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Hear new Rolling Stones track, “One More Shot”

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The Rolling Stones have unveiled a brand new track titled "One More Shot" – scroll down to listen to it. The song is the second new recording from the rock legends, who have been back in the studio for the first time in seven years. It follows the release of the track 'Doom And Gloom' and will f...

The Rolling Stones have unveiled a brand new track titled “One More Shot” – scroll down to listen to it.

The song is the second new recording from the rock legends, who have been back in the studio for the first time in seven years. It follows the release of the track ‘Doom And Gloom’ and will feature on the band’s new greatest hits compilation GRRR!.

Like “Doom And Gloom”, “One More Shot” was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards and was recorded in Paris with longtime Stones collaborator Don Was, who worked with the band on their last five LPs.

The band are currently rehearsing for their forthcoming live dates at London’s O2 Arena on November 25 and 29 to celebrate the their 50th anniversary. They will also be playing two nights at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey in the US on December 13 and 15.



The Rolling Stones – One More Shot (Official Lyrics Video) on MUZU.TV.

Black Sabbath ‘six tracks’ into recording new album – without Bill Ward

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Black Sabbath have revealed that they are six tracks into recording their new album. Tony Iommi has said that the final album will consist of 15 tracks. The Guardian quotes the guitarist as saying: "We've written the 15 songs and we've played them all, but now at the moment we're recording them. We...

Black Sabbath have revealed that they are six tracks into recording their new album.

Tony Iommi has said that the final album will consist of 15 tracks. The Guardian quotes the guitarist as saying: “We’ve written the 15 songs and we’ve played them all, but now at the moment we’re recording them. We’re about six tracks in at the moment.”

Iommi also confirmed that the legendary metal band are working on the new album, which is due for release in April of next year, without original drummer Bill Ward. “We’ll always have a heart for Bill, but I think it’s gone past that now, because it’s gone on so long I don’t see that happening at the moment,” he said.

Last month, Ward said to Eagles Of Death Metal frontman Jesse Hughes in On The Road – Black Sabbath and the Birth of Heavy Metal – which you can view at Vice.com – that he hoped to make amends with the band.

Ward said: “If there is some longevity with Black Sabbath, then I’d like to be part of it.” He added: “I wanna play hard rock music. I wanna play loud drums. I love playing with Terry [Geezer Butler, bass]. I love playing with Oz [Osbourne, vocals]. And I love playing with Tony [Iommi, guitar].”

In May of this year, Ward issued a statement which explained that he would not be taking part in any of the Black Sabbath shows set for the summer, following on from previous claims he’d made that he had been unhappy with the contract he’d been offered to work on the band’s new album and tour.

Black Sabbath headlined Download Festival and also played a small show at Birmingham’s O2 Academy and well as headlining Lollapalooza in Chicago in August, all with a replacement drummer.

Black Sabbath will be playing shows in Australia next year, their first in the country since 1974.

The 45th Uncut Playlist Of 2012

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Quite tempting yesterday to play nothing but “Signed Sealed Delivered I’m Yours”, but here’s this week’s playlist, with quite a few new clips (Broadcast, Jessica Pratt, Hiss, Ty!), links and new entries. Worth reiterating this week that the playlist isn’t ranked as such - number one is the first record I played, number 18 the last – and also that there’s music here I’m not crazy about: it’s all merely a diary of what we’ve listened to over the past couple of days. Hope that makes things clear. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Alasdair Roberts & Friends – A Wonder Working Stone (Drag City) 2 Silver Pyre – AeXE (Sedgemoor) 3 John Fullbright – From The Ground Up (Blue Dirt) 4 Broadcast – Berberian Sound Studio (Warp) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H7zIfUwwoQ0 5 Matthew E White – Big Inner (Hometapes) 6 Jessica Pratt - Jessica Pratt (Birth) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6snZYt7sTh8 7 Ty Segall – He’s The Doctor (Live on Letterman) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJhKupvWJ4U 8 Brian Eno – Lux (Warp) 9 Ty Segall – Twins (Drag City) 10 Various Artists - Stones Throw and Leaving Records Present: Dual Form (Stones Throw/Leaving) 11 Chelsea Wolfe – Unknown Rooms: A Collection Of Acoustic Songs (Sargent House) 12 Sir Douglas Quintet – The Complete Mercury Recordings (Hip-O Select) 13 Mountains – Centralia (Thrill Jockey) 14 Hiss Golden Messenger & Bowerbirds - Brother, Do You Know the Road? (Youtube) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z7QIil8WF3w 15 The Bryan Ferry Orchestra – The Jazz Age (BMG Rights Management) 16 Pantha Du Prince & The Bell Laboratory – Elements Of Light (Rough Trade) 17 18 Esben And The Witch – Wash The Sins Not Only The Face (Matador)

Quite tempting yesterday to play nothing but “Signed Sealed Delivered I’m Yours”, but here’s this week’s playlist, with quite a few new clips (Broadcast, Jessica Pratt, Hiss, Ty!), links and new entries.

Worth reiterating this week that the playlist isn’t ranked as such – number one is the first record I played, number 18 the last – and also that there’s music here I’m not crazy about: it’s all merely a diary of what we’ve listened to over the past couple of days. Hope that makes things clear.

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

1 Alasdair Roberts & Friends – A Wonder Working Stone (Drag City)

2 Silver Pyre – AeXE (Sedgemoor)

3 John Fullbright – From The Ground Up (Blue Dirt)

4 Broadcast – Berberian Sound Studio (Warp)

5 Matthew E White – Big Inner (Hometapes)

6 Jessica Pratt – Jessica Pratt (Birth)

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

7 Ty Segall – He’s The Doctor (Live on Letterman)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJhKupvWJ4U

8 Brian Eno – Lux (Warp)

9 Ty Segall – Twins (Drag City)

10 Various Artists – Stones Throw and Leaving Records Present: Dual Form (Stones Throw/Leaving)

11 Chelsea Wolfe – Unknown Rooms: A Collection Of Acoustic Songs (Sargent House)

12 Sir Douglas Quintet – The Complete Mercury Recordings (Hip-O Select)

13 Mountains – Centralia (Thrill Jockey)

14 Hiss Golden Messenger & Bowerbirds – Brother, Do You Know the Road? (Youtube)

15 The Bryan Ferry Orchestra – The Jazz Age (BMG Rights Management)

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

17

18 Esben And The Witch – Wash The Sins Not Only The Face (Matador)

Robert Plant knocked over during Buenos Aires performance

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Robert Plant was temporarily knocked to the floor when a fan invaded the stage during a recent gig in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Scroll down to watch fan-filmed footage of the incident. The stage invasion happened last Thursday [November 1] when Plant and his group The Sensational Space Shifters per...

Robert Plant was temporarily knocked to the floor when a fan invaded the stage during a recent gig in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Scroll down to watch fan-filmed footage of the incident.

The stage invasion happened last Thursday [November 1] when Plant and his group The Sensational Space Shifters performed at Estadio Luna Park and had just finished performing Led Zeppelin‘s “Going To California”. A man ran onto the stage and approached Plant but was tackled by security with the scuffle causing Plant to lose his balance and topple over.

Plant soon returns to his feet, saying: “Easy, easy” before adding “Thank you very much for the fun” in the direction of the audience.

Led Zeppelin release their live DVD Celebration Day, filmed at the band’s 2007 reunion show at London’s O2 Arena on November 19.

Guitarist Jimmy Page has also hinted that he will release remastered versions of all Led Zeppelin’s albums in 2013.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C7KHFLNN-G0

Rare post-Beatles John Lennon letter to Eric Clapton up for auction

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A rare post-Beatles John Lennon letter to Eric Clapton is expected to fetch as much as £19,000 at auction this week. The handwritten letter by the former Beatle is set to go under the hammer in Los Angeles at the Profiles in History auction on December 18, Reuters reports. In the draft letter, dated September 29, 1971, Lennon asks Clapton to start a band with him, writing: "Eric, I know I can bring out something great, in fact greater in you that had been so far evident in your music. I hope to bring out the same kind of greatness in all of us, which I know will happen if/when we get together." Clapton played in John Lennon and Yoko Ono's Plastic Ono Band in 1969 before The Beatles' official split in 1970. He also played on The Beatles' "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" on The Beatles. "There was a point in time when George Harrison thought about leaving the band and his replacement was Clapton, so this letter is a link of what could have been," auctioneer Joe Maddalena said.

A rare post-Beatles John Lennon letter to Eric Clapton is expected to fetch as much as £19,000 at auction this week.

The handwritten letter by the former Beatle is set to go under the hammer in Los Angeles at the Profiles in History auction on December 18, Reuters reports.

In the draft letter, dated September 29, 1971, Lennon asks Clapton to start a band with him, writing: “Eric, I know I can bring out something great, in fact greater in you that had been so far evident in your music. I hope to bring out the same kind of greatness in all of us, which I know will happen if/when we get together.”

Clapton played in John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s Plastic Ono Band in 1969 before The Beatles’ official split in 1970. He also played on The Beatles’ “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” on The Beatles.

“There was a point in time when George Harrison thought about leaving the band and his replacement was Clapton, so this letter is a link of what could have been,” auctioneer Joe Maddalena said.

My Bloody Valentine announce ‘Loveless’ follow-up and Tokyo Rocks appearance

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My Bloody Valentine have announced a headlining slot at Japan's Tokyo Rocks festival in May 2013, where they will be playing exclusive material from a brand new album. The album, the very-long-awaited follow-up to 1991’s classic Loveless, has been 21 years in the making. It will be released on fr...

My Bloody Valentine have announced a headlining slot at Japan’s Tokyo Rocks festival in May 2013, where they will be playing exclusive material from a brand new album.

The album, the very-long-awaited follow-up to 1991’s classic Loveless, has been 21 years in the making. It will be released on frontman Kevin Shields’ website before the end of the year, and will be followed by a further EP of brand new material.

In NME’s exclusive interview with Kevin Shields, he says that fans of Loveless will not be disappointed by the new material. “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.”

Shields also spoke about the festival: “Tokyo Rocks going to be interesting because it’s going to be in a new venue,” Shields says. “Primal Scream played it last year and Debbie [Googe, MBV bassist] played with them, she said it was good so we were like ‘Cool, we’ll do it’. It’s in some baseball stadium, it’ll be the biggest semi-enclosed gig we’ve ever done.”

My Bloody Valentine will headline the 60,000 capacity Tokyo Rocks festival at Ajinomoto Stadium in Tokyo in early May, supported by Illion, the solo project from Yojiro Noda, the singer from Japan’s biggest rock band Radwimps.

Noda has sold three million albums with Radwimps in Japan but has rarely given interviews. NME secured a rare chat with Tokyo’s answer to Thom Yorke, where he reveals his plans to reach a wider audience outside of Japan.

“If I’m going to do music I want to do it outside Japan as well, and I want to start that while I’m in my twenties. I want to do it to present Japan,” says Noda. “Playing outside Japan is my dream, my goal, but not the dream of the band.”

Noda also spoke about why he’s so secretive in his native Japan. “It wasn’t my intention [to be an enigma] but because I don’t do a lot of interviews, people think I’m mysterious. I don’t mind if listeners don’t know about me, I have my own blog and I’m pretty open – I write about having fights with my girlfriend [Yojiro dates the Japanese film star Usuda Asami].”

First bands unveiled for TV On The Radio and Deerhunter’s 2013 ATP festivals

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The first bands on the bill for TV On The Radio and Deerhunter's 2013 ATP festivals have been unveiled. The first weekend, which will be curated by TV On The Radio (May 10-12, 2013), will see performances from TV On The Radio, Spank Rock, El-P, Saul Williams, Tinariwen, Shabazz Palaces, Thee Oh Sees, CSS, Daniel Higgs (Lungfish), Celebration, Talibam! and North America. The second, Deerhunter<.strong> curated weekend (June 21-23, 2013), will see Deerhunter performing their albums Cryptograms, Microcastle and Halcyon Digest, as well as sets from Atlas Sound, Panda Bear, Avey Tarey, Animal Collective DJs, Pere Ubu, Dan Deacon, Tim Gane, Laetitia Sadier, No Age and Black Lips. Both ATP festivals will take place at Pontin's Camber Sands Holiday Park. The group behind the Lovebox and The Great Escape festivals recently bought 50% of All Tomorrows Parties in a deal which will see both sides assisting each other in the running of their events. The MAMA Group now own half of ATP with the latter on hand to help book acts for MAMA festivals including The Great Escape, Wilderness and Lovebox as part of the deal. Additionally, MAMA Group will help promote ATP gigs and festivals both in the UK and abroad.

The first bands on the bill for TV On The Radio and Deerhunter’s 2013 ATP festivals have been unveiled.

The first weekend, which will be curated by TV On The Radio (May 10-12, 2013), will see performances from TV On The Radio, Spank Rock, El-P, Saul Williams, Tinariwen, Shabazz Palaces, Thee Oh Sees, CSS, Daniel Higgs (Lungfish), Celebration, Talibam! and North America.

The second, Deerhunter<.strong> curated weekend (June 21-23, 2013), will see Deerhunter performing their albums Cryptograms, Microcastle and Halcyon Digest, as well as sets from Atlas Sound, Panda Bear, Avey Tarey, Animal Collective DJs, Pere Ubu, Dan Deacon, Tim Gane, Laetitia Sadier, No Age and Black Lips.

Both ATP festivals will take place at Pontin’s Camber Sands Holiday Park.

The group behind the Lovebox and The Great Escape festivals recently bought 50% of All Tomorrows Parties in a deal which will see both sides assisting each other in the running of their events.

The MAMA Group now own half of ATP with the latter on hand to help book acts for MAMA festivals including The Great Escape, Wilderness and Lovebox as part of the deal. Additionally, MAMA Group will help promote ATP gigs and festivals both in the UK and abroad.

Jimi Hendrix’s Woodstock performance for cinematic release

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Jimi Hendrix's set from the 1969 Woodstock festival is set to receive a cinematic release. The performance will be shown on November 29 and December 4 at more than 30 cinemas across the UK, and in movie theatres globally. The gig is being released to celebrate the 70th year of Hendrix's birth and ...

Jimi Hendrix‘s set from the 1969 Woodstock festival is set to receive a cinematic release.

The performance will be shown on November 29 and December 4 at more than 30 cinemas across the UK, and in movie theatres globally.

The gig is being released to celebrate the 70th year of Hendrix’s birth and will play alongside the film Live At Woodstock, which features interviews with band members Billy Cox and Mitch Mitchell, as well as engineer Eddie Kramer and Woodstock promoter Michael Lang. Live At Woodstock is directed by Bob Smeaton [Festival Express].

Of the cinematic release, Janie Hendrix, Jimi’s sister has said: “This film reflects a legendary event in our history as well as a true pinnacle of Jimi’s career. We celebrate his 70th birthday as we continue to celebrate his legacy/”

The gig footage has been digitally restored and features a new 5.1 audio surround mix by Kramer. The footage will show the songs performed in original sequence, as shown below.

‘Message To Love’

‘Spanish Castle Magic’

‘Red House’

‘Lover Man’

‘Foxy Lady

‘Jam Back At The House’

‘Izabella’

‘Fire’

‘Voodoo Child (Slight Return)’

‘Star Spangled Banner’

‘Purple Haze’

‘Woodstock Improvisation’

‘Villanova Junction’

‘Hey Joe’

For more information on ticketing, visit: jimihendrix.com.

Dave Grohl joins Queens Of The Stone Age for their new album

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Queens Of The Stone Age frontman Josh Homme has revealed that Dave Grohl will be drumming on the band's forthcoming new album. Grohl is filling in for Joey Castillo, who has left the band according to Homme, who broke the news yesterday evening [November 6] on Zane Lowe's BBC Radio 1 show. Grohl h...

Queens Of The Stone Age frontman Josh Homme has revealed that Dave Grohl will be drumming on the band’s forthcoming new album.

Grohl is filling in for Joey Castillo, who has left the band according to Homme, who broke the news yesterday evening [November 6] on Zane Lowe’s BBC Radio 1 show.

Grohl has long had close ties with Queens Of The Stone Age, drumming on the band’s 2002 album, Songs For The Deaf. The band also posted a picture on their Facebook page, showing Grohl’s name on the mixing desk.

Speaking to Zane Lowe, Homme said: “[Grohl] and I have this wonderful musical relationship which we don’t have with other people. It’s a very cool and comfortable position.”

Queens Of The Stone Age yesterday (November 5) revealed that they will be playing Download Festival for the first ever time next summer. Download Festival will take place from June 14-16 2013 at Donington Park.

Eagles Of Death Metal frontman Jesse Hughes recently said that the forthcoming Queens Of The Stone Age album is “badass”.

Speaking to NME, Josh Homme’s Eagles Of Death Metal bandmate added that the material he’s heard from the follow-up to 2007’s ‘Era Vulgaris’ is “really cool”. Hughes said: “The shit I’ve heard from the new Queens album is so badass. It’s really cool. It’s the kinda shit that makes John Holmes [legendary porn star] have a bigger dick and he’s dead, so that’s pretty rad.”

Queens Of The Stone Age are currently finishing up work on what will be their sixth studio album.

Bob Dylan posts his first ever Facebook status update

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Bob Dylan has embraced social media for the first time in the wake of Barack Obama's victory in the US election. Dylan, who has over 4 million "likes" on his official Facebook, posted a status update prior to the confirmation that Obama would serve a second term as US President. Taking a slightly ...

Bob Dylan has embraced social media for the first time in the wake of Barack Obama’s victory in the US election.

Dylan, who has over 4 million “likes” on his official Facebook, posted a status update prior to the confirmation that Obama would serve a second term as US President.

Taking a slightly less enthusiastic tone than you may expect, Dylan delivered a sobering message and said he was not expecting a landslide victory for the Democrats.

The Facebook status read: “Here’s pretty close to what I said last night in Madison. I said from the stage that we had to play better than good tonight, that the president was here today and he’s a hard act to follow. Also, that we’re not fooled by the media and we think it’s going to be a landslide. That’s pretty much all of it.”

Obama secured his second term in office by winning the vote in almost all of the key swing states. The Democrats are expected to hold House whilst the Republican party look set to take Senate.

Allah-Las on their way, praise the Lord!

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You catch us on a pretty busy day, deadlines fast approaching for our last issue of 2012. That’s the one, of course, that traditionally carries our end-of-year lists of best albums, reissues, films, DVDs and books. This means we’ve all been recently asked to nominate our personal Top 20s, from which John has been compiling the definitive countdown, the full list to be published when he’s finished his painstaking calculations in the Uncut that comes out at the end of November. In bygone days on Melody Maker, things used to get very fractious every year about this time, heated disputes breaking out in the pub as the staff split into bitter factions, ugly scenes developing between the champions of one record and the cheerleaders of its rivals, regrettable words spoken in voices raw with partisan emotion, friendships sundered, serious fallings out a seemingly inevitable consequence of the annual occasion of us naming an Album Of The Year. People used to work themselves up into a considerable lather about this, no chance at all of a result based on an agreeable consensus, even less so one based on a clear-cut majority. The polls as I remember them were always tight, even as today’s contest between Barack Obama and Mitt Romney is, as they say, too close to call. Sometimes this would result in uneasy, shifting alliances designed to make this or that record the favourite in a crowded field, the feeling sometimes that deals were being done at clandestine meetings in smoky rooms with overflowing ashtrays, the air stale with bitter compromise and broken promises that led to even greater bitterness. For successive generations of MM scribes, picking the Album Of The Year was one of those decisions on which much seemed to hang, and you couldn’t take the process of choosing it at all lightly. I remember one year spreading the rumour that our then-editor, Mike Oldfield, no relation to the boy genius responsible for Tubular Bells, had been so dismayed by the staff’s esoteric nominations that he’d decided to abandon the voting procedure entirely and hand the award to his own personal favourite album of the year, which was REO Speedwagon’s Good Trouble, a record I imagine no one else on the staff at the time had even heard. This caused an enormous amount of huffing and indignant puffing, great exclamations of shock, outrage and betrayal. Petitions were hastily drawn up, plans for a popular uprising made, a delegation formed to confront the autocratic editor in his beastly lair, where he no doubt lurked in the staff’s imagination like the playboy heir of a Third World dictator with a taste for decadent disco, elaborate furnishings, high calibre weaponry and torture. What they would probably have found was Mike asleep at his desk after an afternoon in the pub, snoring seismically. At which point the People’s Revolt would just sort of die out, as even the rebellion’s hardliners, the hot-heads and fire-brands, sloping back along with everyone else to their desks, where a lot of silent sulking would no doubt have morosely ensued as they contemplated the coming embarrassment of working for a music weekly that in 1982 would pick RE-fucking-O Speedwagon as the year’s best album. Ah, those were the days. Anyway, one of the albums I’m keeping my fingers crossed will do well in our poll this year is the self-titled debut by Allah-Las, which quickly became an office favourite when copies arrived a few months ago, a number of us falling hard for the very loud echoes we heard in their retro-jangle of Love and The Byrds or something compiled from obscure tapes by Lenny Kate as a follow-up to the garage rock splendours of Nuggets. The coolest place to see them live, of course, would be at the Whisky-A-Go-Go on Sunset Strip, possibly opening for Buffalo Springfield, but that’s not going to happen, sadly. So we will have to content ourselves with catching them on one of their first UK dates next month, when they arrive for a short tour. Only four dates have been announced so far – at London’s Shackwell Arms (Monday, December 10), Brighton’s The Hope (11), Liverpool’s Leaf (12) and Manchester’s Night & Day (13). Hopefully, there’ll be a few more confirmed in the next couple of weeks. Maybe I’ll see you at one of them. Have a great week. Allan

You catch us on a pretty busy day, deadlines fast approaching for our last issue of 2012. That’s the one, of course, that traditionally carries our end-of-year lists of best albums, reissues, films, DVDs and books. This means we’ve all been recently asked to nominate our personal Top 20s, from which John has been compiling the definitive countdown, the full list to be published when he’s finished his painstaking calculations in the Uncut that comes out at the end of November.

In bygone days on Melody Maker, things used to get very fractious every year about this time, heated disputes breaking out in the pub as the staff split into bitter factions, ugly scenes developing between the champions of one record and the cheerleaders of its rivals, regrettable words spoken in voices raw with partisan emotion, friendships sundered, serious fallings out a seemingly inevitable consequence of the annual occasion of us naming an Album Of The Year.

People used to work themselves up into a considerable lather about this, no chance at all of a result based on an agreeable consensus, even less so one based on a clear-cut majority. The polls as I remember them were always tight, even as today’s contest between Barack Obama and Mitt Romney is, as they say, too close to call. Sometimes this would result in uneasy, shifting alliances designed to make this or that record the favourite in a crowded field, the feeling sometimes that deals were being done at clandestine meetings in smoky rooms with overflowing ashtrays, the air stale with bitter compromise and broken promises that led to even greater bitterness.

For successive generations of MM scribes, picking the Album Of The Year was one of those decisions on which much seemed to hang, and you couldn’t take the process of choosing it at all lightly. I remember one year spreading the rumour that our then-editor, Mike Oldfield, no relation to the boy genius responsible for Tubular Bells, had been so dismayed by the staff’s esoteric nominations that he’d decided to abandon the voting procedure entirely and hand the award to his own personal favourite album of the year, which was REO Speedwagon’s Good Trouble, a record I imagine no one else on the staff at the time had even heard.

This caused an enormous amount of huffing and indignant puffing, great exclamations of shock, outrage and betrayal. Petitions were hastily drawn up, plans for a popular uprising made, a delegation formed to confront the autocratic editor in his beastly lair, where he no doubt lurked in the staff’s imagination like the playboy heir of a Third World dictator with a taste for decadent disco, elaborate furnishings, high calibre weaponry and torture.

What they would probably have found was Mike asleep at his desk after an afternoon in the pub, snoring seismically. At which point the People’s Revolt would just sort of die out, as even the rebellion’s hardliners, the hot-heads and fire-brands, sloping back along with everyone else to their desks, where a lot of silent sulking would no doubt have morosely ensued as they contemplated the coming embarrassment of working for a music weekly that in 1982 would pick RE-fucking-O Speedwagon as the year’s best album. Ah, those were the days.

Anyway, one of the albums I’m keeping my fingers crossed will do well in our poll this year is the self-titled debut by Allah-Las, which quickly became an office favourite when copies arrived a few months ago, a number of us falling hard for the very loud echoes we heard in their retro-jangle of Love and The Byrds or something compiled from obscure tapes by Lenny Kate as a follow-up to the garage rock splendours of Nuggets.

The coolest place to see them live, of course, would be at the Whisky-A-Go-Go on Sunset Strip, possibly opening for Buffalo Springfield, but that’s not going to happen, sadly. So we will have to content ourselves with catching them on one of their first UK dates next month, when they arrive for a short tour. Only four dates have been announced so far – at London’s Shackwell Arms (Monday, December 10), Brighton’s The Hope (11), Liverpool’s Leaf (12) and Manchester’s Night & Day (13). Hopefully, there’ll be a few more confirmed in the next couple of weeks. Maybe I’ll see you at one of them.

Have a great week.

Allan

Mickey Newbury – Lulled By The Moonlight/Stories From The Silver Moon Cafe/Blue To This Day

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The last wilful testaments of a true original... The words “maverick” and “outlaw” tend to be casually grafted on to the name of any country act that doesn’t fit an easily marketable Nashville template. The latter ultimately became a sub-genre in its own right, fuelled in no small part by the western mythologizing that peppers the catalogues of Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard and Waylon Jennings. Mickey Newbury was certainly a maverick in the accepted difficult-to-pigeonhole sense, but despite being constantly championed by those more famous names above, he wasn’t strictly an outlaw. Even when Elvis Presley covers were boosting his bank balance, Newbury could be more accurately labelled an outsider. Contemporaries who sold countless more concert tickets and records than Newbury considered him a poet. It was the word Johnny Cash used to describe him on prime time television in 1971, going on to declare him “one of the best writers in the country”. He brought a fresh and articulate literacy to country music, perhaps matched only by his close friend Kris Kristofferson; a keen, impressionistic eye which brought the grandeur of Jimmy Webb to saloon laments hitherto been lacking in philosophical ambition. The indications were that he could have effortlessly jumped through Nashville hoops if he’d wanted to; “Funny Familiar Forgotten Feelings” (a big hit for Tom Jones in the UK), “She Even Woke Me Up To Say Goodbye” (a Jerry Lee Lewis live staple) and “I Don’t Think Much About Her No More” (20 different covers and counting) illustrate his innate understanding of the generic country form, but on his own records he relished pushing envelopes until they set fire to themselves in submission. In the studio, he adopted the attitude of a dramatist, employing sound affects (rain, wind and thunder were favourites) to embellish his already evocative symphonies, while his lyrics could, on occasion, read like a ferocious game of Top Trumps between Hank Williams and Raymond Chandler. He probably knew it would never bring him untold riches, but he never seemed to care. Last year’s multi-disc overview, An American Trilogy, was arguably the detailed introduction for latecomers Newbury had warranted for many years, putting a well-stacked delicious buffet of sound to a name that might previously only have registered as a footnote or in parentheses of writings about more celebrated figures. These three albums, comprising his last original recordings before his death in 2002, represent the closing chapters, wilfully individual swansongs which, while only intermittently recalling his creative high watermarks, nonetheless reiterate his go-it-alone spirit. Lulled By The Moonlight [2000; 7/10] was his first full album of primarily original material for nigh on two decades, and it showcased a performer still unencumbered by the demands of commercial industry. He may have nodded to cookie cutter country tradition with knowing lyrical wit on “The Future’s Not What It Used To Be”, but elsewhere he was playfully intricate, often taking his lead from the 19th century parlour songbook of American icon Stephen Foster. Released later the same year, Stories From The Silver Moon Cafe [8/10] combined songs left over from the previous album with re-recordings of older material, serenely revisiting the ‘60s hit “Why You Been Gone So Long?” and the jazz croon of “Ain’t No Blues Today”. Although a settled family man in his ‘60s, Mickey could still pinpoint the emotional pain of love gone wrong on “Lie To Me, Darling” and “Some Memories Are Better Left Alone”. The posthumously released Blue To This Day [7/10] is as glorious wayward as anything in Newbury’s back catalogue, from the hymnal testifying of “Brother Peter” to the curtain-falling lullaby “Goodnight”, via the reassuring honky-tonk refuge of “All The Neon Lights Are Blue”. What we have here is three very good Mickey Newbury albums; collections of eloquent, beautifully crafted songs that bristle with the intellect and curiosity he brought to just about everything he did; not entirely oblivious to the whims of big bucks country commercialism, but betraying a wry smile while charting their own laconic path. Terry Staunton Photo credit: Phil Weddon

The last wilful testaments of a true original…

The words “maverick” and “outlaw” tend to be casually grafted on to the name of any country act that doesn’t fit an easily marketable Nashville template. The latter ultimately became a sub-genre in its own right, fuelled in no small part by the western mythologizing that peppers the catalogues of Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard and Waylon Jennings.

Mickey Newbury was certainly a maverick in the accepted difficult-to-pigeonhole sense, but despite being constantly championed by those more famous names above, he wasn’t strictly an outlaw. Even when Elvis Presley covers were boosting his bank balance, Newbury could be more accurately labelled an outsider.

Contemporaries who sold countless more concert tickets and records than Newbury considered him a poet. It was the word Johnny Cash used to describe him on prime time television in 1971, going on to declare him “one of the best writers in the country”. He brought a fresh and articulate literacy to country music, perhaps matched only by his close friend Kris Kristofferson; a keen, impressionistic eye which brought the grandeur of Jimmy Webb to saloon laments hitherto been lacking in philosophical ambition.

The indications were that he could have effortlessly jumped through Nashville hoops if he’d wanted to; “Funny Familiar Forgotten Feelings” (a big hit for Tom Jones in the UK), “She Even Woke Me Up To Say Goodbye” (a Jerry Lee Lewis live staple) and “I Don’t Think Much About Her No More” (20 different covers and counting) illustrate his innate understanding of the generic country form, but on his own records he relished pushing envelopes until they set fire to themselves in submission.

In the studio, he adopted the attitude of a dramatist, employing sound affects (rain, wind and thunder were favourites) to embellish his already evocative symphonies, while his lyrics could, on occasion, read like a ferocious game of Top Trumps between Hank Williams and Raymond Chandler. He probably knew it would never bring him untold riches, but he never seemed to care.

Last year’s multi-disc overview, An American Trilogy, was arguably the detailed introduction for latecomers Newbury had warranted for many years, putting a well-stacked delicious buffet of sound to a name that might previously only have registered as a footnote or in parentheses of writings about more celebrated figures. These three albums, comprising his last original recordings before his death in 2002, represent the closing chapters, wilfully individual swansongs which, while only intermittently recalling his creative high watermarks, nonetheless reiterate his go-it-alone spirit.

Lulled By The Moonlight [2000; 7/10] was his first full album of primarily original material for nigh on two decades, and it showcased a performer still unencumbered by the demands of commercial industry. He may have nodded to cookie cutter country tradition with knowing lyrical wit on “The Future’s Not What It Used To Be”, but elsewhere he was playfully intricate, often taking his lead from the 19th century parlour songbook of American icon Stephen Foster.

Released later the same year, Stories From The Silver Moon Cafe [8/10] combined songs left over from the previous album with re-recordings of older material, serenely revisiting the ‘60s hit “Why You Been Gone So Long?” and the jazz croon of “Ain’t No Blues Today”. Although a settled family man in his ‘60s, Mickey could still pinpoint the emotional pain of love gone wrong on “Lie To Me, Darling” and “Some Memories Are Better Left Alone”.

The posthumously released Blue To This Day [7/10] is as glorious wayward as anything in Newbury’s back catalogue, from the hymnal testifying of “Brother Peter” to the curtain-falling lullaby “Goodnight”, via the reassuring honky-tonk refuge of “All The Neon Lights Are Blue”. What we have here is three very good Mickey Newbury albums; collections of eloquent, beautifully crafted songs that bristle with the intellect and curiosity he brought to just about everything he did; not entirely oblivious to the whims of big bucks country commercialism, but betraying a wry smile while charting their own laconic path.

Terry Staunton

Photo credit: Phil Weddon

Jay-Z: ‘I’ve got 99 problems but Mitt ain’t one’ – watch

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Rapper Jay-Z performed a special version of his hit "99 Problems" at a rally for Obama's re-election campaign in Columbus, Ohio, changing the lyrics to reference Obama's Republican opponent Mitt Romney. Jay-Z's new version swaps the line "I've got 99 problems but a bitch ain't one" for "I've got 99 problems but Mitt ain't one". Watch the clip by clicking the link below. Fellow Obama supporter Bruce Springsteen also appeared at the rally. It follows an embarrassing event on Saturday (November 3), also taking place in the 'battleground' state of Ohio, at which just 200 people turned up to see Stevie Wonder perform. Jay-Z and wife Beyonce have long been supporters of Obama, playing at a tribute concert to the President in 2008 before he took his oath of office. In September, they raised $4 million (£2.46 million) for the re-election campaign by hosting a fundraiser at Jay-Z's 40/40 club in New York. Last month, Jay-Z appeared in a campaign video titled The Power Of Our Nation. The US presidential elections take place today (November 6). http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sv4pv6b7dIM

Rapper Jay-Z performed a special version of his hit “99 Problems” at a rally for Obama’s re-election campaign in Columbus, Ohio, changing the lyrics to reference Obama’s Republican opponent Mitt Romney.

Jay-Z’s new version swaps the line “I’ve got 99 problems but a bitch ain’t one” for “I’ve got 99 problems but Mitt ain’t one”. Watch the clip by clicking the link below.

Fellow Obama supporter Bruce Springsteen also appeared at the rally. It follows an embarrassing event on Saturday (November 3), also taking place in the ‘battleground’ state of Ohio, at which just 200 people turned up to see Stevie Wonder perform.

Jay-Z and wife Beyonce have long been supporters of Obama, playing at a tribute concert to the President in 2008 before he took his oath of office. In September, they raised $4 million (£2.46 million) for the re-election campaign by hosting a fundraiser at Jay-Z’s 40/40 club in New York. Last month, Jay-Z appeared in a campaign video titled The Power Of Our Nation.

The US presidential elections take place today (November 6).

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sv4pv6b7dIM

Kings of Leon announce 2013 UK arena tour

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Kings Of Leon have confirmed a run of UK arena tour dates for 2013. The band, expected to release a new album next year, will play shows in London, Manchester and Birmingham in June and July. Tickets for all dates go on sale this Friday (November 9) at 9am. Starting in London, the Nashville-based b...

Kings Of Leon have confirmed a run of UK arena tour dates for 2013.

The band, expected to release a new album next year, will play shows in London, Manchester and Birmingham in June and July. Tickets for all dates go on sale this Friday (November 9) at 9am. Starting in London, the Nashville-based band will play the O2 Arena on June 12 and 13 before playing Manchester Arena on June 24 and 25. The short tour then runs to Birmingham’s LG Arena on July 9/10.

Kings of Leon recently announced European festival appearances with headline slots booked at Optimus Alive in Portugal and Rock Werchter in Belgium. UK fans will also note that the arena tour is scheduled around the same time that Glastonbury Festival will be taking place.

Kings Of Leon will play:

London, O2 – June 12, 13

Manchester Arena 24, 25)

Birmingham LG Arena – July 9, 10

Tickets for Kings Of Leon go on sale Friday (November 9) at 9am.

“I’m Your Man: The Biography Of Leonard Cohen”

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As you might expect of a book about Leonard Cohen, Sylvie Simmons spends a fair proportion of I’m Your Man writing about love, faith, depression, finance, and the demands and consolations of poetry and women. Mostly, though, the focus of this hefty and thorough book is Leonard Cohen’s charm: about how an exceptionally gifted artist has seduced most everyone who has come into contact with him, through the course of an uncommonly eventful life. Simmons, of course, might not see her book in quite the same light. But among an impressive castlist, she is as vulnerable to Cohen’s wiles as anyone. “I gathered his only interest in the book was that it wouldn’t be a hagiography,” she writes in the afterword, following some 500 pages in which she has assembled scores of Cohen’s associates to testify to his brilliance and loveliness. Former lovers are generally rhapsodic in their praise. “I felt very lucky to have met Leonard at that time in my life,” says Marianne Ihlen who, among other indignities, was dumped in Montreal with her young son while Cohen gallivanted off to the Cuban revolution (he was eventually summoned to the Canadian embassy in Havana; not as a dangerous subversive, but because his mother was worried about him). Whenever domesticity looms, he heads off on another deluded macho adventure: soon after his son Adam is born, Cohen leaves him and his partner Suzanne Elrod to try and fight in the war of Yom Kippur, then flies directly from Israel to another combat zone, Ethiopia. “Women,” he claims dishonestly, “only let you out of the house for two reasons; to make money or to fight a war.” If only they let out men to sleep with other women, too… Remarkably, just one interviewee can find anything bad to say about him. Steven Machat, the son of Cohen’s former manager, “never liked him”. The chaotic Phil Spector collaboration Death Of A Ladies’ Man, Machat notes, “was two drunks… making an album about picking up girls and getting laid. It was the most honest album Leonard Cohen has ever made.” By 2008, however, even Machat is back, helping Tony Palmer reassemble his Bird On A Wire film. What is it about Cohen that inspires such devotion? Beyond the charm and the great art, the figure that emerges from I’m Your Man is droll, reserved, ultimately unknowable. His self-deprecation can be irritating, but the measured beauty of his language means that Simmons is perpetually disadvantaged as his biographer, grappling to describe a man who could do a much more stylish - and to some degree insightful - job himself. As a consequence, I’m Your Man is a triumph of research rather than analysis, and its best sections dramatise Cohen’s work as part of a team rather than as a solitary, internalised figure. There are fine and bawdy characters in the margins, like the poet Irving Layton and producer Bob Johnston (who deserves a biography of his own, incidentally), and vivid recollections of classic recording sessions and amphetamine-charged tours. Cohen heals a sick cat with Buddhist chanting, tries to get Iggy Pop to jointly respond to a personal ad, and arrives at a French festival on horseback. By the end, and a revelatory new poem for one more faithful ex-lover, Anjani Thomas, even a cynic is starting to be cowed by the cumulative adoration. And if Simmons’ writing is sometimes dogged by the romantic clichés associated with singer-songwriters - well, how could it not be? Leonard Cohen, in his life and work, assiduously created so many of them. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

As you might expect of a book about Leonard Cohen, Sylvie Simmons spends a fair proportion of I’m Your Man writing about love, faith, depression, finance, and the demands and consolations of poetry and women. Mostly, though, the focus of this hefty and thorough book is Leonard Cohen’s charm: about how an exceptionally gifted artist has seduced most everyone who has come into contact with him, through the course of an uncommonly eventful life.

Simmons, of course, might not see her book in quite the same light. But among an impressive castlist, she is as vulnerable to Cohen’s wiles as anyone. “I gathered his only interest in the book was that it wouldn’t be a hagiography,” she writes in the afterword, following some 500 pages in which she has assembled scores of Cohen’s associates to testify to his brilliance and loveliness. Former lovers are generally rhapsodic in their praise. “I felt very lucky to have met Leonard at that time in my life,” says Marianne Ihlen who, among other indignities, was dumped in Montreal with her young son while Cohen gallivanted off to the Cuban revolution (he was eventually summoned to the Canadian embassy in Havana; not as a dangerous subversive, but because his mother was worried about him). Whenever domesticity looms, he heads off on another deluded macho adventure: soon after his son Adam is born, Cohen leaves him and his partner Suzanne Elrod to try and fight in the war of Yom Kippur, then flies directly from Israel to another combat zone, Ethiopia. “Women,” he claims dishonestly, “only let you out of the house for two reasons; to make money or to fight a war.” If only they let out men to sleep with other women, too…

Remarkably, just one interviewee can find anything bad to say about him. Steven Machat, the son of Cohen’s former manager, “never liked him”. The chaotic Phil Spector collaboration Death Of A Ladies’ Man, Machat notes, “was two drunks… making an album about picking up girls and getting laid. It was the most honest album Leonard Cohen has ever made.” By 2008, however, even Machat is back, helping Tony Palmer reassemble his Bird On A Wire film.

What is it about Cohen that inspires such devotion? Beyond the charm and the great art, the figure that emerges from I’m Your Man is droll, reserved, ultimately unknowable. His self-deprecation can be irritating, but the measured beauty of his language means that Simmons is perpetually disadvantaged as his biographer, grappling to describe a man who could do a much more stylish – and to some degree insightful – job himself.

As a consequence, I’m Your Man is a triumph of research rather than analysis, and its best sections dramatise Cohen’s work as part of a team rather than as a solitary, internalised figure. There are fine and bawdy characters in the margins, like the poet Irving Layton and producer Bob Johnston (who deserves a biography of his own, incidentally), and vivid recollections of classic recording sessions and amphetamine-charged tours. Cohen heals a sick cat with Buddhist chanting, tries to get Iggy Pop to jointly respond to a personal ad, and arrives at a French festival on horseback.

By the end, and a revelatory new poem for one more faithful ex-lover, Anjani Thomas, even a cynic is starting to be cowed by the cumulative adoration. And if Simmons’ writing is sometimes dogged by the romantic clichés associated with singer-songwriters – well, how could it not be? Leonard Cohen, in his life and work, assiduously created so many of them.

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

Stephen Stills opens up about cancelled Buffalo Springfield reunion

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Stephen Stills says spoken about the aborted Buffalo Springfield reunion, which was planned for 2012 but cancelled when Neil Young decided to work on new projects with his band Crazy Horse instead – including the new Psychedelic Pill album. Speaking to Rolling Stone, Stills reveals the effect of...

Stephen Stills says spoken about the aborted Buffalo Springfield reunion, which was planned for 2012 but cancelled when Neil Young decided to work on new projects with his band Crazy Horse instead – including the new Psychedelic Pill album.

Speaking to Rolling Stone, Stills reveals the effect of Young’s change of heart, saying:It left me in a lurch for three quarters and ruined my financial planning. Also, 150 people got laid off that were supposed to work on the tour. Young has spoken about his reasons for cancelling the reunion, which began in 2010 at his annual Bridge School Benefit concert and ran to a total of seven shows. “I’d be on a tour of my past for the rest of fucking time,” he said in June. “I have to be able to move forward. I can’t be relegated. I did enough of it for right then.”

Stills’ response? “When Neil is involved you anything you need a seatbelt.” He added, “Working with Neil is a privilege, not a right.” He added that he did not think Buffalo Springfield would tour again. Last month, Young suggested that the group may one day record another album, saying, “Two of the guys are no longer with us, so it’s difficult, but we’re yet to do something that …you never know. It just seemed like it never reached its potential.”

Photo credit: Marc Over

Johnny Marr announces debut solo album details

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Johnny Marr has announced details of his debut solo album. The Messanger will be released on February 25, 2013. It was recorded in Manchester and Berlin and features the former The Smiths guitarist on vocals, guitar and production. The LP was mastered at Abbey Road studios by Frank Arkwright who ...

Johnny Marr has announced details of his debut solo album.

The Messanger will be released on February 25, 2013. It was recorded in Manchester and Berlin and features the former The Smiths guitarist on vocals, guitar and production.

The LP was mastered at Abbey Road studios by Frank Arkwright who recently worked with Marr on the remastering work for The Smiths’ box set Complete.

Speaking to NME about the album, Marr said he didn’t want to be in anyone else’s band anymore. After leaving The Smiths in 1987, Marr played in a number of other bands, including The The, Modest Mouse and The Cribs.

“It is late in the day to be making my debut,” Marr said. “I didn’t want to be in someone else’s band at this point. In the past I might have been reluctant to stand up front, and I’ve been lucky enough to be in bands with great singers, so it wasn’t necessary. But this is my band now, and the frontman in my band has to play guitar. I do both.”

Speaking about the rumours that his former band The Smiths are set to reunite, he said: “Everybody seems to know more about a Smiths reunion than I do. Those rumours are like a sport for everyone involved bar the people who were in the group 30 years ago. But it’s not happening.”

Marr is also set to join grunge icons Dinosaur Jr for a special performance in New York this December to celebrate the 15th anniversary of the band’s 1987 album You’re Living All Over Me.

Brian Eno, “Lux”

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If you've ever suspected that Brian Eno's enduring reputation as an avant-garde genius is more mythical than actual, his discography from the past few years makes for a satisfying read. There are contributions to albums by Andrea Corr, Natalie Imbruglia, Belinda Carlisle and Dido, alongside the higher-profile shifts with Coldplay and U2. Eno must be a lovely and useful man to have around, one concludes. He brings experimental strategies to invigorate the studio graft, but he always ensures that a shiny commercial product comes out at the other end. Which, at a guess, he will never play. In his last major Uncut interview, Eno talked about listening to West African music and gospel rather than his own work, and it's easy to conclude that the creative process interests him much more than the finished music. His technology projects back that up, being mostly based around generative music software, designed to produce infinite melodic variations rather than the same old tune every time. Some of us, though, would still prefer to listen to “Music For Airports”, not to mess about with an iPhone app. If a new deal with Warp Records in 2010 signalled a return to the old orthodoxies of album-making, the releases thus far have been disappointing, with Eno avoiding the burden of sole responsibility. Credits have been shared with two accomplished if uninspired multi-instrumentalists, Leo Abrahams and Jon Hopkins (“Small Craft On A Milk Sea”, 2010), and with a poet, Rick Holland (“Drums Between The Bells”, 2011). “Lux”, however, suggests that Eno might work best these days when he stays away from collaborators, and steers clear of proper musicians in particular. A couple of months ago, Icebreaker's rescoring of “Apollo: Atmospheres & Soundtracks” provided a timely reminder of Eno's ambient skills, his uncanny knack of applying a stately gravity to notionally weightless sounds. Lux operates brilliantly in that tradition. Unlike the often fidgety laptop jams of “Small Craft On A Milk Sea”, pleasingly little happens over the course of its seventy-five minutes. Traditional ambient buzzwords like "lunar" and "sepulchral" are drawn inexorably to these suspended notes and minutely fluctuating soundscapes. Reference points are similarly tasteful, with the four movements recalling Morton Feldman, Arvo Pärt and Gavin Bryars, and with piano lines that feel like tentative improvisations on Satie. While "lux" is actually Latin for light, the implication of luxury presents a further open goal to detractors of such conceptually rarefied music - not least because it was originally designed for an opulent salon, as a generative sound installation at the Palace Of Venaria in Turin. Only the rich, perhaps, have the luxury of enough time and space to really enjoy the leisurely, contemplative possibilities of ambient music. That said, “Lux” works on a pragmatic and egalitarian level as more or less the ideal ambient record. Its tone at times recalls his iPhone app, Bloom, but in the concise press release, Eno places Lux as part of his 'Thinking Music' sequence that also includes “Discreet Music” (1975) and the undervalued, mildly sinister “Neroli” from 1993. "I wanted to make a kind of music that existed on the cusp between melody and texture," Eno explained in “Neroli”'s sleevenotes, "and whose musical logic was elusive enough to reward attention, but not so strict as to demand it." The same statement of intent could be applied to “Lux”. If you're looking for environmental set-dressing, for a faint signifier of sophistication, for a sound that lingers like perfume in an elegant space, then Lux is extremely useful. But as a deeper listening experience, it is also unusually compelling and immersive, particularly through headphones, where the slow evolutions seem less textural and more melodically substantial than one first assumes. It's the sort of album that a lot of people probably imagine Eno makes all the time, but in reality rarely does. Perhaps “Lux” is the best kind of Eno album, too. "Music for thinking" does not come overburdened with clever ideas of its own: it just is. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

If you’ve ever suspected that Brian Eno‘s enduring reputation as an avant-garde genius is more mythical than actual, his discography from the past few years makes for a satisfying read.

There are contributions to albums by Andrea Corr, Natalie Imbruglia, Belinda Carlisle and Dido, alongside the higher-profile shifts with Coldplay and U2. Eno must be a lovely and useful man to have around, one concludes. He brings experimental strategies to invigorate the studio graft, but he always ensures that a shiny commercial product comes out at the other end.

Which, at a guess, he will never play. In his last major Uncut interview, Eno talked about listening to West African music and gospel rather than his own work, and it’s easy to conclude that the creative process interests him much more than the finished music. His technology projects back that up, being mostly based around generative music software, designed to produce infinite melodic variations rather than the same old tune every time. Some of us, though, would still prefer to listen to “Music For Airports”, not to mess about with an iPhone app.

If a new deal with Warp Records in 2010 signalled a return to the old orthodoxies of album-making, the releases thus far have been disappointing, with Eno avoiding the burden of sole responsibility. Credits have been shared with two accomplished if uninspired multi-instrumentalists, Leo Abrahams and Jon Hopkins (“Small Craft On A Milk Sea”, 2010), and with a poet, Rick Holland (“Drums Between The Bells”, 2011). “Lux”, however, suggests that Eno might work best these days when he stays away from collaborators, and steers clear of proper musicians in particular. A couple of months ago, Icebreaker‘s rescoring of “Apollo: Atmospheres & Soundtracks” provided a timely reminder of Eno’s ambient skills, his uncanny knack of applying a stately gravity to notionally weightless sounds.

Lux operates brilliantly in that tradition. Unlike the often fidgety laptop jams of “Small Craft On A Milk Sea”, pleasingly little happens over the course of its seventy-five minutes. Traditional ambient buzzwords like “lunar” and “sepulchral” are drawn inexorably to these suspended notes and minutely fluctuating soundscapes. Reference points are similarly tasteful, with the four movements recalling Morton Feldman, Arvo Pärt and Gavin Bryars, and with piano lines that feel like tentative improvisations on Satie.

While “lux” is actually Latin for light, the implication of luxury presents a further open goal to detractors of such conceptually rarefied music – not least because it was originally designed for an opulent salon, as a generative sound installation at the Palace Of Venaria in Turin. Only the rich, perhaps, have the luxury of enough time and space to really enjoy the leisurely, contemplative possibilities of ambient music. That said, “Lux” works on a pragmatic and egalitarian level as more or less the ideal ambient record. Its tone at times recalls his iPhone app, Bloom, but in the concise press release, Eno places Lux as part of his ‘Thinking Music’ sequence that also includes “Discreet Music” (1975) and the undervalued, mildly sinister “Neroli” from 1993. “I wanted to make a kind of music that existed on the cusp between melody and texture,” Eno explained in “Neroli”’s sleevenotes, “and whose musical logic was elusive enough to reward attention, but not so strict as to demand it.”

The same statement of intent could be applied to “Lux”. If you’re looking for environmental set-dressing, for a faint signifier of sophistication, for a sound that lingers like perfume in an elegant space, then Lux is extremely useful. But as a deeper listening experience, it is also unusually compelling and immersive, particularly through headphones, where the slow evolutions seem less textural and more melodically substantial than one first assumes.

It’s the sort of album that a lot of people probably imagine Eno makes all the time, but in reality rarely does. Perhaps “Lux” is the best kind of Eno album, too. “Music for thinking” does not come overburdened with clever ideas of its own: it just is.

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

‘Kurt Cobain musical will never happen’, says Courtney Love

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Courtney Love has denied rumours that a Broadway musical based on Nirvana's Kurt Cobain is currently in the works. Last month, Sam Lufti revealed that he is currently co-managing Courtney Love and working with her on a project about the life of her late husband. However, Love has scotched the rumo...

Courtney Love has denied rumours that a Broadway musical based on Nirvana’s Kurt Cobain is currently in the works.

Last month, Sam Lufti revealed that he is currently co-managing Courtney Love and working with her on a project about the life of her late husband.

However, Love has scotched the rumours in an interview with The Observer, telling the newspaper “there will be no musical” as “sometimes it’s best just to leave things alone”.

Lufti let slip the rumoured plans in a LA courtroom last month during his trial against Britney Spears and her parents over breach of contract, libel and unpaid management fees.

He said, reports Music-News, that the pair are “are currently working on a possible motion picture or Broadway musical based on the Nirvana catalogue, based on her life and Kurt Cobain‘s.” But he did add that the project was in its very early stages.

Love recently gave up some rights to Cobain’s likeness and Nirvana’s publishing, which has caused anger among fans who believe she is watering down the singer’s legacy. This has been highlighted with the news that CBS are working on a new family sitcom titled Smells Like Teen Spirit.

This has prompted Love to defend her actions in the press and condemning some usage of Nirvana’s material in films, such as ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’ in the recent Muppets movie. “I got bullied into selling what I sold,” she said. “I regret it so much. I’m never selling the rest of it.”

The Rolling Stones – Charlie Is My Darling Ireland 1965

Satisfaction guaranteed! The band's fascinated early days... It’s not as if the Stones are lacking pivotal film documents – there’s the Maysles brothers’ Gimme Shelter and Godard’s One Plus One for starters, not to mention Robert Frank’s notorious, unreleased Cocksucker Blues – and they’re about to hit us with a monumental new career-overview documentary, Crossfire Hurricane. But no filmmaker ever got closer than Peter Whitehead, who was there before the rocky masks had been tugged in place and the myths coalesced. Shot over three days in 1965, on stage, backstage and on the road during a short tour of Ireland, Charlie Is My Darling, the first Stones film, is a Stones film like no other. Barely released in 1966, since trapped in legal tangles, Whitehead’s vibrant, hand-held verité documentary has emerged in various washed-out bootlegs, but the team behind this meticulous release have returned to the archives and not only restored the print but uncovered additional footage, including extended versions of the band’s fantastically raw performances: Jagger, Richards, Jones, Watts and Wyman when they were a young blues band in shirts and sports jackets, playing small venues, close enough for the hysterical audience to storm the stage. Filming shortly after the release of “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction”, Whitehead captures them in the process of going stratospheric, loving what is happening, yet also apprehensive. Here are the Stones when they weren’t much more than kids, impersonating Elvis, getting chased by screaming fans across railway tracks, jamming Beatles songs, and, amazingly, caught in the act composing their own, as Mick talks Keith through his idea for “Sittin’ On A Fence” (“It’s about a guy sitting on a fence…”). What emerges is not a portrait of young gods. Getting so close you get to watch Keith lathering concealer over his spots, this is the band unformed, unvarnished and, when Whitehead pins them down for interviews, uncomfortable. As they get bored, show off, lark around, try on intellectual pretension and mumble, the results are astonishingly intimate, often charming, sometimes toe-curling. Just as fascinating as the picture of the band, however, is the context around them. It’s 1965, but the grey, parochial world we glimpse could as easily be 1948. Whitehead uniquely captures the real sense of the group, and their fans, trying to escape grinding reality by creating something else, something that doesn’t really exist – this music - to believe in instead. Simply essential stuff. EXTRAS: Whitehead’s original cut and Andrew Loog Oldham’s “producer’s cut” alongside the 2012 restoration and outtakes. The “Super Deluxe” edition is pricey, but amazing, including a 10-inch vinyl compilation of live 1965 performances recorded by Glyn Johns, two CDs (those same live tracks, plus the film’s soundtrack) an excellent hardback book, replica poster from the Belfast 1965 gig, and a random film cell. 10/10 Damien Love Photo credit: irish photo archive/www.irishphotoarchive.ie

Satisfaction guaranteed! The band’s fascinated early days…

It’s not as if the Stones are lacking pivotal film documents – there’s the Maysles brothers’ Gimme Shelter and Godard’s One Plus One for starters, not to mention Robert Frank’s notorious, unreleased Cocksucker Blues – and they’re about to hit us with a monumental new career-overview documentary, Crossfire Hurricane.

But no filmmaker ever got closer than Peter Whitehead, who was there before the rocky masks had been tugged in place and the myths coalesced. Shot over three days in 1965, on stage, backstage and on the road during a short tour of Ireland, Charlie Is My Darling, the first Stones film, is a Stones film like no other.

Barely released in 1966, since trapped in legal tangles, Whitehead’s vibrant, hand-held verité documentary has emerged in various washed-out bootlegs, but the team behind this meticulous release have returned to the archives and not only restored the print but uncovered additional footage, including extended versions of the band’s fantastically raw performances: Jagger, Richards, Jones, Watts and Wyman when they were a young blues band in shirts and sports jackets, playing small venues, close enough for the hysterical audience to storm the stage.

Filming shortly after the release of “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction”, Whitehead captures them in the process of going stratospheric, loving what is happening, yet also apprehensive. Here are the Stones when they weren’t much more than kids, impersonating Elvis, getting chased by screaming fans across railway tracks, jamming Beatles songs, and, amazingly, caught in the act composing their own, as Mick talks Keith through his idea for “Sittin’ On A Fence” (“It’s about a guy sitting on a fence…”).

What emerges is not a portrait of young gods. Getting so close you get to watch Keith lathering concealer over his spots, this is the band unformed, unvarnished and, when Whitehead pins them down for interviews, uncomfortable. As they get bored, show off, lark around, try on intellectual pretension and mumble, the results are astonishingly intimate, often charming, sometimes toe-curling.

Just as fascinating as the picture of the band, however, is the context around them. It’s 1965, but the grey, parochial world we glimpse could as easily be 1948. Whitehead uniquely captures the real sense of the group, and their fans, trying to escape grinding reality by creating something else, something that doesn’t really exist – this music – to believe in instead. Simply essential stuff.

EXTRAS: Whitehead’s original cut and Andrew Loog Oldham’s “producer’s cut” alongside the 2012 restoration and outtakes. The “Super Deluxe” edition is pricey, but amazing, including a 10-inch vinyl compilation of live 1965 performances recorded by Glyn Johns, two CDs (those same live tracks, plus the film’s soundtrack) an excellent hardback book, replica poster from the Belfast 1965 gig, and a random film cell.

10/10

Damien Love

Photo credit: irish photo archive/www.irishphotoarchive.ie