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Watch Bob Mould and Dave Grohl perform Hüsker Dü’s “Ice Cold Ice”

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Bob Mould has revealed a clip of his band performing live with Dave Grohl as he seeks funds to launch a new career spanning documentary. Mould revealed the clip, which you can see at the bottom of the page, during an AmA (ask me anything) on Reddit. The performance is lifted from the frontman's new...

Bob Mould has revealed a clip of his band performing live with Dave Grohl as he seeks funds to launch a new career spanning documentary.

Mould revealed the clip, which you can see at the bottom of the page, during an AmA (ask me anything) on Reddit. The performance is lifted from the frontman’s new film See a Little Light: A Celebration Of The Music And Legacy Of Bob Mould which is currently seeking funds on Kickstarter. The film focuses on the November 2011 all-star concert hosted by Mould in Los Angeles at the Walt Disney Concert Hall. Ryan Adams, Spoon’s Britt Daniel, The Hold Steady’s Craig Finn, and No Age were amongst the musicians who paid tribute to Mould at the concert.

Talking about Dave Grohl on Reddit, Mould said the pair would work together, “As soon as he stops hanging around with that McCartney guy.” Adding: “I keep telling him Sir Paul is nothing but trouble! Seriously, any time Dave wants to make more music, I am in. He’s super busy with the Sound City movie, which I can’t wait to see.”

Dave Grohl is no stranger to films either and is currently promoting his Sound City documentary. A studio recording of ‘Cut Me Some Slack’, the song he recorded with Sir Paul McCartney and the remaining members of Nirvana for the film, was put online yesterday (Dec 17).

Bob Mould currently has £52,000 of the £58,000 he needs through Kickstarter to get his film released.

Scroll down to see the clip of Bob Mould and Dave Grohl perform Husker Du’s “Ice Cold Ice” together.

Patti Smith planning sequel to Just Kids book

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Patti Smith has suggested she will release a new book next year, a sequel to her 2010 release Just Kids. Smith's first book focused on her relationship with Robert Mapplethorpe but claims that her second will be more "music based" and will include stories about her marriage to MC5 guitarist Fred Sm...

Patti Smith has suggested she will release a new book next year, a sequel to her 2010 release Just Kids.

Smith’s first book focused on her relationship with Robert Mapplethorpe but claims that her second will be more “music based” and will include stories about her marriage to MC5 guitarist Fred Smith. Speaking to Billboard about the book, which currently has no release date, Smith said: “I don’t have a big rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle, a sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll story to tell. I think I have maybe a better story. Through rock ‘n’ roll I traveled the world, worked with my late brother and, best of all, that’s how I met Fred. It changed my life in many unexpected ways, so I have my story to tell.”

There are also plans for Smith to release “I Ain’t Got Nobody”, the song she wrote for the season finale of Boardwalk Empire this year, in 2013.

“I’ve met Steve Buscemi, and Michael Pitt as well, who’s now departed. So I said I would do it, and I just sang it. I listened to the original versions and tried to integrate some knowledge of that period, when they didn’t sing so emotionally, but also put my own spin on it. I didn’t know where or when they would use it; it was really nice that they put it in a good spot,” says Smith.

Earlier this year Patti smith revealed she is adapting Just Kids into a film and that she would like Twilight actors Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart to take the lead roles.

The Gaslight Anthem reveal Pearl Jam inspiration on next record

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The Gaslight Anthem frontman Brian Fallon claims that Pearl Jam have inspired his band's plans for their next album. The New Jersey four-piece, who only recently released their fourth album Handwritten, already have ideas for their fifth LP according to frontman Brian Fallon. He told Rolling Stone:...

The Gaslight Anthem frontman Brian Fallon claims that Pearl Jam have inspired his band’s plans for their next album.

The New Jersey four-piece, who only recently released their fourth album Handwritten, already have ideas for their fifth LP according to frontman Brian Fallon. He told Rolling Stone: “I want to do the No Code record [Pearl Jam’s fourth album], that one. They did these three rock records, and [then] they all of a sudden went left turn. And everybody went, ‘What the hell?’ Then later, five years, they went, ‘This is amazing.'”

He added: “We’re searching for something new to do with songwriting, rather than just piecing together verses and choruses in more of a traditional sense. We’re looking for some other thing – not some other genre, but something else. And it might not be the favourite of everyone, but [it] might be the ‘weird’ album coming up. I’m pretty sure it is.”

The band recently paid tribute to their homestate of New Jersey in the video for their track “National Anthem“. The video – which you can watch below – shows images of the devastation which befell the East Coast of the United States, including New York, because of Hurricane Sandy.

Meanwhile, the band will play a UK tour in March 2013. They will play nine dates on the stretch kicking off on March 21 at the O2 Academy, Bristol, before heading up to Leeds, Glasgow and Manchester and finishing up at London’s Troxy.

The Gaslight Anthem will play:

O2 Academy Bristol (March 21)

O2 Academy Bristol (22)

O2 Academy Leeds (23)

O2 Academy Glasgow (24)

O2 Academy Glasgow (25)

Manchester, Academy (27, 28)

London, Troxy (29, 30)

Gil Scott-Heron – The Revolution Begins: The Flying Dutchman Masters

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The two sides of Scott-Heron - his early work collected in all its trailblazing glory... When Gil Scott-Heron walked into a small New York studio in Summer 1970, he was an author, not a performer. The gangly 21-year-old had already published a novel and a book of poetry, and had to be persuaded to record a spoken-word album by his new record label Bob Thiele, the man who had overseen the making of Gil’s favourite record, A Love Supreme by John Coltrane. But, as he looked at the few people perched on folding chairs, invited into the studio to make the recording feel live, the prodigy launched into a poem that would change his life. The poem took the form of a list of things that Heron hated; banal icons of white culture and loathed political figures that dominated American television in the 1970’s. By the time Heron had finished reciting “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised”, he had unwittingly changed his life. He would no longer be seen as a writer, but a singer, voice of musical black radicalism, doomed junkie… and the man who invented rap. This three-disc reissue of everything Heron and his pianist partner Brian Jackson recorded on Thiele’s Flying Dutchman label would probably not exist if Heron hadn’t bid farewell to that world in May 2011. But for listeners who only know Heron through his final 2010 album I’m New Here, The Revolution Begins… will be a revelation. Not just because it features some great music and poetry, much of which still sounds acutely relevant. But because the man who slowly killed himself with drugs, spent two lengthy periods in prison, and never quite came to terms with his chaotic childhood, prodigious intellect and hatred of white power, is as present and defined and agonized here, in his early twenties, as he is on I’m New Here. Listen to “The Vulture”, or “Who’ll Pay Reparations On My Soul?”, or “Home Is Where The Hatred Is” and you can only come to the chilling conclusion that Gil Scott-Heron knew exactly where he was headed. Ace’s Dean Rudland has applied some neat ingenuity to the box set’s running order. Heron’s Flying Dutchman catalogue comprised three albums: the largely spoken-word debut Small Talk At 125th And Lenox, featuring Last Poets-influenced percussion backing; the full band debut Pieces Of A Man, a key text in the development of jazz-funk featuring Jackson’s subtle keyboards, the familiar, funked-up version of “The Revolution…”, and an extraordinary pick-up band including drummer Bernard ‘Pretty’ Purdie, bassist Ron Carter and flautist Hubert Laws; and the less admired Free Will, which featured one vinyl side of “Pieces…”-style song and one of “Small Talk…”-style poetry. Rudland resists the temptation to just run the albums together, and instead puts the songs onto disc one and the stark beat poetry on disc two. This works perfectly because the moods of Heron’s two early styles are so diametrically opposed. While disc one’s flute and keyboard-led smugglings of modal jazz motifs into pop and soul melodies are Sunday morning mellow, Heron’s radical politics and bracing anger are left undiluted on disc two, which, as it travels from the persuasive satire of “The Revolution…” and “Whitey On The Moon” to the disturbing misogyny and homophobia of “Enough”, “Wiggy” and “The Subject Was Faggots”, forms the core of Heron’s life, work and internalised rage. Like many black radicals of the era, the young Heron was no liberal, and the chasm between his more and less enlightened selves suggests a fractured psyche that proved difficult to live with. Disc three is given up to an ‘alternate’ version of the Free Will album comprised of outtakes, including a radically different, more chaotic version of the title track, while the big attraction for Heron completists is “Artificialness”, a failed but interesting attempt to satirise Vietnam by way of domestic violence recorded with Purdie’s band Pretty Purdie And The Playboys. But while disc one contains a handful of conscious jazz-funk anthems that formed a ready template for acid jazz and its right-on offshoots, its disc two that pins you to your seat with its savage wit and occasionally brutal nastiness. Gil Scott-Heron was always withering about rap when asked if he had, indeed, invented it. But the linguistic mastery, rhythmic reportage and liberal-baiting fury of his early slam poems remain guilty as charged. Just another cross the man had to bear. Garry Mulholland Q&A BRIAN JACKSON Do you still listen to the early records you and Gil made on Flying Dutchman? I do. I feel those records are some of our best work, if not our best performances. We were finding ourselves. Do you recall your first encounter with Gil? Sure! It was at Lincoln University, Pennsylvania in 1969. We ran into each other by accident through a mutual friend, Victor Brown. Victor was performing in a talent show and Gil sang the song that he had written for Victor – it was called “Where Can A Man Find Peace?” – and that pretty much did it for me. His lyrics were unbelievable. We heard what each other were doing and knew we’d be more effective together. Was Lincoln a hotbed of radicalism? Ha! No. I think that’s what fuelled us. The apathy and lack of consciousness we encountered there galvanized us. Did you feel, at the time, that music could effect political change? I was just naïve enough to think that it actually could. But we weren’t interested in inciting people to riot. Some of that early material may sound incendiary, but compared to what people were actually experiencing and feeling inside, it wasn’t. Were you still in touch with Gil when he died? Yes, though not as much as I would have liked to have been. To be honest, I was not shocked. What shocked me more was that he was able to live for so long under the condition he was in. I said goodbye to him long before he actually left the Earth. In some ways I was relieved for him. He was in a lot of pain. Are you still playing? I’ve just done a show at the London Jazz Festival as part of Jazz Funk Legends, a band I’ve put together with Lonnie Liston Smith and Mark Adams, who was Roy Ayers’ music director for many years. We’ll be coming back to Europe next Spring. INTERVIEW: GARRY MULHOLLAND Pic credit © Chuck Stewart

The two sides of Scott-Heron – his early work collected in all its trailblazing glory…

When Gil Scott-Heron walked into a small New York studio in Summer 1970, he was an author, not a performer. The gangly 21-year-old had already published a novel and a book of poetry, and had to be persuaded to record a spoken-word album by his new record label Bob Thiele, the man who had overseen the making of Gil’s favourite record, A Love Supreme by John Coltrane. But, as he looked at the few people perched on folding chairs, invited into the studio to make the recording feel live, the prodigy launched into a poem that would change his life. The poem took the form of a list of things that Heron hated; banal icons of white culture and loathed political figures that dominated American television in the 1970’s.

By the time Heron had finished reciting “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised”, he had unwittingly changed his life. He would no longer be seen as a writer, but a singer, voice of musical black radicalism, doomed junkie… and the man who invented rap. This three-disc reissue of everything Heron and his pianist partner Brian Jackson recorded on Thiele’s Flying Dutchman label would probably not exist if Heron hadn’t bid farewell to that world in May 2011. But for listeners who only know Heron through his final 2010 album I’m New Here, The Revolution Begins… will be a revelation. Not just because it features some great music and poetry, much of which still sounds acutely relevant. But because the man who slowly killed himself with drugs, spent two lengthy periods in prison, and never quite came to terms with his chaotic childhood, prodigious intellect and hatred of white power, is as present and defined and agonized here, in his early twenties, as he is on I’m New Here. Listen to “The Vulture”, or “Who’ll Pay Reparations On My Soul?”, or “Home Is Where The Hatred Is” and you can only come to the chilling conclusion that Gil Scott-Heron knew exactly where he was headed.

Ace’s Dean Rudland has applied some neat ingenuity to the box set’s running order. Heron’s Flying Dutchman catalogue comprised three albums: the largely spoken-word debut Small Talk At 125th And Lenox, featuring Last Poets-influenced percussion backing; the full band debut Pieces Of A Man, a key text in the development of jazz-funk featuring Jackson’s subtle keyboards, the familiar, funked-up version of “The Revolution…”, and an extraordinary pick-up band including drummer Bernard ‘Pretty’ Purdie, bassist Ron Carter and flautist Hubert Laws; and the less admired Free Will, which featured one vinyl side of “Pieces…”-style song and one of “Small Talk…”-style poetry. Rudland resists the temptation to just run the albums together, and instead puts the songs onto disc one and the stark beat poetry on disc two.

This works perfectly because the moods of Heron’s two early styles are so diametrically opposed. While disc one’s flute and keyboard-led smugglings of modal jazz motifs into pop and soul melodies are Sunday morning mellow, Heron’s radical politics and bracing anger are left undiluted on disc two, which, as it travels from the persuasive satire of “The Revolution…” and “Whitey On The Moon” to the disturbing misogyny and homophobia of “Enough”, “Wiggy” and “The Subject Was Faggots”, forms the core of Heron’s life, work and internalised rage. Like many black radicals of the era, the young Heron was no liberal, and the chasm between his more and less enlightened selves suggests a fractured psyche that proved difficult to live with.

Disc three is given up to an ‘alternate’ version of the Free Will album comprised of outtakes, including a radically different, more chaotic version of the title track, while the big attraction for Heron completists is “Artificialness”, a failed but interesting attempt to satirise Vietnam by way of domestic violence recorded with Purdie’s band Pretty Purdie And The Playboys. But while disc one contains a handful of conscious jazz-funk anthems that formed a ready template for acid jazz and its right-on offshoots, its disc two that pins you to your seat with its savage wit and occasionally brutal nastiness.

Gil Scott-Heron was always withering about rap when asked if he had, indeed, invented it. But the linguistic mastery, rhythmic reportage and liberal-baiting fury of his early slam poems remain guilty as charged. Just another cross the man had to bear.

Garry Mulholland

Q&A

BRIAN JACKSON

Do you still listen to the early records you and Gil made on Flying Dutchman?

I do. I feel those records are some of our best work, if not our best performances. We were finding ourselves.

Do you recall your first encounter with Gil?

Sure! It was at Lincoln University, Pennsylvania in 1969. We ran into each other by accident through a mutual friend, Victor Brown. Victor was performing in a talent show and Gil sang the song that he had written for Victor – it was called “Where Can A Man Find Peace?” – and that pretty much did it for me. His lyrics were unbelievable. We heard what each other were doing and knew we’d be more effective together. Was Lincoln a hotbed of radicalism? Ha! No. I think that’s what fuelled us. The apathy and lack of consciousness we encountered there galvanized us.

Did you feel, at the time, that music could effect political change?

I was just naïve enough to think that it actually could. But we weren’t interested in inciting people to riot. Some of that early material may sound incendiary, but compared to what people were actually experiencing and feeling inside, it wasn’t.

Were you still in touch with Gil when he died?

Yes, though not as much as I would have liked to have been. To be honest, I was not shocked. What shocked me more was that he was able to live for so long under the condition he was in. I said goodbye to him long before he actually left the Earth. In some ways I was relieved for him. He was in a lot of pain.

Are you still playing?

I’ve just done a show at the London Jazz Festival as part of Jazz Funk Legends, a band I’ve put together with Lonnie Liston Smith and Mark Adams, who was Roy Ayers’ music director for many years. We’ll be coming back to Europe next Spring.

INTERVIEW: GARRY MULHOLLAND

Pic credit © Chuck Stewart

The Flaming Lips preview ‘Freak Night’ concert film – watch

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The Flaming Lips have put a preview of their upcoming concert film online – you can watch it at the bottom of this page. The film, titled Freak Night, chronicles the legendary psychedelic band's free concert in Oklahoma City on October 26, and is reportedly available via the band's website next w...

The Flaming Lips have put a preview of their upcoming concert film online – you can watch it at the bottom of this page.

The film, titled Freak Night, chronicles the legendary psychedelic band’s free concert in Oklahoma City on October 26, and is reportedly available via the band’s website next week. No release date has been officially announced.

Tweeting stills from the concert movie, frontman Wayne Coyne wrote: “Freaky shit from Freak Night!!!Comes out next week motherfuckers!! Halloween for Christmas!!”

The preview clip shows the band introducing themselves at the beginning of their free concert, which was held in the Oklahoma City Zoo Amphitheatre, and Wayne Coyne venturing into the crowd in his trademark hamster ball.

Last month, Wayne Coyne found himself at the centre of a bomb scare. The singer was stopped at Will Rogers airport in Oklahoma City on November 10, after a dead grenade in his hand luggage set off alarms at a TSA checkpoint.

Wayne was on his way to Los Angeles to catch a preview of the new Flaming Lips musical Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots, and told police that the grenade was given to him at a party as a joke. Coyne was released once the TSA found that the grenade was harmless. Several flights were delayed as a result.

Coyne recently revealed that their new the album was inspired by band member Steven Drozd when he was in the middle of a serious drug addiction, from which he has now recovered. Coyne added: “It was probably the worst time of his life. I knew he was really, really struggling. He was in a bad way.”

Paul McCartney teams up with Nirvana members again for ‘Saturday Night Live’

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Paul McCartney teamed up again with surviving Nirvana members Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic on Saturday Night Live last weekend [December 16]. The singer had previously performed with the grunge icons at the 12-12-12: Concert For Sandy Relief earlier this week to play their collaboration "Cut Me S...

Paul McCartney teamed up again with surviving Nirvana members Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic on Saturday Night Live last weekend [December 16].

The singer had previously performed with the grunge icons at the 12-12-12: Concert For Sandy Relief earlier this week to play their collaboration “Cut Me Some Slack”, which will feature on the soundtrack to Grohl’s forthcoming documentary Sound City.

The trio were joined by guitarist Pat Smear to play the track again on the US TV show, while McCartney also teamed up with Eagles guitarist Joe Walsh for a rendition of “My Valentine”.

The full details of the Sound City soundtrack were revealed earlier this week. Titled Sound City – Real To Reel, it will also feature collaborations between Grohl and Stevie Nicks of Fleetwood Mac – on “You Can’t Fix This” – and between Grohl, Queens Of The Stone Age frontman Joshua Homme and Nine Inch Nails man Trent Reznor, who team up on a song called “Mantra”.

The soundtrack also features appearances from Peter Hayes and Robert Levon Been of Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Taylor Hawkins of Foo Fighters and Queens Of The Stone Age associate Alain Johannes.

The film marks Grohl’s directorial debut and tells the story of the legendary California recording studio where classics such as Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours and Nirvana’s Nevermind were recorded. It will be shown at the US film festival which runs from January 17-27, 2013.

The Sound City – Real To Reel tracklisting is:

Dave Grohl, Peter Hayes, and Robert Levon Been – ‘Heaven and All’

Brad Wilk, Chris Goss, Dave Grohl, and Tim Commerford – ‘Time Slowing Down’

Dave Grohl, Rami Jaffee, Stevie Nicks, and Taylor Hawkins – ‘You Can’t Fix This’

Dave Grohl, Nate Mendel, Pat Smear, Rick Springfield, and Taylor Hawkins – ‘The Man That Never Was’

Alain Johannes, Dave Grohl, Lee Ving, Pat Smear, and Taylor Hawkins – ‘Your Wife Is Calling’

Corey Taylor, Dave Grohl, Rick Nielsen, and Scott Reeder – ‘From Can to Can’t’

Alain Johannes, Chris Goss, Dave Grohl, and Joshua Homme – ‘Centipede’

Alain Johannes, Dave Grohl, and Joshua Homme: “A Trick With No Sleeve’

Paul McCartney, Dave Grohl, Krist Novoselic, and Pat Smear – ‘Cut Me Some Slack”

Dave Grohl, Jessy Greene, Jim Keltner, and Rami Jaffee – ‘Once Upon a Time… The End’

Dave Grohl, Joshua Homme, and Trent Reznor – ‘Mantra’

Graham Parker And The Rumour – Three Chords Good

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Reunited band rides a wave of serendipity in a surprising, deeply satisfying return... The stars aligned for Graham Parker in early 2011, when he impetuously reformed The Rumour 31 years after they’d last played as a unit. Shortly thereafter, he was contacted by filmmaker Judd Apatow, a longtime fan of Parker’s music, who asked the artist to act and perform in the movie he was working on, This Is 40, setting up a dramatically increased profile for the reunion. Not only that, but the recording sessions provided a dramatic climax for the Gramaglia Brothers’ feature-length documentary Don’t Ask Me Questions, a recounting of Parker’s career. And all this nearly 20 years after Parker, having been dropped from his last major label deal, reinvented himself as a DIY artist, still “searching for that fool’s gold”, his signature pissed-off snarl and cynical attitude reassuringly intact. When he first emerged in 1976, Parker updated and recontextualized the ’50s archetype of the English Angry Young Man at the perfect moment – the dawn of the punk revolution. Together with the newly formed Rumour – keyboard player Bob Andrews and guitarist Brinsley Schwartz, both formerly of the group that bore the latter’s name, ex-Ducks Deluxe guitarist Martin Belmont and the young rhythm section of bassist Andrew Bodnar and drummer Steve Goulding – Parker immediately secured his place in the vanguard of the new movement. Heat Treatment, the band’s debut album – produced by Nick Lowe, another Brinsleys alumnus – formed a bridge between pub rock and punk rock, as Parker kicked open the door for fellow angry young man Elvis Costello, who’d show up in ’77. Though G.P. And The Rumour never rose above cult status, the band’s four ’70s albums, topped off by 1979’s certified classic Squeezing Out Sparks, are as hard-hitting and eloquent as any series of LPs issued during that vital half-decade. The group recorded just one more LP, 1980’s The Up Escalator, before disbanding, whereupon Parker began his extended second act, frequently working with ex-Rumour members along the way. So how does this seminal ’70s band translate to the Internet Age? Quite naturally, it turns out. Tackling Parker’s material with immediacy and masterful finesse, the reunited players show no signs of rust – and this despite the fact that Schwartz has spent recent years working as a luthier at Chandler’s in London, while Belmont has been employed as a librarian in Yorkshire. Parker and his mates forcefully reclaim their turf with the fittingly vitriolic opener “Snake Oil Capital Of The World”, as Parker nicks the intro of Howlin’ Wind’s “Don’t Ask Me Questions” – a cosmic coincidence considering that he wrote these songs with no clue he’d be recording them with The Rumour. What’s immediately apparent is that this veteran has continued to evolve as a singer, no longer reliant on the primal howl that characterized him early on. On the following pair of midtempo cruisers, “Long Emotional Ride” and “Stop Cryin’ About The Rain”, both album highlights, the band’s economical playing leaves Parker plenty of space to explore the nuances of the song and the shadings his earthily elegant mature voice. This sort of knowing interaction animates the entire album, which has a refreshingly spontaneous feel, the result of their cutting the dozen songs live, including Parker’s vocals. Parker isn’t the only one who shines on this labour of love, as the band casually but emphatically occupies its sweet spot. Schwartz shows throughout that he’s one of rock’s most underrated song-serving guitarists. Witness his appropriately sinuous line through “Snake Oil Capital Of The World”, or his central riff on the title track, slurred notes burnishing an arching, evocative arpeggio as timeless as the song’s premise. Andrews is consistently effective in his supporting role, his Garth Hudson-like organ vamps enclosing the other instruments like a down comforter. And the Dylanesque “Coathangers”, the album’s most aggressive track, is distinguished by a taut, tasty ensemble performance, all six bandmembers clearly reveling in the fact that they’re waking up the echoes. When Parker sings in “Long Emotional Ride”, “Maybe I’m just getting old or something/But Something broke down my resistance/And opened the door”, the lines come across with the force of an epiphany. This prescient statement undoubtedly took on further resonance for Parker and his band as serendipity afforded them a welcome chance to once again squeeze out sparks together – though the enduring effect is one of warmly glowing embers. Bud Scoppa Q&A Graham Parker How did the reunion come about? Very simple, really. It just popped into my mind that Steve and Andrew would be really something as the rhythm section on my next record. I emailed both of them, and Steve said, “Why not get Martin, Bob and Brinsley as well? That would be a proper band… Kidding!” I stopped thinking then and started emailing people – because if you think about these things, you won’t do it. The next day, I was like, “What have I done?” You already had the songs written? Yeah. My first thought was, “What do these songs have to do with The Rumour?” But I never wrote any of those records for the band; I just wrote the songs. When did Judd Apatow get hold of you? No more than two weeks later. He said part of the movie would be about an indie label, and I would be the kind of artist this label would sign. I said, “Guess what? I’ve just reformed The Rumour.” He flew us all out to LA to do a two-day shoot. You can’t make this stuff up. We were onstage together for the first time in 31 years in this fabulous theatre with a film crew and excellent lunches – that was the best part. Brinsley was amazed that anyone would want to hear us. Did Apatow have any direct involvement with the album? He got this award-winning designer to do the cover, and the guy made this crazy cover that looks like gay Christian rock! When I saw it, I thought, “Oh my God, that is terrifying.” INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

Reunited band rides a wave of serendipity in a surprising, deeply satisfying return…

The stars aligned for Graham Parker in early 2011, when he impetuously reformed The Rumour 31 years after they’d last played as a unit. Shortly thereafter, he was contacted by filmmaker Judd Apatow, a longtime fan of Parker’s music, who asked the artist to act and perform in the movie he was working on, This Is 40, setting up a dramatically increased profile for the reunion. Not only that, but the recording sessions provided a dramatic climax for the Gramaglia Brothers’ feature-length documentary Don’t Ask Me Questions, a recounting of Parker’s career. And all this nearly 20 years after Parker, having been dropped from his last major label deal, reinvented himself as a DIY artist, still “searching for that fool’s gold”, his signature pissed-off snarl and cynical attitude reassuringly intact.

When he first emerged in 1976, Parker updated and recontextualized the ’50s archetype of the English Angry Young Man at the perfect moment – the dawn of the punk revolution. Together with the newly formed Rumour – keyboard player Bob Andrews and guitarist Brinsley Schwartz, both formerly of the group that bore the latter’s name, ex-Ducks Deluxe guitarist Martin Belmont and the young rhythm section of bassist Andrew Bodnar and drummer Steve Goulding – Parker immediately secured his place in the vanguard of the new movement. Heat Treatment, the band’s debut album – produced by Nick Lowe, another Brinsleys alumnus – formed a bridge between pub rock and punk rock, as Parker kicked open the door for fellow angry young man Elvis Costello, who’d show up in ’77. Though G.P. And The Rumour never rose above cult status, the band’s four ’70s albums, topped off by 1979’s certified classic Squeezing Out Sparks, are as hard-hitting and eloquent as any series of LPs issued during that vital half-decade. The group recorded just one more LP, 1980’s The Up Escalator, before disbanding, whereupon Parker began his extended second act, frequently working with ex-Rumour members along the way.

So how does this seminal ’70s band translate to the Internet Age? Quite naturally, it turns out. Tackling Parker’s material with immediacy and masterful finesse, the reunited players show no signs of rust – and this despite the fact that Schwartz has spent recent years working as a luthier at Chandler’s in London, while Belmont has been employed as a librarian in Yorkshire. Parker and his mates forcefully reclaim their turf with the fittingly vitriolic opener “Snake Oil Capital Of The World”, as Parker nicks the intro of Howlin’ Wind’s “Don’t Ask Me Questions” – a cosmic coincidence considering that he wrote these songs with no clue he’d be recording them with The Rumour. What’s immediately apparent is that this veteran has continued to evolve as a singer, no longer reliant on the primal howl that characterized him early on. On the following pair of midtempo cruisers, “Long Emotional Ride” and “Stop Cryin’ About The Rain”, both album highlights, the band’s economical playing leaves Parker plenty of space to explore the nuances of the song and the shadings his earthily elegant mature voice. This sort of knowing interaction animates the entire album, which has a refreshingly spontaneous feel, the result of their cutting the dozen songs live, including Parker’s vocals.

Parker isn’t the only one who shines on this labour of love, as the band casually but emphatically occupies its sweet spot. Schwartz shows throughout that he’s one of rock’s most underrated song-serving guitarists. Witness his appropriately sinuous line through “Snake Oil Capital Of The World”, or his central riff on the title track, slurred notes burnishing an arching, evocative arpeggio as timeless as the song’s premise. Andrews is consistently effective in his supporting role, his Garth Hudson-like organ vamps enclosing the other instruments like a down comforter. And the Dylanesque “Coathangers”, the album’s most aggressive track, is distinguished by a taut, tasty ensemble performance, all six bandmembers clearly reveling in the fact that they’re waking up the echoes.

When Parker sings in “Long Emotional Ride”, “Maybe I’m just getting old or something/But Something broke down my resistance/And opened the door”, the lines come across with the force of an epiphany. This prescient statement undoubtedly took on further resonance for Parker and his band as serendipity afforded them a welcome chance to once again squeeze out sparks together – though the enduring effect is one of warmly glowing embers.

Bud Scoppa

Q&A

Graham Parker

How did the reunion come about?

Very simple, really. It just popped into my mind that Steve and Andrew would be really something as the rhythm section on my next record. I emailed both of them, and Steve said, “Why not get Martin, Bob and Brinsley as well? That would be a proper band… Kidding!” I stopped thinking then and started emailing people – because if you think about these things, you won’t do it. The next day, I was like, “What have I done?”

You already had the songs written?

Yeah. My first thought was, “What do these songs have to do with The Rumour?” But I never wrote any of those records for the band; I just wrote the songs.

When did Judd Apatow get hold of you?

No more than two weeks later. He said part of the movie would be about an indie label, and I would be the kind of artist this label would sign. I said, “Guess what? I’ve just reformed The Rumour.” He flew us all out to LA to do a two-day shoot. You can’t make this stuff up. We were onstage together for the first time in 31 years in this fabulous theatre with a film crew and excellent lunches – that was the best part. Brinsley was amazed that anyone would want to hear us.

Did Apatow have any direct involvement with the album?

He got this award-winning designer to do the cover, and the guy made this crazy cover that looks like gay Christian rock! When I saw it, I thought, “Oh my God, that is terrifying.”

INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

Bruce Springsteen, Black Keys and Lady Gaga join The Rolling Stones at New Jersey gig

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The Rolling Stones played the final scheduled performance of their 50 And Counting run of gigs at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey on Saturday night (December 15). The band kicked off with "Get Off Of My Cloud" and then played "The Last Time", "It's Only Rock 'N' Roll (But I Like It)" a...

The Rolling Stones played the final scheduled performance of their 50 And Counting run of gigs at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey on Saturday night (December 15).

The band kicked off with “Get Off Of My Cloud” and then played “The Last Time”, “It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll (But I Like It)” and “Paint It, Black” before introducing the first of the night’s special guests, Lady Gaga, for “Gimme Shelter”.

Jagger also dedicated a rendition of “Wild Horses” to the recent victims of the school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, telling the crowd: “I just wanted to take a minute and send our love and condolences to those who lost their loved ones yesterday.”

In addition to Gaga, there was a spate of guest stars as John Mayer and Gary Clark Jr. joined the Stones for “Going Down”, while former guitarist Mick Taylor played with his old bandmates on “Midnight Rambler”.

The Black Keys, meanwhile, were roped in to play on a cover of Bo Diddley’s “Who Do You Love”, before Bruce Springsteen joined the band for “Tumbling Dice” – with Jagger jokingly telling fans that the Boss had “walked to the show”.

The Stones finished the show with “Brown Sugar” and “Sympathy For The Devil”, before returning for an encore of “You Can’t Always Get What You Want”, “Jumpin Jack Flash” and “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction”. By way of farewell, Jagger simply told the audience: “This is our last show… of the 50th anniversary tour. Hope to see you again soon.”

His comments could spark further speculation that the band’s reunion could continue for some time yet, after rumours circulated that they could headline next year’s Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in California

Set List:

“Get Off Of My Cloud”

“The Last Time”

“It’s Only Rock & Roll (But I Like It)”

“Paint It Black”

“Gimme Shelter” (with Lady Gaga)

“Wild Horses”

“Going Down” (with John Mayer & Gary Clark Jr.)

“Dead Flowers”

“Who Do You Love” (with the Black Keys)

“Doom and Gloom”

“One More Shot”

“Miss You”

“Honky Tonk Women”

“Before They Make Me Run”

“Happy”

“Midnight Rambler” (with Mick Taylor)

“Tumbling Dice” (with Bruce Springsteen)

“Start Me Up”

“Brown Sugar”

“Sympathy for the Devil”

Encore:

“You Can’t Always Get What You Want” (with the Trinity Wall Street Choir)

“Jumpin’ Jack Flash”

“Satisfaction”

Watch: ten tracks of 2012

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While rolling out my Top 112 albums list last week, a couple of people understandably asked what some of those records actually sounded like. Maybe this’ll help: ten of my favourite tracks of 2012… Spacin’ – “Sunshine, No Shoes” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GNtjlzw0yOw Jessica Pratt – “Night Faces” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6snZYt7sTh8 Purling Hiss – “Lolita” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5aCOYpWYtig Ty Segall & White Fence – “Scissor People” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwyAGJDRgpI Allah-Las – “Tell Me (What's On Your Mind)” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fiJYecS0vU0 Julia Holter – “Marienbad” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QukVgY8I_nA Duane Pitre – “Feel Free” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cnDc7I8qzH4 Hiss Golden Messenger – “Brother, Do You Know The Road?” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z7QIil8WF3w Bill Fay – “Never Ending Happening” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3xa7EhiCTyA Neil Young & Crazy Horse – “Horse Back” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdaBLO1kj00 Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

While rolling out my Top 112 albums list last week, a couple of people understandably asked what some of those records actually sounded like. Maybe this’ll help: ten of my favourite tracks of 2012…

Spacin’ – “Sunshine, No Shoes”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GNtjlzw0yOw

Jessica Pratt – “Night Faces”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6snZYt7sTh8

Purling Hiss – “Lolita”

Ty Segall & White Fence – “Scissor People”

Allah-Las – “Tell Me (What’s On Your Mind)”

Julia Holter – “Marienbad”

Duane Pitre – “Feel Free”

Hiss Golden Messenger – “Brother, Do You Know The Road?”

Bill Fay – “Never Ending Happening”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3xa7EhiCTyA

Neil Young & Crazy Horse – “Horse Back”

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

End Of The Road 2013 headliners announced

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The headliners for next year's End Of The Road festival have been announced. The festival, which takes place between August 30 and September 1, 2013 at Larmer Tree Gardens, Dorset, have confirmed Sigur Rós and Belle And Sebastian as headliners. Other acts confirmed are: Angel Olsen The Barr Brothers Damien Jurado Daughter Horse Thief John Murry King Kahn & The Shrines Palma Violets Pokey Lafarge Serafina Steer Strand of Oaks Woodpecker Wooliams The festival have also released ticket prices for the 2013 event: Adult weekend (incl. camping): £150 Youth 13-17 years (must be accompanied by an adult): £120 Child 6-12 years (must be accompanied by an adult): £50 Child 0 - 5 years (must be purchased in advance & accompanied by an adult): Free Campervan / Caravan pass £50 See www.endoftheroadfestival.com for more info.

The headliners for next year’s End Of The Road festival have been announced.

The festival, which takes place between August 30 and September 1, 2013 at Larmer Tree Gardens, Dorset, have confirmed Sigur Rós and Belle And Sebastian as headliners.

Other acts confirmed are:

Angel Olsen

The Barr Brothers

Damien Jurado

Daughter

Horse Thief

John Murry

King Kahn & The Shrines

Palma Violets

Pokey Lafarge

Serafina Steer

Strand of Oaks

Woodpecker Wooliams

The festival have also released ticket prices for the 2013 event:

Adult weekend (incl. camping): £150

Youth 13-17 years (must be accompanied by an adult): £120

Child 6-12 years (must be accompanied by an adult): £50

Child 0 – 5 years (must be purchased in advance & accompanied by an adult): Free

Campervan / Caravan pass £50

See www.endoftheroadfestival.com for more info.

The 50th Uncut Playlist Of 2012

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As a knock-on effect of posting my Best Albums Of 2012 list every day this week, the office playlist is about double its normal length, as you’ll see. A few return visits to albums of the year notwithstanding, it’s another list that signals a really strong start to 2013. To rank alongside Endless Boogie, Matmos, Pantha Du Prince, Low and Splashgirl, a new one by Purling Hiss arrived this week, less fuzzy and lo-fi, and revealing them to be effective heirs to Dinosaur Jr, or at least deeply immersed in late ‘80s Boston area rock. It’s great. A few more margin notes: Cyclopean are a quartet featuring Irmin Schmidt and Jaki Liebezeit, alongside Burnt Friedmann and Jono Podmore. The Sun Araw/Congos EP is free, live and massively recommended; “Reverse Shark Attack” is one of a couple of Ty reissues lined up by In The Red; Parquet Courts have got the Fall/Pavement/wired garage band thing down as well as Eddy Current Suppression Ring, and “Light Up Gold” would have easily made my 2012 list if I’d heard it a day or two earlier; and, if you haven’t dared to watch it yet, you may be surprised by the Macca/Nirvana jam… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Endless Boogie – Long Island (No Quarter) 2 Voigt & Voigt – Die Zauberhafte Welt Der Anderen (Kompakt) 3 Iceage – You're Nothing (Matador) 4 Speck Mountain – Badwater (Carrot Top) 5 Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Push The Sky Away (Bad Seed Ltd) 6 Pissed Jeans – Honeys (Sub Pop) 7 Matmos – The Marriage Of True Minds (Thrill Jockey) 8 Chris Darrow – Artist Proof (Drag City) 9 Junior Kimborough – First Recordings (Fat Possum) 10 Mountains – Centralia (Thrill Jockey) 11 Pantha Du Prince & The Bell Laboratory – Elements Of Light (Rough Trade) 12 Allah-Las - Allah-Las (Innovative Leisure) 13 Cyclopean – EP (Mute) 14 Low – The Invisible Way (Sub Pop) 15 Splashgirl – Field Day Rituals (Hubro) 16 Four Tet – Pink (Text) 17 Various Artists – Nuggets: Original Artyfacts From The First Psychedelic Era 1965-1968 (Rhino) 18 Eyvind Kang – The Narrow Garden (Kranky) 19 FJ McMahon – Spirit Of The Golden Juice (Rev-Ola) 20 Ravi Shankar – Chants Of India (Parlophone) 21 Koboku Senju – Joining The Queue To Become One Of Those Ordinary Ghosts (MIE Music) 22 Kraftwerk – Radioactivity (EMI) 23 Sun Araw, M. Geddes Gengras And The Raw Power Band Meet The Congos – Icon Give Life (http://rvng.bandcamp.com/album/icon-give-life) 24 Purling Hiss – Water On Mars (Drag City) 25 Tame Impala – Lonerism (Modular) 26 Phosphorescent – Muchacho (Dead Oceans) 27 Paul McCartney & Nirvana – Cut Me Some Slack (Live) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=624HfkMty_8 28 Ty Segall & Mikal Cronin – Reverse Shark Attack (In The Red) 29 Miles Davis Quintet – Live In Europe 1969; The Bootleg Series Volume 2 (Legacy) 30 La Düsseldorf – Japandorf (Grönland) 31 Steve Mason – Fight Them Back (Double Six) 32 Joni Mitchell – The Hissing Of Summer Lawns (Asylum) 33 Parquet Courts – Light Up Gold (http://dulltools.bandcamp.com/album/light-up-gold) 34 Duane Pitre – Feel Free (Important)

As a knock-on effect of posting my Best Albums Of 2012 list every day this week, the office playlist is about double its normal length, as you’ll see.

A few return visits to albums of the year notwithstanding, it’s another list that signals a really strong start to 2013. To rank alongside Endless Boogie, Matmos, Pantha Du Prince, Low and Splashgirl, a new one by Purling Hiss arrived this week, less fuzzy and lo-fi, and revealing them to be effective heirs to Dinosaur Jr, or at least deeply immersed in late ‘80s Boston area rock. It’s great.

A few more margin notes: Cyclopean are a quartet featuring Irmin Schmidt and Jaki Liebezeit, alongside Burnt Friedmann and Jono Podmore. The Sun Araw/Congos EP is free, live and massively recommended; “Reverse Shark Attack” is one of a couple of Ty reissues lined up by In The Red; Parquet Courts have got the Fall/Pavement/wired garage band thing down as well as Eddy Current Suppression Ring, and “Light Up Gold” would have easily made my 2012 list if I’d heard it a day or two earlier; and, if you haven’t dared to watch it yet, you may be surprised by the Macca/Nirvana jam…

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

1 Endless Boogie – Long Island (No Quarter)

2 Voigt & Voigt – Die Zauberhafte Welt Der Anderen (Kompakt)

3 Iceage – You’re Nothing (Matador)

4 Speck Mountain – Badwater (Carrot Top)

5 Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Push The Sky Away (Bad Seed Ltd)

6 Pissed Jeans – Honeys (Sub Pop)

7 Matmos – The Marriage Of True Minds (Thrill Jockey)

8 Chris Darrow – Artist Proof (Drag City)

9 Junior Kimborough – First Recordings (Fat Possum)

10 Mountains – Centralia (Thrill Jockey)

11 Pantha Du Prince & The Bell Laboratory – Elements Of Light (Rough Trade)

12 Allah-Las – Allah-Las (Innovative Leisure)

13 Cyclopean – EP (Mute)

14 Low – The Invisible Way (Sub Pop)

15 Splashgirl – Field Day Rituals (Hubro)

16 Four Tet – Pink (Text)

17 Various Artists – Nuggets: Original Artyfacts From The First Psychedelic Era 1965-1968 (Rhino)

18 Eyvind Kang – The Narrow Garden (Kranky)

19 FJ McMahon – Spirit Of The Golden Juice (Rev-Ola)

20 Ravi Shankar – Chants Of India (Parlophone)

21 Koboku Senju – Joining The Queue To Become One Of Those Ordinary Ghosts (MIE Music)

22 Kraftwerk – Radioactivity (EMI)

23 Sun Araw, M. Geddes Gengras And The Raw Power Band Meet The Congos – Icon Give Life (http://rvng.bandcamp.com/album/icon-give-life)

24 Purling Hiss – Water On Mars (Drag City)

25 Tame Impala – Lonerism (Modular)

26 Phosphorescent – Muchacho (Dead Oceans)

27 Paul McCartney & Nirvana – Cut Me Some Slack (Live)

28 Ty Segall & Mikal Cronin – Reverse Shark Attack (In The Red)

29 Miles Davis Quintet – Live In Europe 1969; The Bootleg Series Volume 2 (Legacy)

30 La Düsseldorf – Japandorf (Grönland)

31 Steve Mason – Fight Them Back (Double Six)

32 Joni Mitchell – The Hissing Of Summer Lawns (Asylum)

33 Parquet Courts – Light Up Gold (http://dulltools.bandcamp.com/album/light-up-gold)

34 Duane Pitre – Feel Free (Important)

Extra Stone Roses Finsbury Park tickets onsale today

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A limited number of tickets to see The Stone Roses at their two gigs at London's Finsbury Park in June 2013 went onsale at 10am today, priced at £55 plus booking fee. A statement on the band's website posted earlier this week: "Due to the granting of our license at Finsbury Park a very limited number of extra tickets for both London shows – Friday 7th June and Saturday 8th June – will be going on sale at 10am this Friday." The reformed Madchester legends announced three UK shows for June 2013 back in October. The group will play two nights in London’s Finsbury Park on June 7 and 8 followed by a single show at Glasgow Green on June 15. The supports for the Glasgow show are Primal Scream, Jake Bugg and The View. Supports for London are yet to be announced. The band's only London appearance since reuniting was a secret gig at the tiny Village Underground venue. Glasgow Green was the scene of one of The Stone Roses' best-regarded live appearances, taking place on June 9, 1990. "When we were on stage that day, we all looked at each other, and then just went up another level," bassist Mani has said. Other major shows and tours on sale today include Neil Young & Crazy Horse, Leonard Cohen, The xx and Courteeners.

A limited number of tickets to see The Stone Roses at their two gigs at London’s Finsbury Park in June 2013 went onsale at 10am today, priced at £55 plus booking fee.

A statement on the band’s website posted earlier this week: “Due to the granting of our license at Finsbury Park a very limited number of extra tickets for both London shows – Friday 7th June and Saturday 8th June – will be going on sale at 10am this Friday.”

The reformed Madchester legends announced three UK shows for June 2013 back in October. The group will play two nights in London’s Finsbury Park on June 7 and 8 followed by a single show at Glasgow Green on June 15. The supports for the Glasgow show are Primal Scream, Jake Bugg and The View. Supports for London are yet to be announced.

The band’s only London appearance since reuniting was a secret gig at the tiny Village Underground venue. Glasgow Green was the scene of one of The Stone Roses’ best-regarded live appearances, taking place on June 9, 1990. “When we were on stage that day, we all looked at each other, and then just went up another level,” bassist Mani has said.

Other major shows and tours on sale today include Neil Young & Crazy Horse, Leonard Cohen, The xx and Courteeners.

The Damned – Damned Damned Damned

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Deluxe treatment for one of punk’s most rough-and-ready albums... The Damned are a group often praised faintly: sold as having being close to greatness, without ever being great themselves. They were, you understand, the first group to release a punk single. They supported the Sex Pistols at the 100 Club in July 1976, appeared at the 100 Club Punk Festival in September and briefly on the Anarchy Tour, the largely-cancelled series of engagements that the Pistols and Heartbreakers attempted to embark upon, after the “Bill Grundy” incident in December of that year. Strong credentials all, but without an album statement perceived as “iconic”, the harder their case is argued, the more they appear, unjustly, to be nearly men. Rather than, as this four disc set abundantly shows, the riff-tastic, custard-covered, ribald, real deal. The Damned, it’s true, did write and release “New Rose”, the first punk single (which arrived in October 1976, some five weeks in advance of “Anarchy In The UK”), but if they won that particular battle, they were never going to win the longer war for the possession of punk’s intellectual and historical real estate. Theirs was not music as conduit for intellectual ideas, a vaulting horse for détournement. Rather than its thinkers, The Damned represented punk’s doers, a band whose almost comical lack of promise as individuals in civilian life (a toilet cleaner; an unemployed drummer with a skin infection) was imaginatively repurposed within the movement. Here, renamed and re-employed as a fantastic rhythm section (bass player Captain Sensible; drummer Rat Scabies), they proved to be little short of explosive. Theirs, with the above-par croon of David Vanian, were just the combustible talents to give form and flight to the songs of guitarist Brian James, a refugee from a Belgium-dwelling free festival band called Bastard. Recorded quickly for independent label Stiff, the band’s debut album doesn’t sound like considered art statement, more a seizing of the initiative, of the moment. Assisted in their quest by Stiff’s in-house producer Nick Lowe (“They called me Grandad,” Lowe remembers on the Radio 1 documentary that makes up disc 4 here. “I must have been…26.”), the group’s songs evolved from the murky, vaguely melodic demos you can hear elsewhere on this set, to things of immense dynamic power. It was the brutality with which they executed something like “Stab Your Back” more than with any particularly seditious content within it that The Damned’s punk credentials lay. Their moment, seized emphatically then, is memorialized well here 35 years on. The Peel session format (“Are we really 65 in the charts!?”) well-suited the band’s good-humoured detonation, as did Radio 1’s In Concert programme (both disc 2), even as their performance at the 100 Club in July (disc 3) indicates something of the froideur the cliquey punk scene could offer them. Rather than hailed for their breakneck 12 song set (as yet lacking “Neat Neat Neat”), the Damned are instead received by a Pistols crowd as if they had just unveiled a memorial plaque to Emerson, Lake and Palmer. It was rock ‘n’ roll, first and foremost, in which The Damned specialized. Hearing the band’s covers of The Beatles’ “Help” (fast) or the Stooges’ “1970” (retitled “I Feel Alright” and not slow either), you know this was a band more focused on a strong musical statement than an ideological one. The Damned’s punk was born out of a love of the MC5, )Nuggets-era garage rock and of hard-swinging Ladbroke Groove – it had as much in common with the Pink Fairies and Motorhead as it did with The Clash. It’s hard to imagine that was a way to make friends in Year Zero, however good the songs were. And 35 years on, they still are. While some supporting features from the original album (“Fish”; “Born To Kill”) are slight, they show the mileage that could be traveled by a band with sufficient internal momentum. “Neat Neat Neat” and “New Rose”, and the one minute “Stab Your Back” however, remain play like a peculiarly English kind of pulp fiction, awash with girls, guns and the city at night. It’s an escapist thrill that should be seen as helping to round out punk’s character rather than failing to conform to a set of principles – that anyway were often retrospectively applied. Anger is an energy, of course. But energy is an energy too. EXTRAS (7/10): Disc of BBC broadcasts, Peel sessions. Live at 100 Club disc. Hour long 2006 Radio 1 doc ostensibly about “New Rose”. John Robinson

Deluxe treatment for one of punk’s most rough-and-ready albums…

The Damned are a group often praised faintly: sold as having being close to greatness, without ever being great themselves. They were, you understand, the first group to release a punk single. They supported the Sex Pistols at the 100 Club in July 1976, appeared at the 100 Club Punk Festival in September and briefly on the Anarchy Tour, the largely-cancelled series of engagements that the Pistols and Heartbreakers attempted to embark upon, after the “Bill Grundy” incident in December of that year. Strong credentials all, but without an album statement perceived as “iconic”, the harder their case is argued, the more they appear, unjustly, to be nearly men.

Rather than, as this four disc set abundantly shows, the riff-tastic, custard-covered, ribald, real deal. The Damned, it’s true, did write and release “New Rose”, the first punk single (which arrived in October 1976, some five weeks in advance of “Anarchy In The UK”), but if they won that particular battle, they were never going to win the longer war for the possession of punk’s intellectual and historical real estate. Theirs was not music as conduit for intellectual ideas, a vaulting horse for détournement. Rather than its thinkers, The Damned represented punk’s doers, a band whose almost comical lack of promise as individuals in civilian life (a toilet cleaner; an unemployed drummer with a skin infection) was imaginatively repurposed within the movement.

Here, renamed and re-employed as a fantastic rhythm section (bass player Captain Sensible; drummer Rat Scabies), they proved to be little short of explosive. Theirs, with the above-par croon of David Vanian, were just the combustible talents to give form and flight to the songs of guitarist Brian James, a refugee from a Belgium-dwelling free festival band called Bastard.

Recorded quickly for independent label Stiff, the band’s debut album doesn’t sound like considered art statement, more a seizing of the initiative, of the moment. Assisted in their quest by Stiff’s in-house producer Nick Lowe (“They called me Grandad,” Lowe remembers on the Radio 1 documentary that makes up disc 4 here. “I must have been…26.”), the group’s songs evolved from the murky, vaguely melodic demos you can hear elsewhere on this set, to things of immense dynamic power. It was the brutality with which they executed something like “Stab Your Back” more than with any particularly seditious content within it that The Damned’s punk credentials lay.

Their moment, seized emphatically then, is memorialized well here 35 years on. The Peel session format (“Are we really 65 in the charts!?”) well-suited the band’s good-humoured detonation, as did Radio 1’s In Concert programme (both disc 2), even as their performance at the 100 Club in July (disc 3) indicates something of the froideur the cliquey punk scene could offer them. Rather than hailed for their breakneck 12 song set (as yet lacking “Neat Neat Neat”), the Damned are instead received by a Pistols crowd as if they had just unveiled a memorial plaque to Emerson, Lake and Palmer.

It was rock ‘n’ roll, first and foremost, in which The Damned specialized. Hearing the band’s covers of The Beatles’ “Help” (fast) or the Stooges’ “1970” (retitled “I Feel Alright” and not slow either), you know this was a band more focused on a strong musical statement than an ideological one. The Damned’s punk was born out of a love of the MC5, )Nuggets-era garage rock and of hard-swinging Ladbroke Groove – it had as much in common with the Pink Fairies and Motorhead as it did with The Clash. It’s hard to imagine that was a way to make friends in Year Zero, however good the songs were.

And 35 years on, they still are. While some supporting features from the original album (“Fish”; “Born To Kill”) are slight, they show the mileage that could be traveled by a band with sufficient internal momentum. “Neat Neat Neat” and “New Rose”, and the one minute “Stab Your Back” however, remain play like a peculiarly English kind of pulp fiction, awash with girls, guns and the city at night. It’s an escapist thrill that should be seen as helping to round out punk’s character rather than failing to conform to a set of principles – that anyway were often retrospectively applied. Anger is an energy, of course. But energy is an energy too.

EXTRAS (7/10): Disc of BBC broadcasts, Peel sessions. Live at 100 Club disc. Hour long 2006 Radio 1 doc ostensibly about “New Rose”.

John Robinson

Arctic Monkeys to headline Poland’s Open’er Festival next summer

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Arctic Monkeys will play next summer's Open'er festival in Poland. The event takes place in Gdynia from July 3-6, and will also see sets from Queens Of The Stone Age, Blur and Kings of Leon. Arctic Monkeys will play on July 4. Early bird tickets for the festival are on sale until January 15, 2013....

Arctic Monkeys will play next summer’s Open’er festival in Poland.

The event takes place in Gdynia from July 3-6, and will also see sets from Queens Of The Stone Age, Blur and Kings of Leon. Arctic Monkeys will play on July 4.

Early bird tickets for the festival are on sale until January 15, 2013. For more information visit Opener.pl/en.

This autumn, drummer Matt Helders’ mum confirmed that Arctic Monkeys were in the Californian desert recording the follow-up to ‘

Suck It And See.

Jill Helders tweeted: “I don’t know if it helps to clear things up but lads are in the desert!”

She added: “And now we start on 5th album titles!”.

According to unofficial fan Twitter account ArcticMonkeysUS, the four piece were recording the follow-up to 2011’s Suck It And See in the Joshua Tree desert, where they partially recorded 2009’s ‘Humbug’ with co-producer Josh Homme of Queens Of The Stone Age.

Earlier this year, the band’s frontman Alex Turner told Artrocker about their plans for their fifth album. He said: “I think we’re going to go the direction of those heavier tunes. We did ‘R U Mine?’, and I think that’s where it’s going to be at for us for the next record.”

Thurston Moore launches appeal to find stolen guitar

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Thurston Moore had his 1960 Fender Jazzmaster stolen on Wednesday (December 12). The incident occurred around midnight at a Philadelphia hotel, reports a message on Sonic Youth's website. The message reads: "Thurston Moore had his 1966 (circa) Fender Jazzmaster stolen from the Best Western in Ph...

Thurston Moore had his 1960 Fender Jazzmaster stolen on Wednesday (December 12).

The incident occurred around midnight at a Philadelphia hotel, reports a message on Sonic Youth’s website.

The message reads: “Thurston Moore had his 1966 (circa) Fender Jazzmaster stolen from the Best Western in Philadelphia (501 N 22nd St) last night 12-12-12 around 12 midnight. It’s Thurston’s iconic Sonic Youth black Jazzmaster with all the stickers on its body. Here’s a couple of photos. A police report has been filed. Please email us if anyone tries to sell this relic to your store, it would be appreciated. Please forward to other guitar stores you may know in the area. Thanks, Thurston”

An additional message adds: “It has a Mastery Bridge, and the pickguard has been changed so stickers might be different.”

If past experience is anything to go by, Moore may find he has a long wait to get it back. His white Fender Jazzmaster, stolen from a van in 1999, was returned to him earlier this year, 13 years since it went missing.

The Making Of… Roxy Music’s ‘Street Life’

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From Uncut's November 2009 issue (Take 150), Bryan Ferry and his bandmates recall the making of Roxy Music's classic single, "Street Life" _____________________ "Wish everybody would leave me alone,” were the first words of Roxy Music’s electrifying third single, “Street Life”. It was ...

From Uncut’s November 2009 issue (Take 150), Bryan Ferry and his bandmates recall the making of Roxy Music’s classic single, “Street Life”

_____________________

“Wish everybody would leave me alone,” were the first words of Roxy Music’s electrifying third single, “Street Life”. It was November 1973, and for Bryan Ferry and his outlandishly attired colleagues, there was zero chance of peace and quiet. Their new album, Stranded, was their second in eight months, while Ferry had complicated matters by starting a solo career, reaching the Top 10 in October with his cover of Dylan’s “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall”.

But there were problems behind the scenes. Roxy were used to having short-term bassists (five came and went during 1971–’73), but a much more controversial personnel change occurred in July ’73 when Brian Eno, their leopardskin-clad synth operator, quit the band after clashing with the increasingly autocratic Ferry. Eno was replaced by Edwin (Eddie) Jobson, an 18-year-old violinist/keyboardist who’d played on Ferry’s 1973 solo LP, These Foolish Things. In a further change, Roxy abandoned their policy of not releasing singles from albums, and “Street Life” (a UK Top 10 hit) was also the opening track of Stranded. But how would their fanbase react to this post-Eno music? DAVID CAVANAGH

_____________________

Bryan Ferry: For me, 1973 was an exceptionally busy year. Looking back, it seems like a whirlwind of events. For Your Pleasure was quickly followed by my first solo album, These Foolish Things. For Your Pleasure was a dark and important album for me to make, and These Foolish Things was much lighter, and cleared the air of all that angst. It was a great success and suddenly I was on tour. I can’t quite remember how many live shows we did in ’73, both solo and as Roxy, but I do have a hazy memory of rushing into the Royal Albert Hall with a very under-rehearsed band and it all going surprisingly well.

Phil Manzanera: It was a very creative, prolific time. Our management would be booking the next Roxy tour while we were still making the album, and if the album wasn’t finished, we’d have to go back to the studio after the gig, do a bit more, then go off to the next gig. We were really energised and firing on all cylinders.

Paul Thompson: It seemed normal to us. Albums didn’t take long back then. We cut them in a couple of weeks. These days it would be a couple of years.

Andy Mackay: It wasn’t the happiest time in Roxy’s history. There was something of a battle going on between Bryan and everyone else. Bryan’s solo success was threatening to blur the line between Roxy and him. Bryan definitely felt that Roxy was his band and he could push it in the directions he wanted. He didn’t realise that your best work tends to come from a bit of struggle, rather than having things all your own way.

Ferry: I was on a bit of a roll, so I started planning, writing and recording the next Roxy album, Stranded.

Mackay: There was a degree of plotting going on. Even now, I don’t know exactly how much. There’s a famous occasion when we were playing a gig in York, and Bryan, without telling anyone, invited Eddie Jobson to come and watch. That was Eno’s last performance with us. It all seemed slightly underhand. Eno had been my friend before I met Bryan, and I was concerned about what might happen if he left. I considered leaving as well. I was going to join Mott The Hoople.

Manzanera: I guess everybody thought the band was over. I was upset that Eno had to go. But things had been getting a bit dodgy on the European tour, and the band obviously wasn’t big enough for two Brians.

Chris Thomas, producer: It was a shock. We found out on the first day of recording that he’d gone.

Mackay: In the end, pragmatism took over. Phil and I are pragmatic guys and we thought we’d put too much into Roxy to let go. It turned out to be a wise decision. I do think Stranded is an exceptionally good album. But when Eno left and Eddie joined, there’s no doubt the music became a lot straighter and more conventional.

Thompson: Eno classed himself as a non-musician, but he was an integral part of the band. Everybody loved him. It was a shame it had to happen, but personal and artistic differences do happen in bands.

Ferry: I’d written the songs for Stranded in a few locations: my flat in Earl’s Court, a friend’s cottage in Sussex, and even a couple of weeks on a Greek island, where I went with my friend, Simon Puxley, and where I recall bashing out the beginnings of “Mother Of Pearl” on a battered bass guitar. Brian Eno had now left, and obviously this left a huge void to fill, but Eddie Jobson did a great job, playing synths, violin, and even some piano, bringing a different kind of musicality to the project – for instance, his superb, classical-style piano-playing on “A Song For Europe”.

Manzanera: Because of my fondness for Eno, I was like a stroppy teenager when Eddie joined. “I’m not having this!” But in fact he ended up becoming one of my best friends in the band.

Thomas: When I’d done For Your Pleasure with them, everything was rehearsed and we just went in and recorded it. With Stranded, nothing was rehearsed. None of the songs had titles. All the way through the album, we referred to them as Song 1, Song 2… up to 8 or 9.

Manzanera: “Street Life” began as just four chords. There were no words or anything. But funnily enough, I do remember approaching it very much as a potential single.

Thomas: It started from the ground up, with three instruments – bass, drums and piano – playing those four chords all the way through the song. It wasn’t until Phil put some guitars on, that it suddenly turned into this uptempo thing. He put this real sort of thrash across it, and it changed the feel completely.

Manzanera: I had the advantage of working out my parts beforehand. I used to sit at home, in my place just off the Uxbridge Road, with a Revox tape recorder. Then I’d go into the studio and Chris and the band would be there, and I’d say, “Well, here’s idea number one… here’s idea number two…” And at some point, someone would stop me and say, “We’ll have that one.”

Ferry: “Street Life” begins with a cacophony of traffic noise, played by Jobson on synthesiser and Andy Mackay on sax, mingled with real sounds of the street – car horns, for example – and then the vocal enters.

Thomas: We were recording in AIR Studios right above Oxford Street, and we tried dangling a mic down to get some street noises, but it was very disappointing. We ended up using a sound effect of a Moroccan market.

Mackay: The production has a strange, vague, echoey quality. The sax is largely mixed in with the synth… actually, it’s not a synth, it’s a Mellotron that we used to use. I’m not playing very much. I think there’s some tenor sax and possibly a bit of baritone.

Manzanera: I’m pretty sure that’s Eddie playing the dissonant [notes] at the beginning. It’s quite humorous and cheeky. That’s the sort of thing Eddie would get up to. He was very young and you couldn’t control him.

Ferry: I wanted it to be a high-energy, fun song – buzzy and vibrant – and I hope the words convey some of that joie de vivre. Each verse seems to have its own character, like blocks on a street. And connoisseurs might notice the number of allusions to various brands of chocolate [Milky Way, After Eight, Black Magic], which is rather puzzling, since I never touched the stuff.

Mackay: “Street Life” has a great lyric, a real swagger. That was Bryan’s great period for writing. He was the best lyric-writer in Britain for quite a few years. It was all flowing well for him. The phrases were really coming.

Manzanera: I have this memory of being asleep when he sang the vocal. We’d be in the studio until four or five in the morning, and I’d be absolutely knackered.

Mackay: Those sessions at AIR were the days of having lots of time in the studio. We’d get there in the afternoon and maybe put down some guitar and bits and pieces. Then Bryan would come. He always liked to do vocals very late at night. We’d break for dinner, go over to Charlotte St, then come back until about four.

Manzanera: Johnny Gustafson [Roxy’s regular session bassist] had put a bass part on “Street Life”, but it wasn’t quite happening. It needed something to give it movement, but no-one could come up with a bass part. We came in one day and Chris Thomas had put the bass on himself, out of sheer frustration. It totally transformed the track. His bass part is fantastic.

Ferry: “Street Life” became a bit of an anthem for Roxy fans at shows, and seemed to be a cue for them to rush the aisles, showing off their tuxedos and suchlike.

Mackay: We were assuming that people would have forgotten about Eno leaving by the time it was released.

Manzanera: Bizarrely, I was working from noon till 6 at Majestic Studios [in Clapham], playing on Eno’s Here Come The Warm Jets, and then getting the tube

up to AIR to work on Stranded. I obviously wasn’t mentioning to Bryan what I was doing in Clapham.

Mackay: I was at most of the sessions for Here Come The Warm Jets. Several of those tracks could easily have been Roxy tracks, and very good ones. Maybe, if Eno had still been there for Stranded, we could have benefited from a more collaborative way of writing. Bryan had been persuaded to co-write a couple of songs on Stranded (“Amazona”, “A Song For Europe”), and if he’d co-written with Eno, it might have worked out very well.

Ferry: Of course, now I would love to hear what Eno would have brought to those songs. He once told me that Stranded was his favourite Roxy album, which says a lot about the man.

Mackay: The strange thing is, because he’s had such a fantastic career, people look back on early Roxy and hear slightly more Eno than there actually was. There’s no doubt his presence in the band made a big difference, but when people assume he and Bryan must have been an amazing team in Roxy, in practice I don’t remember it being like that at all. People saw Eno as perhaps more of a visual figure than a serious artistic one.

Manzanera: Stranded moved us into different territory. The one thing we always knew was that Roxy had to keep changing. It would be like, “Right, everyone else is doing glam? OK, we’ll start wearing suits.” Of course, it did confuse our fans, because they’d turn up with the old look at the start of each tour. But after three or four gigs, they’d cotton on and you’d see them change.

Ferry: I often wonder how I could have produced so much work in 1973. I can only assume that I’m one of those people who thrives on approval, and the instant success of the first Roxy Music album in 1972 had been a great shot in the arm for me. Since the age of 10 I had loved music so much, and had absorbed so many influences from so many genres, that I was bursting with ideas, and now I felt I had an audience who was willing to listen to them.

_____________________

Fact File

Written by Bryan Ferry

Performers: Bryan Ferry (vocals, keyboards), Phil Manzanera (guitars), Andy Mackay (sax), Eddie Jobson (keyboards, synthesiser and/or Mellotron), Chris Thomas (bass), Paul Thompson (drums)

Produced by Chris Thomas

Recorded at AIR Studios, London

Released as a single: November 1973

Highest UK chart position: 9

Wild Mercury Sound 2012: The Top 25

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The last 25, then. A few of you have asked for some help as to what these records sound like. I’ll try and put some links into these lists over the next few days, and also a blog of favourite track clips that might help a bit. See you what you think, anyhow… Previously: 112-76 Previously: 75-51 Previously: 50-26 25 Bob Dylan – Tempest (Columbia) 24 The Ty Segall Band – Slaughterhouse (In The Red) 23 The Chris Robinson Brotherhood – The Magic Door (Silver Arrow) 22 Damon Albarn – Dr Dee (Parlophone) 21 Chris Forsyth & Koen Holtkamp – Early Astral (Blackest Rainbow) 20 Arbouretum - Covered In Leaves (CDR) 19 The Cairo Gang – The Corner Man (Empty Cellar) 18 Leonard Cohen – Old Ideas (Columbia) 17 Dr John – Locked Down (Nonesuch) 16 Spacin’ - Deep Thuds (Richie/Testoster Tunes) 15 Frank Ocean – Channel Orange (Def Jam) 14 Brian Eno – Lux (Warp) 13 Ty Segall – Twins (Drag City) 12 Grizzly Bear – Shields (Warp) 11 Howlin Rain – The Russian Wilds (Agitated) 10 Allah-Las - Allah-Las (Innovative Leisure) 9 Jessica Pratt – Jessica Pratt (Birth) 8 Duane Pitre – Feel Free (Important) 7 Sun Kil Moon – Among The Leaves (Caldo Verde) 6 Ty Segall & White Fence – Hair (Drag City) 5 Jack White – Blunderbuss (XL) 4 Neil Young & Crazy Horse – Psychedelic Pill (Reprise) 3 The Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Big Moon Ritual (Silver Arrow) 2 Julia Holter – Ekstasis (RVNG INTL) 1 Six Organs Of Admittance – Ascent (Drag City) Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

The last 25, then. A few of you have asked for some help as to what these records sound like. I’ll try and put some links into these lists over the next few days, and also a blog of favourite track clips that might help a bit. See you what you think, anyhow…

Previously: 112-76

Previously: 75-51

Previously: 50-26

25 Bob Dylan – Tempest (Columbia)

24 The Ty Segall Band – Slaughterhouse (In The Red)

23 The Chris Robinson Brotherhood – The Magic Door (Silver Arrow)

22 Damon Albarn – Dr Dee (Parlophone)

21 Chris Forsyth & Koen Holtkamp – Early Astral (Blackest Rainbow)

20 Arbouretum – Covered In Leaves (CDR)

19 The Cairo Gang – The Corner Man (Empty Cellar)

18 Leonard Cohen – Old Ideas (Columbia)

17 Dr John – Locked Down (Nonesuch)

16 Spacin’ – Deep Thuds (Richie/Testoster Tunes)

15 Frank Ocean – Channel Orange (Def Jam)

14 Brian Eno – Lux (Warp)

13 Ty Segall – Twins (Drag City)

12 Grizzly Bear – Shields (Warp)

11 Howlin Rain – The Russian Wilds (Agitated)

10 Allah-Las – Allah-Las (Innovative Leisure)

9 Jessica Pratt – Jessica Pratt (Birth)

8 Duane Pitre – Feel Free (Important)

7 Sun Kil Moon – Among The Leaves (Caldo Verde)

6 Ty Segall & White Fence – Hair (Drag City)

5 Jack White – Blunderbuss (XL)

4 Neil Young & Crazy Horse – Psychedelic Pill (Reprise)

3 The Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Big Moon Ritual (Silver Arrow)

2 Julia Holter – Ekstasis (RVNG INTL)

1 Six Organs Of Admittance – Ascent (Drag City)

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

Kraftwerk fans frustrated as ticket demand crashes Tate Modern website

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Kraftwerk fans have been left frustrated as massive demand for tickets to the group's forthcoming residency at London's Tate Modern crashed the website yesterday (December 12). The electronic act will perform eight live shows at the Tate Modern's Turbine Hall in London next year, with each night se...

Kraftwerk fans have been left frustrated as massive demand for tickets to the group’s forthcoming residency at London’s Tate Modern crashed the website yesterday (December 12).

The electronic act will perform eight live shows at the Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall in London next year, with each night seeing the band perform a different album from their back catalogue. However, many fans were unable to purchase tickets after the surge of traffic to the Tate Modern’s website caused the site to crash immediately at the 7.30am onsale time. A phone line was offered as an alternative though that too could not cope with the strain.

Fans attempting to buy the £60 tickets met with a message reading: “Kraftwerk at Tate Modern has just gone on sale and we are experiencing a phenomenal demand for tickets which is affecting our web server. Please try to buy tickets online again later, or call 020 7887 4919 to join the telephone ticketing queue. We have extra staff on hand today but demand is extremely high. We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause you, and hope you are successful in getting your tickets.”

The Kraftwerk gigs, which are called ‘1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8’, will take on the same format as the run of dates they played at New York’s Museum Of Modern Art in April of this year, and the shows they have confirmed to take place in their hometown of Dusseldorf next January.

Each gig will see the band accompanied by 3D visuals as they play each of their studio albums live in full. The dates are as follows:

1 – ‘Autobahn’ (1974) (February 6)

2 – ‘Radio-Activity’ (1975) (7)

3 – ‘Trans Europe Express’ (1977) (8)

4 – ‘The Man-Machine’ (1978) (9)

5 – ‘Computer World’ (1981) (11)

6 – ‘Techno Pop’ (1986) (12)

7 – ‘The Mix’ (1991) (13)

8 – ‘Tour De France’ (2003) (14)

Bruce Springsteen, The Who, Rolling Stones and Paul McCartney play Sandy benefit in New York

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The 12-12-12: Concert For Sandy Relief took place last night (December 12) at Madison Square Garden in New York, with Sir Paul McCartney performing with Nirvana members Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic. Joined by Pat Smear, the Nirvana reunion saw the band perform new song "Cut Me Some Slack" which has been written by Grohl and McCartney for the drummer's forthcoming documentary Sound City. Speaking from the stage shortly before bringing out Grohl and Novoselic, McCartney said: "So recently, some guys asked me to go and jam with them." Adding: "I finally understood that I was in the middle of a Nirvana reunion." Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band earlier opened the show with "Land Of Hope And Dreams". After "Wrecking Ball", Springsteen spoke to the crowd about the Jersey Shore, saying: “It was painful to see it damaged… because the Jersey Shore has always been a special place, because it’s inclusive… I pray that that characteristic remains on the Jersey Shore, that’s what makes it special.” Springsteen and band then performed an impassioned "My City Of Ruins", which segued into Tom Waits’ "Jersey Girl". Springsteen then bought fellow Jersey native Jon Bon Jovi onto the stage and the pair performed "Born To Run" together. Roger Waters then performed a set which included Pink Floyd’s "In The Flesh", "Another Brick In The Wall" and "Money". He was joined by Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam for "Comfortably Numb". Bon Jovi played "It’s My Life" and "Wanted Dead or Alive" before speaking to the crowd. “This recovery is not going to be quick, it’s going to take a while,” he said, “but we are strong, we are New York, we are New Jersey.” Bruce Springsteen then returned to the stage to sing "Who Says You Can't Go Home" with the band, leaving Jon Bon Jovi to lead the crowd in a sing-along version of "Livin’ On A Prayer". Eric Clapton was the next musical guest, singing an acoustic "Nobody Knows You When You’re Down And Out" before an electric "Got To Get Better In A Little While" and "Crossroads". The Rolling Stones then performed :You Got Me Rocking" and "Jumpin’ Jack Flash". They were followed by Alicia Keys. The Who played "Who Are You", with frontman Roger Daltrey delivering an uncensored 'fuck' in the middle of the song. They followed it with "Bell Boy" - complete with video of their late drummer Keith Moon - "Pinball Wizard", "Baba O'Riley" and "Love Reign O'er Me". At the end of their set, Pete Townshend told the crowd to: "Have a fucking beer!" Next was Kanye West who, wearing a leather kilt performed a medley of "Clique", "Mercy", "Power", "Jesus Walks", "All Of The Lights", "Diamonds From Sierra Leone", "Touch The Sky", "Gold Digger", "Runaway" and "Stronger". Billy Joel then played "Miami 2017 (Seen the Lights Go Out on Broadway)", "Movin' Out", "Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas", "New York State Of Mind", "River Of Dreams" and "You May Be Right". Celebrities contributing to the concert included Billy Crystal, Susan Sarandon, Adam Sandler – who performed a comedy cover of Leonard Cohen’s ‘Hallelujah’, reworked as ‘Sandy Screw Ya’ - Jon Stewart, Chelsea Clinton, Jimmy Fallon, Chris Rock, Steve Buscemi, Jake Gyllenhaal and Kristen Stewart. The show was made available to two billion people globally via television and livestreaming. 12-12-12: Concert For Sandy Relief will be broadcast in full tonight (December 13) at 10pm on Sky Arts 1 and at 12 on Sky Arts 2.

The 12-12-12: Concert For Sandy Relief took place last night (December 12) at Madison Square Garden in New York, with Sir Paul McCartney performing with Nirvana members Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic.

Joined by Pat Smear, the Nirvana reunion saw the band perform new song “Cut Me Some Slack” which has been written by Grohl and McCartney for the drummer’s forthcoming documentary Sound City. Speaking from the stage shortly before bringing out Grohl and Novoselic, McCartney said: “So recently, some guys asked me to go and jam with them.” Adding: “I finally understood that I was in the middle of a Nirvana reunion.”

Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band earlier opened the show with “Land Of Hope And Dreams”. After “Wrecking Ball”, Springsteen spoke to the crowd about the Jersey Shore, saying: “It was painful to see it damaged… because the Jersey Shore has always been a special place, because it’s inclusive… I pray that that characteristic remains on the Jersey Shore, that’s what makes it special.”

Springsteen and band then performed an impassioned “My City Of Ruins”, which segued into Tom Waits’ “Jersey Girl”. Springsteen then bought fellow Jersey native Jon Bon Jovi onto the stage and the pair performed “Born To Run” together.

Roger Waters then performed a set which included Pink Floyd’s “In The Flesh”, “Another Brick In The Wall” and “Money”. He was joined by Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam for “Comfortably Numb”.

Bon Jovi played “It’s My Life” and “Wanted Dead or Alive” before speaking to the crowd. “This recovery is not going to be quick, it’s going to take a while,” he said, “but we are strong, we are New York, we are New Jersey.”

Bruce Springsteen then returned to the stage to sing “Who Says You Can’t Go Home” with the band, leaving Jon Bon Jovi to lead the crowd in a sing-along version of “Livin’ On A Prayer”.

Eric Clapton was the next musical guest, singing an acoustic “Nobody Knows You When You’re Down And Out” before an electric “Got To Get Better In A Little While” and “Crossroads”.

The Rolling Stones then performed :You Got Me Rocking” and “Jumpin’ Jack Flash”. They were followed by Alicia Keys.

The Who played “Who Are You”, with frontman Roger Daltrey delivering an uncensored ‘fuck’ in the middle of the song. They followed it with “Bell Boy” – complete with video of their late drummer Keith Moon – “Pinball Wizard”, “Baba O’Riley” and “Love Reign O’er Me”. At the end of their set, Pete Townshend told the crowd to: “Have a fucking beer!”

Next was Kanye West who, wearing a leather kilt performed a medley of “Clique”, “Mercy”, “Power”, “Jesus Walks”, “All Of The Lights”, “Diamonds From Sierra Leone”, “Touch The Sky”, “Gold Digger”, “Runaway” and “Stronger”.

Billy Joel then played “Miami 2017 (Seen the Lights Go Out on Broadway)”, “Movin’ Out”, “Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas”, “New York State Of Mind”, “River Of Dreams” and “You May Be Right”.

Celebrities contributing to the concert included Billy Crystal, Susan Sarandon, Adam Sandler – who performed a comedy cover of Leonard Cohen’s ‘Hallelujah’, reworked as ‘Sandy Screw Ya’ – Jon Stewart, Chelsea Clinton, Jimmy Fallon, Chris Rock, Steve Buscemi, Jake Gyllenhaal and Kristen Stewart.

The show was made available to two billion people globally via television and livestreaming. 12-12-12: Concert For Sandy Relief will be broadcast in full tonight (December 13) at 10pm on Sky Arts 1 and at 12 on Sky Arts 2.

Fleetwood Mac to reissue Rumours for 35th anniversary

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Fleetwood Mac have announced that they will be reissuing expanded and deluxe versions of their 1977 album Rumours early next year. Posting the news on their website yesterday (December 12), the band revealed that the expanded edition will contain three CDs including the original album with B-Side '...

Fleetwood Mac have announced that they will be reissuing expanded and deluxe versions of their 1977 album Rumours early next year.

Posting the news on their website yesterday (December 12), the band revealed that the expanded edition will contain three CDs including the original album with B-Side ‘Silver Springs’, 12 unreleased live recordings from the band’s 1977 world tour including ‘The Chain’, ‘Oh Daddy’ and ‘Songbird’, and another disc filled with 16 unreleased takes from the album recording sessions.

A separate deluxe edition will also include everything from the expanded version, as well as the album on 12″ vinyl, plus an additional disc of outtakes and a DVD of The Rosebud Film – a documentary about the album filmed in 1977.

Althought it’s being trumpeted as a 35th anniversary reissue, the expanded edition will come out 36 years after the record was originally released.

Fleetwood Mac are also set to embark on a world tour, kicking off with a 34-date US tour in April, 2013. Stevie Nicks also revealed to NME that the band are planning on coming to the UK and that she would love to do Glastonbury too.

RUMOURS: DELUXE EDITION Tracklisting:

Disc 1

1. “Second Hand News”

2. “Dreams”

3. “Never Going Back Again”

4. “Don’t Stop”

5. “Go Your Own Way”

6. “Songbird”

7. “The Chain”

8. “You Make Loving Fun”

9. “I Don’t Want To Know”

10. “Oh Daddy”

11. “Gold Dust Woman”

12. “Silver Springs” – b-side

Disc 2: Live, 1977 Rumours World Tour

1. Intro

2. “Monday Morning”

3. “Dreams”

4. “Don’t Stop”

5. “The Chain”

6. “Oh Daddy”

7. “Rhiannon”

8. “Never Going Back Again”

9. “Gold Dust Woman”

10. “World Turning”

11. “Go Your Own Way”

12. “Songbird”

Disc 3: More from the Recording Sessions

1. “Second Hand News” (Early Take)

2. “Dreams” (Take 2)

3. “Never Going Back Again” (Acoustic Duet)

4. “Go Your Own Way” (Early Take)

5. “Songbird” (Demo)

6. “Songbird” (Instrumental, Take 10)

7. “I Don’t Want To Know” (Early Take)

8. “Keep Me There” (Instrumental)

9. “The Chain” (Demo)

10. “Keep Me There” (With Vocal)

11. “Gold Dust Woman” (Early Take)

12. “Oh Daddy” (Early Take)

13. “Silver Springs” (Early Take)

14. “Planets Of The Universe” (Demo)

15. “Doesn’t Anything Last” (Acoustic Duet)

16. “Never Going Back Again” (Instrumental)

Disc 4: 2004 Reissue Roughs & Outtakes

1. “Second Hand News”

2. “Dreams”

3. “Brushes (Never Going Back Again)”

4. “Don’t Stop”

5. “Go Your Own Way”

6. “Songbird”

7. “Silver Springs”

8. “You Make Loving Fun”

9. “Gold Dust Woman #1”

10. “Oh Daddy”

11. “Think About It”

Early Demos

12. “Never Going Back Again”

13. “Planets Of The Universe”

14. “Butter Cookie (Keep Me There)”

15. “Gold Dust Woman”

16. “Doesn’t Anything Last”

Jam Sessions

17. “Mic The Screecher”

18. “For Duster (The Blues)”

DVD

“The Rosebud Film” by Michael Collins

Vinyl LP

Side 1

1. “Second Hand News”

2. “Dreams”

3. “Never Going Back Again”

4. “Don’t Stop”

5. “Go Your Own Way”

6. “Songbird”

Side 2

1. “The Chain”

2.“You Make Loving Fun”

3. “I Don’t Want To Know”

4. “Oh Daddy”

5. “Gold Dust Woman”