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Judd Apatow’s This Is 40

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Since Judd Apatow inherited the mantle of Hollywood’s king of comedy, one of the criticisms most frequently levied at him involves his willingness to promote those closest to him. His CV – longer than you’d think, stretching back to the mid-Nineties – is heavy with projects he’s shepherded by friends and protégés. With This Is 40, it seems Judd Apatow is now pimping not only his own wife and daughters, but he’s also mining his home life for laffs. This Is 40 finds filmmaker Judd Apatow reconnecting with characters from his 2007 film, Knocked Up. Principally, married couple, Pete (Paul Rudd) and Debbie (Leslie Mann; Apatow’s wife), who are both reaching 40 in varying states of denial. Pete runs a small record label – his sole signing are the reformed Graham Parker And The Rumour – while Debbie owns a boutique. They have two children, Sadie and Charlotte (Apatow’s own daughters, Maude and Iris) and live in a bright, airy home in the LA suburbs. “We’re at the point where everything we say annoys each other, it’s a blast,†Pete confesses. They are evasive. Pete sits in the toilet playing games on his iPad at any given opportunity. Debbie smokes cigarettes wearing rubber gloves and with her hair in a towel, to avoid smelling of smoke. Around them, there is other shit. A employee is stealing from Debbie’s boutique, while both Pete and Debbie are stuck with awful, awful fathers (Albert Brooks and John Lithgow). At their worst, these characters appear shallow and immature, and it’s not entirely clear how they can afford a lifestyle that includes personal trainers, estate cars and original John Lennon art from their salaries (which in Pete’s case is negligible). Interviewed in today’s Time Out, Apatow is keen to put some distance between his characters and his real domestic situation. “The story is made up,†he says. “Really it’s more about our anxieties. We worry about being good parents to the point of making our kids crazy. We try to change each other when we should be trying to change ourselves. Working with Leslie on this movie was like very expensive therapy.†One of the director’s favoured tropes is the idea of prolonged adolescence; it’s certainly telling that when Pete and Debbie finally get away from their kids for a weekend break, they choose to get stoned on hash cakes and stuff themselves on junk food. At close to two and a half hours, it feels very long for a comedy, but it’s hard to know what to cut. The film hangs together well, and even digressive cameos from members of Apatow’s stock company like Jason Siegel and Chris O’Dowd don’t feel entirely gratuitous. But Apatow’s focus is very much the plight of Pete and Debbie, and by extension it addresses universal issues about people in their 40s who had children while they were relatively young. This Is 40 opens in the UK this Friday

Since Judd Apatow inherited the mantle of Hollywood’s king of comedy, one of the criticisms most frequently levied at him involves his willingness to promote those closest to him.

His CV – longer than you’d think, stretching back to the mid-Nineties – is heavy with projects he’s shepherded by friends and protégés. With This Is 40, it seems Judd Apatow is now pimping not only his own wife and daughters, but he’s also mining his home life for laffs.

This Is 40 finds filmmaker Judd Apatow reconnecting with characters from his 2007 film, Knocked Up. Principally, married couple, Pete (Paul Rudd) and Debbie (Leslie Mann; Apatow’s wife), who are both reaching 40 in varying states of denial. Pete runs a small record label – his sole signing are the reformed Graham Parker And The Rumour – while Debbie owns a boutique. They have two children, Sadie and Charlotte (Apatow’s own daughters, Maude and Iris) and live in a bright, airy home in the LA suburbs. “We’re at the point where everything we say annoys each other, it’s a blast,†Pete confesses. They are evasive. Pete sits in the toilet playing games on his iPad at any given opportunity. Debbie smokes cigarettes wearing rubber gloves and with her hair in a towel, to avoid smelling of smoke. Around them, there is other shit. A employee is stealing from Debbie’s boutique, while both Pete and Debbie are stuck with awful, awful fathers (Albert Brooks and John Lithgow). At their worst, these characters appear shallow and immature, and it’s not entirely clear how they can afford a lifestyle that includes personal trainers, estate cars and original John Lennon art from their salaries (which in Pete’s case is negligible).

Interviewed in today’s Time Out, Apatow is keen to put some distance between his characters and his real domestic situation. “The story is made up,†he says. “Really it’s more about our anxieties. We worry about being good parents to the point of making our kids crazy. We try to change each other when we should be trying to change ourselves. Working with Leslie on this movie was like very expensive therapy.â€

One of the director’s favoured tropes is the idea of prolonged adolescence; it’s certainly telling that when Pete and Debbie finally get away from their kids for a weekend break, they choose to get stoned on hash cakes and stuff themselves on junk food. At close to two and a half hours, it feels very long for a comedy, but it’s hard to know what to cut. The film hangs together well, and even digressive cameos from members of Apatow’s stock company like Jason Siegel and Chris O’Dowd don’t feel entirely gratuitous. But Apatow’s focus is very much the plight of Pete and Debbie, and by extension it addresses universal issues about people in their 40s who had children while they were relatively young.

This Is 40 opens in the UK this Friday

Kurt Vile announces release of new album ‘Wakin On A Pretty Daze’

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Kurt Vile has announced the release of his fifth solo album, which is set to be called 'Wakin On A Pretty Daze'. The follow-up to 2011's 'Smoke Ring For My Halo', will come out via Matador on April 8. The album was produced by John Agnello. Vile recently told Spin that the record sounds like Flee...

Kurt Vile has announced the release of his fifth solo album, which is set to be called ‘Wakin On A Pretty Daze’.

The follow-up to 2011’s ‘Smoke Ring For My Halo’, will come out via Matador on April 8.

The album was produced by John Agnello. Vile recently told Spin that the record sounds like Fleetwood Mac’s ‘Tusk’.

“It’s totally our ‘Tusk’, but no cheese. Just rock,” he said of the album, which features guest appearances from Farmer Dave Scher of Beachwood Sparks and Stella Mozgawa of Warpaint.

“You turn it on and it sounds like me. But the guitar playing is better and the ideas are new. It’s classic, it’s epic, with many more solos,” he added.

Kurt Vile will play Field Day in London on May 25 with The Violators.

The ‘Wakin On A Pretty Daze’ tracklisting is:

‘Wakin On A Pretty Day’

‘KV Crimes’

‘Was All Talk’

‘Girl Called Alex’

‘Never Run Away’

‘Pure Pain’

‘Too Hard’

‘Shame Chamber’

‘Snowflakes Are Dancing’

‘Air Bud’

‘Goldtone’

Brian Wilson says ‘no’ to another Beach Boys reunion

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Brian Wilson has said that he doubts there will be another reunion of The Beach Boys. Wilson was speaking on Sunday (February 10) at the Grammy Awards in Los Angeles. When asked about the possibility of a reunion - following last year's 50th anniversary tour dates and the release of a brand new alb...

Brian Wilson has said that he doubts there will be another reunion of The Beach Boys.

Wilson was speaking on Sunday (February 10) at the Grammy Awards in Los Angeles. When asked about the possibility of a reunion – following last year’s 50th anniversary tour dates and the release of a brand new album ‘That’s Why God Made The Radio’ – Wilson told the press room: “No, I don’t think so. Doubt it.”

Last year Mike Love fell out with the remaining band members. In October, Love defended his plans to continue touring under the Beach Boys name without the other members of the group in an open letter published by the LA Times.

Love wrote: “I did not fire Brian Wilson from the Beach Boys. I cannot fire Brian Wilson from the Beach Boys. I am not his employer. I do not have such authority. And even if I did, I would never fire Brian Wilson from the Beach Boys. I love Brian Wilson.”

Wilson then responded with a letter in the same publication, writing: “by Mike not wanting or letting Al, David and me tour with the band, it sort of feels like we’re being fired.”

He added: “While I appreciate the nice cool things Mike said about me in his letter, and I do and always will love him as my cousin and bandmate, at the same time I’m still left wondering why he doesn’t want to continue this great trip we’re on. Al and I want to keep going because we believe we owe it to the music.”

The deluxe box set of ‘The Smile Sessions’ recently won the Grammy Award for Best Historical Album. Wilson called the win “a great honour.”

Ravi Shankar’s posthumous Lifetime Achievement Grammy accepted by Norah Jones

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Ravi Shankar's posthumous Lifetime Achievement Grammy Award was accepted by his daughters at a pre-Grammy event in Los Angeles on Saturday (February 9). Anoushka Shankar, a gifted sitar-player herself, and award-winning singer Norah Jones, accepted the award on behalf of their late father at a cere...

Ravi Shankar’s posthumous Lifetime Achievement Grammy Award was accepted by his daughters at a pre-Grammy event in Los Angeles on Saturday (February 9).

Anoushka Shankar, a gifted sitar-player herself, and award-winning singer Norah Jones, accepted the award on behalf of their late father at a ceremony at the Wilshire Ebell Theatre in California.

Speaking about her father, who passed away on December 11 2012, Nora Jones said: “We know he was very excited to be receiving this award. We really miss him. He lived and breathed music. He was tapping out rhythms on the breakfast table and making me do five over seven…I am still trying to get it. We are very happy to accept the award for him.”

Her sister, Anoushka Shankar, added: “It was 60 days ago today that he passed away. It’s kind of difficult to be standing up here, like Norah said, I am thrilled that he knew about this award before he passed away at least. But I wish we weren’t standing up here for him.”

Other recipients of the Lifetime Achievement Award in 2013 were singer-songwriter Carole King, the late pianist Glenn Gould, jazz musician Charlie Haden, the late blues musician Lightnin’ Hopkins, singer Patti Page and Motown group The Temptations.

Bruce Springsteen discusses autobiography and unreleased country album

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Bruce Springsteen has spoken out about his long mooted autobiography, saying that there doesn't seem to be an 'urgency' to return to writing it. Speaking to Grammy.com ahead of the 2013 MusiCares Person of the Year gala, where he was honoured with a tribute concert featuring performances from Mumfo...

Bruce Springsteen has spoken out about his long mooted autobiography, saying that there doesn’t seem to be an ‘urgency’ to return to writing it.

Speaking to Grammy.com ahead of the 2013 MusiCares Person of the Year gala, where he was honoured with a tribute concert featuring performances from Mumford and Sons, Neil Young, Patti Smith, Alabama Shakes, Elton John, Sting and Eddie Vedder and more, he said of his memoir “I got some stuff I’ve worked on, but I don’t have anything fixed. I worked on it for a while, then the music came along and the tour came along. There doesn’t seem to be an urgency to return to it at the moment. It’ll present itself and I’ll see what happens.”

Springsteen also revealed that he has recorded a country album which he hasn’t released. He said: “A while back, I recorded a country record and put it aside. I returned to it a couple of months ago and thought, ‘What am I going to do next?'”

The gala was hosted by The Daily Show comedian Jon Stewart. The all-star show celebrated Springsteen, who was named as MusiCares Person of the Year for his combination of artistic contributions and charity work.

Previous MusiCares Person of the Year winners include Gloria Estefan, Phil Collins, Elton John, Bono and Barbra Streisand.

Bruce Springsteen is set to play a number of UK and Ireland dates this summer as part of his European tour. He will play London’s Wembley Stadium on June 15, Glasgow Hampden Park on June 18 and Coventry Ricoh Arena on June 20.

The Boss will then visit mainland Europe before travelling to Ireland to play Limerick Thomond Park on July 16, Cork Páirc Uí Chaoimh on July 18 and Belfast King’s Hall on July 20.

Fleetwood Mac add extra London dates to UK tour

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Fleetwood Mac have announced details of two new dates at London's O2 Arena on their forthcoming UK tour. The band will now play The O2 on September 25 and 27 in addition to the previously announced date of September 24 due to huge demand for the shows. Tickets for Fleetwood Mac's UK and Ireland to...

Fleetwood Mac have announced details of two new dates at London’s O2 Arena on their forthcoming UK tour.

The band will now play The O2 on September 25 and 27 in addition to the previously announced date of September 24 due to huge demand for the shows. Tickets for Fleetwood Mac’s UK and Ireland tour went on sale this morning (February 8) priced between £50 and £140.

Speaking about UK tour dates, drummer Mick Fleetwood recently said: “We’re doing a big world tour that starts in April. We’re coming here [the UK] in September, October and maybe a bit longer. We’re doing a lot of work here so we are coming.” The drummer also revealed that there is a new Fleetwood Mac album in the pipeline and that new songs will be released online in the coming months.

The band were rumored to be making their debut appearance on the Pyramid Stage at this years’ Glastonbury Festival, however a string of US dates announced over the same weekend makes this seem unlikely.

Fleetwood Mac will play:

Dublin 02 (September 20)

London O2 Arena (24, 25, 27)

Birmingham LG Arena (29)

Manchester Arena (October 1)

Glasgow The Hydro (3)

Hitchcock

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Hitchcock arrives, rather inconveniently, two months after the superior BBC/HBO co-production The Girl, which cast Toby Jones as a deadpan, ruthless Hitch and Sienna Miller as Tippi Hedron, the blonde star of The Birds and Marnie who endured his abuse. Hitchcock takes place three years before the e...

Hitchcock arrives, rather inconveniently, two months after the superior BBC/HBO co-production The Girl, which cast Toby Jones as a deadpan, ruthless Hitch and Sienna Miller as Tippi Hedron, the blonde star of The Birds and Marnie who endured his abuse.

Hitchcock takes place three years before the events in The Girl, and covers the shooting of Psycho. Instead of the predatory and vengeful Toby Jones, we have Anthony Hopkins lumbering around in a fat suit, pate shaved, facial prosthetics in place. He captures the director’s rotund profile; but for some reason he sounds a lot like Michael Caine. Anthony Hopkins is at his best when playing Anthony Hopkins; he is not the kind of actor to immerse himself in a part or, as he is called upon here, to play a real person.

In The Girl, Hitch’s long-suffering wife Alma was played with a flinty stoicism by Imelda Staunton; here she is played by Helen Mirren, flirting with Danny Huston’s rakish writer. This is the Hollywoodisation of Hitchcock: a weightless, making of story. Hitch wants to make Psycho; the studio want North By Northwest II instead. Hitch gambles the house; we know, of course, that he wins. So where’s the drama? There’s none of the chewy subtext, the sexual obsession, of The Girl; certainly, Hitch doesn’t visit any lecherous intent on Scarlett Johansson’s Janet Leigh. Most peculiarly, Hitchcock finds himself in fantasy sequences with Ed Gein, the serial killer who inspired Psycho’s Norman Bates.

Michael Bonner

Warner Music Group buys Parlophone for £487 million

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Warner Music Group has bought the Parlophone record label for £487 million. Universal Music has sold the home of Blur, Coldplay and Pink Floyd to Warners, who have said that they will be paying in cash for the label, which used to be part of EMI Music. Universal took over EMI in September of last year, but had to sell some of the company's assets in order to take care of concerns about competition, reports BBC News. Last year's sale made Universal the world's largest record label, with a 30% market share. The sale of Parlophone, as well as the Mute label was agreed upon with EU and US antitrust authorities. However, The Beatles, who are part of Parlophone, have not been included in the deal, but the sale does include the Chrysalis and Ensign labels. Len Blavatnik, chairman of industrial group Access Industries, who own Warners, has said: "This is a very important milestone for Warner Music, reflecting our commitment to artist development by strengthening our worldwide roster, global footprint and executive talent."

Warner Music Group has bought the Parlophone record label for £487 million.

Universal Music has sold the home of Blur, Coldplay and Pink Floyd to Warners, who have said that they will be paying in cash for the label, which used to be part of EMI Music.

Universal took over EMI in September of last year, but had to sell some of the company’s assets in order to take care of concerns about competition, reports BBC News.

Last year’s sale made Universal the world’s largest record label, with a 30% market share. The sale of Parlophone, as well as the Mute label was agreed upon with EU and US antitrust authorities.

However, The Beatles, who are part of Parlophone, have not been included in the deal, but the sale does include the Chrysalis and Ensign labels.

Len Blavatnik, chairman of industrial group Access Industries, who own Warners, has said: “This is a very important milestone for Warner Music, reflecting our commitment to artist development by strengthening our worldwide roster, global footprint and executive talent.”

David Bowie and Iggy Pop’s Berlin years to be made into film biopic ‘Lust For Life’

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David Bowie and Iggy Pop's Berlin years are set to be made into a big-screen biopic titled 'Lust For Life'. The pair's legendary collaborative years in 1970s West Berlin, which led to Bowie's trilogy of albums 'Low', 'Heroes' and 'Lodger' and Pop's 'The Idiot' and 'Lust For Life' will be captured ...

David Bowie and Iggy Pop’s Berlin years are set to be made into a big-screen biopic titled ‘Lust For Life’.

The pair’s legendary collaborative years in 1970s West Berlin, which led to Bowie’s trilogy of albums ‘Low’, ‘Heroes’ and ‘Lodger’ and Pop’s ‘The Idiot’ and ‘Lust For Life’ will be captured in the film, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

British producers Altered Image have teamed up with Berlin-based Egoli Tossell Film to co-produce the biopic. Gabriel Range (Death Of A President) is reported to be directing the film with Robin French – wro write BBC comedy Cuckoo lined up to write the screenplay.

“[Lust for Life] is not a traditional rock biopic, for no-one dies at the end,” Egoli Tossell said in a statement, adding that the main character of the film will not be the pair themselves, more the divided city of West Berlin itself – which became a creative hub for artists and activists of all kinds in the 1970s.

Bowie shocked fans and the media alike on January 8, his 66th birthday, when he broke his decade-long musical silence by unveiling a brand new track and accompanying video, ‘Where Are We Now?’, and announced that a new album, titled ‘The Next Day’, would follow in March.

Joey Ramone’s record collection goes up for auction

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Ramones frontman Joey Ramone's record collection is set to go under the hammer. The late musician's vinyl collection includes records by Led Zeppelin, The Who, Bob Dylan, The Human League, Iggy Pop and The Doors. The collection is listed as being "In overall very good to fine condition, with vario...

Ramones frontman Joey Ramone’s record collection is set to go under the hammer.

The late musician’s vinyl collection includes records by Led Zeppelin, The Who, Bob Dylan, The Human League, Iggy Pop and The Doors.

The collection is listed as being “In overall very good to fine condition, with various scattered creases and small tears to sleeves, affixed prices tags and labels, and marks to vinyl.”

The records come from the Joey Ramone Estate and are accompanied by a letter signed by Joey’s brother Mickey, verifying their provenance.

The minimum opening bid on the albums is $500 (£318) and the collection is going up for auction via RR Auction. Bidding opens on February 14 and ends on February 21.

For a full list of records, visit rrauction.com.

Also up for auction is Joey’s custom made leather jacket, a number of guitars and t-shirts and his passport.

Last year a posthumous Joey Ramone album, ‘Ya Know’, was released. The record was the second to be released after his death. His first solo album, ‘Don’t Worry About Me’ was released in 2002, a year after he passed away.

The songs on ‘Ya Know’ were all written by Ramone across as a 23-year period, from 1977 to 2000.

Camper Van Beethoven – La Costa Perdita

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CVB comeback, take two: A sun-cracked roots-rock homage to Northern California... When Camper Van Beethoven oozed out of California's post-punk scene circa mid-1980s, they confronted witnesses with a set of confounding contradictions: a novelty band, ostensibly—â€Take the Skinheads Bowling†was the hit—counter-intuitively sporting a stunning breadth of musical range and ability; a fiercely DIY aggregation, yet explicitly cosmopolitan, conversant with everything from Balkan balladry to Jamaican ska; a hard-rock behemoth, yet leaning more on violin than electric guitar as lead instrument. They could play almost anything, convincingly and entertainingly, and their souped-up electric blender of country, punk, bluegrass, psychedelia, folk and folk-rock, prog, Middle-Eastern, Indian, and world music—steered by multi-instrumentalist Jonathan Segal—made for a combustible, funny, ever-unpredictable mix (think David Lindley's '60s group, Kaleidoscope). They eventually nudged the pop charts (covering Status Quo's “Pictures Of Matchstick Menâ€), recorded five LPs (two for major label Virgin), and ended up mired in a messy breakup that spawned myriad spin-offs: Monks of Doom, Jack & Jill, Camper Van Chadbourne, and, most notably, Cracker, singer David Lowery's straightforward-by-comparison rock juggernaut. But a rally around Fleetwood Mac's Tusk in 2002 produced a surprise reunion, followed by a strong, war-riddled comeback, New Roman Times. La Costa Perdida (tr. The Lost Thing) brings them full circle, plugging them back into their misfit Californian roots. “A California geographically lost,†explains singer/songwriter David Lowery. “A California lost in time . . . culturally forgotten. That's mostly what the album is about.†“Jonathan and I had started re-listening to Holland. In particular the track ‘Steamboat,’†explains Lowery. “Holland is the Beach Boys' Northern California record. This part of the Beach Boys' oeuvre has long been a big part of the CVB listening library.†Staking out their surreal, existential turf in typically atypical fashion—a kitchen-sink mix of country, blues, norteno, psych, and, yes, ‘60s-style pop harmonies—it's both a melancholy musing on place, especially “Come Down the Coast†and “Northern California Girls,†and shot through with mysticism, history, and spiritual restlessness. “Someday Our Love Will Sell Us Out,†with its mellifluous drone and robot-like harmony chorus, sounds like a dark, long-lost 1967 hippie 45. “Summer Days,†all spiraling riffs, an elegiac meditation on freedom/slavery, is the record's centerpiece. Luke Torn

CVB comeback, take two: A sun-cracked roots-rock homage to Northern California…

When Camper Van Beethoven oozed out of California’s post-punk scene circa mid-1980s, they confronted witnesses with a set of confounding contradictions: a novelty band, ostensibly—â€Take the Skinheads Bowling†was the hit—counter-intuitively sporting a stunning breadth of musical range and ability; a fiercely DIY aggregation, yet explicitly cosmopolitan, conversant with everything from Balkan balladry to Jamaican ska; a hard-rock behemoth, yet leaning more on violin than electric guitar as lead instrument.

They could play almost anything, convincingly and entertainingly, and their souped-up electric blender of country, punk, bluegrass, psychedelia, folk and folk-rock, prog, Middle-Eastern, Indian, and world music—steered by multi-instrumentalist Jonathan Segal—made for a combustible, funny, ever-unpredictable mix (think David Lindley’s ’60s group, Kaleidoscope).

They eventually nudged the pop charts (covering Status Quo‘s “Pictures Of Matchstick Menâ€), recorded five LPs (two for major label Virgin), and ended up mired in a messy breakup that spawned myriad spin-offs: Monks of Doom, Jack & Jill, Camper Van Chadbourne, and, most notably, Cracker, singer David Lowery’s straightforward-by-comparison rock juggernaut.

But a rally around Fleetwood Mac‘s Tusk in 2002 produced a surprise reunion, followed by a strong, war-riddled comeback, New Roman Times. La Costa Perdida (tr. The Lost Thing) brings them full circle, plugging them back into their misfit Californian roots. “A California geographically lost,†explains singer/songwriter David Lowery. “A California lost in time . . . culturally forgotten. That’s mostly what the album is about.â€

“Jonathan and I had started re-listening to Holland. In particular the track ‘Steamboat,’†explains Lowery. “Holland is the Beach Boys’ Northern California record. This part of the Beach Boys’ oeuvre has long been a big part of the CVB listening library.â€

Staking out their surreal, existential turf in typically atypical fashion—a kitchen-sink mix of country, blues, norteno, psych, and, yes, ‘60s-style pop harmonies—it’s both a melancholy musing on place, especially “Come Down the Coast†and “Northern California Girls,†and shot through with mysticism, history, and spiritual restlessness. “Someday Our Love Will Sell Us Out,†with its mellifluous drone and robot-like harmony chorus, sounds like a dark, long-lost 1967 hippie 45. “Summer Days,†all spiraling riffs, an elegiac meditation on freedom/slavery, is the record’s centerpiece.

Luke Torn

Cecil Womack dies aged 65

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Cecil Womack, brother of Bobby Womack and one half of Womack and Womack, has died aged 65. Womack passed away on February 1 in Africa. Bobby Womack confirmed his death earlier today (February 7). In his later years, Womack was known as Zekuumba Zekkariyas after embracing his African heritage and ...

Cecil Womack, brother of Bobby Womack and one half of Womack and Womack, has died aged 65.

Womack passed away on February 1 in Africa. Bobby Womack confirmed his death earlier today (February 7).

In his later years, Womack was known as Zekuumba Zekkariyas after embracing his African heritage and finding family ties to the Zekkariyas tribe.

He was best known for Womack And Womack’s 1988 hit single “Teardrops“, which he recorded with his second wife, Linda Cooke, the daughter of soul singer Sam Cooke.

Womack was born in Cleveland, Ohio in 1947. He and his four brothers formed a gospel group in the 1950s and under the patronage of Sam Cooke, became The Valentinos.

Womack married Motown singer Mary Wells in the 1960s and wrote a number of songs for her. He went on to write for Teddy Pendergrass, Patti LaBelle and The O’Jays.

Earlier today Bobby Womack paid tribute to his brother, writing on Facebook: I was terribly upset when I heard about my brother’s passing, and I still am. We made music together for a long time, but we’ve had many differences over the years. Thankfully we got a chance to reunite last year after a very long separation – and little did I know that it would be the last time I would see him. I can only pass along what I have now learned, which is to not let anything – money, success, etc, come between you and your family.”

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Album By Album

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In this archive feature from Uncut’s March 2009 issue (Take 142), Cave and Mick Harvey discuss their career, album by album – from the Birthday Party “crossover†of From Her To Eternity, to the “general chaos†of Abattoir Blues/Lyre Of Orpheus… _____________________ On the telephone ...

In this archive feature from Uncut’s March 2009 issue (Take 142), Cave and Mick Harvey discuss their career, album by album – from the Birthday Party “crossover†of From Her To Eternity, to the “general chaos†of Abattoir Blues/Lyre Of Orpheus…

_____________________

On the telephone the day before his December 2008 tour begins, Nick Cave seems drily amused by the prospect of a discussion of some of his many works with his longstanding group, The Bad Seeds. As it turns out, however, both he and founder Seed Mick Harvey are expansive with their recollections of the band’s gothic Americana – even if Cave, particularly, is surprised to remember much at all. “When you wake up with a hangover and wonder what you did last night,†he says, “there’s always that sort of feeling around my records…â€

_____________________

FROM HER TO ETERNITY
(Mute, 1984)
Their previous band dead, if not yet cold, former Birthday Party members Nick Cave and Mick Harvey return with guitarist Blixa Bargeld and kindred spirit Barry Adamson. Their first album establishes a palette of theatrical arrangements and dark Americana, enduring mainstays of the band’s sound.

Nick Cave: “The Birthday Party very much had its end – I went back to Australia and I think we did a few shows without Mick Harvey, who basically broke up The Birthday Party, in the sense that he made the phone call to say, ‘I don’t think The Birthday Party should go on any longer.’â€
Mick Harvey: “It’s attributed to me. It was me who said ‘we should can it, really’ – and initially Nick and Roland [S Howard, Birthday Party guitarist] agreed with me unreservedly. But afterwards, they started to get cold feet and carry it on a bit longer. I kind of blithely charged off into the unknown, I didn’t really care.â€
Cave: “I think for maybe a year I just kind of wandered around Melbourne, and then Mick found me and suggested starting another band, and that ended up being the Bad Seeds. The consequence of that was that it became much more of a lyrically driven affair, because I felt that at the beginning of the Bad Seeds that was where my strength was, and it’s taken me longer to get a handle on music.â€
Harvey: “There was no template at all, there was no preconception of what kind of album was going to come out at the other end. I think the last [Birthday Party] shows were in April. We mixed [last Birthday Party release] the ‘Mutiny’ EP in August, and we were in there recording by September – there was kind of a crossover.â€
Cave: “What happened was we went in to the studio without any kind of idea of what band we were or might be, we just wanted to get together and make a record – we didn’t know how we were going to sound, and that was really exciting. It’s one of my favourite records because of that – you can hear a band attempting to discover something about themselves. When you make a record the wisdom is that you get the bugs out, and then you make the record – well, all the bugs are well and truly in there, and I love it because of that.â€

Hear Jack White and Gibby Haynes collaboration, “Paul’s Not Home”

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The first track Jack White has recorded with Butthole Surfers frontman Gibby Haynes has been revealed online. Scroll down to hear it. As revealed earlier this week, the pair worked on three songs, set to be released as a single on White's Third Man Records. The single features new songs 'You Don't Have To Be Smart' and 'Horse Named George', as well as a cover of hardcore band Adrenalin OD's 'Paul's Not Home' which you can hear below. Haynes sings on all three songs whilst White plays guitar. The former frontman of The White Stripes also provides backing vocals on 'Paul's Not Home'. The song originally appeared on 1982's 'New York Thrash' compilation alongside the first ever recorded Beastie Boys tracks, 'Riot Fight' and 'Beastie'. The single is released on February 14, but a number of limited edition versions of the 7" will be pressed onto old medical x-rays, in what White is dubbing a 'flex-ray disc'. These will be sold exclusively from Third Man's Rolling Record Store van at South By Southwest next month in Austin, Texas. The single is part of Third Man Records' Blue Series, which has also seen special releases by Laura Marling, Tom Jones, Insane Clown Posse, Jeff The Brotherhood and Beck.

The first track Jack White has recorded with Butthole Surfers frontman Gibby Haynes has been revealed online. Scroll down to hear it.

As revealed earlier this week, the pair worked on three songs, set to be released as a single on White’s Third Man Records. The single features new songs ‘You Don’t Have To Be Smart’ and ‘Horse Named George’, as well as a cover of hardcore band Adrenalin OD’s ‘Paul’s Not Home’ which you can hear below.

Haynes sings on all three songs whilst White plays guitar. The former frontman of The White Stripes also provides backing vocals on ‘Paul’s Not Home’. The song originally appeared on 1982’s ‘New York Thrash’ compilation alongside the first ever recorded Beastie Boys tracks, ‘Riot Fight’ and ‘Beastie’.

The single is released on February 14, but a number of limited edition versions of the 7″ will be pressed onto old medical x-rays, in what White is dubbing a ‘flex-ray disc’. These will be sold exclusively from Third Man’s Rolling Record Store van at South By Southwest next month in Austin, Texas.

The single is part of Third Man Records’ Blue Series, which has also seen special releases by Laura Marling, Tom Jones, Insane Clown Posse, Jeff The Brotherhood and Beck.

Elton John to appear on new Queens Of The Stone Age album

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Elton John is the latest big name guest confirmed to appear on the new Queens Of The Stone Age album. The unlikely collaboration was revealed by Dave Grohl, who is also drumming on the forthcoming album, when he interviewed Sir Elton as part of his week covering chat show host Chelsea Lately on her...

Elton John is the latest big name guest confirmed to appear on the new Queens Of The Stone Age album.

The unlikely collaboration was revealed by Dave Grohl, who is also drumming on the forthcoming album, when he interviewed Sir Elton as part of his week covering chat show host Chelsea Lately on her late night talk show in America last night (February 6). During the interview, Grohl told the audience that “Recently, Elton and I recorded something together. Something that people wouldn’t imagine the two of us doing together,” before Elton revealed that it was a new song for the upcoming Queens Of The Stone Age album.

Revealing details of the recording session, Elton added: “I was in Vegas and I flew back to LA and Engelbert Humperdinck had written me a very sweet letter and asked me to sing a duet with him. He is part of my history and I couldn’t say no so I went and recorded a song with him. Then I drove three blocks and went from Engelbert to Queens Of The Stone Age, which was a bit of a mindfuck.”

Grohl, interjecting, said: “I remember you (Elton) walking in and him being, like, (lethargically) ‘Have you got a ballad for me?’ and we were just like, ‘no, we do not have a ballad for you.'” Talking specifically about recording the song, Elton added: “After three hours we got it and he (Grohl) drummed on every take and every take was amazing. He’s built like a brick shithouse when he drums.”

Other guests confirmed to appear on the band’s new album include Trent Reznor, Mark Lanegan, Nick Oliveri and Jake Shears of Scissor Sisters. The band will be playing a number of festivals this summer, including Benicàssim in Spain, and Download in the UK.

Guitarist Earl Slick ‘wouldn’t be surprised’ if Bowie tours

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David Bowie's long-term guitarist Earl Slick has hinted that Bowie may tour after all. Speaking to Spinner, Slick said "It's kind of like doing the record [The Next Day]. 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!" Producer Tony Visconti previously told NME that live shows were unlikely, saying, "He’s fairly adamant he’s never gonna perform live again… One of the guys would say, 'Boy, how are we gonna do all this live?' and David said, 'We’re not'. He made a point of saying that all the time." Slick also spoke about the sound of Bowie's new album. "There are a few things that kind of feel like Station To Station rockers, then there are some other things that might feel kind of like Diamond Dogs, but as usual it is extremely eclectic and it is uniquely Bowie, meaning that it's a whole bunch of really cool things," he says. Earlier this week, Bowie's drummer Zachary Alford gave his own opinion of the album's sound to Rolling Stone. He said: "There's definitely a lot of up-tempo material. That's some kind of '60s doo-wop-ish material. Although I don't remember a lot of the songs. I mean, it'll be two years in May since we did it. I haven't heard any of it since. I hope to have the chance to hear it soon myself." He added: "There are a couple that remind me of the Scary Monsters period, because they're a bit more angular and aggressive-sounding… There's another number that's a straight-up country song. There was another one that was based on a blues riff, but we had specific instructions to not make it sound like the blues. There were two songs that sort of had a Bo Diddley feel."

David Bowie’s long-term guitarist Earl Slick has hinted that Bowie may tour after all.

Speaking to Spinner, Slick said “It’s kind of like doing the record [The Next Day]. 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!”

Producer Tony Visconti previously told NME that live shows were unlikely, saying, “He’s fairly adamant he’s never gonna perform live again… One of the guys would say, ‘Boy, how are we gonna do all this live?’ and David said, ‘We’re not’. He made a point of saying that all the time.”

Slick also spoke about the sound of Bowie’s new album. “There are a few things that kind of feel like Station To Station rockers, then there are some other things that might feel kind of like Diamond Dogs, but as usual it is extremely eclectic and it is uniquely Bowie, meaning that it’s a whole bunch of really cool things,” he says.

Earlier this week, Bowie’s drummer Zachary Alford gave his own opinion of the album’s sound to Rolling Stone. He said: “There’s definitely a lot of up-tempo material. That’s some kind of ’60s doo-wop-ish material. Although I don’t remember a lot of the songs. I mean, it’ll be two years in May since we did it. I haven’t heard any of it since. I hope to have the chance to hear it soon myself.”

He added: “There are a couple that remind me of the Scary Monsters period, because they’re a bit more angular and aggressive-sounding… There’s another number that’s a straight-up country song. There was another one that was based on a blues riff, but we had specific instructions to not make it sound like the blues. There were two songs that sort of had a Bo Diddley feel.”

Kraftwerk perform ‘Autobahn’ in full as London residency begins

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Kraftwerk opened their eight-night residency at Tate Modern on Wednesday by playing in full their fourth album, Autobahn. Kraftwerk played a two-hour set that also included most of their best loved numbers. Those lucky enough to secure tickets for Kraftwerk’s first night in the London art museumâ...

Kraftwerk opened their eight-night residency at Tate Modern on Wednesday by playing in full their fourth album, Autobahn.

Kraftwerk played a two-hour set that also included most of their best loved numbers. Those lucky enough to secure tickets for Kraftwerk’s first night in the London art museum’s imposing Turbine Hall were each given a cushion, a crib sheet on the band and a pair of 3D spectacles. However, virtually the whole audience stood to appreciate Kraftwerk’s impressive visuals, displayed on a massive screen behind.

On stage, the four performers stood impassively behind their computers, only one of whom played on the original recording of Autobahn, founder member Ralf Hütter. Having opened with “Robots”, the group played Kraftwerk’s breakthrough album in order, beginning with a 10-minute version of the title track.

That left an hour and a half devoted to a wide-ranging journey through the group’s celebrated back catalogue, featuring both digital versions of seventies classics such as ‘Neon Lights’ and ‘Vitamin’ from 2003’s Tour De France Soundtracks. Highlights included hit single ‘The Model’, the influential ‘Trans Europe Express’ and an updated ‘Radioactivity’ that name-checked the nuclear meltdown at Fukushima.

The set was rapturously received by fans. Steve Kiw from Hove, Sussex, said, “It was what we hoped for and more. We came expecting Autobahn, thought we might get something else and it ended up being absolutely brilliant. The 3D effects were wonderful.â€

Silvia Montello from London regretted she could not repeat the experience, adding, “This is the third time I’ve seen them, but tonight has been a massive treat.â€

Kraftwerk played:

‘The Robots’

‘Autobahn’

‘Kometenmelodie 1’

‘Kometenmelodie 2’

‘Mitternacht’

‘Morgenspaziergang’

‘Radioactivity’

‘Trans Europe Express’

‘The Model’

‘Neon Lights’

‘The Man-Machine’

‘Numbers’

‘Computer World’

‘Computer Love’

‘Home Computer’

‘Tour De France’

‘Vitamin’

‘Planet Of Visions’

‘Music Non Stop’

Kraftwerk’s sold-out concert series The Catalogue 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 continues tonight, Thursday, with 1975’s Radio-Activity, followed by sets dedicated to successive albums up to Tour De France Soundtracks.

Sony set to stop making MiniDisc players

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Sony has announced that it will stop making its MiniDisc players in March 2013. The Japanese electronics giant will cease production of the MiniDisc player next month, but it has said it will continue making the actual MiniDiscs, The Telegraph reports. The news marks the end for the audio system, w...

Sony has announced that it will stop making its MiniDisc players in March 2013.

The Japanese electronics giant will cease production of the MiniDisc player next month, but it has said it will continue making the actual MiniDiscs, The Telegraph reports. The news marks the end for the audio system, which was launched by Sony in 1992 as a high-quality digital alternative to the much lower-quality tape cassette.

On their launch, MiniDisc players were seen as the future for audio equipment and Sony claimed the discs would be safe from risk of degradation for 30 years. As the players were recordable, they became popular with sound engineers and media professionals.

However, with the advent of MP3 players such as Apple’s iPod and cloud-based streaming services, the Minidisc has struggled to compete in the market and its demise has been on the cards for some time – Sony previously stopped making portable players in 2011.

The Sixth Uncut Playlist Of 2013: hear Mikal Cronin, Retribution Gospel Choir, Jennie O, Library Of Sands, 3rd Eye Foundation…

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An unintended consequence of the My Bloody Valentine release: plenty of plays this week for “Straight Outta Comptonâ€, following directly after “m b v†in my iTunes library. As you can see, though, it’s been an amazing few days for new music, and consequently I’ve added plenty of links so you can hear Mikal Cronin, Library Of Sands (to recap: Naynay Shineywater from Brightblack Morning Light), Jennie O (produced by Jonathan Wilson), and Retribution Gospel Choir’s amazing “Seven†(featuring Nels Cline, and especially recommended to fans of “Psychedelic Pillâ€). Also worth noting: Kurt Vile, Bitchin’ Bajas. And I’ve added a killer Third Eye Foundation track from 1996, so those of you unfamiliar with Matt Elliott’s music can see why that name’s been cropping up a fair bit with regard to “m b vâ€. This fairly extraordinary week moves up another gear tonight with the start of Kraftwerk’s Tate Modern residency. I’m seeing “Trans Europe Express†on Friday, but your reports and reviews are, as ever, very welcome… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 My Bloody Valentine – m b v (www.mybloodyvalentine.org) 2 NWA – Straight Outta Compton (Ruthless) 3 Kurt Vile – Wakin’ On A Pretty Day (Matador) 4 Bitchin’ Bajas – Krausened (Permanent) 5 Don Bikoff – Celestial Explosion (Tompkins Square) 6 Library Of Sands – Side To Side (Wild Sages) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kTWcS5Jq12A&list=PLnSrbbdQJeKzWIVQATT11_1I4OyGdvBAp 7 Valerie June – You Can’t Be Told (Sunday Best) 8 The Flaming Lips – The Terror (Bella Union) 9 Retribution Gospel Choir – III (Chaperone) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pCKrRoDXPL0 10 Jennie O – Automechanic (Holy Trinity) 11 Library Of Sands – Wavy Heat (Wild Sages) 12 Goat – Live At The Lexington (Rocket) 13 DJ Koze – Amygdala (Pampa) 14 Mikal Cronin – MCII (Merge) 15 David Grubbs – The Plain Where The Palace Stood (Drag City) 16 Third Eye Foundation – Semtex (Domino) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=90rIyiuQ5B0 17 Hiss Golden Messenger – Haw (Paradise Of Bachelors)

An unintended consequence of the My Bloody Valentine release: plenty of plays this week for “Straight Outta Comptonâ€, following directly after “m b v†in my iTunes library. As you can see, though, it’s been an amazing few days for new music, and consequently I’ve added plenty of links so you can hear Mikal Cronin, Library Of Sands (to recap: Naynay Shineywater from Brightblack Morning Light), Jennie O (produced by Jonathan Wilson), and Retribution Gospel Choir’s amazing “Seven†(featuring Nels Cline, and especially recommended to fans of “Psychedelic Pillâ€).

Also worth noting: Kurt Vile, Bitchin’ Bajas. And I’ve added a killer Third Eye Foundation track from 1996, so those of you unfamiliar with Matt Elliott’s music can see why that name’s been cropping up a fair bit with regard to “m b vâ€.

This fairly extraordinary week moves up another gear tonight with the start of Kraftwerk’s Tate Modern residency. I’m seeing “Trans Europe Express†on Friday, but your reports and reviews are, as ever, very welcome…

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

1 My Bloody Valentine – m b v (www.mybloodyvalentine.org)

2 NWA – Straight Outta Compton (Ruthless)

3 Kurt Vile – Wakin’ On A Pretty Day (Matador)

4 Bitchin’ Bajas – Krausened (Permanent)

5 Don Bikoff – Celestial Explosion (Tompkins Square)

6 Library Of Sands – Side To Side (Wild Sages)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kTWcS5Jq12A&list=PLnSrbbdQJeKzWIVQATT11_1I4OyGdvBAp

7 Valerie June – You Can’t Be Told (Sunday Best)

8 The Flaming Lips – The Terror (Bella Union)

9 Retribution Gospel Choir – III (Chaperone)

10 Jennie O – Automechanic (Holy Trinity)

11 Library Of Sands – Wavy Heat (Wild Sages)

12 Goat – Live At The Lexington (Rocket)

13 DJ Koze – Amygdala (Pampa)

14 Mikal Cronin – MCII (Merge)

15 David Grubbs – The Plain Where The Palace Stood (Drag City)

16 Third Eye Foundation – Semtex (Domino)

17 Hiss Golden Messenger – Haw (Paradise Of Bachelors)

David Bowie to reissue 40th anniversary edition of Aladdin Sane

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David Bowie's Aladdin Sane will be remastered and reissued to mark its 40th anniversary this year. Bowie's sixth album, Aladdin Sane was originally released in April 1973. The album was originally co-produced by Bowie and Ken Scott and recorded at Trident Studios in London and RCA Studios in New ...

David Bowie‘s Aladdin Sane will be remastered and reissued to mark its 40th anniversary this year.

Bowie’s sixth album, Aladdin Sane was originally released in April 1973.

The album was originally co-produced by Bowie and Ken Scott and recorded at Trident Studios in London and RCA Studios in New York. It would be the last album that the line-up of Mick Ronson (guitar, piano, backing vocals), Trevor Bolder (bass) and Mick ‘Woody’ Woodmansey (drums) would appear on and the first to feature pianist Mike Garson.

The reissue is set for release on April 15 and was remastered by Ray Staff at London’s AIR Studios, who cut the original LP during his time at Trident Studios and has remastered Ziggy Stardust‘s 40th anniversary edition last year.

The tracklisting for the Aladdin Sane 40th Anniversary Edition is as follows:

‘Watch That Man’

‘Aladdin Sane (1913-1938-197?)’

‘Drive-In Saturday’

‘Panic In Detroit’

‘Cracked Actor’

‘Time’

‘The Prettiest Star’

‘Let’s Spend the Night Together’

‘The Jean Genie’

‘Lady Grinning Soul’