crazy Horse feedback. This week’s major live distraction in the office, though, has been a stream/download of Wilco’s covers set from their festival last Friday night. The whole thing is hugely recommended but, if you’re pressed for time, please have a listen to the uncanny version of “Marquee Moon” I’ve embedded below.

Lots more to try out here, as you can see. A good week, in general, but worth dropping the monthly caveat that I’ve just listed the records I’ve played, and not limited it to the ones I liked. It’s in playing order rather than any rank, too: ie Nils Frahm got an airing first thing on Monday morning, so that’s why it’s Number One, not because it was my favourite out of the 18 (I did like it, though, especially the Clark remix).

Enough pedantry. Unexpected appearance of the week is Judy Dyble from the first Fairports lineup singing with Füxa. Unexpected shift of the week comes from Arp, who’s mostly ditched the kosmische jams and reconstructed himself, not unpleasantly, in the image of Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci. Have a listen…

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

1 Nils Frahm – Juno Reworked (Erased Tapes)

2 Jon Hopkins – Immunity (Domino)

3 Wilco – June 21, 2013 Solid Sound Festival (http://networkedblogs.com/MrPpi)

4 Sebadoh – Defend Yourself (Domino)

5 Hoi’ Polloi – Hoi’ Polloi (Family Vineyard)

6 Arp – More (Smalltown Supersound)

7 Ed Askew – For The World (Tin Angel)

8 Ensemble Economique – Fever Logic (Not Not Fun)

9 Disappears – Era (Kranky)

10 Sonny & The Sunsets – Antenna to the Afterworld (Polyvinyl)

11 Food Pyramid – Ecstasy & Refreshment (Holy Mountain)

12 Kandodo – k2o (Thrill Jockey)

13 MIA – Bring The Noize (NEET/Virgin)

14 Oneohtrix Point Never – Still Life (Warp)

15 Bill Callahan – Apocalypse (Drag City)

16 Füxa – Dirty D (Rocket Girl)

17 Daft Punk – Get Lucky Remix (Columbia)

18 Vieux Farka Touré – Mon Pays (Six Degrees)

Join us – Uncut will be blogging from Glastonbury!

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Uncut will be blogging at Glastonbury festival this weekend. We’ll be on site at Worthy Farm from Thursday (June 27), bringing you a host of reviews, including, of course, of Saturday night’s historic headline performance from The Rolling Stones. Check out the Uncut blog for dedicated pieces...

Uncut will be blogging at Glastonbury festival this weekend.

We’ll be on site at Worthy Farm from Thursday (June 27), bringing you a host of reviews, including, of course, of Saturday night’s historic headline performance from The Rolling Stones.

Check out the Uncut blog for dedicated pieces from Glastonbury across the weekend.

The Stones are headlining alongside Arctic Monkeys and Mumford & Sons, and other acts set to appear include Portishead, Elvis Costello, Primal Scream, Vampire Weekend, Alabama Shakes, Tame Impala and Dinosaur Jr.

Follow Uncut’s Tom Pinnock on Twitter for more updates from Glastonbury: www.twitter.com/thomaspinnock

Motörhead cancel shows after Lemmy suffers a haematoma

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Motörhead have had to cancel two European gigs after their frontman Lemmy suffered a haematoma. The band have pulled tonight's show in Milan (June 25) and also had to cancel their gig on June 22 at a festival in Austria, reports Ultimate Classic Rock. The size, scale or location of Lemmy's haemat...

Motörhead have had to cancel two European gigs after their frontman Lemmy suffered a haematoma.

The band have pulled tonight’s show in Milan (June 25) and also had to cancel their gig on June 22 at a festival in Austria, reports Ultimate Classic Rock. The size, scale or location of Lemmy‘s haematoma – where blood collects outside of a blood vessel – is not known, but the news of the medical problem follows reports that the frontman has also recently been fitted with a defibrillator because of heart problems.

Last year, Lemmy spoke out about plans for Motörhead’s forthcoming 40th anniversary, which will take place in 2015, saying: “We’ll think of something, we always do. Probably involving naked women or something.”

He added of the band’s longevity: “We’ve been lucky; we’ve been around so long people realise they can’t get us to go away, so they’ve just decided to join us. You might not like what we do, but we do what we do very well.”

Former Devo drummer Alan Myers dies following cancer battle

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Former DEVO drummer Alan Myers has died following a battle with cancer. Ralph Carney, a former bandmate of Myers and uncle of The Black Keys' Patrick, shared the news on Facebook earlier this morning (June 26). "i just got some bad news," he wrote. "Alan Myers passed yesterday from cancer. he was Devo's best drummer and one of the first people to teach me about jazz. i cry.........." Myers joined Devo in 1976 and drummed with the band for just under a decade, playing on their early hits including "Jocko Homo", "Working In The Coal Mine" and "Whip It". The band's founder erald Casale used Twitter to pay tribute to Myers, calling him "the most incredible drummer I had the privilege to play with for 10 years" before posting: After leaving Devo in 1985, Myers remained active on the LA music scene, playing with several local bands including Babooshka, Skyline Electric and more recently Swahili Blonde, whose line-up features his daughter Laena Myers-Ionita. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IIEVqFB4WUo

Former DEVO drummer Alan Myers has died following a battle with cancer.

Ralph Carney, a former bandmate of Myers and uncle of The Black Keys’ Patrick, shared the news on Facebook earlier this morning (June 26). “i just got some bad news,” he wrote. “Alan Myers passed yesterday from cancer. he was Devo’s best drummer and one of the first people to teach me about jazz. i cry……….”

Myers joined Devo in 1976 and drummed with the band for just under a decade, playing on their early hits including “Jocko Homo”, “Working In The Coal Mine” and “Whip It”.

The band’s founder erald Casale used Twitter to pay tribute to Myers, calling him “the most incredible drummer I had the privilege to play with for 10 years” before posting:

After leaving Devo in 1985, Myers remained active on the LA music scene, playing with several local bands including Babooshka, Skyline Electric and more recently Swahili Blonde, whose line-up features his daughter Laena Myers-Ionita.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IIEVqFB4WUo

Neil Young: Walk Like A Giant

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Last week started on an absolute high when Neil Young & Crazy Horse’s Alchemy tour rocked up to London’s 02 Arena, turbulence in its wake, some of the crowds they had recently played to evidently unhappy with aspects of the band’s current set, notably the long jams around the songs they are playing from last year’s Psychedelic Pill, especially “Walk Like A Giant” and the extended feedback cacophony of its final 10 minutes, which was spectacularly brutal. Audiences in Birmingham and Newcastle had been from all accounts clearly agitated. In Dublin, a couple of days before the London show, there had been boos, which perhaps hasn’t happened to Neil since he took Trans on the road in 1982. Uncut reader Paul Horton went to the Birmingham gig and was sorely disappointed. Like similarly disgruntled commentators in Newcastle and Dublin, he bemoaned the fact that Neil and Crazy Horse hadn’t played any of the songs he had expected to hear. He cited examples of Neil’s ‘great music’ like “Southern Man”, “Alabama”, “Only Love Can Break Your Heart” and “Old Man”, which Paul seemed to suggest should have been played out of some kind of servile obligation to fans, as if Neil has ever felt ‘obliged’ to do anything apart from what to him at any given moment is important. That the songs he wanted to hear weren’t played Paul described as “shameful”. Interestingly, none of Paul’s favourite songs were written after 1972. Was this the last time Paul and others like him actually heard anything new by Neil, the vast sprawl of whose music between Harvest and last year’s Psychedelic Pill is therefore largely unknown to them? It seems possible. How otherwise could they complain about the absence of classic Neil songs in a set that included “Like A Hurricane”, “Powderfinger”, “My My Hey Hey”, “Cinnamon Girl”, “Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere”, “Comes A Time”, “Mr Soul”, “Roll Another Number (For The Road)” and “Fuckin’ Up”? I can’t really comment further on the show Paul saw in Birmingham because I wasn’t there. But at the O2, Neil and Crazy Horse were sensational, as the crowd recognised, no evidence here of the sulking audience grumpiness that had attached itself to the performances on the Alchemy tour that had immediately preceded it. I don’t think I’ve ever seen them quite as resplendent, despite Neil’s typically perverse comment, late on, that a lot of what they’d played had “sucked”, which brought a visible guffaw from Frank ‘Poncho’ Sampedro. You’ve probably already seen John’s typically thoughtful review on his Wild Mercury Sound blog, but if you missed it you can read it here. And thanks to whoever filmed the following three videos of “Like A Hurricane”, and from Psychedelic Pill, the brilliant “Ramada Inn” and “Walk Like A Giant”. Its’ amazing stuff. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AzTHEwjIvnw http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4IESlcNi4w http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kzVltnLRvY4 Have a good week. Pic: Brian Rasic/Rex Features

Last week started on an absolute high when Neil Young & Crazy Horse’s Alchemy tour rocked up to London’s 02 Arena, turbulence in its wake, some of the crowds they had recently played to evidently unhappy with aspects of the band’s current set, notably the long jams around the songs they are playing from last year’s Psychedelic Pill, especially “Walk Like A Giant” and the extended feedback cacophony of its final 10 minutes, which was spectacularly brutal. Audiences in Birmingham and Newcastle had been from all accounts clearly agitated. In Dublin, a couple of days before the London show, there had been boos, which perhaps hasn’t happened to Neil since he took Trans on the road in 1982.

Uncut reader Paul Horton went to the Birmingham gig and was sorely disappointed. Like similarly disgruntled commentators in Newcastle and Dublin, he bemoaned the fact that Neil and Crazy Horse hadn’t played any of the songs he had expected to hear. He cited examples of Neil’s ‘great music’ like “Southern Man”, “Alabama”, “Only Love Can Break Your Heart” and “Old Man”, which Paul seemed to suggest should have been played out of some kind of servile obligation to fans, as if Neil has ever felt ‘obliged’ to do anything apart from what to him at any given moment is important. That the songs he wanted to hear weren’t played Paul described as “shameful”.

Interestingly, none of Paul’s favourite songs were written after 1972. Was this the last time Paul and others like him actually heard anything new by Neil, the vast sprawl of whose music between Harvest and last year’s Psychedelic Pill is therefore largely unknown to them? It seems possible. How otherwise could they complain about the absence of classic Neil songs in a set that included “Like A Hurricane”, “Powderfinger”, “My My Hey Hey”, “Cinnamon Girl”, “Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere”, “Comes A Time”, “Mr Soul”, “Roll Another Number (For The Road)” and “Fuckin’ Up”?

I can’t really comment further on the show Paul saw in Birmingham because I wasn’t there. But at the O2, Neil and Crazy Horse were sensational, as the crowd recognised, no evidence here of the sulking audience grumpiness that had attached itself to the performances on the Alchemy tour that had immediately preceded it. I don’t think I’ve ever seen them quite as resplendent, despite Neil’s typically perverse comment, late on, that a lot of what they’d played had “sucked”, which brought a visible guffaw from Frank ‘Poncho’ Sampedro. You’ve probably already seen John’s typically thoughtful review on his Wild Mercury Sound blog, but if you missed it you can read it here.

And thanks to whoever filmed the following three videos of “Like A Hurricane”, and from Psychedelic Pill, the brilliant “Ramada Inn” and “Walk Like A Giant”. Its’ amazing stuff.

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

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4IESlcNi4w

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kzVltnLRvY4

Have a good week.

Pic: Brian Rasic/Rex Features

David Bowie exhibition to be broadcast live in cinemas

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The V&A museum has announced details of a special live screening event of the David Bowie Is... exhibition. On Tuesday, August 13, audiences in over 200 cinemas will be able to watch the exhibition's curators Victoria Broackes and Geoffrey Marsh and a host of special guests talk about the stories behind some of the 300 objects on display at the exhibition live from the museum in London. David Bowie Is Happening Now will be directed by BAFTA winning director, Hamish Hamilton and will be broadcast to participating Picturehouse cinemas. The David Bowie Is... exhibition opened in March 23, selling as many as 67,000 tickets in advance – more than any other exhibition in the museum's 150 year history. More than 200,000 people have seen the exhibition so far, with many more expected to visit before it finishes on August 11. V&A Director Martin Roth said in a statement: "Visitors have gone to great lengths for a chance to see our exhibition so we wanted to give everyone across the country one last opportunity to experience it for themselves. This is the first time the V&A has taken part in a live broadcast event of this magnitude and we are extremely excited to be working with such a talented production team to present the phenomenon that is David Bowie to the widest possible audience."

The V&A museum has announced details of a special live screening event of the David Bowie Is… exhibition.

On Tuesday, August 13, audiences in over 200 cinemas will be able to watch the exhibition’s curators Victoria Broackes and Geoffrey Marsh and a host of special guests talk about the stories behind some of the 300 objects on display at the exhibition live from the museum in London. David Bowie Is Happening Now will be directed by BAFTA winning director, Hamish Hamilton and will be broadcast to participating Picturehouse cinemas.

The David Bowie Is… exhibition opened in March 23, selling as many as 67,000 tickets in advance – more than any other exhibition in the museum’s 150 year history. More than 200,000 people have seen the exhibition so far, with many more expected to visit before it finishes on August 11.

V&A Director Martin Roth said in a statement: “Visitors have gone to great lengths for a chance to see our exhibition so we wanted to give everyone across the country one last opportunity to experience it for themselves. This is the first time the V&A has taken part in a live broadcast event of this magnitude and we are extremely excited to be working with such a talented production team to present the phenomenon that is David Bowie to the widest possible audience.”

Arctic Monkeys announce new album, AM

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Arctic Monkeys have announced details of their new album, AM. The album, the band's fifth studio record, will be released on September 9 and features 12 tracks including the new single "Do I Wanna Know?". The song "Mad Sounds", first played at the Hultsfred festival in Sweden earlier this year, als...

Arctic Monkeys have announced details of their new album, AM.

The album, the band’s fifth studio record, will be released on September 9 and features 12 tracks including the new single “Do I Wanna Know?”. The song “Mad Sounds”, first played at the Hultsfred festival in Sweden earlier this year, also appears alongside 2012 single “R U Mine?”. Scroll down to see the full tracklisting for AM.

Produced by James Ford, the album features appearances from Josh Homme plus former The Coral member Bill Ryder-Jones and Elvis Costello’s drummer Pete Thomas. The words of John Cooper Clarke appear on the track “I Wanna Be Yours”.

Arctic Monkeys headline Glastonbury festival this Friday (June 28), performing on the opening day of the festival on the Pyramid Stage. Drummer Matt Helders has said that the band plan to “have a bit of fun” with their setlist at the festival on what will be the second time that the band have headlined the Pyramid Stage, following their appearance in 2007. “I’m prepared for what it entails in a way, but I think in terms of preparation we can mould a different kind of setlist for it and have a bit more fun with it,” said Helders.

The AM tracklisting is as follows:

‘Do I Wanna Know?’

‘R U Mine?’

‘One For The Road’

‘Arabella’

‘I Want It All’

‘No. 1 Party Anthem’

‘Mad Sounds’

‘Fireside’

‘Why’d You Only Call Me When You’re High?’

‘Snap Out Of It’

‘Knee Socks’

‘I Wanna Be Yours’

Bruce Springsteen working on new album

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Bruce Springsteen has already started recording the follow-up to last year's Wrecking Ball. Earlier this year, Springsteen spent time with Rage Against The Machine's Tom Morello and the rest of the E Street Band in a studio in Sydney. Speaking to Rolling Stone, Springsteen commented: "We've never h...

Bruce Springsteen has already started recording the follow-up to last year’s Wrecking Ball.

Earlier this year, Springsteen spent time with Rage Against The Machine’s Tom Morello and the rest of the E Street Band in a studio in Sydney. Speaking to Rolling Stone, Springsteen commented: “We’ve never had a recording session during a tour in our lives. We did a couple of things that I wanted to put down. So that was very exciting. And being with Tommy was exciting. The band – Steven, Nils, all those guys – continues to be a source of inspiration for me.”

Morello covered Steven Van Zandt during the band’s recent Australian tour and also played on Wrecking Ball. Springsteen added that he’s “very happy” about his new material: “I have stuff I’m working on that I’m very happy about. I hate to say, because I don’t like to be wrong, but I have a lot of material. I still feel like I’m in the middle of the well,” he revealed.

Bruce Springsteen played his 1975 album Born To Run in full over the weekend (June 20) as a tribute to the actor James Gandolfini, who passed away at the age of 51. Springsteen turned his show at Coventry’s Ricoh Arena into a tribute to the late actor, who worked with Van Zandt on The Sopranos.

Morrissey to release live DVD to mark his 25-year solo career

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Morrissey will release a live DVD to mark his 25th year as a solo artist. His first live DVD in nine years, Morrissey 25: Live will feature his concert at Hollywood High School on March 2, 2013 and will be released in August. The singer announced the news via fansite True To You. Although it is ...

Morrissey will release a live DVD to mark his 25th year as a solo artist.

His first live DVD in nine years, Morrissey 25: Live will feature his concert at Hollywood High School on March 2, 2013 and will be released in August. The singer announced the news via fansite True To You.

Although it is not yet known whether any other footage will make it onto the film, the tracklisting for the Hollywood High School gig was:

‘Alma Matters’

‘Ouija Board, Ouija Board’

‘Irish Blood, English Heart’

‘You Have Killed Me’

‘November Spawned a Monster’

‘Maladjusted’

‘You’re The One for Me, Fatty’

‘Still Ill’

‘People Are the Same Everywhere’

‘Speedway’

‘That Joke Isn’t Funny Anymore’

‘To Give (The Reason I Live)’

‘Meat Is Murder’

‘Please, Please, Please Let Me Get What I Want’

‘Action Is My Middle Name’

‘Everyday Is Like Sunday’

‘I’m Throwing My Arms Around Paris’

‘Let Me Kiss You’

‘The Boy With The Thorn In His Side’

Morrissey’s last DVD was 2005’s Who Put The M In Manchester?, which was recorded at the Manchester Arena on 22 May 2004 on his 45th birthday.

Jamie Hewlett confirms Blur are working on new studio album

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Jamie Hewlett of Gorillaz has confirmed that he and Damon Albarn will release another Gorillaz album – but not before Blur put out their new material. Hewlett, who alongside Albarn has released four Gorillaz albums including 2010's Plastic Beach, revealed the plans he and Albarn have for the future while speaking at a launch event for his opera in New York recently. One fan in attendance at the Monkey: Journey To The West event claims that Hewlett talked about the future of Gorillaz but admitted he would have to wait for Blur to make their album first. Posting on the Gorillaz-Unofficial fansite, the fan claims Hewlett said: "There’s a five-year gap between the albums because they take a long time to do and and they’re very exhausting and when you’re finished you feel like you need to go do other stuff. So Damon’s touring with Blur – he's doing a world tour with Blur at the moment and then they’re working on a new album so there isn’t really time for him, and I’m doing other stuff as well. So I think it’s, um, we’ll come back to it when the time’s right." Hewlett is also reported to have said that changes within the music industry make it more difficult for a band like Gorillaz to function in 2013. "The music industry’s changed so much since we started doing Gorillaz. There’s no money in the industry so you know you get these amazing new bands, like The Strypes from Ireland, kind of 14 years old [sic], you know, the best rhythm blues guitarist you’ve ever seen. Age 14, make songs and film it in their bedroom. It doesn’t cost anything, and so Gorillaz is kind of expensive. It’s expensive to do because it’s animated." Speaking onstage in Hong Kong in May, Damon Albarn told the crowd that the band were heading back into the studio. "So we have a week in Hong Kong, and we thought it would be a good time to try and record another record," he said at the time. Alex James subsequently revealed that Blur's recent recording sessions in Hong Kong went "very well". The question of whether Blur will record a follow-up to 2003's Think Tank album is an ongoing saga. Blur penned two new tracks – 'Under The Westway' and 'The Puritan' – for last year's Hyde Park shows, and the band have hinted that more could follow, with producer William Orbit telling NME that the band had been in the studio working on new material with him. However, more recently, Graham Coxon denied it would happen in a conversation with a fan on Twitter in November 2012. Asked if there is a new Blur album coming out and, if so, when? Coxon replied by simply saying, "No". Blur will play their only show on the British Isles this year at Dublin's Irish Museum of Modern Art on August 1. The date marks Blur's first show in Ireland in four years. Bat For Lashes and The Strypes support.

Jamie Hewlett of Gorillaz has confirmed that he and Damon Albarn will release another Gorillaz album – but not before Blur put out their new material.

Hewlett, who alongside Albarn has released four Gorillaz albums including 2010’s Plastic Beach, revealed the plans he and Albarn have for the future while speaking at a launch event for his opera in New York recently. One fan in attendance at the Monkey: Journey To The West event claims that Hewlett talked about the future of Gorillaz but admitted he would have to wait for Blur to make their album first.

Posting on the Gorillaz-Unofficial fansite, the fan claims Hewlett said: “There’s a five-year gap between the albums because they take a long time to do and and they’re very exhausting and when you’re finished you feel like you need to go do other stuff. So Damon’s touring with Blur – he’s doing a world tour with Blur at the moment and then they’re working on a new album so there isn’t really time for him, and I’m doing other stuff as well. So I think it’s, um, we’ll come back to it when the time’s right.”

Hewlett is also reported to have said that changes within the music industry make it more difficult for a band like Gorillaz to function in 2013. “The music industry’s changed so much since we started doing Gorillaz. There’s no money in the industry so you know you get these amazing new bands, like The Strypes from Ireland, kind of 14 years old [sic], you know, the best rhythm blues guitarist you’ve ever seen. Age 14, make songs and film it in their bedroom. It doesn’t cost anything, and so Gorillaz is kind of expensive. It’s expensive to do because it’s animated.”

Speaking onstage in Hong Kong in May, Damon Albarn told the crowd that the band were heading back into the studio. “So we have a week in Hong Kong, and we thought it would be a good time to try and record another record,” he said at the time. Alex James subsequently revealed that Blur’s recent recording sessions in Hong Kong went “very well”.

The question of whether Blur will record a follow-up to 2003’s Think Tank album is an ongoing saga. Blur penned two new tracks – ‘Under The Westway’ and ‘The Puritan’ – for last year’s Hyde Park shows, and the band have hinted that more could follow, with producer William Orbit telling NME that the band had been in the studio working on new material with him. However, more recently, Graham Coxon denied it would happen in a conversation with a fan on Twitter in November 2012. Asked if there is a new Blur album coming out and, if so, when? Coxon replied by simply saying, “No”.

Blur will play their only show on the British Isles this year at Dublin’s Irish Museum of Modern Art on August 1. The date marks Blur’s first show in Ireland in four years. Bat For Lashes and The Strypes support.

Van Dyke Parks – Songs Cycled

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The pint-sized Pope of pop candy coats his protest songs... In 1967, aged only 24, Van Dyke Parks came to the pop world’s attention with two glorious failures. He co-wrote Brian Wilson’s aborted orchestral pop masterwork SMiLE, then followed it with his own symphonic voyage across America entitled Song Cycle. Both were highbrow epics that helped take pop music into the conservatoire: few rock ‘n’ roll bands would ever have considered writing the Joycean poetry of “the pit and the pendulum drawn/columnated ruins domino” (as Parks did in “Surf’s Up”); even fewer would have the chops to write the kind of densely orchestrated arrangements that referenced Aaron Copland’s Wild West symphonies, Schumann lieder, Tin Pan Alley standards and the fractured folksong of the entire American continent. As Parks himself says, he’s spent nigh on half a century counteracting charges that he was rather too clever for his own good. “The rock critics would slop words like ‘obscurantism’ and ‘obfuscation’ on me,” he snorts, gleefully. “They’ve always wanted opacity.” Songs Cycled, his first proper solo album in 24 years, is an opaque and entirely accessible album. All 12 of its tracks would make sense to your parents, grandparents or children; all could be easily smuggled onto the Radio 2 playlist; few would sound out of place on any of the Disney soundtracks that Parks has worked on since The Jungle Book. But, the more you snuggle up inside Parks’s wonderfully upholstered orchestrations, the more you realise that this MOR sheen hides an audacious, subversive and politically trenchant agenda. Only four of these tracks are entirely new compositions, where agit-prop sentiments are sweetened by exquisite, chirruping arrangements. The opener, “Dreaming Of Paris” draws connections between the US invasions of Vietnam and Iraq, but manages to do so within the boundaries of a woozy, hopelessly romantic tango. “Black Gold” is Sondheim-ish account of the “ecologic nightmare” created by a doomed oil tanker. “Wall Street” is a pretty, Disneyfied duet with Inara George which turns out to be a dark meditation on 9/11. And “Missin’ Missippi” is a gentrified Cajun-style duet with Gaby Moreno that pays homage to VDP’s native state in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. For Parks, “a good arrangement transcends the mathematics of melody”, and all the remaining tracks are radical rearrangements of his old material, or traditional songs that complement the originals. On 1967’s Song Cycle “All Golden” was a bafflingly complex score for strings, brass and harp: on this new version, Parks’s voice is backed only by rippling piano and simple accordion, and the song benefits hugely. “Hold Back Time”, a herky-jerky country grunter first croaked out by Brian Wilson on the 1995 album Orange Crate Art, is transformed into an elegant tango, with a nimble, swooping arrangement for strings, ukuleles and pedal steel. “Sassafrass”, a daft, folksy nursery rhyme, popularised in the 60s by the West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band, is transformed into a demented piece of antebellum baroque. A 19th century “sacred harp” hymn, “The Parting Hand”, is given a swaggering, jazzy a cappella arrangement, while the closing track transforms “Amazing Grace” into a cowboy hymn in the unorthodox time signature of 5/4. When it comes to world music, Parks has often tried to have his cake and eat it. With the rather sickly calypsos of 1975’s Clang Of The Yankee Reaper, or the plinky-plonky Okinawan folk music of 1989’s Tokyo Rose, Parks embraced the “exotic” while simultaneously offering a critique of orientalism and colonialism. On Songs Cycled, the exotica is rather more effectively harnessed. “Aquarium”, recorded in 1971 with the Esso Trinidad Steel Band, is a steelpan arrangement of the most famous piece from Saint-Saens’ Carnival Of The Animals. It should sound ridiculous, but instead it glistens and sparkles, and links in with a deceptively militant 1930s Trinidadian calypso entitled “Money Is King”. “Wedding In Madagascar” is a traditional African folk waltz that’s been lovingly and elaborately orchestrated, reminiscent of similar projects by VDP’s old pal Ry Cooder. Some critics will ponder where this fits into the music soundscape. Is it music theatre? Symphonic pop? Worldbeat? Protest song? “With music critics,” says Parks, “it’s like the Pope and birth control: if you don't play the game, you don't make the rules!” Let’s just be grateful that the Pope of pop is still making the best music of his life. John Lewis

The pint-sized Pope of pop candy coats his protest songs…

In 1967, aged only 24, Van Dyke Parks came to the pop world’s attention with two glorious failures. He co-wrote Brian Wilson’s aborted orchestral pop masterwork SMiLE, then followed it with his own symphonic voyage across America entitled Song Cycle. Both were highbrow epics that helped take pop music into the conservatoire: few rock ‘n’ roll bands would ever have considered writing the Joycean poetry of “the pit and the pendulum drawn/columnated ruins domino” (as Parks did in “Surf’s Up”); even fewer would have the chops to write the kind of densely orchestrated arrangements that referenced Aaron Copland’s Wild West symphonies, Schumann lieder, Tin Pan Alley standards and the fractured folksong of the entire American continent. As Parks himself says, he’s spent nigh on half a century counteracting charges that he was rather too clever for his own good. “The rock critics would slop words like ‘obscurantism’ and ‘obfuscation’ on me,” he snorts, gleefully. “They’ve always wanted opacity.”

Songs Cycled, his first proper solo album in 24 years, is an opaque and entirely accessible album. All 12 of its tracks would make sense to your parents, grandparents or children; all could be easily smuggled onto the Radio 2 playlist; few would sound out of place on any of the Disney soundtracks that Parks has worked on since The Jungle Book. But, the more you snuggle up inside Parks’s wonderfully upholstered orchestrations, the more you realise that this MOR sheen hides an audacious, subversive and politically trenchant agenda.

Only four of these tracks are entirely new compositions, where agit-prop sentiments are sweetened by exquisite, chirruping arrangements. The opener, “Dreaming Of Paris” draws connections between the US invasions of Vietnam and Iraq, but manages to do so within the boundaries of a woozy, hopelessly romantic tango. “Black Gold” is Sondheim-ish account of the “ecologic nightmare” created by a doomed oil tanker. “Wall Street” is a pretty, Disneyfied duet with Inara George which turns out to be a dark meditation on 9/11. And “Missin’ Missippi” is a gentrified Cajun-style duet with Gaby Moreno that pays homage to VDP’s native state in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

For Parks, “a good arrangement transcends the mathematics of melody”, and all the remaining tracks are radical rearrangements of his old material, or traditional songs that complement the originals. On 1967’s Song Cycle “All Golden” was a bafflingly complex score for strings, brass and harp: on this new version, Parks’s voice is backed only by rippling piano and simple accordion, and the song benefits hugely. “Hold Back Time”, a herky-jerky country grunter first croaked out by Brian Wilson on the 1995 album Orange Crate Art, is transformed into an elegant tango, with a nimble, swooping arrangement for strings, ukuleles and pedal steel. “Sassafrass”, a daft, folksy nursery rhyme, popularised in the 60s by the West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band, is transformed into a demented piece of antebellum baroque. A 19th century “sacred harp” hymn, “The Parting Hand”, is given a swaggering, jazzy a cappella arrangement, while the closing track transforms “Amazing Grace” into a cowboy hymn in the unorthodox time signature of 5/4.

When it comes to world music, Parks has often tried to have his cake and eat it. With the rather sickly calypsos of 1975’s Clang Of The Yankee Reaper, or the plinky-plonky Okinawan folk music of 1989’s Tokyo Rose, Parks embraced the “exotic” while simultaneously offering a critique of orientalism and colonialism. On Songs Cycled, the exotica is rather more effectively harnessed. “Aquarium”, recorded in 1971 with the Esso Trinidad Steel Band, is a steelpan arrangement of the most famous piece from Saint-Saens’ Carnival Of The Animals. It should sound ridiculous, but instead it glistens and sparkles, and links in with a deceptively militant 1930s Trinidadian calypso entitled “Money Is King”. “Wedding In Madagascar” is a traditional African folk waltz that’s been lovingly and elaborately orchestrated, reminiscent of similar projects by VDP’s old pal Ry Cooder.

Some critics will ponder where this fits into the music soundscape. Is it music theatre? Symphonic pop? Worldbeat? Protest song? “With music critics,” says Parks, “it’s like the Pope and birth control: if you don’t play the game, you don’t make the rules!” Let’s just be grateful that the Pope of pop is still making the best music of his life.

John Lewis