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The 13th Uncut Playlist Of 2013

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In haste, and listening to an unexpected return to music from Douglas Hart as I type. Twenty-one items on the playlist this week, mostly approved. Special attention here, I think, for the new Oh Sees album (that’s the sleeve above), which very much builds on “Purifiers II”. Increasingly keen on the James Blake, too, especially the RZA track. In the meantime, we have a new issue which, among more prominent business, includes my piece on Matthew E White. Let me know what you think of it all when you’ve had a look. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Goran Kajfeš Subtropic Arkestra – The Reason Why Vol. 1 (Headspin) 2 White Fence – Cyclops Reap (Castleface) 3 Scott Clark 4Tet – A & B 4 The National – Trouble Will Find Me (4AD) 5 Thee Oh Sees – Floating Coffin (Castleface) 6 Daft Punk – Random Access Memories (10 Minute Loop) SNL #2 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fu17fxjvk6I 7 Mikal Cronin – MCII (Merge) 8 Pick A Piper – Pick A Piper (Mint) 9 Primal Scream – More Light (1st International) 10 Axis:SOVA – Past The Edge (Testoster Tunes) 11 Peter King – Shango (Mr Bongo) 12 Bobby Whitlock – Where There’s A Will There’s A Way: The ABC-Dunhill Recordings (Future Days) 13 Brother JT – The Svelteness Of Boogietude (Thrill Jockey) 14 The Handsome Family – Wilderness (Loose) 15 The Flaming Lips – The Terror (Bella Union) 16 Six By Seven – Truce 17 James Skelly & The Intenders – Love Undercover (Cooking Vinyl) 18 Peals – Walking Field (Thrill Jockey) 19 James Blake – Overgrown (Polydor) 20 Various Artists – Youths Boogie: Jamaican R&B And The Birth Of Ska (Fantastic Voyage) 21 Douglas Hart - X Film Plus Ultra/Pre-Paradise (Memories Of The Future ) (Blank Editions)

In haste, and listening to an unexpected return to music from Douglas Hart as I type. Twenty-one items on the playlist this week, mostly approved. Special attention here, I think, for the new Oh Sees album (that’s the sleeve above), which very much builds on “Purifiers II”. Increasingly keen on the James Blake, too, especially the RZA track.

In the meantime, we have a new issue which, among more prominent business, includes my piece on Matthew E White. Let me know what you think of it all when you’ve had a look.

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

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

2 White Fence – Cyclops Reap (Castleface)

3 Scott Clark 4Tet – A & B

4 The National – Trouble Will Find Me (4AD)

5 Thee Oh Sees – Floating Coffin (Castleface)

6 Daft Punk – Random Access Memories (10 Minute Loop) SNL #2

7 Mikal Cronin – MCII (Merge)

8 Pick A Piper – Pick A Piper (Mint)

9 Primal Scream – More Light (1st International)

10 Axis:SOVA – Past The Edge (Testoster Tunes)

11 Peter King – Shango (Mr Bongo)

12 Bobby Whitlock – Where There’s A Will There’s A Way: The ABC-Dunhill Recordings (Future Days)

13 Brother JT – The Svelteness Of Boogietude (Thrill Jockey)

14 The Handsome Family – Wilderness (Loose)

15 The Flaming Lips – The Terror (Bella Union)

16 Six By Seven – Truce

17 James Skelly & The Intenders – Love Undercover (Cooking Vinyl)

18 Peals – Walking Field (Thrill Jockey)

19 James Blake – Overgrown (Polydor)

20 Various Artists – Youths Boogie: Jamaican R&B And The Birth Of Ska (Fantastic Voyage)

21 Douglas Hart – X Film Plus Ultra/Pre-Paradise (Memories Of The Future ) (Blank Editions)

Extra tickets released for V&A’s David Bowie Is… exhibition

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London's Victoria & Albert Museum have released extra tickets for their David Bowie Is... retrospective exhibition. The show, which opened last Saturday, is the fastest-selling event in the museum's history, with 42,000 advance tickets already sold, more than double the advance sales of previous exhibitions. The V&A have now announced that the exhibition is going to be open on Sunday nights from 7 April. You can book tickets online at the V&A's website. You can read Uncut's review of the exhibition here.

London’s Victoria & Albert Museum have released extra tickets for their David Bowie Is… retrospective exhibition.

The show, which opened last Saturday, is the fastest-selling event in the museum’s history, with 42,000 advance tickets already sold, more than double the advance sales of previous exhibitions.

The V&A have now announced that the exhibition is going to be open on Sunday nights from 7 April.

You can book tickets online at the V&A’s website.

You can read Uncut’s review of the exhibition here.

Chelsea Light Moving – Chelsea Light Moving

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Rock’s poet-noise iconoclast debuts new underground supergroup... Sonic Youth may or may not have ended, but Thurston Moore doesn’t seem to be pausing too long for bouts of reflection. He’s always seemed like a tireless character and instigator, involved in multiple projects, meet-ups, noise blowouts, record labels, curatorial projects, chapbook publications, and the past year or so has been little different. There’s the teaching workshop gig (see panel below for more details). There are the ongoing noise/improv collaborations, including a recent duo with Chelsea Light Moving drummer John Moloney, Caught On Tape. There are the publishing houses: the Ecstatic Peace Library and its associated Ecstatic Peace Poetry Journal, and the smaller poetry imprint, Flowers & Cream Press. And all this connects with his ongoing romance with New York: when asked about his connectedness with the lineage of ‘New York School’ poets and creatives, Moore admits, “with Chelsea Light Moving I feel like I want to have the words of the city fly from my fretboard and my teeth in a very direct and charged way.” Chelsea Light Moving also appear to be on the road a lot, floating from continent to continent. They are, in a very real sense, a working band. The individuals Moore has pulled together for Chelsea Light Moving all move in similar circles, part of that nebulous American underground that has housed the New Weird America, free-folk and neo-psych delirium. But the connective forces are even more blasted and open-ended, aesthetically or personnel-wise, than you’d expect. The group’s ranks include Samara Lubelski (bass), who has released a handful of graceful baroque-pop albums, but also a gorgeous drone duo with Hototogisu’s Marcia Bassett, Sunday Night, Sunday Afternoon; Keith Wood (guitar), who records beautiful acid-folk as Hush Arbors; and of course, the irrepressible Moloney, one of the heads of Sunburned Hand Of The Man. Not too much of that agrarian weirdness has really worked its way into the 10 songs that make up the group’s debut album, admittedly. Moore is pretty much whittling away at his peculiar vision of songcraft here; many of these songs are modular, piecing together constituent parts into odd Frankensteins of rock anti-anthems. And while Chelsea Light Moving is far from a simplistic repro of Sonic Youth’s moves, it does sometimes illuminate what Moore brought to that particular equation: spindly, almost math-rock-y guitar interplay; melodic turns that meander down byways; broad-brush sweeps of heavy riffage; occasional bouts of clumsy out-of-tuneness; and a weirdly brutish pop heart, at times as willfully awkward yet compelling as Mayo Thompson of The Red Krayola. Sometimes, you can hear Moore exploring the songs as he goes, feeling out new terrain, sometimes stumbling and sometimes hitting the ace. Unsurprisingly, it’s not always successful: that modular approach goes seriously awry on “Alighted”, where every twist and turn feels less agile and more forced than the last. But that doesn’t happen too often. Chelsea Light Moving are generally a heads-down, fighting force, capable of swinging with a Mastodon’s gait – “Groovy & Linda” is one of Moore’s most satisfyingly Neanderthal songs yet (at least, until that ungainly “don’t shoot” hardcore coda); “Burroughs” pounds the floor, with Moloney’s primal thud corralling the group into pulling out some of their most rock-reverent moves; and “Mohawk” is gorgeous, with Moore working his poetic tongue over a rumbling, Rhys Chatham-esque guitar pile-up. Half way through “Empires Of Time”, Moore sings, in his by now patented half-yowl/half-sigh, “We are the third eye of rock and roll/We are the third mind of rock and roll.” Well, that’s a little ambitious for a group on their first run, pulled together out of unlikely circumstances and yet to fully find their feet as a fully working entity. But Chelsea Light Moving suggests there’s plenty of space to move around for Moore and his cohorts. This new group is neither a redux of his Sonic Youth moves, nor a solo project with sidekicks. Awkward moments or not, this group moves as one. The next album might well be the ticket. Jon Dale Q&A Thurston Moore Your music has always referenced textual culture, poetry, but Chelsea Light Moving seems to make this most explicit – “Frank O’Hara Hit”, “Burroughs”… It may very well be the fact that I’ve been on faculty at the Summer Writing Workshop at the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at Naropa University in Boulder Colorado the last few years. Burroughs taught there quite a bit and to be able to be in a place where he was active, a school founded on Buddhist principles of engagement and founded by Allen Ginsberg and Anne Waldman, has allowed me to not only continue to investigate their world of alien America perspective but become spiritually immersed in their footsteps and fingerprints. What other projects are you involved with now – I know there’s a collaborative album with Moloney out on Feeding Tube… There are some other improv recordings being released – a very limited LP in benefit to Café OTO, that is a duo with me and reeds-maestro Alex Ward. And live recordings with Swedish free jazz sax demon Mats Gustafsson and, hopefully, an amazing session with prepared-guitar genius Bill Nace and jazz sax legend Joe McPhee that’ll blow yr mind, and a guitar duo freakout with Nels Cline. And I’m set to record a duo CD with John Zorn soon! INTERVIEW BY JON DALE

Rock’s poet-noise iconoclast debuts new underground supergroup…

Sonic Youth may or may not have ended, but Thurston Moore doesn’t seem to be pausing too long for bouts of reflection. He’s always seemed like a tireless character and instigator, involved in multiple projects, meet-ups, noise blowouts, record labels, curatorial projects, chapbook publications, and the past year or so has been little different. There’s the teaching workshop gig (see panel below for more details). There are the ongoing noise/improv collaborations, including a recent duo with Chelsea Light Moving drummer John Moloney, Caught On Tape. There are the publishing houses: the Ecstatic Peace Library and its associated Ecstatic Peace Poetry Journal, and the smaller poetry imprint, Flowers & Cream Press. And all this connects with his ongoing romance with New York: when asked about his connectedness with the lineage of ‘New York School’ poets and creatives, Moore admits, “with Chelsea Light Moving I feel like I want to have the words of the city fly from my fretboard and my teeth in a very direct and charged way.”

Chelsea Light Moving also appear to be on the road a lot, floating from continent to continent. They are, in a very real sense, a working band. The individuals Moore has pulled together for Chelsea Light Moving all move in similar circles, part of that nebulous American underground that has housed the New Weird America, free-folk and neo-psych delirium. But the connective forces are even more blasted and open-ended, aesthetically or personnel-wise, than you’d expect. The group’s ranks include Samara Lubelski (bass), who has released a handful of graceful baroque-pop albums, but also a gorgeous drone duo with Hototogisu’s Marcia Bassett, Sunday Night, Sunday Afternoon; Keith Wood (guitar), who records beautiful acid-folk as Hush Arbors; and of course, the irrepressible Moloney, one of the heads of Sunburned Hand Of The Man.

Not too much of that agrarian weirdness has really worked its way into the 10 songs that make up the group’s debut album, admittedly. Moore is pretty much whittling away at his peculiar vision of songcraft here; many of these songs are modular, piecing together constituent parts into odd Frankensteins of rock anti-anthems. And while Chelsea Light Moving is far from a simplistic repro of Sonic Youth’s moves, it does sometimes illuminate what Moore brought to that particular equation: spindly, almost math-rock-y guitar interplay; melodic turns that meander down byways; broad-brush sweeps of heavy riffage; occasional bouts of clumsy out-of-tuneness; and a weirdly brutish pop heart, at times as willfully awkward yet compelling as Mayo Thompson of The Red Krayola. Sometimes, you can hear Moore exploring the songs as he goes, feeling out new terrain, sometimes stumbling and sometimes hitting the ace.

Unsurprisingly, it’s not always successful: that modular approach goes seriously awry on “Alighted”, where every twist and turn feels less agile and more forced than the last. But that doesn’t happen too often. Chelsea Light Moving are generally a heads-down, fighting force, capable of swinging with a Mastodon’s gait – “Groovy & Linda” is one of Moore’s most satisfyingly Neanderthal songs yet (at least, until that ungainly “don’t shoot” hardcore coda); “Burroughs” pounds the floor, with Moloney’s primal thud corralling the group into pulling out some of their most rock-reverent moves; and “Mohawk” is gorgeous, with Moore working his poetic tongue over a rumbling, Rhys Chatham-esque guitar pile-up.

Half way through “Empires Of Time”, Moore sings, in his by now patented half-yowl/half-sigh, “We are the third eye of rock and roll/We are the third mind of rock and roll.” Well, that’s a little ambitious for a group on their first run, pulled together out of unlikely circumstances and yet to fully find their feet as a fully working entity. But Chelsea Light Moving suggests there’s plenty of space to move around for Moore and his cohorts. This new group is neither a redux of his Sonic Youth moves, nor a solo project with sidekicks. Awkward moments or not, this group moves as one. The next album might well be the ticket.

Jon Dale

Q&A

Thurston Moore

Your music has always referenced textual culture, poetry, but Chelsea Light Moving seems to make this most explicit – “Frank O’Hara Hit”, “Burroughs”…

It may very well be the fact that I’ve been on faculty at the Summer Writing Workshop at the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at Naropa University in Boulder Colorado the last few years. Burroughs taught there quite a bit and to be able to be in a place where he was active, a school founded on Buddhist principles of engagement and founded by Allen Ginsberg and Anne Waldman, has allowed me to not only continue to investigate their world of alien America perspective but become spiritually immersed in their footsteps and fingerprints.

What other projects are you involved with now – I know there’s a collaborative album with Moloney out on Feeding Tube…

There are some other improv recordings being released – a very limited LP in benefit to Café OTO, that is a duo with me and reeds-maestro Alex Ward. And live recordings with Swedish free jazz sax demon Mats Gustafsson and, hopefully, an amazing session with prepared-guitar genius Bill Nace and jazz sax legend Joe McPhee that’ll blow yr mind, and a guitar duo freakout with Nels Cline. And I’m set to record a duo CD with John Zorn soon!

INTERVIEW BY JON DALE

Arctic Monkeys’ Alex Turner, Elton John to appear on new Queens Of The Stone Age album

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It has been confirmed that Arctic Monkeys frontman Alex Turner will appear on the new Queens Of The Stone Age album '...Like Clockwork'. The album was officially announced earlier this week with the band having signed to Matador to release the album in June. A new press release circulated by the band's label confirms the list of guest stars appearing on the album with Turner lining up alongside the previously known guests such as Dave Grohl, Sir Elton John, Trent Reznor, Jake Shears of Scissor Sisters. Previous Queens Of The Stone Age collaborators Mark Lanegan and Nick Oliveri will also appear on the album as does James Lavelle, better known as the man behind UNKLE. In addition to the guest stars, it has also been confirmed that the band will embark on a world tour to promote the album. A new drummer will also be revealed shortly, as the band make their live return next weekend at Lollapalooza Brazil. Dave Grohl contributed drums to '...Like Clockwork', but is not thought to be touring with the Josh Homme fronted band. Joey Castillo and Jon Theodore have also recorded drum parts for the album. Hear short snippets of tracks from the follow-up to 2007's 'Era Vulgaris' at QOTSA.com. The band will be playing a number of festivals this summer, including Benicàssim in Spain, and Download in the UK.

It has been confirmed that Arctic Monkeys frontman Alex Turner will appear on the new Queens Of The Stone Age album ‘…Like Clockwork’.

The album was officially announced earlier this week with the band having signed to Matador to release the album in June. A new press release circulated by the band’s label confirms the list of guest stars appearing on the album with Turner lining up alongside the previously known guests such as Dave Grohl, Sir Elton John, Trent Reznor, Jake Shears of Scissor Sisters. Previous Queens Of The Stone Age collaborators Mark Lanegan and Nick Oliveri will also appear on the album as does James Lavelle, better known as the man behind UNKLE.

In addition to the guest stars, it has also been confirmed that the band will embark on a world tour to promote the album. A new drummer will also be revealed shortly, as the band make their live return next weekend at Lollapalooza Brazil. Dave Grohl contributed drums to ‘…Like Clockwork’, but is not thought to be touring with the Josh Homme fronted band. Joey Castillo and Jon Theodore have also recorded drum parts for the album. Hear short snippets of tracks from the follow-up to 2007’s ‘Era Vulgaris’ at QOTSA.com.

The band will be playing a number of festivals this summer, including Benicàssim in Spain, and Download in the UK.

Cat Power, Suede and The Strypes to kick off new series of Later…

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Later…Live with Jools Holland will return on April 9 with guests including Suede and Cat Power. The long-running music show will start its 42nd series with the first in eight half-hour live shows on BBC 2 at 10PM on Tuesday, April 9. Suede will appear to perform songs from their new album 'Bloodsports' while Cat Power will make a rare live appearance in the UK, playing songs from her 2012 album 'Sun'. Meanwhile, newcomers Laura Mvula and The Strypes will also perform. The Strypes have won over celebrity fans including Noel Gallagher and Elton John with the former Oasis guitarist among the crowd that crammed into London's Old Blue Last on January 23 to catch the band, who have signed to Mercury. The Irish teenagers play energised takes on classic rock and R&B covers including Bo Diddley's 'You Can’t Judge A Book By It's Cover', T-Bone Walker's 'Call It Stormy Monday (But Tuesday Is Just As Bad)' and Muddy Waters' 'Mannish Boy' as well as their own original material. A longer version of Later…Live with Jools Holland will air on Friday, April 12.

Later…Live with Jools Holland will return on April 9 with guests including Suede and Cat Power.

The long-running music show will start its 42nd series with the first in eight half-hour live shows on BBC 2 at 10PM on Tuesday, April 9. Suede will appear to perform songs from their new album ‘Bloodsports’ while Cat Power will make a rare live appearance in the UK, playing songs from her 2012 album ‘Sun’.

Meanwhile, newcomers Laura Mvula and The Strypes will also perform. The Strypes have won over celebrity fans including Noel Gallagher and Elton John with the former Oasis guitarist among the crowd that crammed into London’s Old Blue Last on January 23 to catch the band, who have signed to Mercury. The Irish teenagers play energised takes on classic rock and R&B covers including Bo Diddley’s ‘You Can’t Judge A Book By It’s Cover’, T-Bone Walker’s ‘Call It Stormy Monday (But Tuesday Is Just As Bad)’ and Muddy Waters’ ‘Mannish Boy’ as well as their own original material.

A longer version of Later…Live with Jools Holland will air on Friday, April 12.

Tom Morello speaks about ‘challenge’ of joining Bruce Springsteen’s band

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Tom Morello has spoken about his recent time spent as guitarist for Bruce Springsteen, saying that it is an "honour" to play with the E Street Band. Rage Against The Machine guitarist Morello joined the E Street Band three months ago to cover for Steven Van Zandt, who is filming his show Lilyhamme...

Tom Morello has spoken about his recent time spent as guitarist for Bruce Springsteen, saying that it is an “honour” to play with the E Street Band.

Rage Against The Machine guitarist Morello joined the E Street Band three months ago to cover for Steven Van Zandt, who is filming his show Lilyhammer at the same time as Springsteen is touring Australia. Morello admitted to Rolling Stone that he has been tested by Springsteen’s four-hour shows. “I learned about 50 songs in three months for the tour, and every night, 90 minutes till soundcheck, Bruce will text me with seven or eight songs we’ve never played before. And then during the show, he’ll call up songs we’ve never even discussed – some I’ve never even heard!”

Morello added: “Our band plays very differently night to night. It’s not a repetition, it’s a renewal. If you’re doing it right, that’s how it feels. Every night, there’s six to eight songs I have literally about a nanosecond to prepare for. But it’s fun. Now that I know that’s the gig I’m like, ‘Let’s go!’ Make it clear – I’m not asking Bruce to stump me. I would love to play ‘Thunder Road’. But it’s been a really fun challenge.”

However, Morello was full of praise for the band, saying: “It’s been great. It’s been really an honour being on stage with one of my favourite bands – one of the greatest live bands of all time,” Morello said. “I’ve been to a lot of Bruce Springsteen shows, but I’ve never been to four consecutive ones. And every show isn’t just a different show – it’s a completely different experience.”

Bruce Springsteen and Kasabian have been confirmed as headliners at this year’s Hard Rock Calling festival. The festival, which takes place at Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford, London, runs on June 29 and 30 and will see Springsteen headline on the second night.

Jeff Lynne: “The Beatles would take the piss when I was producing them”

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Jeff Lynne has revealed that the surviving Beatles would “take the piss” when he produced them. The Electric Light Orchestra songwriter and producer explains what it was like working with the group on their “Free As A Bird” and “Real Love” singles in the mid-’90s, in the new issue o...

Jeff Lynne has revealed that the surviving Beatles would “take the piss” when he produced them.

The Electric Light Orchestra songwriter and producer explains what it was like working with the group on their “Free As A Bird” and “Real Love” singles in the mid-’90s, in the new issue of Uncut, out on Thursday (March 28).

“There was no real tension,” Lynne tells Uncut. “They would take the piss, but it was good-natured.

I loved it, but it was tough.

“At Paul’s studio it was just me and them, and I’m listening to all this amazing Liverpool folklore – Hamburg stories, the lot.”

Lynne also takes us through the making of the Traveling Wilburys’ first album, which featured Lynne alongside George Harrison, Bob Dylan, Tom Petty and Roy Orbison, and a host of classic records from Electric Light Orchestra and The Move.

The new issue of Uncut is out on Thursday (March 28).

Lou Reed cancels US live dates

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Lou Reed has cancelled a series of West Coast United States shows through the month of April, including two performances at the Coachella festival. The cancelled shows were in Coachella on April 12 and 19, San Francisco on April 14, Monterrey on April 16 and April 17 in Los Angeles. The five cance...

Lou Reed has cancelled a series of West Coast United States shows through the month of April, including two performances at the Coachella festival.

The cancelled shows were in Coachella on April 12 and 19, San Francisco on April 14, Monterrey on April 16 and April 17 in Los Angeles.

The five cancelled dates were his only listed upcoming shows.

No reason has been given for the cancellations. According to a brief statement posted on website for the Orpheum Theatre in Los Angeles, “This show has been cancelled due to unavoidable complications.”

Reed recently made a surprise appearance at a playback celebrating his 1972 album Transformer.

Jackson 5 and Supremes songwriter and producer Deke Richards dies aged 68

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Motown songwriter-producer Deke Richards, who penned songs for The Jackson 5 and The Supremes, has died at the age 68. The musician, who was suffering oesophageal cancer, died in a Washington state hospice on Sunday (March 24), according to the Hollywood Reporter. He was leader of the Motown songwriting, arranging and producing team The Corporation who's hits included The Jackson 5 classics 'I Want You Back' and 'ABC'. Richards also co-wrote 'Love Child' for Diana Ross And The Supremes, as well as her solo track 'I'm Still Waiting'. The Corporation comprised of Motown label head Berry Gordy, Alphonzo Mizell, Freddie Perren and Richards and was created in 1969. According to Michael Jackson biographer, J. Randy Taraborrelli, The Jackson 5 track 'Mama's Pearl' was originally called 'Guess Who's Making Whoopie (With Your Girlfriend)'. But Richards had the lyrics changed to preserve the frontman's innocent image at the time. Richards' final project before he died, involved mixing eight unreleased tracks by Martha Reeves And The Vandellas for the band's 50th anniversary box set, which is due to be released on April 5. Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download it for your iPad/iPhone, or your Android device.

Motown songwriter-producer Deke Richards, who penned songs for The Jackson 5 and The Supremes, has died at the age 68.

The musician, who was suffering oesophageal cancer, died in a Washington state hospice on Sunday (March 24), according to the Hollywood Reporter. He was leader of the Motown songwriting, arranging and producing team The Corporation who’s hits included The Jackson 5 classics ‘I Want You Back’ and ‘ABC’. Richards also co-wrote ‘Love Child’ for Diana Ross And The Supremes, as well as her solo track ‘I’m Still Waiting’.

The Corporation comprised of Motown label head Berry Gordy, Alphonzo Mizell, Freddie Perren and Richards and was created in 1969. According to Michael Jackson biographer, J. Randy Taraborrelli, The Jackson 5 track ‘Mama’s Pearl’ was originally called ‘Guess Who’s Making Whoopie (With Your Girlfriend)’. But Richards had the lyrics changed to preserve the frontman’s innocent image at the time.

Richards’ final project before he died, involved mixing eight unreleased tracks by Martha Reeves And The Vandellas for the band’s 50th anniversary box set, which is due to be released on April 5.

Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download it for your iPad/iPhone, or your Android device.

The Who, Cream, Kevin Ayers, Matthew E White, Kurt Vile, Jeff Lynne in the new Uncut

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When I first started reading what used to be Melody Maker, in a time now shrouded not so much in what are usually called the mists of time as they are in a fog as dense as anything that might gather over Dogger Bank, I used to accept its weekly delivery in the manner of some kind of jackal, cur or otherwise fanged and ravenous critter. Which is to say I would fall upon it voraciously and devour it from cover to cover, including the Jazz Scene round-up and Folk News, which I thought were both a bit square compared to what elsewhere you could read about The Rolling Stones, The Who and The Kinks, all of whom were by then following The Beatles into the charts, a whole new world taking shape out there. Lurking in the hinterlands of MM back then was something called Club Calendar, whose deeply mesmerising pages advertised upcoming gigs in mostly London venues where the bands currently claiming so much of my attention could be seen regularly at clubs where reputations were being forged and tomorrow’s music was being made today. Among the places that hosted the wild new sounds of these groups were The Railway Hotel, where the Stones had started out, the Eel Pie Island Hotel, Klooks Kleek, The Scene, The 100 Club, The Flamingo and, of course, The Marquee, which was as far as I could tell was pretty much the centre of this particular universe. It was certainly somewhere I wanted desperately to be on Tuesday nights towards the end of 1964, when The Who started a residency there, their appearances advertised by the now-famous poster of Pete Townshend, Rickenbacker aloft, right arm above his head, against a black background, and in white lettering the delirious promise of MAXIMUM R&B. How electrifying it must have been to be part of The Marquee crowd then, with The Who - and a little later Jimi Hendrix, Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin – kicking off in their delinquent pomp, a whole scene building around them that revolutionised British music in the 60s, an era of multiple excitements that is brilliantly recalled in the cover story Peter Watts has written for the new Uncut (on sale this Thursday, March 28), in which Pete Townshend, among other notable veterans of the era, charts The Who’s incredible early ascendency and The Marquee’s part in it as the most important venue at the time in the UK. One of the bands who early in their career made an almost obligatory appearance at The Marquee was Cream. As befitting the first so-called supergroup, however, Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker were soon filling rather larger venues, especially in America where they were treated like gods. Their all-conquering momentum swept all before them for two years, until deep-rooted divisions blew them apart, but not before they’d done their bit in radically altering the contemporary musical landscape. Also in the new issue, we visit Richmond, Virginia, where we meet Matthew E White, whose debut album, the fantastic country-soul extravaganza Big Inner, has provoked such heady excitement, say goodbye to the much-loved Kevin Ayers, talk banjos and comedy with Steve Martin, and find out about the Coen Brothers’ new film, Inside Llewyn Davis, set in the Greenwich Village folk scene of the early-60s. Elsewhere, Jeff Lynne talks us through a recording career that at various time has seen him involved with the Beatles, Bob Dylan, Brian Wilson and, of course, ELO, Eddie And The Hot Rods remember “Do Anything You Wanna Do” and Steve Earle tells us about the records that have most inspired him. In another bumper month for album releases, we review the new records from Kurt Vile, Eric Burdon, Iggy And The Stooges, Iron And Wine, The Flaming Lips and Phoenix and re-releases from Shuggie Otis, The Breeders, Country Joe and Morrissey. My Bloody Valentine, John Grant and Wilko Johnson are meanwhile reviewed live, and David Bowie, The Clash and Gram Parsons feature in our books section. Enjoy the issue and if you have any memories you want to share about legendary nights at the Marquee, write to me at allan_jones@ipcmedia.com. Have a great week.

When I first started reading what used to be Melody Maker, in a time now shrouded not so much in what are usually called the mists of time as they are in a fog as dense as anything that might gather over Dogger Bank, I used to accept its weekly delivery in the manner of some kind of jackal, cur or otherwise fanged and ravenous critter. Which is to say I would fall upon it voraciously and devour it from cover to cover, including the Jazz Scene round-up and Folk News, which I thought were both a bit square compared to what elsewhere you could read about The Rolling Stones, The Who and The Kinks, all of whom were by then following The Beatles into the charts, a whole new world taking shape out there.

Lurking in the hinterlands of MM back then was something called Club Calendar, whose deeply mesmerising pages advertised upcoming gigs in mostly London venues where the bands currently claiming so much of my attention could be seen regularly at clubs where reputations were being forged and tomorrow’s music was being made today. Among the places that hosted the wild new sounds of these groups were The Railway Hotel, where the Stones had started out, the Eel Pie Island Hotel, Klooks Kleek, The Scene, The 100 Club, The Flamingo and, of course, The Marquee, which was as far as I could tell was pretty much the centre of this particular universe. It was certainly somewhere I wanted desperately to be on Tuesday nights towards the end of 1964, when The Who started a residency there, their appearances advertised by the now-famous poster of Pete Townshend, Rickenbacker aloft, right arm above his head, against a black background, and in white lettering the delirious promise of MAXIMUM R&B.

How electrifying it must have been to be part of The Marquee crowd then, with The Who – and a little later Jimi Hendrix, Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin – kicking off in their delinquent pomp, a whole scene building around them that revolutionised British music in the 60s, an era of multiple excitements that is brilliantly recalled in the cover story Peter Watts has written for the new Uncut (on sale this Thursday, March 28), in which Pete Townshend, among other notable veterans of the era, charts The Who’s incredible early ascendency and The Marquee’s part in it as the most important venue at the time in the UK.

One of the bands who early in their career made an almost obligatory appearance at The Marquee was Cream. As befitting the first so-called supergroup, however, Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker were soon filling rather larger venues, especially in America where they were treated like gods. Their all-conquering momentum swept all before them for two years, until deep-rooted divisions blew them apart, but not before they’d done their bit in radically altering the contemporary musical landscape.

Also in the new issue, we visit Richmond, Virginia, where we meet Matthew E White, whose debut album, the fantastic country-soul extravaganza Big Inner, has provoked such heady excitement, say goodbye to the much-loved Kevin Ayers, talk banjos and comedy with Steve Martin, and find out about the Coen Brothers’ new film, Inside Llewyn Davis, set in the Greenwich Village folk scene of the early-60s. Elsewhere, Jeff Lynne talks us through a recording career that at various time has seen him involved with the Beatles, Bob Dylan, Brian Wilson and, of course, ELO, Eddie And The Hot Rods remember “Do Anything You Wanna Do” and Steve Earle tells us about the records that have most inspired him.

In another bumper month for album releases, we review the new records from Kurt Vile, Eric Burdon, Iggy And The Stooges, Iron And Wine, The Flaming Lips and Phoenix and re-releases from Shuggie Otis, The Breeders, Country Joe and Morrissey. My Bloody Valentine, John Grant and Wilko Johnson are meanwhile reviewed live, and David Bowie, The Clash and Gram Parsons feature in our books section.

Enjoy the issue and if you have any memories you want to share about legendary nights at the Marquee, write to me at allan_jones@ipcmedia.com.

Have a great week.

May 2013

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Everybody we spoke to about Kevin Ayers following his lonely death in the South of France at the age of 68 had so much to say that trying to fit everything they told us into the tribute feature I've written for this month's issue was like trying to pour the Atlantic into a bucket. Robert Wyatt's me...

Everybody we spoke to about Kevin Ayers following his lonely death in the South of France at the age of 68 had so much to say that trying to fit everything they told us into the tribute feature I’ve written for this month’s issue was like trying to pour the Atlantic into a bucket.

Robert Wyatt’s memories of Kevin would alone have filled a book whose wordy bulk might need a couple of strong men to lift, and then not without much comic ado, a fair amount of pop-eyed wheezing and the straining of tormented muscles.

So apologies to Richard Sinclair, who played with Kevin and Robert in The Wilde Flowers, the first of the Canterbury Scene bands, before forming Caravan, whose own similarly voluminous recollections of Kevin were unfortunately edged out. He had some splendid stories, though, including one about meeting Kevin for the first time and the dash Ayers cut generally in the Canterbury of the early ’60s. “He’d been invited to join The Wilde Flowers and turned up for his first rehearsal with us, listing at an angle of 45 degrees, holding a bottle of Mateus Rosé in one hand and in the other hand, Jane Hastings, the sister of Pye Hastings (founder member of Caravan). At the time, Jane was married to John Aspinall, who owned a gambling club in Mayfair and also a huge farm near Canterbury that he’d turned into a private zoo. Kevin worked at the zoo as a gorilla keeper and had to clean the poo out of their cages. That’s where he met Jane. John Aspinall was one of the richest men in Kent and she was therefore one of the richest girls in Canterbury, but she gave her husband up for love of Kevin and they’d gone off to Morocco.

“They’d just come back when he turned up to the rehearsal, dressed all in white, as he often was, with his blond hair and suntan, with Jane on his arm. Kevin was always suntanned from going to Morocco and places like that and he liked good food and drink and having a wonderful time. He was an independent, good-looking geezer, wafting about in his white clothes and always with a nice young girlfriend. He lived a good life in those days, then I think later he got a bit lonely, a bit fed up with it all, and his life went downhill, I think, and he tried some things that he shouldn’t have tried, the curtains got closed and he got into a dark, paranoid state. He managed to climb out of that and make more music, but I think he found it very hard.

“In his later years, he’d sometimes come to Canterbury to visit his sister Kate and one evening in the pub I invited him to stay with me. The first thing he asked when he turned up was, ‘Well, is there anything to drink?’ He wasn’t too happy with me, because I’m always very happy in the morning and he wouldn’t be happy until midday when he’d escape to a Mexican restaurant and drink half a bottle of tequila. He wasn’t at that time always a happy person in a way a lot of clever people on the music scene end up unhappy, killing themselves through overdoses, or too much booze or just topping themselves. They just get so personally out of order.

“In Caravan we used to say, ‘Mine’s a Kevin Ayers on the rocks.’ Because Kevin was always on the rocks, you know? A lot of people wanted him to play with them, but because he was a bit out of order, he didn’t want to go out and risk letting everybody down. He was dead for two days before they found him. What a shame for someone who created so much pleasure for so many people on the planet. He was a good bloke, wrote wonderful pop tunes, made me laugh. I’ll be happy to remember him like that.”

ISSUE ON SALE FROM THURSDAY MARCH 28

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George Harrison “Blue Jay Way” house sold for $3.8 million

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The house where George Harrison wrote “Blue Jay Way” has sold for $3.8 million (£2.5 million). 1567 Blue Jay Way Los Angeles, CA 90069 was first put on the market last April with an asking price of $4,599,000 (£3,025,657). The “Bird Streets” of Hollywood Hills are an exclusive neighborhood overlooking the Sunset Strip. 1567 Blue Jay Way was owned by Peggy Lee's manager, Ludwig Gerber. The song was written in August 1967 at the property, where Harrison was staying with his wife Pattie, Apple Corps exec Neil Aspinall and "Magic" Alexis Mardas. The song, which featured on the Magical Mystery Tour EP and album, begins: “There's a fog upon LA / And my friends have lost their way / ‘We'll be over soon’ they said /Now they've lost themselves instead”. Harrison later admitted that the song was written on just such a foggy night, waiting for Beatles publicist Derek Taylor to find his way for a visit. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MNLcXj5yR68

The house where George Harrison wrote “Blue Jay Way” has sold for $3.8 million (£2.5 million).

1567 Blue Jay Way Los Angeles, CA 90069 was first put on the market last April with an asking price of $4,599,000 (£3,025,657).

The “Bird Streets” of Hollywood Hills are an exclusive neighborhood overlooking the Sunset Strip. 1567 Blue Jay Way was owned by Peggy Lee’s manager, Ludwig Gerber. The song was written in August 1967 at the property, where Harrison was staying with his wife Pattie, Apple Corps exec Neil Aspinall and “Magic” Alexis Mardas.

The song, which featured on the Magical Mystery Tour EP and album, begins: “There’s a fog upon LA / And my friends have lost their way / ‘We’ll be over soon’ they said /Now they’ve lost themselves instead”.

Harrison later admitted that the song was written on just such a foggy night, waiting for Beatles publicist Derek Taylor to find his way for a visit.

Dave Davies reveals new album details

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Dave Davies has revealed details of his upcoming album, I Will Be Me. The album is Davies’ sixth solo album and first since 2007's Fractured Mindz. According to Davies' website, I Will Be Me has an expected release date of June 4, to coincide with Davies' run of American dates. According to a p...

Dave Davies has revealed details of his upcoming album, I Will Be Me.

The album is Davies’ sixth solo album and first since 2007’s Fractured Mindz.

According to Davies’ website, I Will Be Me has an expected release date of June 4, to coincide with Davies’ run of American dates.

According to a post on the website for the New York City Winery, where Davies will play on May 28 and 29, “Dave’s new album I Will Be Me is a return to his groundbreaking guitar sound and innovative songwriting. His classically English voice shows off a new deepness but still hits his famous high notes in this collection. Hard rocking track ‘Living In The Past‘, takes a look at obsession with retro but, ever the Mod, Dave surprises with the lyric, ‘no matter what they do or say, the future’s here to stay!'”

“He takes a look back with ‘Little Green Amp‘, a playful, punk homage to days when his jagged, blues driven sound wave ripped ahead of the British Invasion through stereos the world over. ‘Cote du Rhone (I Will Be Me)’, an uncensored look at ugliness in the world today, is as angry and biting as ever with an innovative heavy yet slide guitar tone. Soothing lyrics and sounds of Jonathan Lea’s sitar playing on ‘Healing Boy’ – show Dave’s sensitive side. In a recent radio interview he said, ‘rock music is a positive force for good.’ This hopeful and optimistic vision manifests and bridges themes personal, social and universal in I Will Be Me.”

The tracklisting for I Will Be Me is:

Little Green Amp

Livin’ In The Past

The Healing Boy

Midnight In LA

In The Mainframe

Energy Fields

When I First Saw You

The Actress

Erotic Neurotic

You Can Break My Heart

Walker Through The Worlds

Remember The Future

Cote du Rhone (I Will Be Me)

The album will be available for pre-purchase at the following shows:

May 28 and 29, New York City – New York City Winery

May 30, Shirley, Massachusetts, The Bull Run

May 31, Norfolk, Conneticut – Infinity Hall

June 1, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania – Musikfest Café

June 7, San Juan Capistrano, California – The Coach House

June 9, Agoura Hills, California – The Canyon

Play a round of golf with Alice Cooper for $10,000

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For $10,000 (£6588), a fan of Alice Cooper can buy the chance to play a round of golf with the shock-rock legend. The offer is part of a current Kickstarter campaign which is looking to secure funding for Uncle Alice Presents, a 12 part series of comics and a graphic novel created by Tom Sheppard and which feature Alice Cooper as the narrator and "demented, blood-soaked host". The campaign is looking to raise $200,000 (£131,752) by selling hard copies of the comic book and graphic novel when they have been published, as well as voicemail messages from Alice Cooper, a framed oil painting and the chance to play golf with Cooper himself. There is only one round of golf up for grabs, and it will take place at a golf course of Cooper's choosing in Phoenix, Arizona. It is asked that only experienced players apply. Alice Cooper and Marilyn Manson head out on the joint Masters of Madness tour of North America this June.

For $10,000 (£6588), a fan of Alice Cooper can buy the chance to play a round of golf with the shock-rock legend.

The offer is part of a current Kickstarter campaign which is looking to secure funding for Uncle Alice Presents, a 12 part series of comics and a graphic novel created by Tom Sheppard and which feature Alice Cooper as the narrator and “demented, blood-soaked host”.

The campaign is looking to raise $200,000 (£131,752) by selling hard copies of the comic book and graphic novel when they have been published, as well as voicemail messages from Alice Cooper, a framed oil painting and the chance to play golf with Cooper himself.

There is only one round of golf up for grabs, and it will take place at a golf course of Cooper’s choosing in Phoenix, Arizona. It is asked that only experienced players apply.

Alice Cooper and Marilyn Manson head out on the joint Masters of Madness tour of North America this June.

Phil Spector’s wife believes TV movie exonerates husband; calls for new inquiry

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Phil Spector's wife has called for a fresh appeal over his murder conviction of actress Lana Clarkson. The move comes after Rachelle Spector saw the new David Marnet HBO dramatisation of the case. She believes some of the forensics evidence presented in the film, Phil Spector, will help her prove her husband, played by Al Pacino in the TV movie, did not pull the trigger of the gun which killed Clarkson at his Alhambra, California mansion in 2003. She told Entertainment Tonight: "They (viewers) can clearly see by the lack of any blood on his white jacket that he wasn't even near her when the shot was fired. There is absolutely no way he was even close to her when the shot was fired." In the film, which was screened in the US on Sunday (March 24), Spector's attorney Linda Kenney Baden, portrayed by Dame Helen Mirren, suggests the producer would have had to be at least 10 feet (three meters) away from the pistol - and therefore he couldn't have pulled the trigger. She also hints that Clarkson accidentally shot herself while playing with one of Spector's guns. Following the screening Rachelle Spector added: "People are walking away thinking he was railroaded and is an innocent man." He was convicted of second-degree murder in 2009, and subsequently sentenced to 19 years to life in prison. He has appealed on a number of occasions but failed on every attempt. Friends of Clarkson, recently protested outside a screening of HBO's dramatisation of the event. Clarkson's former publicist Edward Lozzi says he has seen the film and claims the narrative focuses too strongly on Spector’s defence and the suggestion that he is, in fact, innocent, with Clarkson taking her own life.

Phil Spector’s wife has called for a fresh appeal over his murder conviction of actress Lana Clarkson.

The move comes after Rachelle Spector saw the new David Marnet HBO dramatisation of the case. She believes some of the forensics evidence presented in the film, Phil Spector, will help her prove her husband, played by Al Pacino in the TV movie, did not pull the trigger of the gun which killed Clarkson at his Alhambra, California mansion in 2003.

She told Entertainment Tonight: “They (viewers) can clearly see by the lack of any blood on his white jacket that he wasn’t even near her when the shot was fired. There is absolutely no way he was even close to her when the shot was fired.”

In the film, which was screened in the US on Sunday (March 24), Spector’s attorney Linda Kenney Baden, portrayed by Dame Helen Mirren, suggests the producer would have had to be at least 10 feet (three meters) away from the pistol – and therefore he couldn’t have pulled the trigger. She also hints that Clarkson accidentally shot herself while playing with one of Spector’s guns. Following the screening Rachelle Spector added: “People are walking away thinking he was railroaded and is an innocent man.”

He was convicted of second-degree murder in 2009, and subsequently sentenced to 19 years to life in prison. He has appealed on a number of occasions but failed on every attempt.

Friends of Clarkson, recently protested outside a screening of HBO’s dramatisation of the event. Clarkson’s former publicist Edward Lozzi says he has seen the film and claims the narrative focuses too strongly on Spector’s defence and the suggestion that he is, in fact, innocent, with Clarkson taking her own life.

Ginger Baker: “Jack Bruce is a problem everywhere he goes”

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Ginger Baker has described his former Cream bandmate Jack Bruce as “a problem” in the latest issue of Uncut, out on Thursday (March 28). Baker and Bruce take us through their two-year whirlwind, from forming the ‘supergroup’, to creating enduring classics such as “White Room” and “S...

Ginger Baker has described his former Cream bandmate Jack Bruce as “a problem” in the latest issue of Uncut, out on Thursday (March 28).

Baker and Bruce take us through their two-year whirlwind, from forming the ‘supergroup’, to creating enduring classics such as “White Room” and “Sunshine Of Your Love” and touring the US, all while seemingly loathing each other from the start.

Asked whether it was a problem reuniting with Bruce in Cream after their stint together in The Graham Bond Organisation, Ginger Baker tells Uncut: “Jack’s a problem everywhere he goes. He still is.

“Liz, my wife at the time, convinced me to give Jack another chance, as it were. Something I still regret.”

Uncut’s piece on Cream also includes a look at the band’s songwriting collaborators, their 1968 Albert Hall farewell concerts and an eyewitness account from Melody Maker’s Chris Welch, who scooped the first news of Cream’s split.

We also talk to Ginger Baker about drumming, getting shot at in Nigeria and the new documentary about him, Beware Of Mr Baker.

The new issue of Uncut, dated May 2013, is out on Thursday (March 28).

Picture: Roz Kelly/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

First Look – Noah Baumbach’s Frances Ha trailer

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The IMDB lists Noah Baumbach’s credits since 2010’s Greenberg as a TV adaptation of Jonathan Franzen’s novel The Corrections and a co-write on Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted. At first glane, Baumbach’s credit on a DreamWorks animation seem conspicuously out of synch with his previous work – after all, Baumbach, is best known as an occasional collaborator with Wes Anderson and, in his own right, the auteur-ish chronicler of neurotic family dynamics like The Squid And The Whale and Margot At The Wedding. Perhaps Baumbach recognised something from his own films in the four squabbling talking animals in the Madagascar series. But it’s likely Baumbach was brought in by Madagascar’s star Ben Stiller – they worked together on Greenberg – to legitimise the ailing franchise. It certainly ranks as one of the strangest pairings of director and studio since Charlie Kaufman was drafted in to script doctor Kung Fu Panda 2. Normal service seems to have been restored, however, with Boambach’s latest, Frances Ha. Shot in black and white, it stars Greta Gerwig – the female lead in Greenberg – as an aspiring dancer who lives with her best friend in Brooklyn. Gerwig’s star is very much in ascent right now – she was terrific in Whit Stillman’s Damsels In Distress last year, although that film - brilliant as it was - may just have been too much of an acquired taste for many. At least on the strength of this trailer, Frances Ha – which Gerwig co-wrote – appears to be a warmer, more accessible film than Stillman’s. The black and white cinematography – and Gerwig’s skittish heroine – calls to mind both Woody Allen’s Manhattan and also Gerwig’s mumblecore roots. Fans of slapstick will presumably enjoy watching Gerwig fall over in the trailer. Those who’re less enamoured with tales of first world woes – Frances appears to lack a job and steady income – should probably give this a wide berth. "What do you do?" Frances is asked at a dinner party. "It's kind of hard to explain," she replies. "Because what you do is complicated?" "Because I don't really do it." There’s a great use of David Bowie’s “Modern Love” on trailer, too. Frances Ha opens in the UK on July 26 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LSmGOwTJSNA

The IMDB lists Noah Baumbach’s credits since 2010’s Greenberg as a TV adaptation of Jonathan Franzen’s novel The Corrections and a co-write on Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted.

At first glane, Baumbach’s credit on a DreamWorks animation seem conspicuously out of synch with his previous work – after all, Baumbach, is best known as an occasional collaborator with Wes Anderson and, in his own right, the auteur-ish chronicler of neurotic family dynamics like The Squid And The Whale and Margot At The Wedding. Perhaps Baumbach recognised something from his own films in the four squabbling talking animals in the Madagascar series. But it’s likely Baumbach was brought in by Madagascar’s star Ben Stiller – they worked together on Greenberg – to legitimise the ailing franchise. It certainly ranks as one of the strangest pairings of director and studio since Charlie Kaufman was drafted in to script doctor Kung Fu Panda 2.

Normal service seems to have been restored, however, with Boambach’s latest, Frances Ha. Shot in black and white, it stars Greta Gerwig – the female lead in Greenberg – as an aspiring dancer who lives with her best friend in Brooklyn. Gerwig’s star is very much in ascent right now – she was terrific in Whit Stillman’s Damsels In Distress last year, although that film – brilliant as it was – may just have been too much of an acquired taste for many. At least on the strength of this trailer, Frances Ha – which Gerwig co-wrote – appears to be a warmer, more accessible film than Stillman’s. The black and white cinematography – and Gerwig’s skittish heroine – calls to mind both Woody Allen’s Manhattan and also Gerwig’s mumblecore roots. Fans of slapstick will presumably enjoy watching Gerwig fall over in the trailer. Those who’re less enamoured with tales of first world woes – Frances appears to lack a job and steady income – should probably give this a wide berth.

“What do you do?” Frances is asked at a dinner party.

“It’s kind of hard to explain,” she replies.

“Because what you do is complicated?”

“Because I don’t really do it.”

There’s a great use of David Bowie’s “Modern Love” on trailer, too.

Frances Ha opens in the UK on July 26

Jeff Tweedy calls for gay marriage support in Illinois

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Jeff Tweedy has had a letter printed in his hometown newspaper, The Belleville News-Democrat, asking that Illinois lawmakers pass pending legislation legalizing gay marriage. “Over the last few decades,” Tweedy writes, “I've had the good fortune as a member of the band Wilco to play music in...

Jeff Tweedy has had a letter printed in his hometown newspaper, The Belleville News-Democrat, asking that Illinois lawmakers pass pending legislation legalizing gay marriage.

“Over the last few decades,” Tweedy writes, “I’ve had the good fortune as a member of the band Wilco to play music in every state in the union and in countless other countries. In my travels, I’ve witnessed firsthand that gay and lesbian couples want to marry for the same reasons all of us do — to share a lifetime of commitment.”

The Illinois House of Representatives is yet to ratify the bill, SB10, which would extend equal marriage right to same sex couples. If it passes the House, it is expected to become law – it passed the State Senate on Valentines Day and Illinois Governor Pat Quinn has vowed to sign the bill into law. The bill is currently short of the 60 votes it would need to pass, with some estimates placing it as much as 12 votes short.

Tweedy, still a resident of Illinois, now lives in Chicago. He joined Ian MacKaye and Bob Mould last year in a unsuccessful effort to prevent an amendment to the North Carolina state constitution banning same sex marriage.

Duane Allman – Skydog: The Duane Allman Retrospective

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The charismatic slide guitar god and Southern rock avatar finally gets his due via a massive career overview... Until now, no guitar great’s career has been as under-represented as has that of Duane Allman, who packed a lifetime’s worth of music into seven intensive and wildly productive years. Previous efforts to compile Allman’s body of work were stymied by lawsuits and massive licensing issues. It took the concerted efforts of Bill Levenson, who’d been forced to shelve an earlier attempt at a career overview while working at Universal Music in the mid-’90s, and Galadrielle Allman, Duane’s only child, who’s been on a lifelong mission to get to know her father through his music, to finally bring the long-delayed project to fruition. To say the resulting seven-disc boxset – with 129 tracks, 33 of them either previously unreleased or unissued on CD – has been worth the wait would be a gross understatement. Skydog is an addictive, endlessly captivating aural history of a towering figure in rock history, with each disc forming a distinct chapter in the sprawling narrative. The first disc, which collects 23 of Duane and brother Gregg’s initial efforts with the Escorts, which begat the Allman Joys, which in turn begat Hour Glass, spilling into brief forays with Butch Trucks’ 31st Of February and long-forgotten group the Bleus, is a microcosm of the apprenticeships undertaken by so many musicians in the mid- to late ’60s. After an initial infatuation with the Beatles, the siblings began to explore the blues and R ‘n’ B, for which they shared a deep affinity, with a fascinating side trip into the psychedelic blues of the Jeff Beck-era Yardbirds, providing a key learning experience for Duane. They then made an early attempt at making commercial records, signing a deal with Liberty Records, which renamed them Hour Glass and forced them into confining stylistic contexts. Even then, the brothers’ soulfulness showed through –after two stiff albums, they headed to Muscle Shoals and essentially drew up the blueprint for the Allman Brothers Band with foreshadowing showcases like “The B.B. King Medley” and Gregg’s “Been Gone Too Long”, only to be shot down by the label. After the stint with the 31st Of February, the brothers went their separate ways, Gregg exiled to the West Coast in an aborted attempt at a solo career, while Duane remained in Florida, playing every gig he could find, treading water. Duane’s fortunes changed in the space of a single Wilson Pickett session in late 1968 at Rick Hall’s Fame Studio in Muscle Shoals, as the young interloper wowed Hall and the seasoned session players with his prodigious natural talent, erupting Vesuvius-like on a mind-blowing cover of “Hey Jude” after being pent up for so long in Hour Glass. Disc Two compiles Duane’s session work with Pickett, Clarence Carter, Arthur Conley, Aretha Franklin, the Soul Survivors, King Curtis and others, as Hall and Atlantic’s Jerry Wexler used him extensively in early ’69, knowing they’d discovered a prodigy with jaw-dropping chops and unlimited potential. Wexler thought enough of Duane to sign him to a solo deal, and three of his early efforts are compiled on Disc Three, which encompasses the spring and summer of 1969. But he was collaborative by nature, and he apparently realized that quickly enough to abandon the project, return to Florida, and begin assembling the Allman Brothers Band with Muscle Shoals drummer Jai Johanny “Jaimo” Johanson, bassist Berry Oakley, Butch Trucks and guitarist Dickey Betts, summoning Gregg from LA to complete the lineup. But he also continued to do sessions to pay the rent while developing the band’s sound, an audaciously open-ended amalgam of blues, R&B, jazz and rock’n’roll. If Duane was a magnetic presence to his fellow musicians in Muscle Shoals, Daytona Beach and New York, he remained unknown to the rest of the world until Atlantic’s September 1969 release of Boz Scaggs, recorded at Fame and containing the 13-minute blues epic “Loan Me A Dime”, with an extended performance from Duane so withering it stopped the critics in their tracks. Two months later, The Allman Brothers Band came out, unleashing the glorious tempest of “Whipping Post”, the prototypical harmonized guitar riffage of “Black Hearted Woman” and the crushed-velvet textures of “Dreams”. A month after that, the group blew the roof off the Fillmore East for the first time. And just like that, the train was roaring down the tracks, a runaway express bound for glory. The next three discs, each capturing a few retrospectively precious months at a time, as 1969 emptied into 1970, find Duane and his simpatico bandmates converting the masses on concert stages across the States with their enthralling, force-of-nature sets, their magisterial, all-business, no bullshit stage presence a direct reflection of their leader, willowy and bent to his task, a blue-collar Michelangelo. You couldn’t take your eyes off him. While the band was kicking back in Macon, enjoying the downtime, the tireless guitarist was showing up at sessions for everyone worth a damn from Ronnie Hawkins to Lulu, from Sam the Sham to Herbie Mann, changing the climate of every tracking room he entered. His abiding relationship with the knowing engineer/producer Tom Dowd led to Idlewild South and a few ecstatic nights at Criteria in Miami with Eric Clapton and his Dominos making what may be the most exalted example ever of dueling electric guitars. Disc Seven, charting what would be the last few months of his life – an acoustic workout with Delaney and Bonnie for New York’s WPLJ in July, an Allmans stop at the same station a month later, live and studio recordings from September, topped by the penultimate cut, an immersive 18-minute “Dreams”. Then, finally, the only recording that could end this opus, the shimmering acoustic duet with Dickey “Little Martha”, its heartbreaking beauty intensified by the cumulative tidal force of the music that preceded it, while being reminded of the first time we heard it, on Eat A Peach, not long after we lost him. If Duane Allman’s purpose in life was to play the guitar, his daughter’s purpose appears just as clearly to give voice to her father’s wordless expressiveness. Galadrielle, who’s finishing a book about her father, captures his prodigious soulfulness more vividly than anyone else who has yet attempted to do so in her notes to Skydog. “His spirit shines through every song,” she writes. “There is something forever unknowable in his music, a mystery I cannot solve by listening, an element that is wholly his own and does not translate into words. Music told the truth. He grabbed on to it from the very beginning and never let it go.” Amen. Bud Scoppa Photo credit: John Gellman

The charismatic slide guitar god and Southern rock avatar finally gets his due via a massive career overview…

Until now, no guitar great’s career has been as under-represented as has that of Duane Allman, who packed a lifetime’s worth of music into seven intensive and wildly productive years. Previous efforts to compile Allman’s body of work were stymied by lawsuits and massive licensing issues. It took the concerted efforts of Bill Levenson, who’d been forced to shelve an earlier attempt at a career overview while working at Universal Music in the mid-’90s, and Galadrielle Allman, Duane’s only child, who’s been on a lifelong mission to get to know her father through his music, to finally bring the long-delayed project to fruition.

To say the resulting seven-disc boxset – with 129 tracks, 33 of them either previously unreleased or unissued on CD – has been worth the wait would be a gross understatement. Skydog is an addictive, endlessly captivating aural history of a towering figure in rock history, with each disc forming a distinct chapter in the sprawling narrative.

The first disc, which collects 23 of Duane and brother Gregg’s initial efforts with the Escorts, which begat the Allman Joys, which in turn begat Hour Glass, spilling into brief forays with Butch Trucks’ 31st Of February and long-forgotten group the Bleus, is a microcosm of the apprenticeships undertaken by so many musicians in the mid- to late ’60s. After an initial infatuation with the Beatles, the siblings began to explore the blues and R ‘n’ B, for which they shared a deep affinity, with a fascinating side trip into the psychedelic blues of the Jeff Beck-era Yardbirds, providing a key learning experience for Duane. They then made an early attempt at making commercial records, signing a deal with Liberty Records, which renamed them Hour Glass and forced them into confining stylistic contexts.

Even then, the brothers’ soulfulness showed through –after two stiff albums, they headed to Muscle Shoals and essentially drew up the blueprint for the Allman Brothers Band with foreshadowing showcases like “The B.B. King Medley” and Gregg’s “Been Gone Too Long”, only to be shot down by the label. After the stint with the 31st Of February, the brothers went their separate ways, Gregg exiled to the West Coast in an aborted attempt at a solo career, while Duane remained in Florida, playing every gig he could find, treading water.

Duane’s fortunes changed in the space of a single Wilson Pickett session in late 1968 at Rick Hall’s Fame Studio in Muscle Shoals, as the young interloper wowed Hall and the seasoned session players with his prodigious natural talent, erupting Vesuvius-like on a mind-blowing cover of “Hey Jude” after being pent up for so long in Hour Glass. Disc Two compiles Duane’s session work with Pickett, Clarence Carter, Arthur Conley, Aretha Franklin, the Soul Survivors, King Curtis and others, as Hall and Atlantic’s Jerry Wexler used him extensively in early ’69, knowing they’d discovered a prodigy with jaw-dropping chops and unlimited potential.

Wexler thought enough of Duane to sign him to a solo deal, and three of his early efforts are compiled on Disc Three, which encompasses the spring and summer of 1969. But he was collaborative by nature, and he apparently realized that quickly enough to abandon the project, return to Florida, and begin assembling the Allman Brothers Band with Muscle Shoals drummer Jai Johanny “Jaimo” Johanson, bassist Berry Oakley, Butch Trucks and guitarist Dickey Betts, summoning Gregg from LA to complete the lineup. But he also continued to do sessions to pay the rent while developing the band’s sound, an audaciously open-ended amalgam of blues, R&B, jazz and rock’n’roll.

If Duane was a magnetic presence to his fellow musicians in Muscle Shoals, Daytona Beach and New York, he remained unknown to the rest of the world until Atlantic’s September 1969 release of Boz Scaggs, recorded at Fame and containing the 13-minute blues epic “Loan Me A Dime”, with an extended performance from Duane so withering it stopped the critics in their tracks. Two months later, The Allman Brothers Band came out, unleashing the glorious tempest of “Whipping Post”, the prototypical harmonized guitar riffage of “Black Hearted Woman” and the crushed-velvet textures of “Dreams”. A month after that, the group blew the roof off the Fillmore East for the first time. And just like that, the train was roaring down the tracks, a runaway express bound for glory.

The next three discs, each capturing a few retrospectively precious months at a time, as 1969 emptied into 1970, find Duane and his simpatico bandmates converting the masses on concert stages across the States with their enthralling, force-of-nature sets, their magisterial, all-business, no bullshit stage presence a direct reflection of their leader, willowy and bent to his task, a blue-collar Michelangelo. You couldn’t take your eyes off him.

While the band was kicking back in Macon, enjoying the downtime, the tireless guitarist was showing up at sessions for everyone worth a damn from Ronnie Hawkins to Lulu, from Sam the Sham to Herbie Mann, changing the climate of every tracking room he entered. His abiding relationship with the knowing engineer/producer Tom Dowd led to Idlewild South and a few ecstatic nights at Criteria in Miami with Eric Clapton and his Dominos making what may be the most exalted example ever of dueling electric guitars. Disc Seven, charting what would be the last few months of his life – an acoustic workout with Delaney and Bonnie for New York’s WPLJ in July, an Allmans stop at the same station a month later, live and studio recordings from September, topped by the penultimate cut, an immersive 18-minute “Dreams”. Then, finally, the only recording that could end this opus, the shimmering acoustic duet with Dickey “Little Martha”, its heartbreaking beauty intensified by the cumulative tidal force of the music that preceded it, while being reminded of the first time we heard it, on Eat A Peach, not long after we lost him.

If Duane Allman’s purpose in life was to play the guitar, his daughter’s purpose appears just as clearly to give voice to her father’s wordless expressiveness. Galadrielle, who’s finishing a book about her father, captures his prodigious soulfulness more vividly than anyone else who has yet attempted to do so in her notes to Skydog. “His spirit shines through every song,” she writes. “There is something forever unknowable in his music, a mystery I cannot solve by listening, an element that is wholly his own and does not translate into words. Music told the truth. He grabbed on to it from the very beginning and never let it go.”

Amen.

Bud Scoppa

Photo credit: John Gellman

The Making Of… The Animals’ The House Of The Rising Sun

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Eric Burdon’s new album, ’Til Your River Runs Dry, is reviewed in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2013 and out now – so for this week’s archive feature we thought we’d revisit this piece from Uncut’s May 2009 issue (Take 144), which examines how Burdon and his Geordie bluesmen somehow ...

Eric Burdon’s new album, ’Til Your River Runs Dry, is reviewed in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2013 and out now – so for this week’s archive feature we thought we’d revisit this piece from Uncut’s May 2009 issue (Take 144), which examines how Burdon and his Geordie bluesmen somehow turned a lengthy folk staple about a brothel into a massive international hit… but don’t mention the royalties… Words: Nick Hasted

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The Animals was a bunch of egotists,” says Eric Burdon. “Which exploded like a hand grenade.” The song responsible, “The House Of The Rising Sun”, dates back to the 19th Century. A folk staple, Bob Dylan recorded it for his self-titled debut in 1962, and it’s this version that found its way to Newcastle. The Animals recorded it in 1964 as their second single. Up until then, they’d specialised in R’n’B covers. But “The House Of The Rising Sun” provided something of a change of pace. It was raw, adult R’n’B that not even the Stones could match. “When we met them at the Club A Go Go in Newcastle, I saw the look on the faces of Mick and Keith,” Burdon says. “It was quite clear they had to kill us off.”

“The House Of The Rising Sun” was a global hit, The Animals becoming the first UK band to top the US charts since The Beatles. But they never came close to matching its success again, and by September ’66, the band had split.

There was another twist. The single’s royalties, assigned to Alan Price as sole arranger, left a lingering bitterness. Price refused to talk for this piece – “he tries not to be drawn into the open wound of the publishing,” believes drummer John Steel. Burdon, too, has mixed feelings about his biggest hit. “The downside was realised by me just recently. I was frontman for a band that was screwing me from behind. We toured non-stop for almost two years, hardly a day off… for zero. We lost our monies in the Bermuda triangle. But at least I’m alive to tell the tale. And I’m still out on the road, keeping songs like this alive.”

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John Steel (drummer): The song was first introduced into our crowd in Newcastle by a friend of mine called Bill Davison, the first guy to get the Bob Dylan album in 1962. No matter what Eric claims, that was the first time we ever heard ‘The House Of The Rising Sun’.

Hilton Valentine (guitarist): The first version I heard was Dylan’s. To this day I still think it’s the definitive one.

Eric Burdon (vocalist): It was sung by local folk hero Johnny Handel in one of Tyneside’s many jazz/folk clubs. I knew instantly it held some magic.

John Steel: We hadn’t long left Newcastle, and we were offered our first major tour, with Chuck Berry. Chas [Chandler, bass] said, “Everybody’s going to try to out-rock Chuck…”

Valentine: …which was impossible. We wanted to do something moodier and slower. “House…” was the obvious choice.

Steel: We’d been dicking about with the song anyway. We took three days at the Club A Go Go, our Newcastle stomping ground, to rehearse for the tour. And that’s when we worked out the whole thing, as we recorded it. Alan said Hilton should play an acoustic strumming style. Hilton had developed this arpeggio thing. Alan stormed off, because we opted for Hilton’s version. By the time he came back, all he had to do was drop in the organ solo. We’d sorted the rest of it out. Eric rewrote the lyrics [making the usually female fallen protagonist in the House a man], because we knew we couldn’t get a song about a prostitute on the BBC. My drum-pattern I picked up from Jimmy Smith’s “Walk On The Wild Side”, on a jukebox in Belgium. Everybody had a part in it.

Burdon: Playing “House…” on the Chuck Berry tour, we all knew it had to be recorded and released instantly. It got our biggest reaction. Constantly, every night, in spite of the fact the packed house was waiting for Mister Rock’n’Roll to take the stage. People were leaving the theatre singing it. We could hear them through the dressing-room window.

Steel: Halfway through the tour, [producer] Mickie Most put us into the studio to do Ray Charles’ “Talkin’ ‘Bout You” for the credits for Ready Steady Go!. We were so convinced by the reaction on tour that “House…” was something special, we persuaded Mickie to let us record it as well.

Valentine: We were travelling straight from Blackpool overnight, to either the Isle of Man or Jersey. And we went through London, and cut an LP, including “The House Of The Rising Sun”, in about an hour-and-a-half.

Steel: We didn’t have time to do a whole album. I’ve got letters I sent to my then-girlfriend which say we didn’t.

Burdon: We were on tour with Chuck Berry and we’d done a gig the night before in Manchester. We felt the crowd’s acceptance and we knew that we had to record this song. That night, we decided to jump on the milk train to London, dragging all our gear along and arriving at King’s Cross Station. We bribed a British Railways guy for the use of a hand-cart, put the gear on it and pushed it through the empty, early morning streets. It looked like a scene from The Day The Earth Stood Still. Arriving at the studio we carried the equipment downstairs, set it up and we were ready to go for it, around 11.30am. We were underground, in what I was told later was part of Winston Churchill’s WWII mapping room. It was cold, dark and concrete. The engineer had never recorded electric music before. I can’t recall Mickie Most being at the session. If he was, he let the band get on with it. He contributed very little as producer then.

Valentine: The dynamics of the song was what The Animals used to do when we played – start off with a certain pace, move it up a few notches, really drive it – and then drop it, right back down. And then build back to a crescendo at the end. Eric was total excitement, totally on the spur of the moment. We just put our heads down. We were all into it, responding to each other.

Burdon: I always sing with feeling. In my mind, the “house” was a polished Gentleman’s Club. It had to be a room full of women of many colours, sizes and shapes. It would have a spiral staircase. It must have had a black man playing ragtime piano. It must be three storeys high and smell of cheap perfume – and way too expensive for me to get across the threshold. I hate the word “whorehouse”. In London, some of my best friends were hookers. I’ve always had a soft spot for ladies of the night, but may I add that I’ve never, ever paid for it. Every time I sing that song, it’s like having a perfect sex partner. It just climaxes naturally.

Valentine: We all thought we’d really captured the mood in the studio. I remember thinking, ‘This is going to be a No. 1 record.’

Steel: One take did it, and Mickie said, “Come in and listen to this. That’s a hit.” Dave Siddle the engineer, turned round to Mickie and said, “We’ve got a problem here. It’s four-and-a-half minutes.” Mickie to his credit said: “Oh, the hell with that. We’re in the vinyl age now!”

Valentine: The BBC said that they wouldn’t play it as it was too long. It was possibly because it was about a brothel…

Steel: We got to do it on Ready Steady Go!, which created such a huge surge in the shops, the BBC had to change their minds. Within three weeks it was No 1.

Burdon: It was too sexy, too long for a single, wrong subject matter – and no idea how to promote it. Thanks to the crew at Ready Steady Go! and the fans at the Chuck Berry gigs, it ended up right in the corner of the net. It broke The Beatles’ grip on the No 1 spot, for a while.

Valentine: We were in a rehearsal studio in London when [manager] Mike Jefferey came in and said it was too long to put “Trad. Arranged by”… with all our names on the record. And we’ll sort the division of the money out later.

Burdon: Can you believe that we were so naïve? Well… we were. We all could have done with the extra cash… but I guess Alan Price felt he needed it more than anyone else.

Valentine: One day [in 1965] Pricey up and left the band. He didn’t give any notice. Chas said, “He must’ve got his first royalty cheque.” We were five guys from Newcastle. We were all buddies. And we started to realise we were getting ripped off, by everybody and his mother. But to be ripped off within the group, our circle – it was a bit sad.

Burdon: Many years later, on the ’83 Animals reunion tour, Chas Chandler called a meeting. He proposed that all the royalties from that day on be shared among the original members. Alan Price’s reaction was “Go fuck yourself,” or words to that effect. He got up and left. He has a head made of granite.

Steel: It rankled more with Hilton and Eric than anybody else. Eric still explodes about it. And I know it ate away at Hilton for a long time.

Burdon: The upside of the success was that it sent me off on a trip to the land of the blues, which I’d always dreamt about since I was a kid. In America, we were lumped in with the rest of the great bands that emerged from the UK and woke up the US to their own music. Legend has it that Bob Dylan was pushed into the electronic era due to The Animals’ version of the song.

Valentine: It was only when we were on tour there that we heard “House…” on the radio, and realised they’d chopped over a minute out of it. We were furious. No-one had told us.

Steel: In America they were still very conservative, very much in the 1950s. It was a shock to us. Whereas in Europe, we were a boys’ hardcore R’n’B and blues band, America introduced us to… waves of girls. We took whatever came at us.

Valentine: It was a two-and-a-half-year roller-coaster ride. “House…” was beyond our wildest dreams.

Burdon: I can separate the song from the debacle that was the band and still deliver it with conviction, knowing that a whole world of several generations of young people began an interest in music because of that song and that band, despite itself.

FactFile

Written by: Trad. Arranged by Alan Price

Performers: Eric Burdon (vocals), Alan Price (organ), Hilton Valentine (guitar), Chas Chandler (bass), John Steel (drums)

Produced by: Mickie Most

Recorded at: De Lane Lea Studios, Kingsway, London

Released as a single: July 1964

Highest UK chart position: 1

Highest US chart position: 1

Timeline

1962 The bandmembers first hear “House Of The Rising Sun” – either on Bob Dylan, or in Tyneside folk clubs

April 24-26, 1964 The Animals rehearse their version at Newcastle’s Club A Go Go, in readiness for a tour with the legendary Chuck Berry

May 18, 1964 Mid-tour, The Animals record the song in one take

July 1964 After initial resistance from the BBC due to its four-and-a-half minute length, it hits the UK No 1 spot. Within weeks, it’s a global smash