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Watch Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds in concert

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An unedited Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds concert is now available to watch online for 24 hours. The show, which took place at the Fonda Theater in Los Angeles last night, will be taken down tomorrow (February 23) at 2 pm. It was recorded for the Rockfeedback YouTube channel and finds Cave and his band perform their new album Push The Sky Away in full as well as classic tracks like “Jack the Ripper". Watch the concert below, or at the Rockfeedback site. Rockfeedback will host upcoming shows by Maps & Atlases on March 6, Theme Park on March 14, Brandt Brauer Frick with Om’mas Keith, Unknown Mortal Orchestra on May 16 and Toro y Moi on Jun 4. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fymChgeO00g

An unedited Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds concert is now available to watch online for 24 hours.

The show, which took place at the Fonda Theater in Los Angeles last night, will be taken down tomorrow (February 23) at 2 pm.

It was recorded for the Rockfeedback YouTube channel and finds Cave and his band perform their new album Push The Sky Away in full as well as classic tracks like “Jack the Ripper”.

Watch the concert below, or at the Rockfeedback site.

Rockfeedback will host upcoming shows by Maps & Atlases on March 6, Theme Park on March 14, Brandt Brauer Frick with Om’mas Keith, Unknown Mortal Orchestra on May 16 and Toro y Moi on Jun 4.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fymChgeO00g

Chicago blues guitarist Magic Slim dies aged 75

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Magic Slim, the Chicago blues guitarist, has died aged 75. A heavy smoker who suffered from emphysema and heart problems, Slim was forced by illness to cut short a tour with his band, the Teardrops, in late January, reports Reuters. Born Morris Holt to Mississippi sharecroppers in August 1937, Sli...

Magic Slim, the Chicago blues guitarist, has died aged 75.

A heavy smoker who suffered from emphysema and heart problems, Slim was forced by illness to cut short a tour with his band, the Teardrops, in late January, reports Reuters.

Born Morris Holt to Mississippi sharecroppers in August 1937, Slim started out playing the piano. But after losing a little finger in a cotton gin accident at 14, he switched to guitar.

On his first trip to Chicago to play for friend and mentor Magic Sam, Sam nicknamed his friend Slim on account of his physique.

Slim cut his first single, “Scufflin'”, in 1966, and went on to release 30 albums throughout his career – the last of which, Bad Boy, was released last August on Blind Pig records.

“There’s probably not another bluesman who had quite the repertoire that Slim had,” said his manager, Martin Salzman.

“Magic Slim embodied the heart and soul of this label,†Blind Pig Records owner Jerry Del Giudice told Billboard. “It was Magic Slim, and the guys like him, and their music, that inspired us to start the label in the first place.”

Atoms For Peace announce European festival dates

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Atoms For Peace have been announced as the headliner for two festivals this July. Thom Yorke’s side project with Flea, Nigel Godrich, Mauro Refosco and Joey Waronker will play The Melt! Festival in Ferropolis, Germany and the Exit Festival in Novi Sad, Serbia. Melt!, now in its 16th year, will a...

Atoms For Peace have been announced as the headliner for two festivals this July.

Thom Yorke’s side project with Flea, Nigel Godrich, Mauro Refosco and Joey Waronker will play The Melt! Festival in Ferropolis, Germany and the Exit Festival in Novi Sad, Serbia.

Melt!, now in its 16th year, will also include Alt-J, Django Django, Dan Deacon and The Knife. It takes place between July 19 and 21. Tickets are €119 (£102.85) plus fees including a €5 garbage disposal surcharge.

The 14th annual Exit Festival features fewer big name rock bands, but has announced other acts including DJ Fresh Live, Friction & MC Linguistics and SKisM. The show takes place between July 10 and 14, with a ticket price of £95 plus fees including £25 for camping.

http://www.meltfestival.de/history.html

http://www.exitfest.org/en

Elvis Costello reportedly to release new album for Record Store Day

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Elvis Costello is reportedly to release a new album for Record Store Day 2013. The album, as yet untitled, will be a collaboration between Costello and The Roots. According to an interview on NYU Local with Roots’ drummer Questlove, the collaboration grew out of Costello’s appearances on Americ...

Elvis Costello is reportedly to release a new album for Record Store Day 2013.

The album, as yet untitled, will be a collaboration between Costello and The Roots. According to an interview on NYU Local with Roots’ drummer Questlove, the collaboration grew out of Costello’s appearances on American chat show Late Night With Jimmy Fallon, where The Roots are the house band.

“After Elvis Costello’s third appearance,†he said, “we liked him so much we were like hey why don’t we make a record? Well what went from being one song to be released on Record Store Day became – why don’t we try four songs? Now we have a brilliant album. And, in the whole history of The Roots, I have never bragged on an album first, but I actually love this record.â€

This year’s Record Store Day will also include anticipated low-run releases by Roky Erickson, David Bowie, Public Image Ltd, and Willie Nelson, .

Yesterday, we reported news of a rumoured Bob Dylan single for Record Store Day.

Julian Cope – Saint Julian

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The arch druid goes POPTASTIC... We are now used to Julian Cope as the drug-damaged, Krautrock-obsessed arch druid who pens weighty tomes on prehistoric monuments and makes arcane psych-rock albums to a bijou audience. Saint Julian is a reminder that English rock’s last great eccentric was once a proper pop star. Just over a quarter of a century ago, Saint Julian put him all over the place: on Top Of The Pops, on Jonathan Ross and Terry Wogan’s chat shows, on Saturday-morning kids shows like Number 73 and Saturday Superstore, while his high cheekbones were splashed all over the pages of Smash Hits, Just Seventeen and Number One. Newly signed to his dream record label, Island, Cope cut his hair, donned his Hamburg Beatles biker leathers, clambered aboard his faintly ridiculous 10-foot-high “Iggdrassil†mic stand (complete with integral step ladder) and decided – in his own words – “to compete†on pop’s battleground with the likes of Nick Berry, Sam Fox and Belouis Some. Cope, along with a large section of his fanbase, is now rather dismissive of this period of his career, faintly ashamed to admit that he was “devastated†when the album’s lead single, “World Shut Your Mouth†stalled at No.19 in the UK chart and its follow-up, “Trampolineâ€, spent three weeks at No.31. When I last interviewed him he dismissed the LP as “patchy and largely rubbish†and appears not to be doing any promotion for its reissue. It’s a pity, because most of it certainly holds up. After two slightly self-indulgent attempts to mix psychedelic whimsy with Scott Walker-ish baroque pop – 1983’s World Shut Your Mouth and 1984’s Fried – Saint Julian was a shit-or-bust attempt to go to the pop jugular. Cope’s template was Alice Cooper’s early singles, and at least half the album succeed in capturing that essence. You can certainly hear that snotty, longhaired garage rock sound in the album’s two lead singles, while the rabble-rousing “Pulsarâ€, the yelping live favourite “Spacehopper†and the Sonics-referencing “Shot Down†all owe much to Detroit. Cope described “World Shut Your Mouthâ€, with its Motown drumbeat and anthemic chorus, as somewhere between “Hang On Sloopy†and “I Love Rock ‘N’ Rollâ€, and it probably trumps “Reward†as his finest three minutes – closely followed by “Trampolineâ€. Some of the album revisits other areas of Cope’s career. The title track and the waltzing “Crack In The Clouds†both hark back to the cleverly arranged orchestral pop of his 1983 post-Teardrops debut “Sunshine Playroomâ€, with Kate St John’s cor anglais nestling alongside a lovely tangle of chords. The tracks that don’t stand up so well are the ones that can be carbon-dated to 1987. The quirky 6/8 shuffle of “Eve’s Volcano†and the faux-gospel of “Planet Ride†are decent songs but both sound like Scritti Politti productions attempted on a low-budget, with tons of gated reverb on the snare drum, a kaleidoscope of processed guitars and even a hint of slap bass. Nothing new has been unearthed from the vaults for disc two of this package, but we do get a pretty comprehensive collection of period ephemera. There are live versions of “Pulsar†and “Shot Down†(which showed up on flipsides) and a few inconsequential remixes, including the much-vaunted but rather useless Troublefunk mix of “World Shut Your Mouthâ€, which was supposed to indulge Cope’s fondness for DC Go-Go but which sounds like any other drearily superfluous ’80s 12†mix. More interesting are the non-album songs. There are four tracks that were b-sides to various pressings of “World Shut Your Mouthâ€, including a thoroughly thrashy and dissolute cover of The 13th Floor Elevators’ “(I’ve Got) Levitationâ€, a jaunty country-and-western track called “Umpteenth Unnatural Bluesâ€, a free-jazz odyssey called “Transportation†and a Ramones-ish run through Pere Ubu’s “Non-Alignment Pactâ€. There are three primeval punk oddities which made up the “Trampoline†EP: the stately, martial clarion call of “Disasterâ€; the cyclical, Can-like “Warwick The Kingmakerâ€; and the droney, organ-led “Mock Turtleâ€. There’s also a Morricone-ish instrumental called “Almost Beautifulâ€, the b-side to “Eve’s Volcanoâ€. Listening to the album again, 25 years on, one can see how it may retrospectively ruin Cope impeccably honed psych-rock credibility. But that’s the key to Saint Julian’s appeal – what it lacks in rockist credibility it more than makes up for in pop urgency. It shows that even an obscurantist cult messiah can benefit from the discipline of trying to write a hit single. John Lewis

The arch druid goes POPTASTIC…

We are now used to Julian Cope as the drug-damaged, Krautrock-obsessed arch druid who pens weighty tomes on prehistoric monuments and makes arcane psych-rock albums to a bijou audience. Saint Julian is a reminder that English rock’s last great eccentric was once a proper pop star. Just over a quarter of a century ago, Saint Julian put him all over the place: on Top Of The Pops, on Jonathan Ross and Terry Wogan’s chat shows, on Saturday-morning kids shows like Number 73 and Saturday Superstore, while his high cheekbones were splashed all over the pages of Smash Hits, Just Seventeen and Number One.

Newly signed to his dream record label, Island, Cope cut his hair, donned his Hamburg Beatles biker leathers, clambered aboard his faintly ridiculous 10-foot-high “Iggdrassil†mic stand (complete with integral step ladder) and decided – in his own words – “to compete†on pop’s battleground with the likes of Nick Berry, Sam Fox and Belouis Some.

Cope, along with a large section of his fanbase, is now rather dismissive of this period of his career, faintly ashamed to admit that he was “devastated†when the album’s lead single, “World Shut Your Mouth†stalled at No.19 in the UK chart and its follow-up, “Trampolineâ€, spent three weeks at No.31. When I last interviewed him he dismissed the LP as “patchy and largely rubbish†and appears not to be doing any promotion for its reissue. It’s a pity, because most of it certainly holds up.

After two slightly self-indulgent attempts to mix psychedelic whimsy with Scott Walker-ish baroque pop – 1983’s World Shut Your Mouth and 1984’s Fried – Saint Julian was a shit-or-bust attempt to go to the pop jugular. Cope’s template was Alice Cooper’s early singles, and at least half the album succeed in capturing that essence. You can certainly hear that snotty, longhaired garage rock sound in the album’s two lead singles, while the rabble-rousing “Pulsarâ€, the yelping live favourite “Spacehopper†and the Sonics-referencing “Shot Down†all owe much to Detroit. Cope described “World Shut Your Mouthâ€, with its Motown drumbeat and anthemic chorus, as somewhere between “Hang On Sloopy†and “I Love Rock ‘N’ Rollâ€, and it probably trumps “Reward†as his finest three minutes – closely followed by “Trampolineâ€.

Some of the album revisits other areas of Cope’s career. The title track and the waltzing “Crack In The Clouds†both hark back to the cleverly arranged orchestral pop of his 1983 post-Teardrops debut “Sunshine Playroomâ€, with Kate St John’s cor anglais nestling alongside a lovely tangle of chords. The tracks that don’t stand up so well are the ones that can be carbon-dated to 1987. The quirky 6/8 shuffle of “Eve’s Volcano†and the faux-gospel of “Planet Ride†are decent songs but both sound like Scritti Politti productions attempted on a low-budget, with tons of gated reverb on the snare drum, a kaleidoscope of processed guitars and even a hint of slap bass.

Nothing new has been unearthed from the vaults for disc two of this package, but we do get a pretty comprehensive collection of period ephemera. There are live versions of “Pulsar†and “Shot Down†(which showed up on flipsides) and a few inconsequential remixes, including the much-vaunted but rather useless Troublefunk mix of “World Shut Your Mouthâ€, which was supposed to indulge Cope’s fondness for DC Go-Go but which sounds like any other drearily superfluous ’80s 12†mix.

More interesting are the non-album songs. There are four tracks that were b-sides to various pressings of “World Shut Your Mouthâ€, including a thoroughly thrashy and dissolute cover of The 13th Floor Elevators’ “(I’ve Got) Levitationâ€, a jaunty country-and-western track called “Umpteenth Unnatural Bluesâ€, a free-jazz odyssey called “Transportation†and a Ramones-ish run through Pere Ubu’s “Non-Alignment Pactâ€. There are three primeval punk oddities which made up the “Trampoline†EP: the stately, martial clarion call of “Disasterâ€; the cyclical, Can-like “Warwick The Kingmakerâ€; and the droney, organ-led “Mock Turtleâ€. There’s also a Morricone-ish instrumental called “Almost Beautifulâ€, the b-side to “Eve’s Volcanoâ€.

Listening to the album again, 25 years on, one can see how it may retrospectively ruin Cope impeccably honed psych-rock credibility. But that’s the key to Saint Julian’s appeal – what it lacks in rockist credibility it more than makes up for in pop urgency. It shows that even an obscurantist cult messiah can benefit from the discipline of trying to write a hit single.

John Lewis

Johnny Marr – Album By Album

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Johnny Marr’s first proper solo album, The Messenger, is reviewed in the new issue of Uncut, dated March 2013, and out now, so it seemed time to revisit the guitarist’s impressive back catalogue with the man himself… From Uncut’s February 2008 issue (Take 129), Marr relives the making of rec...

Johnny Marr’s first proper solo album, The Messenger, is reviewed in the new issue of Uncut, dated March 2013, and out now, so it seemed time to revisit the guitarist’s impressive back catalogue with the man himself… From Uncut’s February 2008 issue (Take 129), Marr relives the making of records from The Smiths and The The to Electronic and Modest Mouse. Interview: Stephen Troussé

_________________

“I’m less bothered about sounding obviously like me these days,†says Marr, taking a break before the final leg of his sell-out tour with Modest Mouse. “When I started The Healers I was keen to not do something that sounded like someone copying someone sounding like me. But when I do what’s natural now, I know that’s OK. What is natural for me? I let other people put words on it. What’s natural to me could be anything from ‘That Joke Isn’t Funny Anymore’ to ‘Slow Emotion Replay’ to ‘Getting Away With It’ to ‘Dashboard’.†Calling from his American home in Portland, Oregon, this chiming man takes us on a tour of his greatest musical moments…

_________________

THE SMITHS – HATFUL OF HOLLOW

(Rough Trade, 1984)

Some say it’s The Smiths’ real debut: a stunning collection of Peel Sessions, singles, B-sides and more…

Johnny Marr: “At the time it surprised me how popular it was. Originally my feeling about it was that it was going to be like one of those cut-price best-ofs that you used to be able to get in the ’70s on Hallmark or Pye. I’m glad we did it, because it definitely captured that time when we were in between phases and somewhat embryonic. It had a certain kind of musical exploration on it… It’s definitive, but quite what it’s defining is mysterious. And that’s a good thing.

“You could work quickly in those days. But even at the time we were unusual in that regard. No-one had to encourage us or get us to hurry up or go into the studio. The record company couldn’t keep up with us, really. In terms of booking studio time, writing songs and releasing them. We were practically tripping over ourselves with releases.

“I was in a shop on tour recently and they were playing Hatful… – ‘You’ve Got Everything Now’ and ‘Accept Yourself’ I heard for the first time in years. And I was surprised by the complexity of the music on those songs. Because they really were our early songs. Chords I’d been playing from being 16. You can hear our girl group influence, yeah. I was super obsessive about The Shangri-Las and The Marvelettes… When we met, Morrissey had Sandie Shaw covered and Billy Fury, and The Shangri-Las and Dusty were more my thing. We felt that we had everything that you need, really!â€

THE SMITHS – MEAT IS MURDER

(Rough Trade, 1985)

Producing themselves for the first time, The Smiths notch up their first UK No 1 with their most musically adventurous album…

“Is it the Johnny Marr Smiths record? Maybe… I was exploring what I could do. I suppose I was feeling really let loose on that second record. The first period was over – of getting known, learning to play onstage, getting a label and getting a relationship with the audience and then that’s worked out. And then I went into it just rolling my sleeves up and thinking, ‘Let’s see what we can do!’ I have to say we were really lucky as a band that we had Stephen Street, who was also around the same age as us and a real talent in his own right waiting to happen. We had a feeling that the grown-ups had left the building and it was left to us to break some rules and have some fun.

“We recorded in Liverpool. The tour manager took it upon himself to provide us with a ’70s Merc limo, which wasn’t actually a limousine. Just a big white stretched-out Mercedes that we drove out to an industrial estate in Liverpool every day. I remember the start of the record because I moved back to Manchester very deliberately – to get the atmosphere right for the instrumental tracks I was writing. And that worked out immediately because ‘Well I Wonder’ came out of that, with the rain and everything. When we did it we knew it would be popular because it had that real sense of yearning in it. ‘The Headmaster Ritual’ is one of my favourite guitar tracks. I wrote it over a period of two years, always looking for the next section I needed. I saw the Radiohead version, yeah. I have shown Ed [O’Brien] the chords, but maybe he was looking out the window! But they do a better job of it than anyone else I’ve heard.

“And ‘That Joke Isn’t Funny Anymore’ was always one of my favourites. It just fell through the roof. It was one of those lovely times when the feeling just falls down on you from the ceiling somewhere and it almost plays itself. It gives it an almost esoteric feeling.

“With ‘Barbarism Begins At Home’, a lot’s made of the funky aspect of the bassline, but that track harks back to what I was doing with Andy before The Smiths. I guess it came out of this love of retro kind of James Brown records, and things like Rip Rig & Panic and The Pop Group. That period of anaemic, underfed white funk. It’s me and Andy being townies in Manchester, liking a bit of the American No-Wave thing, James Chance, I guess.

“When we made an album, we weren’t thinking that we needed to pull a single from it. That’s the prerequisite these days, and maybe even then. Because we were also writing singles. We wrote albums to be albums and if some singles came off them coincidentally then fair enough. We assumed that most people who followed the band were the same as us, and presumed that they didn’t need to be spoonfed a commercial track to buy an interesting piece of work. So that’s why Meat Is Murder is the way it is – almost unfettered by chart considerations.â€

THE SMITHS – THE QUEEN IS DEAD

(Rough Trade, 1986)

For many, The Smiths’ finest moment: an epic and intimate state-of-the-nation and state-of-the-heart address…

“For a long time I worked on the premise that we should always have a song on each album that people said, ‘That should be a single.’ But in fact really wasn’t. ‘Reel Around The Fountain’ was that for the first album and ‘There Is A Light…’ from The Queen Is Dead. I thought it was a sign of a really great album that there was a track that everyone wanted as a single, but you had stronger singles instead.

“With a lot of my stuff, especially my acoustic work, like on ‘I Know It’s Over’, I’m not usually thinking about anybody when I do it. I was a big fan of Bert Jansch, but there’s not a lot of my stuff that actually sounds like him. I try not to sound like anybody. I think it was a sense of displacement and yearning that I remember having when I was writing it, where it’s beautiful but unnerved. That’s how I was feeling and that’s what I was trying to capture. I was playing the sound of my feelings! Luckily that was never interfered with – we didn’t want record companies sticking their noses in or management or anything.

“For the title track, one of the things musically that I always had my antenna up for were things you could dance to that weren’t obviously ‘dancey’. I was always looking for the alternatives to straight rock beats but not falling into the trap of being ‘dancey’ like A Certain Ratio or New Order or even Orange Juice. I was looking for Eddie Cochran… The Stooges… riffy drums.â€

TALKING HEADS – NAKED

(Sire, 1988)

Marr makes one of his first post-Smiths outings on Talking Heads’ swansong, produced in Paris by Steve Lillywhite with a cast of hundreds…

“This must have been ’87, just after The Smiths split. Talking Heads had asked Steve Lillywhite to invite me over for the early stages of recording in Paris. They were about to try another period of augmentation after a couple of stripped-down records. I got the feeling that David Byrne particularly enjoyed that left-field surprise approach that other musicians brought in. When I got there they put down some bass and drum tracks. ‘(Nothing But) Flowers’ sounded almost like a reggae dub track.

“I wasn’t to trying to play in an African style – although some people pointed out that I sometimes sounded like that anyway! I knew all about King Sunny Adé and I love Fela Kuti, but really I just played melodies that sounded good in a high range. The intro to ‘Flowers’ was me playing without knowing the tape machine was on – that’s how little attention I paid to any kind of remit! I built that track from the ground up. I was impressed with what David did on it. He worked super quickly.

“‘Flowers’ was the big hit but ‘Cool Water’ is probably my favourite – that was something David and I built up one afternoon: I was playing and he was encouraging me and egging me on to try different things, miking up a semi-acoustic 12-string without putting it through the amplifier and putting it into weird tunings and drones. That in itself was really invigorating.”

ELECTRONIC – ELECTRONIC

(Factory, 1991)

The first supergroup of the ’90s, comprising members of the three best British pop groups of the ’80s: Bernard Sumner, Johnny Marr, and associate members Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe from the Pet Shop Boys…

“Bernard and I had always known each other – I played with him in 1983 on a Quando Quango record! But Madchester, that time was pretty amazing and somewhat unfathomable, really. There was an incredible explosion of creativity and newness in fashion and music and design – back smack in the middle of my hometown. And often back smack in the middle of my kitchen! It was really necessary. The Smiths and our aesthetic dominated the underground music scene so much that when we stepped aside the inevitable change was allowed to come blasting through.

“I remember what would often happen with Electronic is that we recorded at my house and, after having worked all day, I would say to the engineer, ‘You can work on the hi-hat sound and I’m going to go and hang out for a couple of hours.’ And about 3.30 in the morning, three cars would arrive outside my house with a bunch of people falling out, or dancing out, and we’d all pile into the control room. And I’d start working on the track. I looked over and in the corner Bez was talking to someone, and I got the pitch wheel of the tape machine and slowed one of the tracks – it was ‘Feel Every Beat’ – down until he started to dance. When it attracted his attention to start grooving, I knew then that was the right tempo. I used him as a human metronome. At the time he was probably the best indication of when something was in the right swing.â€

THE THE – DUSK

(Sony, 1992)

Johnny hooks up with old friend Matt Johnson on this brooding exploration of a troubled world and a troubled mind…

“Dusk is my favourite of the two The The records, yeah… Because it’s one of the few records I’ve made that I can detach from and just enjoy as a listener. I don’t listen to anything after I’ve made it. As soon as it goes out I’m almost pathologically working on the next one in my mind, wherever it’s going to come from. But Dusk I continued to listen to for quite a long time afterwards. A lot of the music and the songs just appeared from this atmosphere of retreat, because of what had happened in Matt’s life – losing his brother – but also a real creatively inspired time, after being on the road for a year.

“We knew we were a great band and we’d had validation from the audience and we knew that The The had a lot of people out there willing us on, whereas with Mind Bomb we hadn’t toured and the only feedback we were getting was from the press. We were making a record for a different reason than some musical statement and bravado. We were forced to do something that had real emotions in.

“Matt was really adamant that I played as much harmonica as I could, because he really loved my playing. ‘Slow Emotion Replay’ was really the best hit that never was. There’s a real intimate feeling. It’s a very London record, but in some ways almost New Orleansy. A little like that movie, Angel Heart… and therefore pretty sexy.â€

JOHNNY MARR AND THE HEALERS – BOOMSLANG

(Reincarnate Music, 2003)

Marr finally fronts his own group, including Zak Starkey and Alonso Bevan (ex-Kula Shaker)…

“Why did it take me so long to front my own group? I never really had the ambition – apart from one week when I was 11. But eventually it was just a challenge and situation I hadn’t met that had to be done. Chrissie Hynde had really let me have it one afternoon in London and told me I was being a big wimp and that I had an interesting voice. And Matt and Bernard had been on at me. And when people who love you say that, they’re not going to put you out on the line.

“The band came together really because I was following a sound that I had in my mind that I couldn’t get anywhere else. Which is probably the best reason to form any band. It was a kind of thick, psychedelic pop with singing and lyrics that went along with the music rather than against it. I had never done that before. And I wanted to work with musicians like Edgar ‘Summertyme’ Jones and Zak Starkey.

“Singing and writing lyrics weren’t really the issue, it was going out and fronting a band for 90 minutes which was the big mystery. And I found that I quite liked it. It’s a different discipline, different creative sides, and I miss it when I’m not doing it. I like getting lyrical ideas and fronting a band live comes pretty naturally.

“When we get a break with Modest Mouse I want to put out a second Healers record – several records, in fact. I’m less bothered about sounding obviously like me, too. When I just do what’s natural now, I know that’s OK.â€

MODEST MOUSE – WE WERE DEAD BEFORE THE SHIP EVEN SANK

(Epic, 2007)

A quarter of century into his career, Marr achieves his first US No 1 with the intense American indie rockers…

“When I first met Isaac from Modest Mouse it just worked straight away. But we weren’t there to mess around, although we gave ourselves that get-out. Whatever it was we were gonna do, we were going to have fun trying over a 10-day period. On the first night we just set up two amps opposite each other and just got louder and louder and improvised. I just started playing ‘Dashboard’, which I’d been playing a few weeks before and forgotten about. And he instantly started improvising the lyrics, which knocked me out. To see someone produce those lyrics just off the top of his head is amazing: I’ve never seen it done in such a way. Next morning I woke up at 4am, jetlagged as usual, wondering whether it had really happened, that we’d written this super-commercial couple of songs. The writing was like little fires starting all over the room – this inspired atmosphere.

“There’s six of us, one of the drummers might want to do something Prince Buster or The Minutemen, the bass player will want to get something like old Celtic music, the other drummer wants it to sound techno. And I’m on whatever trip I’m on and so is Isaac. And that’s about as much as I want to work out with this band as far as the writing goes. By the third or fourth day working I remember standing in the middle of the room playing very loud and wondering to myself what this music actually is. And not being able to work it out – which was perfect.â€

David Bowie guitarist: ‘Odds of a tour are 50-50’

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Guitarist Gerry Leonard has revealed that David Bowie could tour off the back of his forthcoming new album. "I would say that it's 50-50," he told Rolling Stone. "A couple of times, when we played back one of the more kick-ass tunes from the new record, he'd be like, 'This would be great live!' Of course, everyone was like, 'What? Did he just say that?' But other times he'd just roll his eyes if someone brought up playing live." The comments echo those of fellow Bowie guitarist Earl Slick, who also plays on forthcoming album The Next Day. "It's kind of like doing the record. I wouldn't be surprised if he toured and I wouldn't be surprised if he didn't tour... I know I would like a tour to happen!" he said previously. David Bowie is set to release a brand new track titled "The Stars (Are Out Tonight)" on February 26. The track will appear on The Next Day, Bowie's first new album in 10 years which is set for release on March 11. The full tracklisting for 'The Next Day' is as follows: 'The Next Day' 'Dirty Boys' 'The Stars (Are Out Tonight)' 'Love Is Lost' 'Where Are We Now?' 'Valentine's Day' 'If You Can See Me' 'I'd Rather Be High' 'Boss Of Me' 'Dancing Out In Space' 'How Does The Grass Grow' '(You Will) Set The World On Fire' 'You Feel So Lonely You Could Die' 'Heat' Deluxe Version bonus tracks 'So She' 'I'll Take You There' 'Plan'

Guitarist Gerry Leonard has revealed that David Bowie could tour off the back of his forthcoming new album.

“I would say that it’s 50-50,” he told Rolling Stone. “A couple of times, when we played back one of the more kick-ass tunes from the new record, he’d be like, ‘This would be great live!’ Of course, everyone was like, ‘What? Did he just say that?’ But other times he’d just roll his eyes if someone brought up playing live.”

The comments echo those of fellow Bowie guitarist Earl Slick, who also plays on forthcoming album The Next Day. “It’s kind of like doing the record. I wouldn’t be surprised if he toured and I wouldn’t be surprised if he didn’t tour… I know I would like a tour to happen!” he said previously.

David Bowie is set to release a brand new track titled “The Stars (Are Out Tonight)” on February 26. The track will appear on The Next Day, Bowie’s first new album in 10 years which is set for release on March 11.

The full tracklisting for ‘The Next Day’ is as follows:

‘The Next Day’

‘Dirty Boys’

‘The Stars (Are Out Tonight)’

‘Love Is Lost’

‘Where Are We Now?’

‘Valentine’s Day’

‘If You Can See Me’

‘I’d Rather Be High’

‘Boss Of Me’

‘Dancing Out In Space’

‘How Does The Grass Grow’

‘(You Will) Set The World On Fire’

‘You Feel So Lonely You Could Die’

‘Heat’

Deluxe Version bonus tracks

‘So She’

‘I’ll Take You There’

‘Plan’

Iggy And The Stooges to release DVD of Ron Asheton tribute concert

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The official website for Iggy And The Stooges has announced plans to release a DVD of its 2011 tribute concert for band member Ron Asheton in April. Asheton died in 2009 of a heart attack. He was the Stooges' original guitarist, but moved to bass for Raw Power, a position he held through the bandâ€...

The official website for Iggy And The Stooges has announced plans to release a DVD of its 2011 tribute concert for band member Ron Asheton in April.

Asheton died in 2009 of a heart attack. He was the Stooges’ original guitarist, but moved to bass for Raw Power, a position he held through the band’s reunion.

The concert was held on April 19, 2011 at the Michigan, Theater in Ann Arbor and featured Radio Birdman’s Deniz Tek joining the Stooges on guitar. Henry Rollins hosted the show and also performs on the first song, “I’ve Got A Rightâ€.

Profits from the sale of the DVD will benefit the Ron Asheton Foundation, a charity set up in his memory. In addition to his musical career, Asheton was a avid lover of animals known to provide a home for stray cats he would come across. The foundation honors both parts of his life – subsidizing public school music departments and veterinary care for families in need and supporting animal and music charitable organisations.

The DVD is available for pre-order at MVD Entertainment at a price of $12.71/£8.35.

The tracklisting for the DVD is:

I Got A Right (with Henry Rollins)

Raw Power

Search And Destroy

Gimme Danger

Shake Appeal

1970

L.A. Blues

Night Theme

Beyond The Law

Fun House

Open Up And Bleed

Your Pretty Face Is Going To Hell

I Wanna Be Your Dog

TV Eye

Loose

Dirt

Real Cool Time

Iggy’s Speech

Ron’s Tune

No Fun

Beatles grant rare music license to doc about their former secretary

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Good Ol’ Freda, a documentary about former Beatles secretary Freda Kelly, has scaled the Everest of music licensing feats: it has licensed three Beatles songs. Kelly worked for The Beatles between 1963 and 1972 as both a secretary and manager of their fan club. The Liverpudlian, now 60 years old,...

Good Ol’ Freda, a documentary about former Beatles secretary Freda Kelly, has scaled the Everest of music licensing feats: it has licensed three Beatles songs.

Kelly worked for The Beatles between 1963 and 1972 as both a secretary and manager of their fan club. The Liverpudlian, now 60 years old, had long denied filmmakers the rights to her life story. In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, filmmaker Ryan White said Kelly had finally agreed to share her story “for her 2-year-old grandson — she sees it as a sort of home movie.â€

The Beatles soundtrack appearances are notoriously difficult to obtain. The TV show Mad Men purportedly spent $250,000 last season for a clip of “Tomorrow Never Knowsâ€.

White met Kelly through his uncle, Billy Kinsley, a veteran of the ‘60s Liverpool rock scene as a founding member of The Merseybeats, a band that shared bills with the Beatles. Though White doesn’t say how much the songs cost (slyly answering “Clearly the living Beatles have a lot of respect for herâ€), the documentary will feature four Beatles songs in the film including “I Saw Her Standing There†and “Love Me Doâ€.

The film premiers at South By Southwest on March 9.

Bob Dylan single rumoured for Record Store Day 2013

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Bob Dylan is reportedly releasing a 7†single as part of Record Store Day 2013, according to an online round up of this year’s planned releases. The 7†will comprise versions of “Wigwam†b/w “Thirsty Bootsâ€, which may be taken from the forthcoming Bootleg Series Volume 10. “Wigwamâ...

Bob Dylan is reportedly releasing a 7†single as part of Record Store Day 2013, according to an online round up of this year’s planned releases.

The 7†will comprise versions of “Wigwam†b/w “Thirsty Bootsâ€, which may be taken from the forthcoming Bootleg Series Volume 10.

“Wigwam†was recorded in early 1970 for the Self Portrait album, and later released as single. The Record Store Day version is reportedly a demo. Meanwhile, “Thirsty Boots†is a Civil Rights era folk song written by Dylan’s Greenwich Village contemporary, Eric Andersen. Dylan recorded the song as part of the Self Portrait sessions, though his version has never been officially released.

In October last year, the Dylan fan site Isis reported rumours that recording sessions from 1969/1970, in particular the Self Portrait sessions, were being considered for Volume 10 – which this Record Store Day release appears to corroborate.

The Dylan camp has history of using Record Store Day to release prospective material from the Bootleg Series. Last November, Dylan released “Duquesne Whistle†from The Tempest album as a Record Store Day single, backed with an unreleased version of the Blood On The Tracks song, “Meet Me In The Morningâ€. “Meet Me In The Morning†was initially flagged up as being “taken from the forthcoming Bootleg Series Volume 11â€, leading to speculation that the set might be drawn from Blood On The Tracks sessions. However, Record Store Day removed reference to the Bootleg Series shortly after.

The most recent edition of the Bootleg Series – Volume 9, The Whitmark Demos: 1962 – 1964 – was released in October 2010.

Record Store Day will publish a full list of this year’s releases on March 21.

Kevin Ayers, 1944 – 2013

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Kevin Ayers, one of Britain’s most gifted and idiosyncratic singer-songwriters, has died at the age of 68. Ayers was born in Kent in 1944. Though he spent his childhood in Malaysia – moving there with his mother and British district officer stepfather – he returned to London at 12, only to be...

Kevin Ayers, one of Britain’s most gifted and idiosyncratic singer-songwriters, has died at the age of 68.

Ayers was born in Kent in 1944. Though he spent his childhood in Malaysia – moving there with his mother and British district officer stepfather – he returned to London at 12, only to be told to leave the city by a magistrate five years later following a drug bust. Ayers always maintained the bust that sent him into exile (and more importantly, into Canterbury) was a set-up. Whether it was or wasn’t, it was certainly an act of fate.

In Canterbury, Ayers joined forces with Brian and Hugh Hopper, Robert Wyatt and Mike Ratledge forming a tight-knit pack of well to do schoolboys. Ayers formed a band with the more worldly Daevid Allen, who had worked with William Burroughs and minimalist composer Terry Riley, and who was renting a room in Canterbury from Wyatt’s mom.

After a short stint as The Wilde Flowers, the band – now Ayers, Wyatt, Ratledge and Allen – eventually took a new name from Burroughs’ The Soft Machine, and became one of the most potent forces on the emerging London psychedelic scene. Ayers played bass (later, guitar, after Allen’s departure) and sang many of the group’s songs, in a baritone that at once conveyed a wry delight in the world around him and a certain lugubriousness that transcended his age. Close competitors with The Pink Floyd, Soft Machine’s debut single “Love Makes Sweet Music†was released in February 1967, a month ahead of the Floyd’s “Arnold Layneâ€, while in 1970, Syd Barrett appeared on a long-unreleased version of Ayers’ “Religious Experience (Singing A Song In The Morning)”.

Ayers only lasted in Soft Machine long enough to appear on their debut self-titled album (1968), notably contributing the exploratory band’s poppiest song, “”Why Are We Sleeping?” A restless and single-minded artist, Ayers left after a fraught tour with Jimi Hendrix and retreated to Ibiza.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oaxPJ_V3kvE

Iziba brought out the best in Ayers’ songwriting. He parlayed a spate of new songs into his fine solo debut, Joy Of A Toy (1969), that initiated a series of wonderful albums for the Harvest label. Shooting At The Moon (featuring a new band, The Whole World, anchored by David Bedford and featuring a teenage Mike Oldfield), Whatevershebringswesing and Bananamour showcased Ayers as a romantic, sometimes rather louche bon viveur, forging a capricious path through an evolving late ‘60s and early ‘70s scene. His music was quintessentially English, always charming and often whimsical, but Ayers also had an unusually continental bent; he spent his later years in the south of France.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a6kslKx5Zdo

Commercial success generally proved to be just out of his reach, but Ayers’ albums continued to bewitch a devout band of fans. Perennially well-connected, he worked with Eno and Nico, slept with John Cale’s wife (Cale’s “Guts†is about Ayers) and mentored at least one guitar prodigy in Oldfield.

Towards the end of the decade, however, Ayers’ music suffered, and addiction further complicated an erratic career path through the ‘80s and ‘90s. After a 15-year hiatus, Ayers returned in 2007 with The Unfairground, a dazzling return to form that showcased his apparently languid brilliance while featuring contributions from old friends like Wyatt and Phil Manzanera. A younger generation of musicians, from bands like Teenage Fanclub, The Ladybug Transistor and Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci, also helped out, revealing that Ayers’ gentle take on psychedelia had proved covertly influential over the years.

The Unfairground proved to be Ayers’ last release, “largely concerned,†wrote Uncut’s Andy Gill, “with the passage of time, its songs reflecting lost loves, wrong turnings and missed opportunities. Which isn’t to say it’s in any way downbeat or depressing in tone: there’s an equanimity about the past that does Ayers credit, and may be due in part to the relaxed Mediterranean lifestyle he’s pursued for the past three decades…

“Ayers’ amenability shines through regardless, a wave of warmth that can lighten the heaviest soulâ€.

You can read Uncut’s Album By Album feature with Kevin here.

Kevin Ayers – Album By Album

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In the issue of Uncut dated December 2008 (Take 139), Kevin Ayers talked us through the making of some of his finest albums - including the Soft Machine’s debut, through his collaboration with Brian Eno, John Cale and Nico, his much-loved solo album Whatevershebringswesing, and more. Interview: J...

In the issue of Uncut dated December 2008 (Take 139), Kevin Ayers talked us through the making of some of his finest albums – including the Soft Machine’s debut, through his collaboration with Brian Eno, John Cale and Nico, his much-loved solo album Whatevershebringswesing, and more.

Interview: John Robinson

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Having been one of the architects of the “underground†while a member of Soft Machine, by 1969 Kevin Ayers had decided to follow a still more eccentric calling. Inspired by the endless possibilities of wine, women and song, Ayers embarked on a solo career as a writer of eccentric, uniquely charming music that is as inspirational as it is commercially undervalued. We meet him in his manager’s Notting Hill flat, a remarkably unscathed 64, his charm and his velvet jacket both apparently untouched by the passing time.

__________________

THE SOFT MACHINE

The Soft Machine

(1968) ABC Probe

Produced by Chas Chandler and Tom Wilson

The debut LP by one of the most influential groups of the “underground†era. After several demo sessions in London, the album is recorded in New York during a break in the band’s tour supporting the Jimi Hendrix Experience. Begins Ayers’ love/hate relationship with the music business.

We did demos in London with Joe Boyd, and Kim Fowley…a lot of weirdos. I think the reason Jimi Hendrix liked us as a band was that we were weirdos. We had a very strange combination of people if you think of the backgrounds, and also different musical and literary influences. We were never going to be a hit band… I think we knew that and other people knew it, too. We were sort of curios: all English, middle class, myself a colonial boy from Malaysia. There was this alleged Canterbury sound, which consisted of about seven people: Mike [Ratledge, organ] and Robert [Wyatt, drums] went to the same school, and I went to a ghastly boarding school after coming back from Malaysia. There was a real kindred spirit – Canterbury wasn’t a big town, we shared interests in jazz, in art, literature, all that stuff. We had a group called the Wilde Flowers, where we learned the basics, then gravitated towards my writing songs and [roadie, later bass player] Hugh Hopper writing songs. A guy called Daevid Allen [founder member/collaborator, who later formed Gong], who was a big influence on all our lives, wasn’t allowed back into the country because he was Australian, so we became the Soft Machine trio, and we did all the road work, up and down the M1, the M4, for nothing. But we did get the basis of a sound and an idea. A lot of people hated it at the time, the early Soft Machine [laughs]. It wasn’t yer pub band – you couldn’t dance around with your girlfriend. But it was the beginning of a movement which came to include Pink Floyd and the whole underground. It was totally unfamiliar ground. There wasn’t really a category for us, this bunch of weirdos. Soft Machine had a certain power, it didn’t fit in any slot. We ended up recording it in New York. And what a let-down that was. We had the guy [Tom Wilson] who did Dylan, and all he did was sit on the telephone and talk to his girlfriend while we played a live set. So there was no production whatsoever. It was one of the reasons I got out of Soft Machine. A top producer, a top studio…but no-one seems to give a fuck.

KEVIN AYERS

Joy Of A Toy

(1969) Harvest

Produced by Kevin Ayers and Peter Jenner

After his return from the Hendrix/Soft Machine tour in 1968, Ayers decides enough is enough with the band’s “pseudo jazz†and falls into a solo career. No hard feelings, thought: both Wyatt and Ratledge show up to play on Ayers’ solo debut.

There was no plan when I joined the Soft Machine, I just fell in with these people. And when I left, it wasn’t a bad break-up, at all, just a definite parting of the ways. Soft Machine had been like my family for quite a few years – there was no bad feeling; in fact I think they were probably quite happy to get rid of me, because they wanted to do something that I didn’t want to do. Basically, I’m a simple songwriter, I’m not a jazz musician, and the way they were going didn’t interest me – but it was amicable parting. The songs had been written for the Soft Machine, but really the title says it all: it was just fun to be able to work on my own thing, in my own way without other people’s advice or influence. It was something I had to do: I needed to do something to make a living and because I had my own ideas, which sometimes worked and sometimes didn’t. It’s mostly tongue in cheek, I never took myself or the business too seriously, but there’s a dark side as well as the light side, which is evident in the body of work. There are a lot of areas which go into the depths, and there are some very silly songs. At that time Harvest was unique, because they were a separate body from the massive EMI machine. They were a great team, they were keen and encouraging, and they basically reported back to the people in suits, and said “This is worth putting out…â€

KEVIN AYERS

Whatevershebringswesing

(1971) Harvest

Produced by Kevin Ayers and Andrew King

Ayers’ most commercially successful record, and arguably his best-loved. Contains the magnificent joy-waded-in-tears feel of the title track, and “O! Wot A Dreamâ€, his portrait of Syd Barrett.

Well, the most relevant line on that album is “Let’s drink some wine/And have a good time/But if you really want to come through/Let the good times have you…†That’s, basically, how I’ve lived my life, that’s my feeling about life. But there’s a contrast in those lines, something to think about. There’s wonderful bass playing, and wonderful guitar playing on that record by Mike Oldfield. There was no pressure back then to be part of a boy band, or talk about stuff that was fashionable. Syd Barrett was on one of the takes of a song called “Singing A Song In The Morning (Religious Experience)â€, people keep asking me where it is. Whether he’s there on the record, I don’t know, but he was definitely on the session, though he was losing it fast even by then. I’d never been any kind of close friend, but we’d played back-to-back at so many concerts in an era, the underground thing: I especially liked the first [Pink Floyd] album, which was basically just Syd. “O Wot A Dream†isn’t catering to anyone’s ideas, it’s entirely my fantasy, mostly dedicated to Syd, but also about the epoch: “I met you floating when I was boating…†that was very much of that time – you don’t have to make a big complicated song about it. The sandwich [“O! Wot A Dream suggests that when Barrett met Ayers the former offered the latter a sandwich]? The sandwich is poetic license.

KEVIN AYERS

Confessions Of Dr Dream

(1974) Island

Produced by Rupert Hine

Part written in the bathroom of his landlady, “Lady†June Campbell Cramer, this sees the beginning of Ayers’ collaboration with Patto guitarist Ollie Halsall, a partnership which Ayers describes as “like having a lover, musically speakingâ€. The collaboration endures until Halsall’s drug-related death in 1992.

I think Ollie Halsall is one of the most under-rated guitarists in the world – he played the shit out of people like Clapton, or Jeff Beck or whoever was the guitar hero of the time. The thing that was great about Ollie was that he was really adaptable: he could go from the simplest, gentlest song, really listen to the song, not just like a guitar player, but be really sensitive to a piece of music. But he could also be as hard a rocker as anyone. My favourite Ollie quote is: “There are only two people I’d play free for; that’s you and Randy Newman.†It was enduring collaboration: it was love at first solo. I asked him to play this solo, and pulled him out of the corridor to do, and I thought, “That’s my man…†At the time, I had a nice big house in Mallorca, and he and his girlfriend moved in with me – and we did a lot of work in and around Spain and various places. We had started collaborating and writing songs – after a while you get bored with yourself. It was like the musical equivalent of having a partner. We played in cafes; had fun. I don’t want to give anything away, really, but he started working with Spanish bands, because I didn’t have enough going on, and they were paying him loads. And he hated it, and he fell into bad ways… and died of it. Personally, it was a massive loss of a friend and a great talent.

KEVIN AYERS, JOHN CALE, NICO, BRIAN ENO

June 1, 1974

(1974) Island

Produced by Richard Williams

A record company-conceived live performance. Events around the show allegedly later lead Cale to write “Guts†(“The bugger in the short sleeves fucked my wife…â€) about Ayers.

“Yes, ACNE. They were all kindred spirits, but in very different directions. Personally, I would never have put that together: given the choice, they were not the people I would have chosen to do a concert with, because of the dissimilarity of our work and what we did. The only thing we really had in common was being on the same record company, and being from the same era, and being associated with the so-called underground. Otherwise I don’t think it was the best decision in the world. I prefer the idea of “peripheral†to “underground†– the kind of people who were never going to make middle of the road music or be on AM radio. We were always going to be on late night FM programmes. We were never going to be pop stars. It was conceived entirely by Island records, because we all happened to be on the label at the time. They thought that it would be a kind of launch for me as a megastar: they dressed me in silk suits and silver shoes and stuff like that, but I obviously wasn’t going to be that, and so I was dropped. There was a great guy there, Richard Williams who gave me a lot of support [and who produced this LP]. [Island records boss] Chris Blackwell was, I think, bemused, but they couldn’t find a category, even an image that was saleable couldn’t fit me in, so that stopped. I only had curio value.

LADY JUNE

Lady June’s Linguistic Leprosy

(1974) Caroline Records

Produced by David Vorhaus

Kevin and Brian Eno collaborate on a project that’s very much of the era, but very interesting: a set of songs by Ayers’ landlady, “Lady” June. Initially a limited edition, it was reissued in 2007.

She was my landlady when I was living in Maida Vale, and she wrote these very odd songs. She was an art groupie. She painted, she made things, and she never really got to where she wanted to be, but was very happy to be around people who were doing things in the biz, as it were, and she was happy to have us around. She gave us very good rates… the whole place, there was always something going on with musicians and painters and writers coming in. She couldn’t sing to save her life, but it was that time of weirdness, so myself and Brian Eno and several others took her in hand, basically and produced her album. I even wrote quite a lot of it in the end, the melodies, anyway, and Brian Eno did his things. Even the fact of calling herself “Lady June†is a fair indicator of her eccentricity, shall we say. I can’t tell you much more about her without being kiss and tell, which I don’t do. Not that that was actually involved with me – but I don’t like to give other people’s secrets away. She obviously had private money, had a very large flat in Maida Vale – my poor dead bass player Archie Leggett lived there at the same time, and Robert Wyatt fell out of the window in that place, and various other things. As I say, it was a labour of love doing the album. I wrote half a side of an album in her bathroom, which I called Confessions Of Doctor Dream. I used to drag my tape machine and guitar in there. It was the only place which had any soundproofing.

KEVIN AYERS

Sweet Deceiver

(1975) Island

Produced by Kevin Ayers and Ollie Halsall

Ayers is taken on, perhaps surprisingly, by the management company of John Reid, then custodian of Elton John. Elton plays on the album, a bizarre cover drawing is commissioned, but a critical backlash inexorably begins.

This had a very gay weighting, which isn’t me at all. Well, it was great that Elton played on the album. John Reid was a sweetie, really, but I think he just took me on as a pretty young boy, and totally missed the point of what I was doing, or just didn’t give a fuck. He farmed me out with this personal manager from one of his stock, and they were all sweet people, but they were all interested in being gay than getting on with the music or marketing me. I felt as if I’d been bought by this very rich and very powerful person in the business as a kind of token: he had Elton, he had Queen and he had many others. I don’t think he ever expected to make any money out of me; I think it was really a way of saying “We also have this in our catalogue…â€

KEVIN AYERS

The Unfairground

(2007) LOMAX

Produced by Kevin Ayers, Peter Henderson and Gary Olson

Ayers’ first album for 15 years – since the 1992 death of his guitarist and frequent collaborator Ollie Halsall. Alternative greats present – Norman Blake, Euros Childs – join Robert Wyatt and Phil Manzanera in helping to revive Ayers’ fortunes.

I was greatly assisted by [current manager] Tim Shepard, who pulled my socks up and said he was happy to arrange it. He found all these young guys and girls, and we talked about doing something that would revive interest in my previous work, which I think is a) good for my health, and b) hopefully will find some listeners beyond my basic fanbase. I was working in Belgium, doing a lot of live stuff, earning a living, but as you get older, it’s a bit more taxing on the body and brain. A guy called Joe had plucked me out of the depths of Deya, Mallorca, and inactivity, and bad health, and said “I’m taking you to work againâ€. I’d become too relaxed. I had a beautiful house, but I wasn’t making any money. I was in a bad state. Basically, he pulled me out of the pond that I’d fallen into. We made an album, but it wasn’t different enough, and that’s where Tim came in. It was good to meet up with all these people that I’d never worked with before – it was all new. I was amazed that there people out there…Teenage Fanclub, Euros Childs, and Candi Payne. The fact they were willing to come and play was really nice, to put it very simply. It was good to be functioning again, to feel useful, like you were doing your bit. We recorded in Arizona, in a studio which still has tubes, and I wrote a couple of songs then, but the songs had been on ice for a while. And so have I.

You can read our online obituary here.

“A folk singer with a cat”: Bob Dylan, Greenwich Village and the new Coen Brothers film

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I’ve been meaning to write about this for a week or so now, but pesky deadlines for next month’s issue of Uncut kept getting in the way. Anyway, here’s some thoughts on the trailer for the new Coen brothers film, Inside Llewyn Davis. It would, I think, be a gross understatement if I said that regular readers of Uncut might find something to pique their interest here. There’s the early Sixties Greenwich Village setting, for instance, and the use of a rare Bob Dylan cut on the trailer’s soundtrack (“Farewellâ€, originally recorded for The Times They Are a-Changin’ sessions). Although it might be a typical case of wilful misdirection on the part of the Coens, the story itself – about a young folk singer making his way round the New York folk scene – is apparently based on Dave Van Ronk’s memoir, The Mayor Of McDougal Street. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LFphYRyH7wc What we do know for sure, however, is that Llewyn Davis is played by a relative newcomer, Guatemalan actor and singer Oscar Isaac – you might remember him as Carey Mulligan’s husband in Drive. Despite the Coens’ claims Davis is based (to whatever degree) on Van Ronk, Dylan is everywhere in this trailer – and not just on the soundtrack. Davis appears to be wearing jacket in the trailer that’s a dead spit for the one Dylan’s wearing on the Freewheelin’… album cover. There’s a shot early on in the trailer where Davis crosses what looks like Jones Street, where the Freewheelin… album sleeve was shot. At any rate, according to this Tumblr site, the Coens seem to have done some filming there. Apart from Davis – “a folk singer with a cat†– we also get Carey Mulligan as Jean Berkley, whose role here suggests a conflation of Suze Rotolo and Mary Travers. You can also, very briefly, spot Justin Timberlake, as Jean’s singing partner and, from what I can deduce from the IMDB listing, her husband. More prominent in the trailer is John Goodman, sporting a fantastic haircut, and also F Murray Abraham, fresh from running black ops in Homeland. The soundtrack, predictably, seems to have been put together by regular Coens collaborator, T Bone Burnett - I read somewhere it'll include contributions from Timberlake (a potentially brilliant idea) and Carey Mulligan's other half, Marcus Mumford, which is admittedly less appealing. A little digging on the internet divulges that there was an early screening of the film a few weeks ago in the States, and it wouldn't surprise me if it didn't premier at Cannes in May - a regular festival haunt for the Coens, who've previously picked up seven nominations for the Palme d'Or. Anyway, enjoy the trailer.

I’ve been meaning to write about this for a week or so now, but pesky deadlines for next month’s issue of Uncut kept getting in the way. Anyway, here’s some thoughts on the trailer for the new Coen brothers film, Inside Llewyn Davis.

It would, I think, be a gross understatement if I said that regular readers of Uncut might find something to pique their interest here. There’s the early Sixties Greenwich Village setting, for instance, and the use of a rare Bob Dylan cut on the trailer’s soundtrack (“Farewellâ€, originally recorded for The Times They Are a-Changin’ sessions). Although it might be a typical case of wilful misdirection on the part of the Coens, the story itself – about a young folk singer making his way round the New York folk scene – is apparently based on Dave Van Ronk’s memoir, The Mayor Of McDougal Street.

What we do know for sure, however, is that Llewyn Davis is played by a relative newcomer, Guatemalan actor and singer Oscar Isaac – you might remember him as Carey Mulligan’s husband in Drive. Despite the Coens’ claims Davis is based (to whatever degree) on Van Ronk, Dylan is everywhere in this trailer – and not just on the soundtrack. Davis appears to be wearing jacket in the trailer that’s a dead spit for the one Dylan’s wearing on the Freewheelin’… album cover. There’s a shot early on in the trailer where Davis crosses what looks like Jones Street, where the Freewheelin… album sleeve was shot. At any rate, according to this Tumblr site, the Coens seem to have done some filming there.

Apart from Davis – “a folk singer with a cat†– we also get Carey Mulligan as Jean Berkley, whose role here suggests a conflation of Suze Rotolo and Mary Travers. You can also, very briefly, spot Justin Timberlake, as Jean’s singing partner and, from what I can deduce from the IMDB listing, her husband. More prominent in the trailer is John Goodman, sporting a fantastic haircut, and also F Murray Abraham, fresh from running black ops in Homeland.

The soundtrack, predictably, seems to have been put together by regular Coens collaborator, T Bone Burnett – I read somewhere it’ll include contributions from Timberlake (a potentially brilliant idea) and Carey Mulligan’s other half, Marcus Mumford, which is admittedly less appealing. A little digging on the internet divulges that there was an early screening of the film a few weeks ago in the States, and it wouldn’t surprise me if it didn’t premier at Cannes in May – a regular festival haunt for the Coens, who’ve previously picked up seven nominations for the Palme d’Or.

Anyway, enjoy the trailer.

The Eighth Uncut Playlist Of 2013: listen to Retribution Gospel Choir, Primal Scream, White Fence

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A recording of Kraftwerk’s “Trans-Europe Express†night at the Tate Modern seems to have fallen off the back of the internet this morning: genuinely not sure where one of my colleagues found it, before you ask. A nice end to this week’s selection, anyhow. Plenty to engage with here: I know and understand why Primal Scream probably get short shrift from many of you, but if it’s possible to circumnavigate the daftness, I really like “2013â€, more than anything since “XTRMNTRâ€. Kevin Shields and – possibly – James Chance involved, it seems. Check out the Alan Sparhawk/Nels Cline face-off embedded below, too. And wow, Steve Gunn… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Mark Kozelek – Like Rats (Caldo Verde) 2 Primal Scream – 2013 (First International) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LfPu5FQgFIU 3 Loom – I Get A Taste (Hate Hate Hate) 4 Charlie Parr – Barnswallow (Tin Angel) 5 James Blackshaw & Lubomyr Melnyk – The Watchers (Important) 6 White Fence –Pink Gorilla (Castleface) 7 Charlie Boyer & The Voyeurs – Things We Be (Heavenly) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VUbeV4q4G_Q 8 Zomes – Time Was (Thrill Jockey) 9 Steve Gunn – Time Off (Paradise Of Bachelors) 10 Elephant Micah – Elephant Micah - Globe Rush Progressions (Bluesanct) 11 Rangda/Dead C – Rangda/Dead C (Ba Da Bing) 12 Various Artists – Eccentric Soul: The Dynamic Label (Numero Group) 13 Retribution Gospel Choir with Nels Cline – New York Knitting Factory, February 12, 2013 (http://www.nyctaper.com/) 14 Phoenix – Bankrupt! (Atlantic) 15 Houndmouth – From The Hills Below The City (Rough Trade) 16 Mark Kozelek – Live At Phoenix Public House, Melbourne (Caldo Verde) 17 Mikal Cronin – MCII (Merge) 18 Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats – Mind Control (Rise Above) 19 Golden Gunn – Golden Gunn (Three Lobed Recordings) 20 Kraftwerk – London Tate Modern, February 8, 2013 (God knows where this came from…)

A recording of Kraftwerk’s “Trans-Europe Express†night at the Tate Modern seems to have fallen off the back of the internet this morning: genuinely not sure where one of my colleagues found it, before you ask.

A nice end to this week’s selection, anyhow. Plenty to engage with here: I know and understand why Primal Scream probably get short shrift from many of you, but if it’s possible to circumnavigate the daftness, I really like “2013â€, more than anything since “XTRMNTRâ€. Kevin Shields and – possibly – James Chance involved, it seems. Check out the Alan Sparhawk/Nels Cline face-off embedded below, too. And wow, Steve Gunn…

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

1 Mark Kozelek – Like Rats (Caldo Verde)

2 Primal Scream – 2013 (First International)

3 Loom – I Get A Taste (Hate Hate Hate)

4 Charlie Parr – Barnswallow (Tin Angel)

5 James Blackshaw & Lubomyr Melnyk – The Watchers (Important)

6 White Fence –Pink Gorilla (Castleface)

7 Charlie Boyer & The Voyeurs – Things We Be (Heavenly)

8 Zomes – Time Was (Thrill Jockey)

9 Steve Gunn – Time Off (Paradise Of Bachelors)

10 Elephant Micah – Elephant Micah – Globe Rush Progressions (Bluesanct)

11 Rangda/Dead C – Rangda/Dead C (Ba Da Bing)

12 Various Artists – Eccentric Soul: The Dynamic Label (Numero Group)

13 Retribution Gospel Choir with Nels Cline – New York Knitting Factory, February 12, 2013 (http://www.nyctaper.com/)

14 Phoenix – Bankrupt! (Atlantic)

15 Houndmouth – From The Hills Below The City (Rough Trade)

16 Mark Kozelek – Live At Phoenix Public House, Melbourne (Caldo Verde)

17 Mikal Cronin – MCII (Merge)

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

19 Golden Gunn – Golden Gunn (Three Lobed Recordings)

20 Kraftwerk – London Tate Modern, February 8, 2013 (God knows where this came from…)

Suede announce brand new single and intimate London gig

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Suede have announced details of a new single and intimate London show. The band will release the track 'It Starts And Ends With You' – which you can listen to below – to coincide with the release of their new album 'Bloodsports' on March 18. The track follows 'Barriers', which you can hear on ...

Suede have announced details of a new single and intimate London show.

The band will release the track ‘It Starts And Ends With You’ – which you can listen to below – to coincide with the release of their new album ‘Bloodsports’ on March 18. The track follows ‘Barriers’, which you can hear on Suede’s official website.

The band have also announced that they will play an intimate show at The Barfly in Camden on March 4 for XFM, which they will follow-up with a big London show at Alexandra Palace on March 30.

Speaking about the new Suede material, frontman Brett Anderson told NME previously: “The album is called ‘Bloodsports’. It’s about lust, it’s about the chase, it’s about the endless carnal game of love. It was possibly the hardest we ever made but certainly is the most satisfying. Its 10 furious songs have reclaimed for me what Suede was always about: drama, melody and noise.”

The tracklisting to ‘Bloodsports’ is as follows:

‘Barriers’

‘Snowblind’

‘It Starts And Ends With You’

‘Sabotage’

‘For The Strangers’

‘Hit Me’

‘Sometimes I Feel I’ll Float Away’

‘What Are You Not Telling Me?’

‘Always’

‘Faultlines’

Jack White named Record Store Day ambassador

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Jack White has been named the official ambassador for Record Store Day 2013. The former frontman of The White Stripes has been named as the figurehead of the celebration of independent record shops thanks to the fact that he not only makes records, but also owns a record store and a record label: h...

Jack White has been named the official ambassador for Record Store Day 2013.

The former frontman of The White Stripes has been named as the figurehead of the celebration of independent record shops thanks to the fact that he not only makes records, but also owns a record store and a record label: his Nashville based Third Man Records.

This year’s Record Store Day takes place on April 20. Speaking about his role as ambassador, White said in a statement: We need to re-educate ourselves about human interaction and the difference between downloading a track on a computer and talking to other people in person and getting turned onto music that you can hold in your hands and share with others.

He continued: “As Record Store Day Ambassador of 2013 I’m proud to help in any way I can to invigorate whoever will listen with the idea that there is beauty and romance in the act of visiting a record shop and getting turned on to something new that could change the way they look at the world, other people, art, and ultimately, themselves.”

Read White’s full statement at Recordstoreday.com

A host of artists will be putting out special releases in order to celebrate Record Store Day.

Nick Cave on Grinderman reunion: ‘Every other shitty band is doing it, why not someone who’s good’

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Nick Cave has spoken about reforming Grinderman in order to play the Coachella Valley Festival of Music and Arts in California this April. Cave took to Twitter on Tuesday in order to answer questions from fans. When asked why Grinderman were getting back together after splitting in 2011, Cave resp...

Nick Cave has spoken about reforming Grinderman in order to play the Coachella Valley Festival of Music and Arts in California this April.

Cave took to Twitter on Tuesday in order to answer questions from fans. When asked why Grinderman were getting back together after splitting in 2011, Cave responded: “Every other shitty band is doing it, why not someone who’s actually good.”

In December 2011 Nick Cave announced that Grinderman were “over” at the Meredith Music Festival in Victoria, Australia. He said: “See you all in another 10 years when we’ll be even older and uglier.”

The quartet – comprised of members of The Bad Seeds – released two albums; a self-titled debut in 2007 and a follow up, Grinderman 2, in 2010.

During the online Q&A session, Cave was asked which of his own songs he was proudest of and named, “Jack The Ripper“, from the Bad Seeds’ 1992 album Henry’s Dream. He added: “My favorite album is Nocturama mostly because everybody hates it, someone’s gotta look out for it.”

He explained that “I’m a songwriter, a story teller and hence a voyeur and that’s what all my songs are about” and also spoke about the impact of drugs on his creativity, writing: “Early period, largely positive. Middle period, more problematic. Late period, total destruction.”

Many of his answers were tongue in cheek. When asked about the Wikipedia reference on new track ‘We Real Cool’, he said of the website: “I love it beyond measure, I’m a Wikipediaphile.” He was also asked if was as morose as he seems and responded: “you have no fucking idea. Morose? I’m just getting started.”

When quizzed about his moustache, he said he got rid of it as “my wife thought it was like kissing a doormat”. He then revealed the identity of the naked woman on the Dominique Issermann-shot cover of new album Push The Sky Away to be his wife, Susie Bick.

Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds’ show at the Los Angeles Fonda Theatre on February 21 will be streamed via the Rockfeedback YouTube channel and Spotify. Cave said of his decision to livestream the concert: “Well, we have little kiddies and an orchestra. It’s going to be awesome and we’ve decided to share it with the world.”

Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds recently announced plans for an autumn tour of the UK. The band will play five shows as part of a larger European tour, starting at London Hammersmith Apollo on October 26 and playing the same venue on the following day. They will then visit Manchester Apollo (October 30), Glasgow Barrowland (October 31) and Edinburgh Usher Hall (November 1).

Uncut at The Great Escape with Phosphorescent and Allah-Las

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In his memoir, Prince Among Stones: That Business With The Rolling Stones And Other Adventures, which I’ve just reviewed for the next Uncut, Prince Rupert Loewenstein, who was the band’s financial adviser for nearly 40 years, reflects at one point about how time as he gets older has started, as they say, to fly. Thinking about this, he is reminded of a famous quote by the grand old thespian, John Gielgud, who wryly remarked that in his old age time had started to speed by at such a pace that it seemed like breakfast was being served every 10 minutes. I rather think I know how Sir John must have felt, although in a more general sense perhaps than being brought bran muffins and warm tea on a bedside tray by a doting manservant with The Times tucked under his arm, which you sense is how the great actor may have started his day. What I mean, I guess, is that it barely seems possible it will soon be a year since we were last in Brighton for the annual Great Escape Festival, but here it comes again, galloping over the horizon at a fair old clip. This year’s festival runs for three days between May 16 and 18, and once again Uncut will have its own stage, I think at the Pavilion Theatre, where you will have found us for the last few years. You may already have seen on www.uncut.co.uk that the first two acts confirmed to appear under the Uncut banner are The Allah-Las and Phosphorescent (pictured above). This was news I must say that especially cheered me, as I’m a big fan of both. The Allah-Las were terrific when they played London in December and the new Phosphorescent album, Muchacho, is tremendous. Ahead of its release I was recently in New York for a few days to interview Matthew Houck for a feature in the next Uncut. We spent a Sunday afternoon and early evening at the Bowery Hotel, running up quite a bar bill, as Matthew was drinking his way out of a hangover. At the rate he was knocking them back by the end of the interview he probably woke up with another one the next day, which may not have been how he intended to start his week, which I hope wasn’t ruined or otherwise compromised by our carefree carousing. There are more details of the line-ups for the three Uncut Great Escape shows in next month’s issue, which will be on sale from the end of next week. Sorry I can’t give away any more here, but suffice to say, it’s our strongest festival bill yet. Early bird tickets for the concert and conference are £45 and £145 respectively and can be found on the Great Escape website. Have a good week. Allan Phosphorescent pic: Pieter M Van Hattem

In his memoir, Prince Among Stones: That Business With The Rolling Stones And Other Adventures, which I’ve just reviewed for the next Uncut, Prince Rupert Loewenstein, who was the band’s financial adviser for nearly 40 years, reflects at one point about how time as he gets older has started, as they say, to fly. Thinking about this, he is reminded of a famous quote by the grand old thespian, John Gielgud, who wryly remarked that in his old age time had started to speed by at such a pace that it seemed like breakfast was being served every 10 minutes.

I rather think I know how Sir John must have felt, although in a more general sense perhaps than being brought bran muffins and warm tea on a bedside tray by a doting manservant with The Times tucked under his arm, which you sense is how the great actor may have started his day. What I mean, I guess, is that it barely seems possible it will soon be a year since we were last in Brighton for the annual Great Escape Festival, but here it comes again, galloping over the horizon at a fair old clip.

This year’s festival runs for three days between May 16 and 18, and once again Uncut will have its own stage, I think at the Pavilion Theatre, where you will have found us for the last few years. You may already have seen on www.uncut.co.uk that the first two acts confirmed to appear under the Uncut banner are The Allah-Las and Phosphorescent (pictured above). This was news I must say that especially cheered me, as I’m a big fan of both.

The Allah-Las were terrific when they played London in December and the new Phosphorescent album, Muchacho, is tremendous. Ahead of its release I was recently in New York for a few days to interview Matthew Houck for a feature in the next Uncut. We spent a Sunday afternoon and early evening at the Bowery Hotel, running up quite a bar bill, as Matthew was drinking his way out of a hangover. At the rate he was knocking them back by the end of the interview he probably woke up with another one the next day, which may not have been how he intended to start his week, which I hope wasn’t ruined or otherwise compromised by our carefree carousing.

There are more details of the line-ups for the three Uncut Great Escape shows in next month’s issue, which will be on sale from the end of next week. Sorry I can’t give away any more here, but suffice to say, it’s our strongest festival bill yet.

Early bird tickets for the concert and conference are £45 and £145 respectively and can be found on the Great Escape website.

Have a good week.

Allan

Phosphorescent pic: Pieter M Van Hattem

Bruce Springsteen adds Leeds show to July UK tour dates

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Bruce Springsteen has added a new date to the UK leg of his Wrecking Ball Tour. He will play at the brand new Leeds Arena on July 24, his first indoor UK performance since 2007. The Leeds date will be this tour’s fourth UK date Springsteen, immediately preceded by nights in London, Glasgow and C...

Bruce Springsteen has added a new date to the UK leg of his Wrecking Ball Tour.

He will play at the brand new Leeds Arena on July 24, his first indoor UK performance since 2007.

The Leeds date will be this tour’s fourth UK date Springsteen, immediately preceded by nights in London, Glasgow and Coventry all announced last year.

The Arena was not slated to host its first act until a September grand opening performance by Elton John. Venue staff and city council members still consider that show to be the official launch, with the Springsteen concert acting as a preview.

“The team is ecstatic that an artist of this sheer calibre will be providing all of us with, what is effectively, a big dress rehearsal for the arena for its opening season,†said Leeds Arena Director Tony Watson.

Councilman Keith Wakefield, leader of the Leeds City Council, said, “This is an unexpected but very welcome announcement. To hear that the arena’s appeal is such that the advance actually came from Bruce Springsteen’s people is incredibly exciting. Leeds has waited a long time to welcome him back since his legendary 1985 Roundhay Park concert.â€

Tickets are available priced £65 at the Leeds Arena website leeds-arena.com, by phone at 0844 248 1585 or in person, at the pop-up box office at Leeds Town Hall.

Terrence Malick’s To The Wonder

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It’s an odd week to release a film, I guess, as no one’s entirely paying attention. The usual brouhaha surrounding this coming Sunday’s Oscars ceremony has been chewing up a lot of film content in magazines and on websites, while elsewhere the internet seems preoccupied with Star Wars spin-offs, Star Trek and Sin City posters and whether or not Sam Mendes will direct the next Bond film. Of the films coming out this week in the UK, many offer a very specific respite from the Oscar chat. Apart from a Guillermo del Toro produced horror movie, Mama, and the Wachowski’s $100 million art film Cloud Atlas, there’s a zombie film shot in Yorkshire (Before Dawn), a documentary about Yoga (Breath Of The Gods) and an Indian crime film (Gangs Of Wasseypur). The best of the lot, though, is To The Wonder – Terrence Malick’s latest, which arrives with little hoo-ha. This is Malick’s third film since The Thin Red Line 15 years ago, and it feels as if with each new film the tremendous amounts of goodwill Malick accrued during his 20-year absence is gradually diminishing. 2005’s The New World lustrous retelling of the Pocahontas story came and went inside a week. Tree Of Life – in fact, quite a sharp story about a father and son – was roundly chastised for Malick’s unfashionable views on God and religion. Presumably, To The Wonder isn’t likely to win Malick any new fans. That said, it’s stuck with me rather stubbornly in the month or so since I saw it. “We climbed the steps to the Wonder,†says Olga Kuylenko in whispered voiceover, as she and boyfriend Ben Affleck walk into the grounds of the monastery located on top of Mont Saint-Michel. Everything is bathed in a soft, blue-grey light as Malick’s camera follows the lovers walking through the grounds, Kuylenko gently running a hand across the top of a hedge of box trees, before they stop to marvel at a rose in bloom. As with Tree Of Life, To The Wonder is unashamedly a film about religion and love, framed within the confines of a smaller, more intimate story. Malick’s film follows Neil (Affleck) and Marina (Kuylenko) as they drift in and out of love, first in Paris and then in Malick’s hometown of Bartlesville, Oklahoma, a place of wide-open skies, seemingly caught in endless summer twilight. Neil is practical, if remote; Marina is “a little dreamer.†A second thread follows Javier Bardem’s Father Quintana as he experiences a crisis of faith. This strand, as Quintana ministers to the sick and poor of Bartlesville, feels the least satisfactory. Even for a film as airy as this, there's little to anchor Quintana to the main narrative. As is his wont, Malick cut a lot of footage (and performances from Jessica Chastain, Rachel Weisz, Michael Sheen and Barry Pepper) from the finished film, and I wonder whether there are specific linking scenes Malick thought fit to lose that might actually have served to connect the two storylines more explicitly. The narrative – as slight as it is – drifts by in a series of loosely connected montages, as serene and graceful as you’d expect from Malick. This is an experimental art film, beautifully shot using natural light, with Malick’s camera in a state of constant movement, catching scenes of natural beauty but also finding something to marvel at in more mundane events; Malick turns a trip to the local supermarket into cinematic rhapsody. At times, though, it veers towards self-parody. “Where are we when we’re there?†asks one character in voiceover. “Stop being so serious,†admonishes another, advice Malick himself could perhaps have done with. To The Wonder opens in the UK on Friday, February 22

It’s an odd week to release a film, I guess, as no one’s entirely paying attention. The usual brouhaha surrounding this coming Sunday’s Oscars ceremony has been chewing up a lot of film content in magazines and on websites, while elsewhere the internet seems preoccupied with Star Wars spin-offs, Star Trek and Sin City posters and whether or not Sam Mendes will direct the next Bond film.

Of the films coming out this week in the UK, many offer a very specific respite from the Oscar chat. Apart from a Guillermo del Toro produced horror movie, Mama, and the Wachowski’s $100 million art film Cloud Atlas, there’s a zombie film shot in Yorkshire (Before Dawn), a documentary about Yoga (Breath Of The Gods) and an Indian crime film (Gangs Of Wasseypur).

The best of the lot, though, is To The Wonder – Terrence Malick’s latest, which arrives with little hoo-ha. This is Malick’s third film since The Thin Red Line 15 years ago, and it feels as if with each new film the tremendous amounts of goodwill Malick accrued during his 20-year absence is gradually diminishing. 2005’s The New World lustrous retelling of the Pocahontas story came and went inside a week. Tree Of Life – in fact, quite a sharp story about a father and son – was roundly chastised for Malick’s unfashionable views on God and religion. Presumably, To The Wonder isn’t likely to win Malick any new fans. That said, it’s stuck with me rather stubbornly in the month or so since I saw it.

“We climbed the steps to the Wonder,†says Olga Kuylenko in whispered voiceover, as she and boyfriend Ben Affleck walk into the grounds of the monastery located on top of Mont Saint-Michel. Everything is bathed in a soft, blue-grey light as Malick’s camera follows the lovers walking through the grounds, Kuylenko gently running a hand across the top of a hedge of box trees, before they stop to marvel at a rose in bloom. As with Tree Of Life, To The Wonder is unashamedly a film about religion and love, framed within the confines of a smaller, more intimate story. Malick’s film follows Neil (Affleck) and Marina (Kuylenko) as they drift in and out of love, first in Paris and then in Malick’s hometown of Bartlesville, Oklahoma, a place of wide-open skies, seemingly caught in endless summer twilight. Neil is practical, if remote; Marina is “a little dreamer.â€

A second thread follows Javier Bardem’s Father Quintana as he experiences a crisis of faith. This strand, as Quintana ministers to the sick and poor of Bartlesville, feels the least satisfactory. Even for a film as airy as this, there’s little to anchor Quintana to the main narrative. As is his wont, Malick cut a lot of footage (and performances from Jessica Chastain, Rachel Weisz, Michael Sheen and Barry Pepper) from the finished film, and I wonder whether there are specific linking scenes Malick thought fit to lose that might actually have served to connect the two storylines more explicitly.

The narrative – as slight as it is – drifts by in a series of loosely connected montages, as serene and graceful as you’d expect from Malick. This is an experimental art film, beautifully shot using natural light, with Malick’s camera in a state of constant movement, catching scenes of natural beauty but also finding something to marvel at in more mundane events; Malick turns a trip to the local supermarket into cinematic rhapsody.

At times, though, it veers towards self-parody. “Where are we when we’re there?†asks one character in voiceover. “Stop being so serious,†admonishes another, advice Malick himself could perhaps have done with.

To The Wonder opens in the UK on Friday, February 22