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Queens Of The Stone Age announce ‘…Like Clockwork’ tracklisting and release date

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Queens Of The Stone Age will release their forthcoming new album …Like Clockwork on June 3. Scroll down for the full tracklisting for the band's sixth album, which is the follow-up to 2007's Era Vulgaris. Artwork for the album has been designed by UK artist Boneface. The band premiered the studi...

Queens Of The Stone Age will release their forthcoming new album …Like Clockwork on June 3.

Scroll down for the full tracklisting for the band’s sixth album, which is the follow-up to 2007’s Era Vulgaris. Artwork for the album has been designed by UK artist Boneface.

The band premiered the studio version of the album’s first single “My God Is The Sun” on Zane Lowe’s BBC Radio 1 show this evening (April 8). Speaking about the album, Joshua Homme told Lowe: “I feel like a weight made of monkeys has lifted off my shoulders.”

“Every once in a while this process is difficult,” he added of making the record. “This is documenting the journey of moving forward and it was a tough time… Not to get all Beatles on you, but [I] just ‘Let It Be’.”

The track is available now as a free download to fans who pre-order …Like Clockwork through the band’s label Matador. The iTunes and Amazon pre-order starts on April 9.

“My God Is The Sun” is streaming now at QOTSA.com. Scroll down to listen to the song, which the band debuted live at Lollapalooza Brazil at the end of March.

…Like Clockwork is made up of 10 tracks and was produced by Joshua Homme and the band at Pink Duck in Burbank, California. It was recorded by Mark Rankin with additional engineering by Justin Smith.

The album contains a list of guest stars, including Arctic Monkeys frontman Alex Turner, Dave Grohl, Elton John, Nine Inch Nails’ Trent Reznor, and Jake Shears of Scissor Sisters.

The band’s only confirmed live UK date this year is at Download Festival (June 14-16) at Donington Park.

The …Like Clockwork tracklisting is:

‘Keep Your Eyes Peeled’

‘I Sat By The Ocean’

‘The Vampyre of Time and Memory’

‘If I Had A Tail’

‘My God Is The Sun’

‘Kalopsia’

‘Fairweather Friends’

‘Smooth Sailing’

‘I Appear Missing’

‘…Like Clockwork’

The White Stripes to release ‘Nine Miles From The White City’ live album

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The White Stripes will release a live album titled 'Nine Miles From The White City', it has been confirmed. The release will come through Jack White's Third Man Records Vault subscription service and will be released as a double vinyl LP featuring 26 songs. Recorded at Chicago's Aragon Ballroom in...

The White Stripes will release a live album titled ‘Nine Miles From The White City’, it has been confirmed.

The release will come through Jack White’s Third Man Records Vault subscription service and will be released as a double vinyl LP featuring 26 songs. Recorded at Chicago’s Aragon Ballroom in 2003, the tracklisting includes fan favourites such as ‘Hotel Yorba’ and ‘Dead Leaves and the Dirty Ground’ as well as a number of cover versions of songs by Bob Dylan and Captain Beefheart.

The release celebrates 10 years since the release of The White Stripes album Elephant in 2003 and will come with a 7″ featuring demos of the Elephant tracks ‘I Want to Be the Boy to Warm Your Mother’s Heart’ and ‘Little Acorns’ as well as photos of the recording sessions for the album taken by David Swanson. A snippet of the demo version of The White Stripes ‘I Want to Be the Boy To Warm Your Mother’s Heart‘ can be heard below.

Nine Miles From the White City tracklisting:

‘When I Hear My Name’

‘Dead Leaves and the Dirty Ground’

‘Love Sick’ (Bob Dylan cover)

‘Hotel Yorba’

‘Aluminum’

‘Cool Drink of Water Blues’ (Tommy Johnson cover)

‘The Hardest Button To Button’

‘I Want to Be The Boy To Warm Your Mother’s Heart’

‘Stones in My Passway’ (Robert Johnson cover)

‘Stop Breakin’ Down’ (Robert Johnson cover)

‘Do’

‘In the Cold, Cold Night’

‘Seven Nation Army’

‘The Same Boy You’ve Always Known’

‘Black Jack Davey’

‘We Are Going to Be Friends’

‘Offend in Every Way’

‘Little Cream Soda’

‘Cannon/’Party Of Special Things To Do’ (Captain Beefheart cover)

‘Candy Cane Children’

‘The Air Near My Fingers’

‘Screwdriver’ (tease)

‘Ball And Biscuit’

‘Screwdriver’ (reprise)

‘Let’s Build a Home’

‘Goin’ Back to Memphis’ (Henry & June cover)

Photo credit: Autumn de Wilde

Fleetwood Mac to release new EP ‘in a few days’

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Lindsey Buckingham has announced that Fleetwood Mac will release an EP of new material later this week. The announcement came on stage in Philadelphia where the reunited band were playing one of the first dates of their 2013 world tour at the Fargo Centre on Saturday night (April 6). Speaking to the crowd before playing new song "Sad Angel", Buckingham said: "One of the things we thought would be a good idea before we hit the road would be to go into the studio and cut some new material. So last year we did that. It's the best stuff we've done in a long time and in a few days we're going to drop an EP of new stuff". Scroll down to watch the performance and hear the announcement now. Meanwhile, Christine McVie has said that she would be keen to perform live with Fleetwood Mac when they play live in London later this year. The group will perform three gigs at London's O2 Arena in September as part of a world tour and McVie, who retired from the music industry in 1998, has gone on record as saying that she will "pop back on stage" if the opportunity arises. Speaking to last week, McVie said: "If they wanted me to, I might pop back on stage when they’re in London just to do a little duet or something like that." Fleetwood Mac's UK dates are: Dublin 02 (September 20) London O2 Arena (24, 25, 27) Birmingham LG Arena (29) Manchester Arena (October 1) Glasgow The Hydro (3) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CITTkWQyf4g

Lindsey Buckingham has announced that Fleetwood Mac will release an EP of new material later this week.

The announcement came on stage in Philadelphia where the reunited band were playing one of the first dates of their 2013 world tour at the Fargo Centre on Saturday night (April 6). Speaking to the crowd before playing new song “Sad Angel“, Buckingham said: “One of the things we thought would be a good idea before we hit the road would be to go into the studio and cut some new material. So last year we did that. It’s the best stuff we’ve done in a long time and in a few days we’re going to drop an EP of new stuff”. Scroll down to watch the performance and hear the announcement now.

Meanwhile, Christine McVie has said that she would be keen to perform live with Fleetwood Mac when they play live in London later this year.

The group will perform three gigs at London’s O2 Arena in September as part of a world tour and McVie, who retired from the music industry in 1998, has gone on record as saying that she will “pop back on stage” if the opportunity arises. Speaking to last week, McVie said: “If they wanted me to, I might pop back on stage when they’re in London just to do a little duet or something like that.”

Fleetwood Mac’s UK dates are:

Dublin 02 (September 20)

London O2 Arena (24, 25, 27)

Birmingham LG Arena (29)

Manchester Arena (October 1)

Glasgow The Hydro (3)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CITTkWQyf4g

The Rolling Stones announce second London Hyde Park gig

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The Rolling Stones have announced they will play a second gig in London’s Hyde Park. The band will play on July 13, one week after their show on July 6. Jake Bugg, Tom Odell and The 1975 will support the Stones for their second concert. The band's show on July 6 sold out within minutes of ticke...

The Rolling Stones have announced they will play a second gig in London’s Hyde Park.

The band will play on July 13, one week after their show on July 6.

Jake Bugg, Tom Odell and The 1975 will support the Stones for their second concert.

The band’s show on July 6 sold out within minutes of tickets going on sale last week.

Tickets for the July 13 show – which is part of the Barclaycard Presents British Summer Time Hyde Park series – go on sale on Friday at 9am, with Barclaycard Unwind customers able to buy from Wednesday.

Justin Vernon’s new band, The Shouting Matches, stream their debut album

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The debut album from Justin Vernon's new band, The Shouting Matches, is streaming online now. Grownass Man, the first LP from the trio fronted by the Bon Iver man, is a departure from much of his previous work, showcasing a raw, blues-rock style. The Shouting Matches also feature Phil Cook – who played with Vernon in the band DeYarmond Edison, and now performs as part of Megafaun – and Brian Moen, part of the duo Peter Wolf Crier. The group are set to play at this month's Coachella festival in California. Grownass Man is available to listen to on NPR Music's site.

The debut album from Justin Vernon‘s new band, The Shouting Matches, is streaming online now.

Grownass Man, the first LP from the trio fronted by the Bon Iver man, is a departure from much of his previous work, showcasing a raw, blues-rock style.

The Shouting Matches also feature Phil Cook – who played with Vernon in the band DeYarmond Edison, and now performs as part of Megafaun – and Brian Moen, part of the duo Peter Wolf Crier.

The group are set to play at this month’s Coachella festival in California.

Grownass Man is available to listen to on NPR Music’s site.

Bill Wyman on joining The Rolling Stones again: ‘I’ve got better things to be doing now’

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The Rolling Stones' former bassist Bill Wyman has said he would never rejoin the band because he's got "better things to be doing". Wyman, who played with the The Rolling Stones between 1962 and 1993, joined the band onstage for their 50th anniversary gigs at London's O2 Arena last November (2012...

The Rolling Stones‘ former bassist Bill Wyman has said he would never rejoin the band because he’s got “better things to be doing”.

Wyman, who played with the The Rolling Stones between 1962 and 1993, joined the band onstage for their 50th anniversary gigs at London’s O2 Arena last November (2012). When asked by The Express what he would say if Mick Jagger asked him back on a permanent basis, he replied: “I’d say ‘no’…Thirty years was great but I’ve got better things to be doing now. That time has gone.”

Wyman, who is now a restaurateur, said playing with his former bandmates for the first time in 20 years last November was “great for five minutes because that’s about as long as they let me play… I thought I was going to get quite heavily involved because I was led to believe that throughout the year by them.”

He added: “Keith [Richards] in particular made me think that I would be a large part of it but when it came to it they told me they only wanted me to do two songs. It was fun but I regretted not playing more. I was a bass guitarist, a rhythm guitarist, I have to be on the button from the moment Charlie [Watts] does that first drum roll… I came off just as I was warming up and getting into it.”

He also revealed that he turned down the chance to play the US leg of the tour: “When they asked me to go to America for two weeks to do three shows there, I said ‘For two songs? No thank you.'”

Last week, tickets to see The Rolling Stones for their forthcoming huge Hyde Park on July 6 gig sold out in three minutes, fuelling speculation that they will add another show due to popular demand. The gig will mark the first time the band have played at the venue since their now-legendary gig in 1969.

The Stones will play in London just a week after they headline the Saturday night of Glastonbury in June.

The National unveil new song ‘Demons’ – listen

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'Demons', the first song to be released from The National's forthcoming new album, has been premiered on BBC 6 Music. You can listen to the track below. 'Demons' is the second track on Trouble Will Find Me, the group's sixth album, which is set to be released on May 20 on 4AD. Trouble Will Find Me is the follow-up to 2010's High Violet, which debuted at number three in the US Billboard chart. During the three-year gap between High Violet and Trouble Will Find Me, guitarists Bryce and Aaron Dessner, along with singer Matt Berninger, worked on a multimedia production, The Long Count, which also featured vocal contributions from Kim and Kelley Deal, Shara Worden and Tunde Adebimpe. The group's new album features guest appearances from St Vincent, Sufjan Stevens, Sharon Van Etten and Arcade Fire's Richard Reed Parry. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N527oBKIPMc

‘Demons’, the first song to be released from The National‘s forthcoming new album, has been premiered on BBC 6 Music. You can listen to the track below.

‘Demons’ is the second track on Trouble Will Find Me, the group’s sixth album, which is set to be released on May 20 on 4AD.

Trouble Will Find Me is the follow-up to 2010’s High Violet, which debuted at number three in the US Billboard chart. During the three-year gap between High Violet and Trouble Will Find Me, guitarists Bryce and Aaron Dessner, along with singer Matt Berninger, worked on a multimedia production, The Long Count, which also featured vocal contributions from Kim and Kelley Deal, Shara Worden and Tunde Adebimpe.

The group’s new album features guest appearances from St Vincent, Sufjan Stevens, Sharon Van Etten and Arcade Fire’s Richard Reed Parry.

Black Sabbath announce UK arena tour

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Black Sabbath have announced a UK arena tour for December 2013. The band will kick off the tour at London's O2 Arena on December 12, before calling in at Belfast, Sheffield, Glasgow and Manchester before a homecoming show at Birmingham’s LG Arena on December 20. The dates will support the band...

Black Sabbath have announced a UK arena tour for December 2013.

The band will kick off the tour at London’s O2 Arena on December 12, before calling in at Belfast, Sheffield, Glasgow and Manchester before a homecoming show at Birmingham’s LG Arena on December 20.

The dates will support the band’s brand new album ’13’, which will be released on June 10. ’13’ is the first album Osbourne, Tony Iommi and Geezer Butler have recorded together since 1978’s ‘Never Say Die!’. The Birmingham rock legends made the album primarily in Los Angeles with renowned producer Rick Rubin (Johnny Cash, Metallica, System Of A Down), and it features Rage Against The Machine’s Brad Wilk, who replaces original sticksman Bill Ward on drums.

Black Sabbath will play:

London O2 Arena (December 10)

Belfast Odyssey Arena (December 12)

Sheffield Arena (December 14)

Glasgow Hydro (December 16)

Manchester Arena (December 18)

Birmingham LG Arena (December 20)

Meanwhile, it was revealed earlier this year that Iommi has written the song that Armenia will enter for this year’s Eurovision Song Contest. Iommi will not perform at the annual competition, which this year is taking place in Sweden, but he has written the song ‘Lonely Planet’ for Armenian band Dorians.

Tickets for Black Sabbath’s UK arena tour go onsale on Friday (April 12) at 9am.

Andy Johns, Led Zeppelin and Rolling Stones engineer and producer, dies aged 61

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Andy Johns has died at the age of 61. The producer and engineer was hospitalised last week, collaborator Stacy Blades told Billboard, partly due to liver problems, though no cause of death has yet been announced. The younger brother of producer Glyn Johns, Andy Johns was born in 1952. He began stu...

Andy Johns has died at the age of 61.

The producer and engineer was hospitalised last week, collaborator Stacy Blades told Billboard, partly due to liver problems, though no cause of death has yet been announced.

The younger brother of producer Glyn Johns, Andy Johns was born in 1952. He began studio work as tape operator on The Rolling Stones’ Their Satanic Majesties Request in 1967, before going on to engineer legendary albums such as Led Zeppelin’s II, III and IV and The Rolling Stones’ Exile On Main Street.

Other records he engineered include Free’s Highway, Blind Faith’s self-titled, the Stones’ It’s Only Rock ‘n’ Roll, Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti, and Joni Mitchell’s Shadows And Light, as well as albums by Mott The Hoople and Jethro Tull.

Johns also carved out a successful career as a producer, working on Television’s Marquee Moon, as well as albums by Steve Miller, Free, Humble Pie, Van Halen, Bobby Whitlock and Ron Wood.

Johns is survived by his wife Anet, as well as his sons Evan, Jesse and Will.

Edwyn Collins – Understated

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Less is infinitely more for the man who invented indie... “I have been a rover, I have walked alone,” quavers Edwyn Collins, closing his second record since suffering two serious strokes in 2005 with an incongruous rendition of Rod McKuen’s “Love’s Been Good To Me”. It’s the sort of last-orders warhorse that the floppy-fringed Collins might have referenced obliquely in his Orange Juice pomp as he stalked the margins between the classic and the kitschy in a Davy Crockett hat. Here, though - backed by an acoustic guitar and what sounds like a Joe Meek theramin whine - he throws everything he has at it, battling to hold on as his voice cracks around the high notes. You’re waiting for the twist – the wink and the knowing grin – and, as with the rest of Understated, there really isn’t one. Those bewitched by the playful Edwyn Collins of “You Can’t Hide Your Love Forever” or the ironic subversions of his Britpop-era second wind might find Understated hard going. Musically, it is business as usual – out-on-the-floor, stack-heeled indie stompers all the way – but if 2010’s stark Losing Sleep was a little on the abrupt side, this is more concise still. Collins has recovered his vocabulary since his strokes (at one stage, his only four coherent phrases were “yes”, “no”, “Grace Maxwell” – the name of his wife and manager - and “the possibilities are endless”) but has ruthlessly streamlined his songwriting lexicon. “My lyrics are now simple - backward, maybe,” he said. “They used to be very flowery. Now they’re direct and focused and repetitious and precise.” He can say that again, and if Understated is anything to go by, he will. For here is a record where economy – of language, of ideas – is a virtue. Having struggled for life, the simple act of being is mined relentlessly for subject matter, but amid Collins’ drive to document simple, universal truths, the tiny flourishes illuminate the one-time draftsman’s craftsmanship; the life-or-death double-entendre of ‘Dilemma’s refrain “that’s me all over”; the deadpan Otis Redding lift of “I’ve got sunshine on a cloudy day” on “Baby Jean”; the syntactical twists that stretch “the question of what you do, what you see are integral to life in my point of view” over four lines in uptempo stomper “Carry On, Carry On”. What epiphanies that come, meanwhile, are elegantly undersold. He measures his pop career matter-of-factly on “31 Years” and acknowledges his teenage days as a graphic artist with the Glasgow parks department on the title track, breaking into what seems like a torrent of emotion by comparison on “Forsooth” – a classic Collins word if ever there was one – as he enjoys a lazy morning around the house. “I’m so happy to be alive,” he repeats over a mesmeric Velvet Underground buzz, descending into what comes close to a Van Morrison-circa-Astral Weeks rapture with the reiterated phrase “I feel alive and I feel reborn”. Given the brisk manner in which he documents his life elsewhere (“Back to life, back to hope,” on the cheery “Too Bad (That’s Sad)” – “to and fro, back to work,” on the smoky “It’s A Reason)” it’s an unexpectedly cathartic moment, all the more so as he is not one given to gush. For all of his reputation as a jangly romantic - Jonathan Richman with the sappy swapped for savvy – Collins is a supremely controlled writer, even his wordiest masterworks littered with pomposity-busting asides and obfuscatory single inverts. Understated dispenses with all those frills and curlicues, and if it does not offer unbridled emotion, its quiet determination strikes a dramatic enough minor chord. “I’ve got music to see me through, I’ve got art to ease the pain,” Collins explains on ‘Baby Jean’, staking out the margins of his new territory once more. No longer so clever maybe, but indubitably wise. Jim Wirth Q&A EDWYN COLLINS You sound like a very positive person: is that a fair assessment? It's fair, certainly. I wake up in a cheerful mood every day, because I have a great life. I'm lucky, I guess. I feel it. Why “Understated”? Words pop into my head, single words, then I try to bend them into a song. "Understated, hmmm, let's see, an interesting idea. My career, perhaps?” But no, actually I'm not at all understated! I'm a show-off. “Forsooth” is extraordinary: can you talk us through it? Obviously, it's a Velvets reference. But it's still all mine. I like the chant feel to it. And ironically, “I feel alive, I feel reborn.” As opposed to “Heroin......” Has the process of writing songs changed since your stroke? Oh yes. Lyrically, more direct and to the point. That's fine - I have no choice, and I like it. Music? I can only play a little now, but all the notes and chords flow easily enough in my brain. My musician friends get my intent, no problem there. I sing them the parts, choose the effects, arrange the instruments. We collaborate, it's brilliant. “Love’s Been Good To Me” is an odd choice of cover. I used to sing it ten years ago, acoustically. I love Rod McKuen, and the Sinatra version. It's just a beautiful song. Ten years ago, I loved to play it on the guitar, especially. INTERVIEW: JIM WIRTH

Less is infinitely more for the man who invented indie…

“I have been a rover, I have walked alone,” quavers Edwyn Collins, closing his second record since suffering two serious strokes in 2005 with an incongruous rendition of Rod McKuen’s “Love’s Been Good To Me”.

It’s the sort of last-orders warhorse that the floppy-fringed Collins might have referenced obliquely in his Orange Juice pomp as he stalked the margins between the classic and the kitschy in a Davy Crockett hat. Here, though – backed by an acoustic guitar and what sounds like a Joe Meek theramin whine – he throws everything he has at it, battling to hold on as his voice cracks around the high notes. You’re waiting for the twist – the wink and the knowing grin – and, as with the rest of Understated, there really isn’t one.

Those bewitched by the playful Edwyn Collins of “You Can’t Hide Your Love Forever” or the ironic subversions of his Britpop-era second wind might find Understated hard going. Musically, it is business as usual – out-on-the-floor, stack-heeled indie stompers all the way – but if 2010’s stark Losing Sleep was a little on the abrupt side, this is more concise still.

Collins has recovered his vocabulary since his strokes (at one stage, his only four coherent phrases were “yes”, “no”, “Grace Maxwell” – the name of his wife and manager – and “the possibilities are endless”) but has ruthlessly streamlined his songwriting lexicon. “My lyrics are now simple – backward, maybe,” he said. “They used to be very flowery. Now they’re direct and focused and repetitious and precise.”

He can say that again, and if Understated is anything to go by, he will. For here is a record where economy – of language, of ideas – is a virtue. Having struggled for life, the simple act of being is mined relentlessly for subject matter, but amid Collins’ drive to document simple, universal truths, the tiny flourishes illuminate the one-time draftsman’s craftsmanship; the life-or-death double-entendre of ‘Dilemma’s refrain “that’s me all over”; the deadpan Otis Redding lift of “I’ve got sunshine on a cloudy day” on “Baby Jean”; the syntactical twists that stretch “the question of what you do, what you see are integral to life in my point of view” over four lines in uptempo stomper “Carry On, Carry On”.

What epiphanies that come, meanwhile, are elegantly undersold. He measures his pop career matter-of-factly on “31 Years” and acknowledges his teenage days as a graphic artist with the Glasgow parks department on the title track, breaking into what seems like a torrent of emotion by comparison on “Forsooth” – a classic Collins word if ever there was one – as he enjoys a lazy morning around the house. “I’m so happy to be alive,” he repeats over a mesmeric Velvet Underground buzz, descending into what comes close to a Van Morrison-circa-Astral Weeks rapture with the reiterated phrase “I feel alive and I feel reborn”.

Given the brisk manner in which he documents his life elsewhere (“Back to life, back to hope,” on the cheery “Too Bad (That’s Sad)” – “to and fro, back to work,” on the smoky “It’s A Reason)” it’s an unexpectedly cathartic moment, all the more so as he is not one given to gush. For all of his reputation as a jangly romantic – Jonathan Richman with the sappy swapped for savvy – Collins is a supremely controlled writer, even his wordiest masterworks littered with pomposity-busting asides and obfuscatory single inverts.

Understated dispenses with all those frills and curlicues, and if it does not offer unbridled emotion, its quiet determination strikes a dramatic enough minor chord. “I’ve got music to see me through, I’ve got art to ease the pain,” Collins explains on ‘Baby Jean’, staking out the margins of his new territory once more. No longer so clever maybe, but indubitably wise.

Jim Wirth

Q&A

EDWYN COLLINS

You sound like a very positive person: is that a fair assessment?

It’s fair, certainly. I wake up in a cheerful mood every day, because I have a great life. I’m lucky, I guess. I feel it.

Why “Understated”?

Words pop into my head, single words, then I try to bend them into a song. “Understated, hmmm, let’s see, an interesting idea. My career, perhaps?” But no, actually I’m not at all understated! I’m a show-off.

“Forsooth” is extraordinary: can you talk us through it?

Obviously, it’s a Velvets reference. But it’s still all mine. I like the chant feel to it. And ironically, “I feel alive, I feel reborn.” As opposed to “Heroin……”

Has the process of writing songs changed since your stroke?

Oh yes. Lyrically, more direct and to the point. That’s fine – I have no choice, and I like it. Music? I can only play a little now, but all the notes and chords flow easily enough in my brain. My musician friends get my intent, no problem there. I sing them the parts, choose the effects, arrange the instruments. We collaborate, it’s brilliant.

“Love’s Been Good To Me” is an odd choice of cover.

I used to sing it ten years ago, acoustically. I love Rod McKuen, and the Sinatra version. It’s just a beautiful song. Ten years ago, I loved to play it on the guitar, especially.

INTERVIEW: JIM WIRTH

Mark Knopfler cancels two concerts in Russia in protest over human rights crackdown

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Mark Knopfler has axed two concerts in Russia in protest over a crackdown on human rights groups. He was due to perform in Moscow on June 7 and in St Petersburg the following night (8) but has now decided to cancel the shows following the decision of Russian prosecutors and tax officials to search ...

Mark Knopfler has axed two concerts in Russia in protest over a crackdown on human rights groups.

He was due to perform in Moscow on June 7 and in St Petersburg the following night (8) but has now decided to cancel the shows following the decision of Russian prosecutors and tax officials to search the offices of Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and Memorial, Russia’s oldest rights group, in what Kremlin observers claimed were raids aimed at stifling criticism of President Vladimir Putin.

Knopfler wrote on his official website: “Given the crackdown by Russian authorities on groups including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, I have regretfully decided to cancel my upcoming concerts in Moscow and St. Petersburg.”

He added: “I have always loved playing in Russia and have great affection for the country and the people. I hope the current climate will change soon.”

Russian authorities have recently carried out unprecedented searches of over 100 non-governmental organisations (NGOs) involved in rights activism, reports The Daily Telegraph. Putin has signed laws to tighten controls on non-governmental organisations since he returned to the presidency in March last year, requiring those with foreign funding to register as “foreign agents”.

Knopfler previously spoke out in support of Pussy Riot when three members were jailed last year. At the time he said: “Whenever a political regime or religious establishment refuses to tolerate criticism it advertises itself as repressive, backward and insecure. This verdict will diminish Russia in the eyes of the world. I condemn the prison sentences given to these young people and support the right to protest for everyone.”

The National announce UK and European tour dates

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The National have announced UK and European tour dates. The band, who release their sixth album, Trouble Will Find Me, on May 21, have lined up a run of dates through October and November, including a show at London's Alexandra Palace. The National will play: 31 Oct Finland, Helsinki, Ice Hall 2 Nov Denmark, Copenhagen, Forum 4 Nov Germany, Berlin, Max Schmelling Halle 5 Nov Germany, Dusseldorf, Mitsubishi Electric Hallen 6 Nov Luxembourg, Luxembourg, Rockhal 7 Nov The Netherlands, Amsterdam, Heineken Music Hall 9 Nov UK, Belfast, Odyssey Arena 10 Nov Ireland, Dublin, O2 Arena 11 Nov UK, Manchester, O2 Apollo 13 Nov UK, London, Alexandra Palace 18 Nov France, Paris, Zenith 20 Nov Spain, Madrid, Palacio Vistalegre 21 Nov Portugal, Lisbon, Pavilhao Atlântico For more information and tickets visit: http://www.americanmary.com/tour.php

The National have announced UK and European tour dates.

The band, who release their sixth album, Trouble Will Find Me, on May 21, have lined up a run of dates through October and November, including a show at London’s Alexandra Palace.

The National will play:

31 Oct Finland, Helsinki, Ice Hall

2 Nov Denmark, Copenhagen, Forum

4 Nov Germany, Berlin, Max Schmelling Halle

5 Nov Germany, Dusseldorf, Mitsubishi Electric Hallen

6 Nov Luxembourg, Luxembourg, Rockhal

7 Nov The Netherlands, Amsterdam, Heineken Music Hall

9 Nov UK, Belfast, Odyssey Arena

10 Nov Ireland, Dublin, O2 Arena

11 Nov UK, Manchester, O2 Apollo

13 Nov UK, London, Alexandra Palace

18 Nov France, Paris, Zenith

20 Nov Spain, Madrid, Palacio Vistalegre

21 Nov Portugal, Lisbon, Pavilhao Atlântico

For more information and tickets visit: http://www.americanmary.com/tour.php

Yeah Yeah Yeahs stream new album ‘Mosquito’ ahead of release

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The Yeah Yeah Yeahs are currently streaming their upcoming fourth album 'Mosquito' on YouTube. Scroll down to listen to record, which is set for release on April 15. The follow-up to 2009's 'It's Blitz!', 'Mosquito' sees the band again working with long-time producers David Sitek and Nick Launay, a...

The Yeah Yeah Yeahs are currently streaming their upcoming fourth album ‘Mosquito’ on YouTube.

Scroll down to listen to record, which is set for release on April 15. The follow-up to 2009’s ‘It’s Blitz!’, ‘Mosquito’ sees the band again working with long-time producers David Sitek and Nick Launay, and was recorded at Sonic Ranch in Tornillo, Texas.

Introducing the album for Noisey, frontwoman Karen O says “I am extremely excited about this record, excited in a way that I was back in the day, ‘Fever To Tell’ kind of style.”

She continues: “It’s kind of like a Yeah Yeah Yeahs soul record – our version of one – but also it’s really playful and tongue in cheek at times. I think its got something for everyone.”

Yeah Yeah Yeahs will curate I’ll Be Your Mirror at London’s Alexandra Palace alongside Grizzly Bear over the weekend of May 4-5. Bands confirmed for the event so far include The Walkmen, Black Lips, Real Estate, Dirty Beaches and Cass McCombs.

Yeah Yeah Yeahs play:

Manchester O2 Apollo (May 1)

Leeds O2 Academy (2)

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HMV poised to sign a £50 million rescue package

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HMV finally looks set to be rescued in a £50 million deal that will preserve 2,500 jobs. Hilco, the specialist restructuring firm, is poised to sign a binding agreement to secure the chain's future, which will acquire around 130 HMV-branded stores and nine Fopp outlets, reports The Guardian. It's ...

HMV finally looks set to be rescued in a £50 million deal that will preserve 2,500 jobs.

Hilco, the specialist restructuring firm, is poised to sign a binding agreement to secure the chain’s future, which will acquire around 130 HMV-branded stores and nine Fopp outlets, reports The Guardian. It’s thought the deal could signed as soon as today (April 5).

The firm, which owns HMV Canada, was the frontrunner to become the new owner of HMV soon after Deloitte was appointed as administrator at the end of January. At the time, Hilco bought HMV’s £176m of debt for a reported £40m. The chain is now expected to be run by a combination of current HMV and newly-appointed Hilco executives.

Major music labels and film studios are also understood to have backed the deal and have agreed new supply terms with HMV. Hilco also has plans to re-establish the brand in Ireland by reopening a store on Dublin’s Henry Street. The retailer’s 16 outlets in the country were closed three months ago.

Last month, the total number of job losses at HMV was reported as coming up to 1,500, and the number of stores marked for closure stands at 103. It came after administrators announced that an additional 37 stores would close, resulting in the loss of 464 jobs.

Cat Power reschedules cancelled London show

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Cat Power has rescheduled her cancelled December 2012 London gig. The new show will take place at The Roundhouse in Camden on June 25. She will also be playing Glastonbury Festival on June 30 and Latitude Festival on July 19. Cat Power has rescheduled all her cancelled European shows to promote 20...

Cat Power has rescheduled her cancelled December 2012 London gig.

The new show will take place at The Roundhouse in Camden on June 25. She will also be playing Glastonbury Festival on June 30 and Latitude Festival on July 19.

Cat Power has rescheduled all her cancelled European shows to promote 2012’s Sun album, which she pulled last year because of poor health.

Writing on Instagram last year, the singer songwriter explained her reasons for pulling the tour:

“I fucking love my fans. Everything I do regarding my career, I FIRST, think of my fans and this world we all share. But right now, I HAVE TO think of myself because I have to learn through meditation & being clear from alcohol & cigarettes & red meat and lots of rest amongst my menagerie of doctors.”

Cat Power will be one of the guests on the first episode of the new series of Later… Live With Jools Holland, which returns to the BBC on April 9.

Charlie Watts: “I don’t want to play Glastonbury.”

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Charlie Watts has said that he doesn't want to play Glastonbury because he doesn't like festivals or playing outdoors. The Rolling Stones will headline the Saturday night at Glastonbury, joining fellow headliners Arctic Monkeys and Mumford & Sons on the bill for the Worthy Farm festival. How...

Charlie Watts has said that he doesn’t want to play Glastonbury because he doesn’t like festivals or playing outdoors.

The Rolling Stones will headline the Saturday night at Glastonbury, joining fellow headliners Arctic Monkeys and Mumford & Sons on the bill for the Worthy Farm festival.

However, Watts seems less than excited about the prospect, telling The Guardian that he worries the wind on the night will make it difficult for him to play the drums to the best of his ability. “I don’t want to do it [Glastonbury]. Everyone else does. I don’t like playing outdoors, and I certainly don’t like festivals,” he told the paper. “The worse thing playing outdoors is when the wind blows, if you’re a drummer, because the cymbals move … it really is hard to play then.”

The Stones announced details of another outdoor show on Wednesday, confirming that they will play London’s Hyde Park in July. The band will perform at the central London location as part of the Barclaycard presents British Summer Time festival. Support on the day will come from The Vaccines, The Temper Trap, Gary Clark Jr and King Charles, plus Palma Violets, Tribes, The Boxer Rebellion and more across three other stages. Tickets for The Rolling Stones in Hyde Park go on general sale at 9am Friday, April 5.

The Glastonbury line-up as it stands is:

Pyramid stage

Arctic Monkeys; the Rolling Stones; Mumford & Sons; Dizzee Rascal; Primal Scream; Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds; Vampire Weekend; Elvis Costello; the Vaccines; Kenny Rogers; Ben Howard; Rita Ora; Rufus Wainwright; Jake Bugg; Professor Green; Laura Mvula; Billy Bragg; Rokia Traoré; First Aid Kit; Haim

Other stage

Portishead; Chase & Status; The xx; Foals; Example; The Smashing Pumpkins; Alt-J; Two Door Cinema Club; PiL; Tame Impala; Alabama Shakes; Editors; Azealia Banks; Of Monsters and Men; the Lumineers; Enter Shikari; I Am Kloot; The Hives; Amanda Palmer

West Holts stage

Chic featuring Nile Rogers; Public Enemy; The Weeknd; Seasick Steve; Major Lazer; Tom Tom Club; Maverick Sabre; Lianne Les Havas; Toro Y Moi; Ondatrópica; Sérgio Mendes; Dub Colossus; the Orb & Indigenous People; The Child of Lov; Alice Russell; Goat; Badbadnotgood; The Bombay Royale; Matthew E. White; Riot Jazz

The Park stage

Cat Power; The Horrors; Fuck Buttons; Django Django; Rodriguez; Dinosaur Jr; Calexico; Steve Mason; Palma Violets; Devendra Banhart; Michael Kiwanuka; Solange; King Krule; Stealing Sheep; Tim Burgess; Melody’s Echo Chamber; Ed Harcourt; Half Moon Run; Josephine; Teleman

John Peel stage

Crystal Castles; Hurts; Phoenix; Bastille; Everything Everything; James Blake; Johnny Marr; The Courteeners; Jessie Ware; Tyler, The Creator; Frightened Rabbit; Miles Kane; Local Natives; The Strypes; Savages; Tom Odell; Peace; Daughter; Villagers; Toy; Jagwar Ma

Silver Hayes

Nas; Hot Natured; Disclosure; Rudimental; The Family Stone; Skream & Benga; Sub Focus; Charles Bradley; SBTRKT; Netsky; Dogblood; The Congos; The 2 Bears; Aluna George; Julio Bashmore; Wiley; TEED; Gold Panda; David Rodigan

Acoustic tent

Sinéad O’Connor; Stevie Winwood; Lucinda Williams; Glen Hansard; Bill Wyman’s Rhythm Kings; Gabrielle Aplin; The Proclaimers; Martha Wainwright; Seth Lakeman; KT Tunstall; Gretchen Peters; Martin Stevenson & The Daintees

Avalon stage

Ben Caplan; Beverley Knight; Crowns; Evan Dando; Gary Clark Jr.; JJ Grey & Mofro; Josh Doyle; Lucy Rose; Mad Dog Mcrea; Molotov Jukebox; Newton Faulkner; Oysterband; Penguin Café; Shooglenifty; Stornoway; The Destroyers; The Staves; The Urban Voodoo Machine; Vintage Trouble; Xavier Rudd

An Audience With… Graham Nash

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Graham Nash discusses the unique exhibition of his photography in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2013, and out now – in this archive feature from Uncut’s April 2009 issue (Take 143), the silver-throated former Holly tackles some prickly subjects – dissing Dylan, breaking up with Joni and pl...

Graham Nash discusses the unique exhibition of his photography in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2013, and out now – in this archive feature from Uncut’s April 2009 issue (Take 143), the silver-throated former Holly tackles some prickly subjects – dissing Dylan, breaking up with Joni and playing peacekeeper in CSNY… Interview: John Lewis

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Graham Nash is telling Uncut about the last time he went carol singing… “It was a couple of Christmasses ago, in the Valley. There was a whole bunch of us – John David Souther, Linda Ronstadt, me, [David] Crosby, I think Jackson Browne might have turned up, too – and we all went door-to-door in Encino. We turned up at one house and I remember Jimmy Webb answering the door, with a gun in his hand just in case we turned out to be robbers. I think he was pretty surprised to see us all there…”

You can forgive Nash for this shameless piece of name-dropping, because that’s the world he lives in. After touring the US with Manc popsters The Hollies in 1968, he quickly relocated to the States and has spent the past four decades hobnobbing with legends – partying with Mama Cass Elliot, pioneering protest rock with Pete Seeger, Joan Baez and Bob Dylan, trading influences with Paul Simon and nearly getting married to Joni Mitchell. Oh, and he found the time to become a respected photographer and form the world’s first rock supergroup with David Crosby and Stephen Stills.

Now 67, Nash spends most of his time at home in Kauai, Hawaii, with his wife Susan and three children Jackson, Will and Nile, although the Salford vowels are still in place, mixed with some Californian consonants. He’s spent the past few months touring the world and putting together a three-CD boxset of his songs, as performed by The Hollies, as a solo artist and in various permutations of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young. “I had completely forgotten about dozens of these tracks,” he says. “But then again, I’m not one for looking backwards. I’m much more interested in the future than the past.”

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In his book, Chronicles, Dylan writes of performing “Lay Lady Lay” at Johnny Cash’s house before handing you the guitar. What did you play and what memories do you have of that evening?

Andrew Poulsen, Christchurch, New Zealand

I hate to contradict Bob, but he remembers it wrong! He would never have gotten up to play first. Never in a million years! Him and his wife, Sarah, were sitting on the stairway – a stairway that led up to the second floor of Johnny’s house off the main dining room – and he didn’t play until the end of the evening. I actually got up first. Because nobody knew who I was then, so I didn’t give a shit. I’d just recorded “Marrakesh Express” so I played it, accompanying myself on acoustic guitar. I remember coming to the end of the song, feeling pretty good about how I performed it, and then standing up and walking into a lamp. Which was a bit embarrassing.

Who would win in a fight between Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young?

Chris Webb, Birmingham

Me and Neil. We’re still pretty thin. We’re fitter. We can run away. David can’t run away from anything!

What are your memories of Salford from your childhood?

Guy Garvey, Elbow

A friendly place, cold and damp and then brilliantly sunny for a few minutes every year. I had good friends, lots of people who I could kick a football around with. But it was definitely a place to get out of. From the age of 13, I wanted to be a rock’n’roll musician, and at the time that meant going to London. I think it’s fantastic now that people from around the world go to Manchester to make music! That was unheard of in my day. When was the last time I went back? That was seven months ago, for the funeral of my second-born sister. Now I have one sister in Manchester, and her children.

You have a reputation as being a very calming, no-nonsense figure. Do you think you’re good at resolving conflict situations?

Zoran Tuckar, Zagreb, Croatia

Oh yeah. I put that down to my background in Salford. You gotta remember that England was devastated twice by Germany in 25 years. English people of my generation tend to just get the job done while they can. Like everyone in England, I had to deal with the aftermath of World War II – all the old clichés, rationing, not being able to get coal for the fire, not being able to get food and stuff, the sense that tomorrow might never come – which none of my American friends experienced. You had to remain cheerful about it. So I think that equipped me for dealing with Americans who might have been getting stressed unnecessarily. That’s part of the role I’ve played in CSN. I think it would have flown apart much more often if I’d not been there to steady things down!

How do you guys record harmonies? They sure put a tingle up my spine!

Candi Staton

We have tried every way possible! One mic, three mics, six mics, two mics each, we’ve tried everything. We’ve even tried doing them separately, track by track. But we’ve found that you get the best results when you sing harmonies together, around just a couple of microphones. I don’t pretend to understand the physics involved in it, but I’m sure there’s something that happens to the way in which the soundwaves from two or three voices, singing in harmony, interact with each other before they reach the microphone. There’s no question about it. That’s the best way to do it.

Have you ever sung karaoke?

Alexia, Hitchin, Herts

Unfortunately, yes. My son made me do it, honestly! It was at a sushi bar in Hawaii. I did “Wasted On The Way” as it was one of the CSN songs they had on their list. I think I did a good job!

Songs For Beginners – your first solo album from 1971 – is one of my favourite albums ever. Every track seems to say exactly what a woman would want to hear from her boyfriend! Were you in a happy place when you wrote it?

Alela Diane

We’d just recorded Déjà Vu with CSNY, the sessions for which ran the gamut of emotions, from thrilling to soul-destroying – it was a painstaking, difficult time for all of us – so it was kind of a relief to get away and do my own thing. Like Crosby and Stills, I’d recently gotten over a difficult break-up, in my case with Joni, but it was a matter of just getting on with it, staying positive. And I’m proud of every track there. I suppose it’s an object lesson in writing a happy, positive album!

What is your relationship like with the other Hollies these days? Would you consider a reunion if Allan Clarke was to come out of retirement?

Alex Day, Leeds

I did rejoin The Hollies for a bit in the 1980s – 1982, 1983 – and if Allan was there I might consider doing a record with them. But I don’t think Allan’s coming out of retirement. Yes, I’m still in touch with Allan – he is my oldest friend and I’ve known him since I was five years old! I also speak to Bobby [Elliott, the drummer with the Hollies] a lot, because he was the archivist in the band. Since I’ve been putting together my boxset, I needed certain facts and figures that only Bobby would know.

Pop seemed to get very political in the late ’60s and then again in the early ’80s. Are people still making protest songs now?

Ali Campbell, UB40

If you go to Neil Young’s Living With War website, there are 2,500 protest songs on there. The thing that’s different is that the people who own the world’s media – who you can probably count on two hands – don’t want those songs on their radio any more. They don’t want you stirring up the sheep. They don’t want you talking about what’s wrong with the country. They just want to rob us in peace. A lot of broadcasting companies are owned by people who make profits from the war machine. So they don’t like dissent. So you won’t hear protest songs on the radio stations. Kids in America in the 1960s were angry about an immoral, unjust war, just like the one that we’re in now. I don’t see what’s changed!

I find it inspiring that, after all these years, you still seem to retain the same friendship with Stephen Stills, and especially David Crosby. What’s so special about your friendship that has made it endure so long?

David Bruce, Scotland

They’re crazy people! I’ve always known it. They’ve always been out of the ordinary, they’ve always thought outside the box, they’re just very strange people and I’ve thoroughly enjoyed their company over that time. We started out when we found that we had a certain sound and we made a couple of really fine records. Then you start to get comfortable with stardom, money and fame, and then you come back to being normal. And that’s what we’ve been good at doing – staying normal.

Do you remember the first song you sang together with Crosby and Stills? And did it take you long to nail those perfect harmonies?

Amadou Bagayoko, Amadou & Mariam

With me, David and Stephen, we knew the first time we sang together – we did a version of The Beatles’ “Blackbird” – that it sounded special. And, in the recording studio, there were some things that we did in one take. “Lady Of The Island” – one take, took us four minutes! Other tracks, like most of the ones on Déjà Vu, took us absolutely ages… hours and hours. But, generally you want to get it right, and nobody knows when it’s right except the three of us.

In a 1966 NME interview – with Keith Altham at your flat in Marble Arch – you say, “With Dylan I can’t reconcile the man who writes ‘Blowin’ In The Wind’ with rubbish like ‘Subterannean Homesick Blues’.” Did you really mean that?

Garry, Brighton

Ha! I can’t have done. I think at the time I was cynical about The Hollies wanting to do an album of Dylan songs in a way I didn’t appreciate. I think my comments about Dylan were more a reflection of that, rather than about Bob. I always appreciated Bob, he’s a brilliant singer and a brilliant songwriter, probably the country’s best. But The Hollies wanted to do an album of Dylan covers with Las Vegas-style horn arrangements. And it just didn’t sit with me well at all. I cut “Blowin’ In The Wind” with them and then after that I’d had it, I couldn’t do it at all. I think you can tell in that 1966 interview that I really was just straining to leave the group and leave the country.

What’s the first gig you went to?

Hardeep, Wolverhampton

It was Cliff Richard at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester, in about 1960. It was phenomenal. I don’t remember screaming at the stage, I just remember staring at everything with awe and wonder for two hours. Cliff was so damn cool in those days. I distinctly recall wanting to be Cliff Richard for a while. And The Shadows were fantastic. They really, really rocked like hell!

You and David Crosby famously started a campaign to run as “joint president” in 2004. How did you feel about Obama’s victory and where were you on that night?

Nick, Chicago

I was sitting on my tourbus watching the results come in. We had just done a show in the Midwest, I think it was Tiffin, Ohio. Me and Crosby had booked a tour where every date was in a key swing state. We’d go to the Barack Obama headquarters and say hello to the campaign staff and volunteers who were working so hard. I was very impressed by them all. It was a very well run, energetic organisation, and I’m very proud of Obama. I was amazed and thrilled that he won. Right off the bat it was a historic event. Thing is, we have given him a bucket of shit and we’re hoping that he’s going to make biscuits out of it, you know? It’s a very difficult job he’s got. But I also believe he can turn this thing around. We should all try our best to make sure he can do it.

Christine McVie keen to join Fleetwood Mac on stage in London

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Christine McVie has said that she would be keen to perform live with Fleetwood Mac when they play live in London later this year. The group will perform three gigs at London's O2 Arena in September as part of a world tour and McVie, who retired from the music industry in 1998, has gone on record as...

Christine McVie has said that she would be keen to perform live with Fleetwood Mac when they play live in London later this year.

The group will perform three gigs at London’s O2 Arena in September as part of a world tour and McVie, who retired from the music industry in 1998, has gone on record as saying that she will “pop back on stage” if the opportunity arises. Speaking to Metro, McVie said: “If they wanted me to, I might pop back on stage when they’re in London just to do a little duet or something like that.”

Also speaking to Metro, Mick Fleetwood said that he was delighted with the band’s recent rise in popularity with young listeners who were not alive during high points of their career. “A lot of bands, including us, never know when the audience is going to finally disappear,” he said. “But we have a whole influx of new fans, young people who’ve been brought up on us by their parents or picked us up on the internet. There’ll be people on this tour in their seventies and others seeing us for the first time, and that’s really cool.”

Fleetwood Mac will play:

Dublin 02 (September 20)

London O2 Arena (24, 25, 27)

Birmingham LG Arena (29)

Manchester Arena (October 1)

Glasgow The Hydro (3)

Patti Smith, Iggy & The Stooges, Siouxsie confirmed for Yoko Ono’s Meltown

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The line-up for this year's Meltdown festival has been announced. Curated by Yoko Ono, the festival will run from June 14 - 23 at London's Southbank Centre. Ono will open the festival with a performance by the Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band on June 14. Siouxsie will make her first public performance in five years on June 15. Iggy And The Stooges will play live on June 20, the same night as Kim Gordon's Body/Head project. Former Meltdown curator Patti Smith returns to the Southbank for an Evening of Music and Words on 21 June, and legendary singer Marianne Faithfull will take to the stage on 22 June. Ono will close the Festival with a special performance of 1980's Double Fantasy album, where she will be joined by special guests, as yet unannounced. You can find the full line-up and ticket details here.

The line-up for this year’s Meltdown festival has been announced.

Curated by Yoko Ono, the festival will run from June 14 – 23 at London’s Southbank Centre.

Ono will open the festival with a performance by the Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band on June 14.

Siouxsie will make her first public performance in five years on June 15.

Iggy And The Stooges will play live on June 20, the same night as Kim Gordon’s Body/Head project.

Former Meltdown curator Patti Smith returns to the Southbank for an Evening of Music and Words on 21 June, and legendary singer Marianne Faithfull will take to the stage on 22 June.

Ono will close the Festival with a special performance of 1980’s Double Fantasy album, where she will be joined by special guests, as yet unannounced.

You can find the full line-up and ticket details here.

Giorgio Moroder on the new Daft Punk album: ‘It’s a step forward’

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Giorgio Moroder has spoken about working on the new Daft Punk album. Speaking to Vice as part of their Creators Project series, Moroder says that the album is a "step forward" for dance music. "Daft Punk wanted to do something and do it in a way that's not done by just pushing a note or a chord," he said. "You definitely hear that it's nice and full; the drums and the bass have that warm, that full sound. . . This is like a step forward." Recalling the first time he heard the track "One More Time" he said: "That was my favourite song. Especially when they break it down and you hear the strings and the chords. It had a beautiful feel." He revealed that the duo were "perfectionists" in the studio before adding: "What the world needs now is not only good dance songs, which I think are out," he added. "The world needs something new." Moroder is one of a number of collaborators Daft Punk have worked with on their new album, Random Access Memories, which is released on May 20. As well as Moroder, Nile Rogers, Panda Bear and Chilly Gonzales are all believed to have recorded with the French duo in the studio. Speaking about working with Daft Punk, Nile Rogers said: "About a year ago, I get a knock on the door – first a virtual one and then a real knock – from Guy-Manuel and Thomas. The collaboration felt so unbelievably natural that it made me realise that I need to be in the studio with people. I love partnering with people. And then from that moment, a windfall of recording started happening. I just started going in with whomever I could." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eYDvxo-M0OQ

Giorgio Moroder has spoken about working on the new Daft Punk album.

Speaking to Vice as part of their Creators Project series, Moroder says that the album is a “step forward” for dance music. “Daft Punk wanted to do something and do it in a way that’s not done by just pushing a note or a chord,” he said. “You definitely hear that it’s nice and full; the drums and the bass have that warm, that full sound. . . This is like a step forward.”

Recalling the first time he heard the track “One More Time” he said: “That was my favourite song. Especially when they break it down and you hear the strings and the chords. It had a beautiful feel.” He revealed that the duo were “perfectionists” in the studio before adding: “What the world needs now is not only good dance songs, which I think are out,” he added. “The world needs something new.”

Moroder is one of a number of collaborators Daft Punk have worked with on their new album, Random Access Memories, which is released on May 20. As well as Moroder, Nile Rogers, Panda Bear and Chilly Gonzales are all believed to have recorded with the French duo in the studio.

Speaking about working with Daft Punk, Nile Rogers said: “About a year ago, I get a knock on the door – first a virtual one and then a real knock – from Guy-Manuel and Thomas. The collaboration felt so unbelievably natural that it made me realise that I need to be in the studio with people. I love partnering with people. And then from that moment, a windfall of recording started happening. I just started going in with whomever I could.”