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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 Compton”, 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 Pill”). 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 v”. 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 Compton”, 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 Pill”).

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 v”.

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’

Morrissey postpones more Stateside shows due to illness

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Morrissey has postponed more shows in the US due to illness. The singer said that he wanted to restart his tour in Las Vegas on February 9, however, this show has now been pulled, as has his February 10 date in Phoenix. Rescheduled dates are expected to be announced in the coming days. Morrissey...

Morrissey has postponed more shows in the US due to illness.

The singer said that he wanted to restart his tour in Las Vegas on February 9, however, this show has now been pulled, as has his February 10 date in Phoenix.

Rescheduled dates are expected to be announced in the coming days.

Morrissey recently spoke out following his recent health troubles, which saw him hospitalised at William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Michigan.

The singer issued a statement to fan site True To You, explaining that he was treated for concussion, a bleeding ulcer and Barrett’s esophagus.

He said that he was keen to pick up his North American tour in Las Vegas, writing: “I am fully determined to resume the tour on February 9 at the Chelsea Ballroom in Las Vegas. If there’s an audience of any kind in attendance, I just might die with a smile on my face, after all. If I am not there, I shall probably never again be anywhere.”

These postponed gigs are already part of dates rescheduled from October last year, when Morrissey stopped mid-tour to return to the UK to be with his ill mother. She has since recovered.

Meanwhile, Parlophone Records will put out a limited edition 7″ picture disc of Morrissey’s 1989 single “The Last Of The Famous International Playboys” and a remastered version of his second solo album, 1991’s Kill Uncle on April 8.

Both will feature rare Morrissey photos while Kill Uncle will boast a brand new cover.

The single release will be backed with live recordings, taken from a 2011 Janice Long Show session on BBC Radio 2. The 7″ single comes with ‘People Are The Same Everywhere’, the CD with ‘Action Is My Middle Name’ and the digital download with ‘The Kid’s A Looker’.

The Making Of… The Troggs’ ‘Wild Thing’

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This primal blast of sexual energy – penned by Chip Taylor and later hijacked by Jimi Hendrix – would prove an immediate ’66 hit for Reg Presley and his ‘proto-punk’ beat boys... Reg, manager Larry Page, writer Chip Taylor and more explain how the iconic song was made. From Uncut’s April...

This primal blast of sexual energy – penned by Chip Taylor and later hijacked by Jimi Hendrix – would prove an immediate ’66 hit for Reg Presley and his ‘proto-punk’ beat boys… Reg, manager Larry Page, writer Chip Taylor and more explain how the iconic song was made. From Uncut’s April 2009 issue (Take 143)…

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One of the great, indestructible rock’n’roll songs, “Wild Thing” has survived assaults from The Goodies and, in disco form, Suzi Quatro. Arguably, the best-known version is by Andover’s The Troggs, but they weren’t the first band to record it. “Wild Thing” was written by Chip Taylor, brother of the actor Jon Voight, for The Wild Ones, the house band at New York discothèque, Arthur, run by Richard Burton’s former wife, Sybil.

There is some dispute about who proposed that The Troggs record the song. The band’s manager, Larry Page, insists it was him, while singer Reg Presley suggests that Page was pushing for a cover version of a Lovin’ Spoonful track. But there is no denying the primal power of the recording, which reached No 2 in the UK, and topped the US charts in the summer of 1966. It was subsequently hijacked by Jimi Hendrix, and has become a rock’n’roll classic, revived recently by Prince, who performs it as part of a medley with Tommy James And The Shondells’ “Crimson & Clover”.

“First of all, the groove is so good,” says Taylor. “But the biggest thing that ‘Wild Thing’ had was the silence. I never heard anything like that. That’s the magic of ‘Wild Thing’. Silence is the biggest chill factor you can get in music, and there’s no better pause in rock’n’roll than the pause in ‘Wild Thing’.” Alastair McKay

___________________

Chip Taylor, songwriter: I got a writer’s job in the Brill Building area. I had a room and a piano and a telephone and a window that overlooked 7th Avenue, Broadway and 51st Street. I was writing these organic things that sounded a little Memphisy. I got a call from Gerry Granahan, a writer and A&R executive for United Artists. He said: “I have a group I’m recording, called The Wild Ones. We have three songs, and to tell you the truth I don’t love any of them.” He said: “I’d like to get some cool little thing. I wondered if you had something you could send me over.”

Chuck Alden, Singer, The Wild Ones: We were making a circuit of all the clubs in Manhattan, and we heard about a new club called Arthur that was going to open. The band that went in there was going to be a success because Sybil Burton was one of the shareholders. We had the right look, the right attitude, so they hired us. We did whatever was current – Beatles, Motown and such. When you were in there you were relegated to being a dance band, because that was one of the first discothèques.

Taylor: I didn’t have many tape recorders to save my ideas. The way I would remember songs was just play them over and over. I was a very simple, unschooled guitar player. So I started banging out these chords, and it almost sounded like a drum as well as the guitar because you could hear the beats my thumb was doing. I was just looking out in the street and letting this thing float, and all of a sudden it just felt terrific. It was just me closing my eyes and imagining I was with some sexy girl that I wanted to talk to: she was kinda mesmerised and I was trying to mesmerise her some more.

Alden: “Wild Thing” is not something I take pride in. It’s like I was holding my nose when I sang it. When you record for a producer, you do what they tell you to do, and that’s it, case closed. It’s spilt milk. I had nothing to do with it except to go in and try to put down a vocal. Looking back, I didn’t even do a good reading on it. If you listen to the demo, they had that little potato pie tin sound, banging away. The Troggs did it the way it should’ve been done.

Taylor: The Wild Ones’ version was a good little R’n’B record with harmonica, but it was more like a regular record, and not like the mad, uneducated thing I’d created.

Larry Page, The Troggs’ manager, producer: I’d done an orchestral album called Kinky Music and I had some stuff on the go in America. I had a meeting with [Columbia Records-owned publishing company] April Blackwood Music, and they said are you looking for material for groups? They brought in about seven or eight titles for me to listen to, one of which was “Wild Thing”.

Reg Presley, singer, The Troggs: I’d started to write songs. I don’t think Larry would have known, other than me saying, “Oh, I’ve got a song,” on the telephone. And I didn’t have a telephone in those days. I had to go to a little box. But he sent down “Did You Ever Have To Make Up Your Mind” by The Lovin’ Spoonful for us to do. Also sent with it was the old demo of “Wild Thing”, which Dennis Berger, who worked in the office, had got out of a heap of demos. He saw it and thought, ‘Ooh, that’d be good for The Troggs’. I really wasn’t into that kind of music [The Lovin’ Spoonful]. My influences were Louisiana Red and Lightnin’ Hopkins and the blues. When I finally got hold of Larry he said: “How did you get on with the harmonies?” I said, “Harmonies? On ‘Wild Thing’?” And he said, “Well, come up to London and we’ll do it.”

Page: Reg is into UFOs and he always used to say that if they asked him to go up there with them, he’d go. I get the feeling he’s been, and it’s affected his memory.

Chris Britton, guitar, The Troggs: We did “Wild Thing” and “With A Girl Like You” on the end of a Larry Page Orchestra session. We drove up to Olympic Studios in London from Andover in our battered J4 van, which took two of us to drive, because someone had to lean over and help turn the steering wheel. The throttle linkage broke, so we tied a bit of string on the carburettor leverage, and whoever was sitting in the passenger seat had to work the throttle… it was utter chaos. Anyway, we arrived outside Olympic, and Larry said, “Come on, load yourselves in.” We got in as fast as we could, did a quick runthrough to get a sound balance, played “Wild Thing”, played “With A Girl Like You” and we were back out in 20 minutes.

Page: When you hear that they went in and did it in one take… we had rehearsed the boys so we knew exactly what we had. We were going down on four-track, so there wasn’t a lot of mixing, but you had to get it right. The Troggs were rough when I first saw them and rough when I left them, but that’s the magic. It was such a basic song, but everyone had tried to over-produce it. We did add the ocarina, which Colin Fretcher played. Colin worked for me. He used to count the boys in. They weren’t a band that could count themselves in.

Britton: I’ve always been a bit heavy-handed and raucous. Keith [Grant], the engineer, managed to capture the sound quite well. I had two Vox AC30 amps,  one of which I had on flat-out top, and the other I had on flat-out bass, and not only did he put a mic on each amp, but he stuck one on the strings, so you get this slight plectrum noise on the strings – it gives it a slight acoustic quality.

Taylor: The Troggs’ record totally captured the feel of the demo, and it had that great little intro. The ocarina solo that you hear on Reg’s record, they copied that from my demo. I stomped on the floor and did this overdub, trying to get some power to it, and as we were listening back my engineer Ron Johnson did this thing, like when you cup your hands and put a blade of grass in there and you can make a whistling sound – he did it without the blade of grass.

Page: To me it was magic. But no-one else seemed to think so. I walked this thing around the BBC and everybody hated it. I came out and bumped into a producer named Brian Willey. He said to me, “How are you, Larry?” I said, “I’m actually pissed off, I’ve got a hit record here, and everybody hates it.” He said, “I don’t know if you know, but I’m doing Saturday Club, would you like me to put it in?” He’d never heard it, and he put it in the programme. On that one play, it took off. That’s the way hit records happen.

Presley: It was all so fast. I was working on a building, doing a gable end, when I first heard “Wild Thing” on the radio. There was a painter, and he was working on the scaffolding behind me, and when “Wild Thing” came on his transistor radio, he shouted over to me, not knowing who I was. He said, “If that ain’t No 1 next week I’ll eat my brush.” Well, the DJ, when it finished said: “And from 44 to No 8 this week…” and I thought: ‘That bastard could be right.’ I threw my trowel down, and I looked round the shed and said: “Share out me tools, I’m off.”

Taylor: Your big fear when you wrote a song was that somebody would not get the feel of what you were doing. That’s the one thing the Chip Taylor demo, The Troggs, and the Jimi Hendrix version have in common – the strum is this primitive, groovy thing that has a little in-between movement of your thumb that makes it almost sound percussive.

Presley: It was raw. Music was starting at that time to go towards flower power. A lot of people say we’re the first punk rock. Well, when you look back and see how the punks started, they’re probably bloody right.

My Bloody Valentine, “m b v”: second thoughts

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Just before starting to write this morning, I spent a while digging around for the old office ghettoblaster, computer-connecting technology having failed us in our attempts to play a new EP that turned up yesterday in cassette form. The EP forms part of the capricious launch strategy of Library Of Sands, a new project from a mesa-dwelling outlier called Naynay Shineywater, who used to front Brightblack Morning Light. Brightblack, in the entirely possible event that you never heard them, specialised in a kind of husky, somnambulant desert funk, much indebted to Spiritualized and Dr John. Shineywater’s dedicated new age sensibilities meant that their crystal-heavy imagery was offputting to some, but the music was fantastic. This time, he has returned with three EPs: one on 12-inch (which I haven’t heard yet); one on CD (“Side To Side”, soupy ambient-blues jams with a crack Chicago horn section); and one on cassette (“Wavy Heat”, playing now, with an almost industrial grind). You should probably check Shineywater’s site, http://www.tented-tent.com/, for further details. Anyhow, “Wavy Heat” is also remarkable for the second appearance of the week from Colm Ó Cíosóig (it’s pronounced “Cusack”, I learn from Wikipedia perhaps 25 years too late). One suspects it might have a little less cultural impact than that of Ó Cíosóig’s other new release, “m b v”; after all, Shineywater’s last album came out in 2008, while My Bloody Valentine, legendarily, haven’t put one out since 1991. At time of writing, @LIBRARYOFSANDS has 14 followers on Twitter. All of which means that the few people who do discover Library Of Sands are likely to hear that music very privately and in their own time; its impact will be small, gradual, cumulative. The exact opposite of how “m b v” arrived at some point on Saturday night or Sunday morning, depending on timezone, stamina and luck with My Bloody Valentine’s severely overloaded website. At 7am on Sunday morning, UK time, there was still a palpable sense of participating in a momentous event, as social media elevated the mere act of downloading and playing a new album into a collective phenomenon; who was still awake? and who wakes up at that time? For those of us who first came across MBV around the time of “Strawberry Wine” and “Ecstasy”, the feeling of being part of an apparently huge community was at once bizarre and heartening, a validation of sorts; not least when the initial excitement began to solidify into a realisation that “m b v” at least seemed to be an entirely dignified and thrilling continuation of MBV’s musical legacy. The problem with these sudden big releases, of course, is that there’s a danger snap judgments become final ones; that once everyone has shared their first thoughts - here’s the MBV review I posted at about 9am on Sunday – they move on to the next musical revelation dropped without warning onto the internet. There is, though, another possible path: that as a record beds in, we can carry on talking about it, so that a picture emerges of how music changes with every listen – something especially salient to a record like “m b v”, on which hidden melodies and details come into focus over time: I’m currently fixated on an escalating whoosh that comes in at 1:22, prefacing the riff, in “Only Tomorrow”, and which fades out in a sly, almost sheepish way five or six seconds later, just when you expect it to explode. What else have I learned, or at least thought, about “m b v” in the last 48 hours? That the lower-case fetish still annoys me. That “She Found Now” is maybe out of place as the album opener (it feels like the fourth track on an EP), but has maybe been placed there for tactical reasons, as a kind of initial defusing of expectations. This is how “m b v” seems to be structured: a first hazy shrug; followed by two superb and more overt declarations of intent (“Who Sees You” reminds me increasingly of “Come In Alone”); a varied and consolidating mid-section; then the closing triumvirate of beats and fanfares and noise that offer all the bracing possibilities of what the future – or more cynically, the mid-‘90s - might bring. Mostly, though, and happily, it feels like repeated listenings to this beautiful album have compounded the positive responses of Sunday morning so that, in this case, first thoughts mostly remain best thoughts. Even in the melee of “Wonder 2” (did they sample the plane takeoff from “Blue Monday” and stretch it over the entire track?), it’s those melodies which still feel the most potent aspect of MBV’s work here. Someone on Twitter tagged my first review as a “rockist” reading, presumably on account of me privileging the tunes and casting the closing passage of “Only Tomorrow” as ostensibly a guitar solo. The thing is, though, that the disruptions of My Bloody Valentine and Sonic Youth provided a gateway for me into a lot of avant-garde – especially abstract electronic – music. Kevin Shields’ bent aesthetic still sounds highly original – I might even risk using the word “unique” – but as a consequence, its noisiness is no longer so shocking. Let me know, of course, how it’s working for you. It’ll be interesting to see what Uncut’s reviewer makes of it all, two unimaginable weeks down the line. In the meantime, though, it’s probably responsible of me to flag up our current issue that came out in the UK at the end of last week, and which features Tom Waits on the cover, alongside The Beach Boys, Hendrix, Jim James, Richard Thompson, a spectacular Sinead O’Connor review, and a very different story involving this year’s other significant comeback kids, David Bowie and Tony Visconti. Full details here: https://www.uncut.co.uk/magazine/march-2013 Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

Just before starting to write this morning, I spent a while digging around for the old office ghettoblaster, computer-connecting technology having failed us in our attempts to play a new EP that turned up yesterday in cassette form. The EP forms part of the capricious launch strategy of Library Of Sands, a new project from a mesa-dwelling outlier called Naynay Shineywater, who used to front Brightblack Morning Light.

Brightblack, in the entirely possible event that you never heard them, specialised in a kind of husky, somnambulant desert funk, much indebted to Spiritualized and Dr John. Shineywater’s dedicated new age sensibilities meant that their crystal-heavy imagery was offputting to some, but the music was fantastic. This time, he has returned with three EPs: one on 12-inch (which I haven’t heard yet); one on CD (“Side To Side”, soupy ambient-blues jams with a crack Chicago horn section); and one on cassette (“Wavy Heat”, playing now, with an almost industrial grind). You should probably check Shineywater’s site, http://www.tented-tent.com/, for further details.

Anyhow, “Wavy Heat” is also remarkable for the second appearance of the week from Colm Ó Cíosóig (it’s pronounced “Cusack”, I learn from Wikipedia perhaps 25 years too late). One suspects it might have a little less cultural impact than that of Ó Cíosóig’s other new release, “m b v”; after all, Shineywater’s last album came out in 2008, while My Bloody Valentine, legendarily, haven’t put one out since 1991. At time of writing, @LIBRARYOFSANDS has 14 followers on Twitter.

All of which means that the few people who do discover Library Of Sands are likely to hear that music very privately and in their own time; its impact will be small, gradual, cumulative. The exact opposite of how “m b v” arrived at some point on Saturday night or Sunday morning, depending on timezone, stamina and luck with My Bloody Valentine’s severely overloaded website.

At 7am on Sunday morning, UK time, there was still a palpable sense of participating in a momentous event, as social media elevated the mere act of downloading and playing a new album into a collective phenomenon; who was still awake? and who wakes up at that time? For those of us who first came across MBV around the time of “Strawberry Wine” and “Ecstasy”, the feeling of being part of an apparently huge community was at once bizarre and heartening, a validation of sorts; not least when the initial excitement began to solidify into a realisation that “m b v” at least seemed to be an entirely dignified and thrilling continuation of MBV’s musical legacy.

The problem with these sudden big releases, of course, is that there’s a danger snap judgments become final ones; that once everyone has shared their first thoughts – here’s the MBV review I posted at about 9am on Sunday – they move on to the next musical revelation dropped without warning onto the internet.

There is, though, another possible path: that as a record beds in, we can carry on talking about it, so that a picture emerges of how music changes with every listen – something especially salient to a record like “m b v”, on which hidden melodies and details come into focus over time: I’m currently fixated on an escalating whoosh that comes in at 1:22, prefacing the riff, in “Only Tomorrow”, and which fades out in a sly, almost sheepish way five or six seconds later, just when you expect it to explode.

What else have I learned, or at least thought, about “m b v” in the last 48 hours? That the lower-case fetish still annoys me. That “She Found Now” is maybe out of place as the album opener (it feels like the fourth track on an EP), but has maybe been placed there for tactical reasons, as a kind of initial defusing of expectations. This is how “m b v” seems to be structured: a first hazy shrug; followed by two superb and more overt declarations of intent (“Who Sees You” reminds me increasingly of “Come In Alone”); a varied and consolidating mid-section; then the closing triumvirate of beats and fanfares and noise that offer all the bracing possibilities of what the future – or more cynically, the mid-‘90s – might bring.

Mostly, though, and happily, it feels like repeated listenings to this beautiful album have compounded the positive responses of Sunday morning so that, in this case, first thoughts mostly remain best thoughts. Even in the melee of “Wonder 2” (did they sample the plane takeoff from “Blue Monday” and stretch it over the entire track?), it’s those melodies which still feel the most potent aspect of MBV’s work here.

Someone on Twitter tagged my first review as a “rockist” reading, presumably on account of me privileging the tunes and casting the closing passage of “Only Tomorrow” as ostensibly a guitar solo. The thing is, though, that the disruptions of My Bloody Valentine and Sonic Youth provided a gateway for me into a lot of avant-garde – especially abstract electronic – music. Kevin Shields’ bent aesthetic still sounds highly original – I might even risk using the word “unique” – but as a consequence, its noisiness is no longer so shocking. Let me know, of course, how it’s working for you.

It’ll be interesting to see what Uncut’s reviewer makes of it all, two unimaginable weeks down the line. In the meantime, though, it’s probably responsible of me to flag up our current issue that came out in the UK at the end of last week, and which features Tom Waits on the cover, alongside The Beach Boys, Hendrix, Jim James, Richard Thompson, a spectacular Sinead O’Connor review, and a very different story involving this year’s other significant comeback kids, David Bowie and Tony Visconti. Full details here: https://www.uncut.co.uk/magazine/march-2013

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

Reg Presley dies aged 71

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Reg Presley has died at the age of 71. Presley died at his home in Andover, Hampshire – the town of his birth – from cancer yesterday (February 4), in the company of his family. He was diagnosed with lung cancer in December 2012 during a tour of Germany, and is reported to have had a number of...

Reg Presley has died at the age of 71.

Presley died at his home in Andover, Hampshire – the town of his birth – from cancer yesterday (February 4), in the company of his family. He was diagnosed with lung cancer in December 2012 during a tour of Germany, and is reported to have had a number of strokes before the diagnosis, according to messages posted by music publicist and close friend Keith Altham.

Last month (January 24), Presley posted a statement to fans on the band’s website, in which he announced his retirement from music due to failing health. “I am receiving chemotherapy treatment and at the moment not feeling too bad. However I’ve had to call time on The Troggs and retire. I would like to take this opportunity to thank you all for the cards and calls and for your love, loyalty and support over the years… I shall miss you all. Lots of Love.”

Presley – born Reginald Maurice Ball – formed The Troggs in 1964. The band were signed by Kinks manager Larry Page the following year. Their signature song, “Wild Thing”, reached Number 2 in the charts in 1966, though the lesser-known follow-up, “With A Girl Like You”, gave them their first and only UK Number 1. Though they split in 1969, The Troggs soon reunited and remained a group until Presley’s announcement last month. Despite this, life within the band was not always rosy – as demonstrated on the notorious Troggs Tapes, an expletive-ridden recording of the band arguing in the studio.

In 1994, Wet Wet Wet’s cover of Presley’s 1967 song “Love Is All Around” (for the Four Weddings And A Funeral soundtrack) gave them the second longest-running UK Number 1 to date, remaining on the top spot for 15 consecutive weeks. Presley is reported to have used the royalties from the single to pursue his interest in crop circles and UFOs. The paranormal was a great passion of Presley’s – he published a book on the subject titled Wild Things They Don’t Tell Us in 2002. Presley also had a sideline in acting, appearing in TV’s Inspector Wexford.

Presley’s pop-meets-garage rock sound is said to have been an influence on artists as diverse as The Ramones, Iggy Pop, REM and Jimi Hendrix, who covered ‘Wild Thing’ at 1967’s Monterey Pop Festival. On Twitter, former Rolling Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham wrote, “R.I.P. Reg Presley of The Troggs. A long time served in the rock trenches. Always innovative.”

Jack White collaborates with Butthole Surfers’ Gibby Haynes on three tracks

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Jack White has collaborated with Butthole Surfers' Gibby Haynes 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'. Scr...

Jack White has collaborated with Butthole Surfers’ Gibby Haynes 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’. Scroll down to listen to an excerpt from the track.

Haynes sings on all three songs while White plays guitar. White 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.

Jack White will be performing as part of the Grammy Awards ceremony in Los Angeles this Sunday (February 10). His debut solo album, ‘Blunderbuss’, has been nominated for Album of the Year and Best Rock Album.

Vampire Weekend name new album via newspaper classified advert – and announce UK gig

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Vampire Weekend have announced details of their new album, which will be titled Modern Vampires Of The City. The band have also revealed they are to play a one-off UK show on May 8 at The Troxy in London. The band teased the name of their forthcoming third album, which will be released in May, last...

Vampire Weekend have announced details of their new album, which will be titled Modern Vampires Of The City. The band have also revealed they are to play a one-off UK show on May 8 at The Troxy in London.

The band teased the name of their forthcoming third album, which will be released in May, last week and today placed the album title in the classified section of the New York Times under the ‘Lost And Found’ header. Having tipped fans off to their PR stunt via Twitter, the band then confirmed the album title and release date in a second tweet.

The title is in keeping with the cryptic ‘MVOTC’ acronym which has been present on Vampire Weekend’s website since they first revealed they had finished work on the album earlier this year. Fans had speculated as to what the album title could mean online, with some suggesting the MV could stand for Martha’s Vineyard, where some of the album was written and recorded.

The LP will be the band’s first new material since 2010’s ‘Contra’ and has been in the works for more than 20 months and will be released in the UK on May 6.

The tracklisting for is as follows:

‘Obvious Bicycle’

‘Unbelievers’

‘Step’

‘Diane Young’

‘Don’t Lie’

‘Hannah Hunt’

‘Everlasting Arms’

‘Finger Back’

‘Worship You’

‘Ya Hey’

‘Hudson’

‘Young Lion’

Thom Yorke announces series of special live shows

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Thom Yorke has announced a special series of live shows with Radiohead and Atoms For Peace superproducer Nigel Godrich. Announcing the gigs on Twitter earlier today (February 4), Yorke wrote: "Me & Nigel out & about with two turntables & a microphone - London 22 Feb, Berlin 8 March, NY...

Thom Yorke has announced a special series of live shows with Radiohead and Atoms For Peace superproducer Nigel Godrich.

Announcing the gigs on Twitter earlier today (February 4), Yorke wrote: “Me & Nigel out & about with two turntables & a microphone – London 22 Feb, Berlin 8 March, NY 14 March. Special guests & location to follow…”

Atoms For Peace – Thom Yorke’s side project with Godrich, Flea from Red Hot Chili Peppers and percussionist Mauro Refosco – release their debut album ‘Amok’ on February 25 via XL.

In a recent interview, Yorke and Godrich confirmed that they would be playing shows in the UK and Europe, but that they didn’t know when. “It’s still being figured out,” said Nigel. “It’s on the table.”

When asked if they’d be playing this summer’s Glastonbury Festival, Yorke said that they wouldn’t. “We won’t have got our shit together by then,” he explained.

Watch new Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds video, “Jubilee Street”

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Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds have unveiled the video for their song 'Jubilee Street'. The NSFW promo was directed by longtime Cave collaborator John Hillcoat (Lawless, The Proposition), and features Brit actor Ray Winstone. The video was shot in the East End of London at the end of last year. Scroll...

Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds have unveiled the video for their song ‘Jubilee Street’.

The NSFW promo was directed by longtime Cave collaborator John Hillcoat (Lawless, The Proposition), and features Brit actor Ray Winstone. The video was shot in the East End of London at the end of last year. Scroll down to watch.

Speaking about the video, Cave said: It was a real pleasure hanging around the set and watching Ray do his thing. He is a master. What a great actor. And of course, working with my friend and collaborator John Hillcoat is always a blast.

Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds will launch their new album, ‘Push the Sky Away’, with a special, sold out live show at Her Majesty’s Theatre in London on February 10.

The band will be playing the album in full with strings and a choir. A short film by Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard about the making of the album, which is out February 18, will also be screened at the event.

Similar events will be held in Paris at Trianon (February 11), Berlin Admiralspalast (February 13) and Los Angeles Fonda Theatre (February 21).

For more information visit Nickcave.com.

Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds will be playing SXSW in Austin, Texas in March, Coachella Festival in California in April and Primavera Sound in Barcelona, Spain, in May.

HMV to close up to 100 shops

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Administrators responsible for the restructure of HMV are understood to be announcing plans to close between 60 and 100 stores this week. According to The Telegraph, administrator Deloitte's plans to restructure the business could result in the loss of 1,500 jobs at the music retailer. The location of the stores set to be closed are yet to be finalised, but the chosen shops will remain open until all their stock has been sold. HMV went into administration last month, putting over 4,000 jobs and 223 stores at risk, but hopes of a rescue deal have been raised after restructuring firm Hilco bought the company's £176 million worth of debt. The company are believed to be in talks with record labels, suppliers and HMV's landlords as part of a plan to keep the retailer afloat in some capacity. Hilco, which turned around the fortunes of HMV's Canadian arm, and Deloitte believe that for the chain to emerge as a viable high street retailer it must reduce its number of shops to between 120 and 160. Deloitte has already cut 60 jobs at HMV, which led to staff hijacking the company's Twitter account last week. In a string of messages on the company's Twitter account, Poppy Rose Cleere, who was HMV’s social media planner, criticised the company for getting rid of people who wanted to help secure the long term future of the company: "There are over 60 of us being fired at once! Mass execution of loyal employees who love the brand," read one message. Another stated: "Under normal circumstances we'd never dare do such a thing as this." She later revealed that she felt senior members of staff at HMV "never seemed to grasp" how important social media was in building links between themselves and customers. "I would apologise for the #hmvXFactorFiring tweets but I felt like someone had to speak. As someone without a family to support/no mortgage I felt that I was the safest person to do so," she wrote on her own personal Twitter account. She later added: "I wanted to show the power of Social Media to those who refused to be educated."

Administrators responsible for the restructure of HMV are understood to be announcing plans to close between 60 and 100 stores this week.

According to The Telegraph, administrator Deloitte’s plans to restructure the business could result in the loss of 1,500 jobs at the music retailer. The location of the stores set to be closed are yet to be finalised, but the chosen shops will remain open until all their stock has been sold.

HMV went into administration last month, putting over 4,000 jobs and 223 stores at risk, but hopes of a rescue deal have been raised after restructuring firm Hilco bought the company’s £176 million worth of debt. The company are believed to be in talks with record labels, suppliers and HMV’s landlords as part of a plan to keep the retailer afloat in some capacity.

Hilco, which turned around the fortunes of HMV’s Canadian arm, and Deloitte believe that for the chain to emerge as a viable high street retailer it must reduce its number of shops to between 120 and 160. Deloitte has already cut 60 jobs at HMV, which led to staff hijacking the company’s Twitter account last week.

In a string of messages on the company’s Twitter account, Poppy Rose Cleere, who was HMV’s social media planner, criticised the company for getting rid of people who wanted to help secure the long term future of the company: “There are over 60 of us being fired at once! Mass execution of loyal employees who love the brand,” read one message. Another stated: “Under normal circumstances we’d never dare do such a thing as this.”

She later revealed that she felt senior members of staff at HMV “never seemed to grasp” how important social media was in building links between themselves and customers. “I would apologise for the #hmvXFactorFiring tweets but I felt like someone had to speak. As someone without a family to support/no mortgage I felt that I was the safest person to do so,” she wrote on her own personal Twitter account. She later added: “I wanted to show the power of Social Media to those who refused to be educated.”

Watch Pulp perform new single ‘After You’ on Jonathan Ross show

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Pulp made their first live appearance on TV together in 10 years on Jonathan Ross' chat show this weekend, performing their new single "After You". Watch it below. Jarvis Cocker and co played the James Murphy produced single as well as a brief part of "Common People" as the programme began. "Afte...

Pulp made their first live appearance on TV together in 10 years on Jonathan Ross’ chat show this weekend, performing their new single “After You”. Watch it below.

Jarvis Cocker and co played the James Murphy produced single as well as a brief part of “Common People” as the programme began.

After You” was made available to download last week (January 28). The band originally gave away the track as a present on Christmas Day 2012 to fans who attended their homecoming Sheffield Arena show on December 8.

The track was first demoed by the band during the sessions for their 2001 album We Love Life, but the new version is a fresh version recorded in November 2012, before being finished off with Murphy in December.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=72YVDqBqBzo

Villagers – {Awayland}

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Conor O'Brien adds some weirdness to his songcraft... Villagers’ 2010 debut, the Mercury Prize nominated Becoming A Jackal, was a quiet kind of revelation, full of slightly off-centre pop songs, jazzy diminished chords, inventive rhythms and unexpected melodic detours. The richly imaginative lyrical landscape hinted at horror and myth, but while there was a contemporary kind of darkness in the songs of Conor J. O’Brien – the young Irishman who is essentially the north, south, east and west of Villagers – the precision-point songcraft recalled those elegant, literate pop songwriters who blossomed in another era: Roddy Frame, Imperial Bedroom Costello, Paddy McAloon. If that first album announced the arrival of a precocious new talent the follow up not only seals the deal but expands the frame of reference. These 11 tracks are bolstered by a fuller, more adventurous sound: crisp electronics, more expansive string arrangements, and overall a greater sense of a five-piece band working together to exploit the full potential of each song. And whereas the lyrics on Becoming A Jackal were placed front and centre, this time they are pared back and shifted slightly from the spotlight. Indeed, the beautiful title track is a wordless concatenation of drifting voices, liquid guitar and sky-high strings. O’Brien still clearly labours over every line but in general he seems happy to let the music do a little more of the heavy lifting. On {Awayland} the craft and guile is worn at a slightly more rakish angle. “The Waves” offers not only a lip-smacking chorus but glitchy electronics and a runaway finale involve a feedbacking guitar revving like a jet engine struggling to get airborne. “Passing A Message” is built on a pulsing, undeviating Krautrock bassline, a sharp Bernard Herrmann string figure and clipped funk guitar. It sounds like three entirely different songs until it literally pulls itself together into something unified and wholly fantastic. The edges may be sharper, the outlook less austere and self-contained, but Villagers are still defined by songs which deliver hook upon hook. “Nothing Arrived” rolls in on a circular piano line which recalls R.E.M.’s “Electrolite” and runs on a similar hybrid of melancholy and euphoria. “The Bell” is 60s spy theme pop: Duane Eddy twang, cresting horns, rattling flamenco rhythm. “Rhythm Composer” has the gentle swing of classic Cole Porter filtered through Steve McQueen-era Prefab Sprout; amused and amusing, full of ease and elegance. Beginning with a Byrds-like raga guitar figure, “Earthy Pleasures” is a deconstructed Dylan ’65 blues, O’Brien tangling with some mysterious lady “speaking Esperanto and drinking ginger tea” before the whole thing – and this is unfortunate but not entirely unenjoyable – mutates into a galloping oddity which recalls nothing so much as Benny Hill’s “Ernie (The Fastest Milkman In The West)”. Here, as elsewhere, O’Brien’s voice combines the clenched vibrato of Feargal Sharkey with the cool, calm clarity of Paul Simon. It is not a big voice. On “Grateful Song” – a sweeping waltz-time ballad which sounds like the Walker Brothers jamming with Holger Czukay – the tilt at orchestral grandeur is rather diminished by his little boy’s politesse, but it works perfectly on “My Lighthouse”, the spare opener which needs nothing more than soft, multi-tracked vocals and a gently picked chord pattern to make a profound impact. Like many of these songs, it seems drawn inexorably towards the sea. In other hands – let’s attach them to the arms of Neil Hannon – this kind of thing can easily become too arch, too knowing, but O’Brien possesses a disarmingly childlike quality which proves that smart pop music needn’t necessarily come with a smirk and a raised eyebrow. “In A Newfound Land You Are Free” is both a tender lullaby for a baby and a manifesto for retaining joy, innocence and “vicious freedom”. On “Judgement Call” he sings waspishly, “God forbid they retain their sense of wonder”. O’Brien, for one, has certainly lost none of his ability to be amazed and to amaze in return. Graeme Thomson Q&A CONOR J. O’BRIEN Was it hard to reorientate yourself after the success of Becoming A Jackal? It wasn’t easy. When I started trying to write this album there were a couple of weeks where I was imagining criticisms of the songs before I’d even written two lines – I had to get that out of my head. More than what I did want to do I knew what I didn’t want to do, which was the more confessional, overly melodramatic first person things. I wanted the music to be something more uplifting. What prompted the introduction of more electronic textures? I bought a synthesiser. I’d never had one of those before. There were a few weeks of experimenting: programming beats, making really bad techno music, just fucking about with rhythms and grooves. I discovered I had song ideas that could connect with these textures, so it was like a jigsaw puzzle. I had loads of different versions of each song, and most of them were far more electronic than the versions on the album. The stuff that stayed on were the things that really gave the songs a signature; the stuff that I took off was because it definitely sounded like somebody who was making their first electronic music! INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Conor O’Brien adds some weirdness to his songcraft…

Villagers’ 2010 debut, the Mercury Prize nominated Becoming A Jackal, was a quiet kind of revelation, full of slightly off-centre pop songs, jazzy diminished chords, inventive rhythms and unexpected melodic detours. The richly imaginative lyrical landscape hinted at horror and myth, but while there was a contemporary kind of darkness in the songs of Conor J. O’Brien – the young Irishman who is essentially the north, south, east and west of Villagers – the precision-point songcraft recalled those elegant, literate pop songwriters who blossomed in another era: Roddy Frame, Imperial Bedroom Costello, Paddy McAloon.

If that first album announced the arrival of a precocious new talent the follow up not only seals the deal but expands the frame of reference. These 11 tracks are bolstered by a fuller, more adventurous sound: crisp electronics, more expansive string arrangements, and overall a greater sense of a five-piece band working together to exploit the full potential of each song. And whereas the lyrics on Becoming A Jackal were placed front and centre, this time they are pared back and shifted slightly from the spotlight. Indeed, the beautiful title track is a wordless concatenation of drifting voices, liquid guitar and sky-high strings. O’Brien still clearly labours over every line but in general he seems happy to let the music do a little more of the heavy lifting.

On {Awayland} the craft and guile is worn at a slightly more rakish angle. “The Waves” offers not only a lip-smacking chorus but glitchy electronics and a runaway finale involve a feedbacking guitar revving like a jet engine struggling to get airborne. “Passing A Message” is built on a pulsing, undeviating Krautrock bassline, a sharp Bernard Herrmann string figure and clipped funk guitar. It sounds like three entirely different songs until it literally pulls itself together into something unified and wholly fantastic.

The edges may be sharper, the outlook less austere and self-contained, but Villagers are still defined by songs which deliver hook upon hook. “Nothing Arrived” rolls in on a circular piano line which recalls R.E.M.’s “Electrolite” and runs on a similar hybrid of melancholy and euphoria. “The Bell” is 60s spy theme pop: Duane Eddy twang, cresting horns, rattling flamenco rhythm. “Rhythm Composer” has the gentle swing of classic Cole Porter filtered through Steve McQueen-era Prefab Sprout; amused and amusing, full of ease and elegance. Beginning with a Byrds-like raga guitar figure, “Earthy Pleasures” is a deconstructed Dylan ’65 blues, O’Brien tangling with some mysterious lady “speaking Esperanto and drinking ginger tea” before the whole thing – and this is unfortunate but not entirely unenjoyable – mutates into a galloping oddity which recalls nothing so much as Benny Hill’s “Ernie (The Fastest Milkman In The West)”.

Here, as elsewhere, O’Brien’s voice combines the clenched vibrato of Feargal Sharkey with the cool, calm clarity of Paul Simon. It is not a big voice. On “Grateful Song” – a sweeping waltz-time ballad which sounds like the Walker Brothers jamming with Holger Czukay – the tilt at orchestral grandeur is rather diminished by his little boy’s politesse, but it works perfectly on “My Lighthouse”, the spare opener which needs nothing more than soft, multi-tracked vocals and a gently picked chord pattern to make a profound impact. Like many of these songs, it seems drawn inexorably towards the sea.

In other hands – let’s attach them to the arms of Neil Hannon – this kind of thing can easily become too arch, too knowing, but O’Brien possesses a disarmingly childlike quality which proves that smart pop music needn’t necessarily come with a smirk and a raised eyebrow. “In A Newfound Land You Are Free” is both a tender lullaby for a baby and a manifesto for retaining joy, innocence and “vicious freedom”. On “Judgement Call” he sings waspishly, “God forbid they retain their sense of wonder”. O’Brien, for one, has certainly lost none of his ability to be amazed and to amaze in return.

Graeme Thomson

Q&A

CONOR J. O’BRIEN

Was it hard to reorientate yourself after the success of Becoming A Jackal?

It wasn’t easy. When I started trying to write this album there were a couple of weeks where I was imagining criticisms of the songs before I’d even written two lines – I had to get that out of my head. More than what I did want to do I knew what I didn’t want to do, which was the more confessional, overly melodramatic first person things. I wanted the music to be something more uplifting.

What prompted the introduction of more electronic textures?

I bought a synthesiser. I’d never had one of those before. There were a few weeks of experimenting: programming beats, making really bad techno music, just fucking about with rhythms and grooves. I discovered I had song ideas that could connect with these textures, so it was like a jigsaw puzzle. I had loads of different versions of each song, and most of them were far more electronic than the versions on the album. The stuff that stayed on were the things that really gave the songs a signature; the stuff that I took off was because it definitely sounded like somebody who was making their first electronic music!

INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

My Bloody Valentine upload new album to YouTube

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My Bloody Valentine have uploaded their long-awaited new album on YouTube – scroll to the bottom of the page and click to begin listening. The nine-track follow-up to 1991's 'Loveless', titled 'mbv', was released at midnight (GMT) on the evening of February 2 via a brand new website for the band....

My Bloody Valentine have uploaded their long-awaited new album on YouTube – scroll to the bottom of the page and click to begin listening.

The nine-track follow-up to 1991’s ‘Loveless’, titled ‘mbv’, was released at midnight (GMT) on the evening of February 2 via a brand new website for the band. Shortly after, they posted all nine tracks on YouTube.

The album is sold as a download only, CD and download or as a 180g vinyl, CD and download package. The vinyl and CD packages will be posted within three weeks of purchase date, but the download is immediate.

The tracklisting for ‘mbv’ is

‘she found now’

‘only tomorrow’

‘who sees you’

‘is this and yes’

‘if i am’

‘new you’

‘in another way’

‘nothing is’

‘wonder 2’

Speaking to NME at the beginning of November, frontman Kevin Shields said of the new album: “I think with this record, people who like us will immediately connect with something. Based on the very, very few people who’ve heard stuff – some engineers, the band, and that’s about it – some people think it’s stranger than ‘Loveless’. I don’t. I feel like it really frees us up, and in the bigger picture it’s 100 per cent necessary.”

The band will head out on a UK tour in March. The UK dates will follow a series of six gigs in Japan and four dates in Australia, all taking place this month. The band are also confirmed to headline the 60,000 capacity Tokyo Rocks festival in May and will also play Primavera Sound in Barcelona.

My Bloody Valentine will play:

Birmingham O2 Academy (March 8)

Glasgow Barrowlands (March 9)

Manchester Apollo (10)

London Hammersmith Apollo (12, 13)

Thom Yorke’s soundtrack for fashion show appears online – listen

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A new soundtrack for a fashion show scored by Radiohead's Thom Yorke has been posted online. The singer teamed up with long-time collaborator and producer Nigel Godrich to provide the music for the Rag and Bone fashion label's event in Manhattan earlier this week. The soundtrack can now be streamed at the designer's Facebook page. Yorke previously provided music for a show by the fashion label in September 2011, with two of the tracks he produced - titled 'Twist' and 'Stuck Together' - subsequently surfacing on the internet. The latter track also featured a contribution from Radiohead guitarist Jonny Greenwood. Earlier this month (January 17), the frontman made the headlines after warning Prime Minister David Cameron against using any of his music in election campaigns, threatening to "sue the living shit out of him" if he did. "Politics is not a fun thing to write about," he said. "I can’t say I love the idea of a banker liking our music, or David Cameron. I can’t believe he'd like [Radiohead’s last album] 'The King Of Limbs' much. But I also equally think, who cares?" Thom Yorke is currently working on his Atoms For Peace project, which features Flea from Red Hot Chili Peppers, super-producer Nigel Godrich and percussionist Mauro Refosco. The group's debut album, 'Amok', is set for release on February 25. Speaking recently about whether the group would be playing any live shows, Godrich said that UK and European concerts were on the cards, but that they were "still being figured out". Yorke ruled out playing this summers' Glastonbury, explaining: "We won’t have got our shit together by then."

A new soundtrack for a fashion show scored by Radiohead’s Thom Yorke has been posted online.

The singer teamed up with long-time collaborator and producer Nigel Godrich to provide the music for the Rag and Bone fashion label’s event in Manhattan earlier this week. The soundtrack can now be streamed at the designer’s Facebook page.

Yorke previously provided music for a show by the fashion label in September 2011, with two of the tracks he produced – titled ‘Twist’ and ‘Stuck Together’ – subsequently surfacing on the internet. The latter track also featured a contribution from Radiohead guitarist Jonny Greenwood.

Earlier this month (January 17), the frontman made the headlines after warning Prime Minister David Cameron against using any of his music in election campaigns, threatening to “sue the living shit out of him” if he did. “Politics is not a fun thing to write about,” he said. “I can’t say I love the idea of a banker liking our music, or David Cameron. I can’t believe he’d like [Radiohead’s last album] ‘The King Of Limbs’ much. But I also equally think, who cares?”

Thom Yorke is currently working on his Atoms For Peace project, which features Flea from Red Hot Chili Peppers, super-producer Nigel Godrich and percussionist Mauro Refosco. The group’s debut album, ‘Amok’, is set for release on February 25.

Speaking recently about whether the group would be playing any live shows, Godrich said that UK and European concerts were on the cards, but that they were “still being figured out”. Yorke ruled out playing this summers’ Glastonbury, explaining: “We won’t have got our shit together by then.”

Fleetwood Mac confirm UK tour dates

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Fleetwood Mac have confirmed details of five UK tour dates to take place in September and October. The band previously hinted at bringing their world tour to the UK later in the year and have today confirmed five dates, including shows in Dublin, London, Birmingham, Manchester and Glasgow. Starting...

Fleetwood Mac have confirmed details of five UK tour dates to take place in September and October.

The band previously hinted at bringing their world tour to the UK later in the year and have today confirmed five dates, including shows in Dublin, London, Birmingham, Manchester and Glasgow. Starting in Ireland, the group will perform at the O2 in Dublin on September 20 before heading to London for a date at the O2 Arena on September 24. From there, the band will play Birmingham’s LG Arena (September 29), Manchester Arena (October 1) and new venue The Hydro in Glasgow on October 3. Tickets go on sale from Saturday, February 8.

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.

Fleetwood Mac will play:

Dublin, 02 (September 20)

London, O2 Arena (24)

Birmingham, LG Arena (29)

Manchester, Manchester Arena (October 1)

Glasgow, The Hydro (3)

My Bloody Valentine, “MBV”: A first couple of listens

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Last night, it was all about anticipation. First, the rumours started circulating that Michael Gove was implicated in some job-threatening scandal, only for those rumours to reach a resounding anti-climax, as The Observer’s story was revealed to be a little spat between a couple of hacks and some unsavoury Tory operatives. Would My Bloody Valentine’s promise of a new album – “We are preparing to go live with the new album/website this evening. We will make an announcement as soon as its [sic] up” – turn out to be as disappointing, when the news broke an hour or so later? I must confess, tricked often enough in the last 20 years by Kevin Shields, I gave up after a while and went to bed. This morning, one predictable tale has emerged: of crashing websites and frustrated fans. It is romantic to see “MBV” as the climax of two decades of uncompromising artistic labour. It might be more realistic, though, to see the launch of MBV’s third album as a neat cipher for 20 years of muddling, incompetence and blithe contempt for their fans. Less predictable, perhaps, is what seems to be the quality of these nine tracks, once you do manage to download them. They do not sound like they’ve been sweated over for all those years (how could they, I guess?); in fact, there’s an odd, mellow rawness to some of them that’s quite surprising. If there’s a shocking quality to “MBV” – beyond its actual existence – it’s the lack of layering to something like “Is This And Yes”, as if Shields has spent all that time adding and subtracting sounds, and eventually resolving to go with a minimal take: glazed sequencers, Bilinda Butcher’s nebulous sigh. It’d be churlish to jump to too many conclusions too fast, of course, and already on a third listen the richness of the melodies buried in many of these tracks is slowly emerging: if “Nothing Is” initially startles, thanks to a mechanistic quasi-hardcore riff and overdriven martial beats, it’s the detailing that endures (and in spite of some talk on Twitter this morning, I don’t think it sounds quite as much like Third Eye Foundation as I, at least, expected). Did Kevin Shields ever listen to Third Eye Foundation or, indeed, much else through those long years? Apart from a few breaks that would’ve sounded a bit progressive for 1992, it’s hard to tell on this evidence. Much of “MBV”, from its scrupulously indistinct cover, through the self-conscious use of lower case, down to the songs, feels like four men and women with an unwavering loyalty to their old aesthetic. And the remarkable thing is, for all the mostly limpid music that followed in the slipstream of “Loveless”, the 2013 Valentines don’t feel devalued by their progeny. “MBV” is a generic My Bloody Valentine record, but not a generic shoegazing one. It’s in the way Shields bends a note and a tune, something intangible in the way they mix haziness and intensity; it might conceivably be a projection of what we expect of MBV rather than what we actually hear, but that’s working just fine right now. Early days, then, but at this point, two clear favourites. After the blur of “She Found Now”, “Only Tomorrow” feels very much congruent with “Loveless” but, as it evolves, there’s something a little different, too: a marked extra force to Colm O’Ciosoig’s drumming, and a crude immediacy to Shields’ riffing, even as it is smothered in fx and matched up with something akin to a melodica. If MBV have been hailed and intellectualised over the years as post-rock, or anti-rock, or as a feminised inversion of guitar band orthodoxies, there’s a triumphal rockishness to what gradually reveals itself to be a solo, or the closest Shields has ever got to one. It’s lumbering, tentative, and far from the spiralling velocity of Shields’ old sparring partner J Mascis, but there’s a palpable kinship there, too, and an incredible tune embedded in the fuzz. Then, following, the skipping accessibility of “New You” (the one played in Brixton last week as “Rough Song”), there’s “In Another Way”, an uncommonly urgent, euphoric sequel of sorts to “Soon”, with an ebbing, anthemic melody which emerges out of the blast furnace after a couple of minutes, and which is then hammered with a relentless calculation that proves Shields is always more concerned with making his tunes memorable than with the damage he can wreak in the process. All this will bed in, and perspectives will doubtless change over the next day/week/decade or two and countless more listens, but once again – as they delicately pick their way through the roaring “Wonder 2” - after all these years, it’s wonderful to be reminded that it’s not the noise that sticks in your head, it’s the songs. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

Last night, it was all about anticipation. First, the rumours started circulating that Michael Gove was implicated in some job-threatening scandal, only for those rumours to reach a resounding anti-climax, as The Observer’s story was revealed to be a little spat between a couple of hacks and some unsavoury Tory operatives.

Would My Bloody Valentine’s promise of a new album – “We are preparing to go live with the new album/website this evening. We will make an announcement as soon as its [sic] up” – turn out to be as disappointing, when the news broke an hour or so later? I must confess, tricked often enough in the last 20 years by Kevin Shields, I gave up after a while and went to bed. This morning, one predictable tale has emerged: of crashing websites and frustrated fans. It is romantic to see “MBV” as the climax of two decades of uncompromising artistic labour. It might be more realistic, though, to see the launch of MBV’s third album as a neat cipher for 20 years of muddling, incompetence and blithe contempt for their fans.

Less predictable, perhaps, is what seems to be the quality of these nine tracks, once you do manage to download them. They do not sound like they’ve been sweated over for all those years (how could they, I guess?); in fact, there’s an odd, mellow rawness to some of them that’s quite surprising. If there’s a shocking quality to “MBV” – beyond its actual existence – it’s the lack of layering to something like “Is This And Yes”, as if Shields has spent all that time adding and subtracting sounds, and eventually resolving to go with a minimal take: glazed sequencers, Bilinda Butcher’s nebulous sigh.

It’d be churlish to jump to too many conclusions too fast, of course, and already on a third listen the richness of the melodies buried in many of these tracks is slowly emerging: if “Nothing Is” initially startles, thanks to a mechanistic quasi-hardcore riff and overdriven martial beats, it’s the detailing that endures (and in spite of some talk on Twitter this morning, I don’t think it sounds quite as much like Third Eye Foundation as I, at least, expected).

Did Kevin Shields ever listen to Third Eye Foundation or, indeed, much else through those long years? Apart from a few breaks that would’ve sounded a bit progressive for 1992, it’s hard to tell on this evidence. Much of “MBV”, from its scrupulously indistinct cover, through the self-conscious use of lower case, down to the songs, feels like four men and women with an unwavering loyalty to their old aesthetic. And the remarkable thing is, for all the mostly limpid music that followed in the slipstream of “Loveless”, the 2013 Valentines don’t feel devalued by their progeny. “MBV” is a generic My Bloody Valentine record, but not a generic shoegazing one. It’s in the way Shields bends a note and a tune, something intangible in the way they mix haziness and intensity; it might conceivably be a projection of what we expect of MBV rather than what we actually hear, but that’s working just fine right now.

Early days, then, but at this point, two clear favourites. After the blur of “She Found Now”, “Only Tomorrow” feels very much congruent with “Loveless” but, as it evolves, there’s something a little different, too: a marked extra force to Colm O’Ciosoig’s drumming, and a crude immediacy to Shields’ riffing, even as it is smothered in fx and matched up with something akin to a melodica. If MBV have been hailed and intellectualised over the years as post-rock, or anti-rock, or as a feminised inversion of guitar band orthodoxies, there’s a triumphal rockishness to what gradually reveals itself to be a solo, or the closest Shields has ever got to one. It’s lumbering, tentative, and far from the spiralling velocity of Shields’ old sparring partner J Mascis, but there’s a palpable kinship there, too, and an incredible tune embedded in the fuzz.

Then, following, the skipping accessibility of “New You” (the one played in Brixton last week as “Rough Song”), there’s “In Another Way”, an uncommonly urgent, euphoric sequel of sorts to “Soon”, with an ebbing, anthemic melody which emerges out of the blast furnace after a couple of minutes, and which is then hammered with a relentless calculation that proves Shields is always more concerned with making his tunes memorable than with the damage he can wreak in the process.

All this will bed in, and perspectives will doubtless change over the next day/week/decade or two and countless more listens, but once again – as they delicately pick their way through the roaring “Wonder 2” – after all these years, it’s wonderful to be reminded that it’s not the noise that sticks in your head, it’s the songs.

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

My Bloody Valentine release new album, ‘mbv’

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My Bloody Valentine have released their brand new album, mbv. The nine-track follow-up to 1991's Loveless was released at midnight (GMT) on the evening of February 2 via a brand new website for the band, however the site Mybloodyvalentine.org crashed almost immediately after launching. The album i...

My Bloody Valentine have released their brand new album, mbv.

The nine-track follow-up to 1991’s Loveless was released at midnight (GMT) on the evening of February 2 via a brand new website for the band, however the site Mybloodyvalentine.org crashed almost immediately after launching.

The album is available exclusively from the website and will be sold as a download only, CD and download or as a 180g vinyl, CD and download package. The vinyl and CD packages will be posted within three weeks of purchase date, but the download will be immediate.

Click here for Uncut’s first review of mbv

The tracklisting for mbv is

‘she found now’

‘only tomorrow’

‘who sees you’

‘is this and yes’

‘if i am’

‘new you’

‘in another way’

‘nothing is’

‘wonder 2’

My Bloody Valentine unveiled plans to release their long-awaited new album via their Facebook page, writing:

“We are preparing to go live with the new album/website this evening. We will make an announcement as soon as its up.”

Earlier this week, the band’s frontman Kevin Shields said the follow-up to 1991’s Loveless “might be out in two or three days” and it seems he’s stayed pretty much true to his word.

He made the comments on stage on January 27, during the band’s warm-up show at Brixton’s Electric. The band will head out on a UK tour in March.

The UK dates will follow a series of six gigs in Japan and four dates in Australia, all taking place this month. My Bloody Valentine are also confirmed to headline the 60,000 capacity Tokyo Rocks festival in May and will also play Primavera Sound in Barcelona.

Speaking to NME at the beginning of November, Shields said of the new album: “I think with this record, people who like us will immediately connect with something. Based on the very, very few people who’ve heard stuff – some engineers, the band, and that’s about it – some people think it’s stranger than Loveless. I don’t. I feel like it really frees us up, and in the bigger picture it’s 100 per cent necessary.”

My Bloody Valentine will play:

Birmingham O2 Academy (March 8)

Glasgow Barrowlands (March 9)

Manchester Apollo (10)

London Hammersmith Apollo (12, 13)

The Specials announce American tour dates

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The Specials have announced tour dates for the United States. The band, who announced on their website in January that vocalist Neville Staples would cease touring for medical reasons, have confirming shows in Chicago, Los Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco in addition to the band’s appearance ...

The Specials have announced tour dates for the United States.

The band, who announced on their website in January that vocalist Neville Staples would cease touring for medical reasons, have confirming shows in Chicago, Los Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco in addition to the band’s appearance at the South By Southwest festival in March.

The band have already announced a batch of UK shows in May.

The dates are as follows:

March 11: The Vic Theatre, Chicago, IL

March 13: South By Southwest, Austin, TX

March 15: South By Southwest, Austin, TX

March 18: Club Nokia, Los Angeles, CA

March 19: House of Blues, San Diego, CA

March 20: Fox Theater, Pomona, CA

March 22: Ventura Theatre, Ventura, CA

March 23: The Warfield, San Francisco, CA

March 26: Roseland Theater, Portland, OR

March 27: Showbox SoDo, Seattle, WA

March 29: The Commodore, Vancouver, B.C.

March 30: The Vogue, Vancouver, B.C.

May 10: Barrowland, Glasgow, UK

May 13: O2 Academy, Newcastle, UK

May 15: O2 Apollo, Manchester, UK

May 18: Olympia, Liverpool, UK

May 19: De Montfort Hall, Leicester, UK

May 21: O2 Academy, Birmingham, UK

May 23: Centre, Newport, UK

May 25: Winter Gardens, Margate, UK

May 26: Guildhall, Portsmouth, UK

May 28: O2 Academy Brixton, London, UK

Flight

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With Flight, director Robert Zemeckis has made a solid, unshowy character drama, the kind of film cinemagoers of a certain age will tell you the studios don't really make any more. It reminds me a little of an Eastwood movie - specifically, with Eastwood in his capacity as a film director, that is. It's a sober piece about a man's moral choices, built around a creditable central performance from Denzel Washington as Whip Whitaker – an alcoholic pilot who, still drunk and high from the night before, manages to land his aeroplane after a mechanical failure sends it into a 4,800 ft dive. The crash itself is amazing; a 10-minute nose dive, with Zemeckis barely moving his camera out of the cockpit. Whitaker emerges a hero – “you’re a rock star” – before he is called to account. “Death demands responsibility,” Don Cheadle’s lawyer explains. “Six people died. Someone is to blame.” Flight is essentially a study an intelligent man living in denial. The film revolves entirely around Washington: sweaty, puffy, slow-eyed when down, very much The Man when the booze and the coke kick in. Zemeckis – who hasn’t directed a live action film since 2000’s Cast Away – shoots the film as straight as possible. But that’s not to say it’s without wit. There are artfully handled moral ambiguities here: could Whitaker have saved that plane if he hadn’t been blasted on vodka and cocaine? With a film so focused on his character, there is little room for those around him to breathe – although John Goodman gets some meaty scenes as Whitaker’s drug dealer, who seems to be modelled on The Big Lebowski’s Dude. It’s Washington’s best work since Training Day: a damaged, defiant soul, strutting down hotel corridors with his aviator shades on, that latest line of coke racing round his blood stream, or shivering as he pours bottles of spirits down the sink. Michael Bonner

With Flight, director Robert Zemeckis has made a solid, unshowy character drama, the kind of film cinemagoers of a certain age will tell you the studios don’t really make any more. It reminds me a little of an Eastwood movie – specifically, with Eastwood in his capacity as a film director, that is. It’s a sober piece about a man’s moral choices, built around a creditable central performance from Denzel Washington as Whip Whitaker – an alcoholic pilot who, still drunk and high from the night before, manages to land his aeroplane after a mechanical failure sends it into a 4,800 ft dive.

The crash itself is amazing; a 10-minute nose dive, with Zemeckis barely moving his camera out of the cockpit. Whitaker emerges a hero – “you’re a rock star” – before he is called to account. “Death demands responsibility,” Don Cheadle’s lawyer explains. “Six people died. Someone is to blame.”

Flight is essentially a study an intelligent man living in denial. The film revolves entirely around Washington: sweaty, puffy, slow-eyed when down, very much The Man when the booze and the coke kick in. Zemeckis – who hasn’t directed a live action film since 2000’s Cast Away – shoots the film as straight as possible. But that’s not to say it’s without wit. There are artfully handled moral ambiguities here: could Whitaker have saved that plane if he hadn’t been blasted on vodka and cocaine?

With a film so focused on his character, there is little room for those around him to breathe – although John Goodman gets some meaty scenes as Whitaker’s drug dealer, who seems to be modelled on The Big Lebowski’s Dude. It’s Washington’s best work since Training Day: a damaged, defiant soul, strutting down hotel corridors with his aviator shades on, that latest line of coke racing round his blood stream, or shivering as he pours bottles of spirits down the sink.

Michael Bonner