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The Rolling Stones to play Paris warm-up show tonight

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The Rolling Stones are to play a surprise gig in Paris tonight as a warm-up for their forthcoming dates in London and New Jersey. The group made the announcement on Twitter, writing: "The Rolling Stones are playing a short warm-up gig tonight, Thursday 25th Oct, in Paris." Newspaper Le Parisien re...

The Rolling Stones are to play a surprise gig in Paris tonight as a warm-up for their forthcoming dates in London and New Jersey.

The group made the announcement on Twitter, writing: “The Rolling Stones are playing a short warm-up gig tonight, Thursday 25th Oct, in Paris.” Newspaper Le Parisien reports that the show will take place at Trabendo. A small, 700-seat theatre in the Parc de la Villette area of Paris.

Tickets for the show will be available from 12pm local time today at Virgin Megastore on Paris’s Champs Elysees. The band’s Twitter stipulated that, “Names will be printed on the tickets. On presentation of photo ID at the venue, ticket holders will receive a wristband. Doors open at 8 pm… Mobile phones, cameras, video equipment and recording devices are strictly prohibited.”

Earlier this week, guitarist Ronnie Wood told NME that the band are likely to play more than one low-key show. He said: “There’s going to be little club gigs that we’re gonna surprise ourselves to do as well, we’ll bung a few in next week or the week after, so look out for any Cockroaches gigs or whatever! I don’t know who we’ll be billed as but we’ll turn up somewhere and put a few to the test. Tiny, 200, 300 people kind of places.”

Last week, The Rolling Stones announced two huge London dates for November. The rock legends will play London’s O2 Arena on November 25 and 29 to celebrate 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. All the dates sold out in minutes.

Neil Young: ‘Who is Bono?’

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Neil Young took part in a Twitter Q&A session yesterday (October 24), in which he asked his fans "who is Bono?". Young made the comment about the U2 frontman after he was asked what his opinion was of the band Foster The People. Young was asked by @akemi99 "what do you like about foster the peo...

Neil Young took part in a Twitter Q&A session yesterday (October 24), in which he asked his fans “who is Bono?”.

Young made the comment about the U2 frontman after he was asked what his opinion was of the band Foster The People. Young was asked by @akemi99 “what do you like about foster the people? #askneil btw, bono said he likes them, too… it is surprising two super stars like them..”. Young replied: “who is Bono?”.

Young was also asked by @kellyapritchard if he’d be making any more ‘rock operas’ similar to his Greendale project, to which he responded: “anything can happen”.

He also took the time to reply to @jana_pe’s question “what would happen if you were locked alone in a room with only a jar of nutella?” with the answer “creative things”.

Neil Young and Crazy Horse’s new album Psychedelic Pill is currently streaming ahead of its official release at neilyoungpsychpill.warnerreprise.com

Psychedelic Pill is out on October 29. The album follows June’s covers LP Americana.

You can read Uncut’s review of Psychedelic Pill here.

The Velvet Underground – The Velvet Underground & Nico

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The banana’s back. Not before time. Late last year, Lou Reed’s reputation suffered a serious blow when his ill-fated collaboration with Metallica met with hostility not witnessed since Metal Machine Music. He even had death threats. This 45th anniversary edition of The Velvet Underground & Nico is a timely reminder (if one is needed) that Reed at his best had few peers and no equals, and that his writer’s eye – literate, probing, explicit – was unflinching right from the start. He was always hardcore. Recorded when Reed was 24, The Velvet Underground & Nico drops us into a Manhattan drug deal (“I’m Waiting For The Man”), ushers us into a dark room where a girl in leather boots is whipping a kneeling man with a belt (“Venus In Furs”), and allows us to watch a syringe entering a human arm in real time (“Heroin”). Condemned in 1967 for breaking every taboo in the book, The Velvet Underground & Nico was a victim of wretched luck – mislaid master tapes, slashed budgets, negligible distribution – but stoically survived its punishing times like Beardless Harry riding the trolleys into Manhattan (“Run Run Run”). Then, like Van Gogh in early 20th century Europe, The Velvet Underground & Nico basked in posthumous recognition. It became a potent influence on David Bowie, Roxy Music, Bromley punks, Manchester post-punks, indie Glaswegians and hundreds – perhaps thousands – of others. Yet the album has always resisted attempts to imitate it. The music is too idiosyncratic to be anyone’s template. The songs’ atmospheres are too nuanced, too twisted – delicate paranoia (“Sunday Morning”), ice-cold tragedy (“All Tomorrow’s Parties”) – for another band to be capable of creating them. In Reed’s idea of people-watching, motives are complicated. Nobody is condemned for his or her predilection. The listener is credited with an open mind. And so, almost half a century later, The Velvet Underground & Nico still attracts quizzical visitors to its amoral museum. Universal’s 6CD boxset is by far the most in-depth reissue the album has ever had. Newly remastered throughout, it contains stereo and mono versions, original singles, alternate takes, different mixes and an entire Nico LP (Chelsea Girl). Major incentives appear on disc four with the official release of two VU bootlegs: a 30-minute rehearsal at The Factory in January 1966, and engineer Norman Dolph’s acetate of the Scepter Studios sessions in April, which formed the basis of the album. Discs five and six offer 94 minutes from a November 1966 concert in Columbus, Ohio (with Nico in the line-up), bootlegged during the ’80s on the LPs 1966 and Down For You Is Up. Thus a fan of “All Tomorrow’s Parties”, for example, can hear it seven times: the traditional double-voiced version in stereo, the same in mono, the alternative single-voiced version, an instrumental version, an edited mono 45, a Scepter Studios mix and a live recording. Most of the boxset takes place in mono, so we need to understand right away that the difference between stereo and mono, for the Velvets, was stark. A good illustration is what happens to “European Son”. The song is amazing by any standards, a frantic, chugging, dissonant drone with a mad banjo-like guitar making avant-garde use of feedback. In stereo, it’s as heart-stopping a rollercoaster as the Velvets ever took us on. But in mono, the walls narrow and the claustrophobia kicks in. Crank it loud and it’s a bass-heavy rumble punctuated by ear-splitting screams. We can’t hear Mo Tucker’s drums, so we lose the beat and feel disorientated. It’s a very uncomfortable sensation. The same happens on the mono “Heroin” when John Cale’s viola suddenly monopolises the air space like a demented Paganini, reducing Tucker to a faraway muffled thump as if she’s banging a broomstick on a ceiling three floors below. In essence, stereo gave the Velvets width – but mono gives them violence. The white noise cacophonies border on sadism; they really must have wanted to frighten the life out of people. The Factory rehearsal in January 1966 and the Scepter sessions in April reveal a few insights into how certain arrangements took shape. In January, Nico was being considered for “There She Goes Again”, a decision that was later changed. “Venus In Furs” was still a work-in-progress, with Reed dictating the lyrics (“comes... in bells...”) to an onlooker while someone off-mic sang Bo Diddley’s “Crackin’ Up” to the guitar chords. Cale’s viola was evilly prominent on “Heroin” and Tucker kept time with a tambourine. By April at Scepter, Reed’s voice was adopting a snarl on “Heroin”, far removed from the woozy-sounding character he’d inhabit on the final version, but at least Tucker was now pounding her drums. And “Venus In Furs” had structure, even if Reed sang it with none of the sinister dreaminess of the May re-recording. Captured live by a fan in November, the Velvets were ‘promoting’ an album that their label MGM-Verve had frustratingly not yet released. The tape is old and beset by dropouts and general wear-and-tear, but it’s striking how faithful the Velvets are to their beloved ballads (“All Tomorrow’s Parties”, “Femme Fatale”) and even to some of the heavier material (“Run Run Run”, “The Black Angel’s Death Song”). They play them as if they’re proud of them, which is the best way to play them. The true chaos is reserved for a pair of mammoth improvisations, “Melody Laughter” and “The Nothing Song”, which bookend the concert in shrieking feedback and ominous drones. Though its intensity can intimidate, The Velvet Underground & Nico was clearly made in a spirit of fun. It’s often forgotten that Reed laughs several times on the album, and we can imagine the grin on Cale’s face, too, as he hammers away at his piano on “I’m Waiting For The Man”. They moved from dispassionate reportage to touching tenderness, from a “whiplash girl-child” to a poor Cinderella in dowdy clothes. They reconvened in April 1967 (minus Tucker) to record Nico’s fine solo LP Chelsea Girl, by which time journalists and DJs were telling them, to their dismay, that their banana was rotten. David Cavanagh

The banana’s back. Not before time. Late last year, Lou Reed’s reputation suffered a serious blow when his ill-fated collaboration with Metallica met with hostility not witnessed since Metal Machine Music. He even had death threats. This 45th anniversary edition of The Velvet Underground & Nico is a timely reminder (if one is needed) that Reed at his best had few peers and no equals, and that his writer’s eye – literate, probing, explicit – was unflinching right from the start. He was always hardcore.

Recorded when Reed was 24, The Velvet Underground & Nico drops us into a Manhattan drug deal (“I’m Waiting For The Man”), ushers us into a dark room where a girl in leather boots is whipping a kneeling man with a belt (“Venus In Furs”), and allows us to watch a syringe entering a human arm in real time (“Heroin”). Condemned in 1967 for breaking every taboo in the book, The Velvet Underground & Nico was a victim of wretched luck – mislaid master tapes, slashed budgets, negligible distribution – but stoically survived its punishing times like Beardless Harry riding the trolleys into Manhattan (“Run Run Run”). Then, like Van Gogh in early 20th century Europe, The Velvet Underground & Nico basked in posthumous recognition. It became a potent influence on David Bowie, Roxy Music, Bromley punks, Manchester post-punks, indie Glaswegians and hundreds – perhaps thousands – of others. Yet the album has always resisted attempts to imitate it. The music is too idiosyncratic to be anyone’s template. The songs’ atmospheres are too nuanced, too twisted – delicate paranoia (“Sunday Morning”), ice-cold tragedy (“All Tomorrow’s Parties”) – for another band to be capable of creating them. In Reed’s idea of people-watching, motives are complicated. Nobody is condemned for his or her predilection. The listener is credited with an open mind. And so, almost half a century later, The Velvet Underground & Nico still attracts quizzical visitors to its amoral museum.

Universal’s 6CD boxset is by far the most in-depth reissue the album has ever had. Newly remastered throughout, it contains stereo and mono versions, original singles, alternate takes, different mixes and an entire Nico LP (Chelsea Girl). Major incentives appear on disc four with the official release of two VU bootlegs: a 30-minute rehearsal at The Factory in January 1966, and engineer Norman Dolph’s acetate of the Scepter Studios sessions in April, which formed the basis of the album. Discs five and six offer 94 minutes from a November 1966 concert in Columbus, Ohio (with Nico in the line-up), bootlegged during the ’80s on the LPs 1966 and Down For You Is Up. Thus a fan of “All Tomorrow’s Parties”, for example, can hear it seven times: the traditional double-voiced version in stereo, the same in mono, the alternative single-voiced version, an instrumental version, an edited mono 45, a Scepter Studios mix and a live recording.

Most of the boxset takes place in mono, so we need to understand right away that the difference between stereo and mono, for the Velvets, was stark. A good illustration is what happens to “European Son”. The song is amazing by any standards, a frantic, chugging, dissonant drone with a mad banjo-like guitar making avant-garde use of feedback. In stereo, it’s as heart-stopping a rollercoaster as the Velvets ever took us on. But in mono, the walls narrow and the claustrophobia kicks in. Crank it loud and it’s a bass-heavy rumble punctuated by ear-splitting screams. We can’t hear Mo Tucker’s drums, so we lose the beat and feel disorientated. It’s a very uncomfortable sensation. The same happens on the mono “Heroin” when John Cale’s viola suddenly monopolises the air space like a demented Paganini, reducing Tucker to a faraway muffled thump as if she’s banging a broomstick on a ceiling three floors below. In essence, stereo gave the Velvets width – but mono gives them violence. The white noise cacophonies border on sadism; they really must have wanted to frighten the life out of people.

The Factory rehearsal in January 1966 and the Scepter sessions in April reveal a few insights into how certain arrangements took shape. In January, Nico was being considered for “There She Goes Again”, a decision that was later changed. “Venus In Furs” was still a work-in-progress, with Reed dictating the lyrics (“comes… in bells…”) to an onlooker while someone off-mic sang Bo Diddley’s “Crackin’ Up” to the guitar chords. Cale’s viola was evilly prominent on “Heroin” and Tucker kept time with a tambourine. By April at Scepter, Reed’s voice was adopting a snarl on “Heroin”, far removed from the woozy-sounding character he’d inhabit on the final version, but at least Tucker was now pounding her drums. And “Venus In Furs” had structure, even if Reed sang it with none of the sinister dreaminess of the May re-recording.

Captured live by a fan in November, the Velvets were ‘promoting’ an album that their label MGM-Verve had frustratingly not yet released. The tape is old and beset by dropouts and general wear-and-tear, but it’s striking how faithful the Velvets are to their beloved ballads (“All Tomorrow’s Parties”, “Femme Fatale”) and even to some of the heavier material (“Run Run Run”, “The Black Angel’s Death Song”). They play them as if they’re proud of them, which is the best way to play them. The true chaos is reserved for a pair of mammoth improvisations, “Melody Laughter” and “The Nothing Song”, which bookend the concert in shrieking feedback and ominous drones.

Though its intensity can intimidate, The Velvet Underground & Nico was clearly made in a spirit of fun. It’s often forgotten that Reed laughs several times on the album, and we can imagine the grin on Cale’s face, too, as he hammers away at his piano on “I’m Waiting For The Man”. They moved from dispassionate reportage to touching tenderness, from a “whiplash girl-child” to a poor Cinderella in dowdy clothes. They reconvened in April 1967 (minus Tucker) to record Nico’s fine solo LP Chelsea Girl, by which time journalists and DJs were telling them, to their dismay, that their banana was rotten.

David Cavanagh

P Diddy involved in Beverly Hills car crash

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P Diddy has been involved in a car accident outside a hotel in Beverly Hills, according to US reports. It is believed that the rapper was being driven into the Sunset Boulevard entrance to the Beverly Hills hotel in California overnight when his chauffeur-driven Cadillac Escalade came into contact ...

P Diddy has been involved in a car accident outside a hotel in Beverly Hills, according to US reports.

It is believed that the rapper was being driven into the Sunset Boulevard entrance to the Beverly Hills hotel in California overnight when his chauffeur-driven Cadillac Escalade came into contact with a Lexus RX. It is not yet known who was driving the Lexus.

X17online reports that Diddy and his fellow passengers were laying ‘prostrate’ on a piece of grass near the hotel with staff from the hotel aiding them until emergency services arrived at the scene. An image posted by the showbiz website shows a severely damaged Cadillac with comprehensive damage sustained to the front of the vehicle. Despite this, it is believed that there were no serious injuries received by anybody during the crash.

Diddy has yet to update his Twitter page about the incident, however, leaving his last Tweet as a message reading: “Oooooohhhhhh shit today is wed? Woah.”

Earlier this year it was revealed that Diddy will guest star in the new series of US sitcom It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia.

The 43rd Uncut Playlist Of 2012

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Most important things first: apparently www.neilyoung.com will be streaming the whole of “Psychedelic Pill” today. Once you’ve had a listen, let me know what you think. In the meantime, a couple of nice things to listen to here, and a special gold star for Robert Stillman’s excellent new album (that's him in the picture). I wrote this about his last one, “Machine’s Song”, but “Station Wagon Interior Perspective” is more orchestrated: a John Fahey requiem that cleverly avoids the use of any guitar, favouring instead a horn-heavy band sound initially redolent of Mingus’ Town Hall Concert and maybe some of Moondog’s orchestral pieces. Much love, too, for the new “Imaginational Anthems” guitar soli comp, Pantha Du Prince (+ carillon) and the Junior Kimbrough comp that the Reviews Ed just bought. The new Uncut is out now, if you hadn’t seen; besides all the headline business, I’ve contributed reviews of the new Brian Eno album and Sylvie Simmons’ Leonard Cohen biography. Enjoy, and so on… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Robert Stillman – Station Wagon Interior Perspective (A Requiem for John Fahey) (Archaic Future) 2 Various Artists – Imaginational Anthems Volume 5 (Tompkins Square) 3 Cornershop Featuring Sinead O’Connor & Chris Constantinou – Posing As An Angel (Ample Play) 4 Pantha Du Prince & The Bell Laboratory - Elements Of Light (Rough Trade) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=87rx_1xFgvg 5 Colossal Yes – Loosen The Lead And Spoil The Dogs (Jackpot) 6 Sinkane – Mars (City Slang) 7 Wooden Wand – Blood Oaths Of The New Blues (Fire) 8 Various Artists – Man Chest Hair (Finders Keepers) 9 Six Organs Of Admittance – Ascent (Drag City) 10 Michael Chapman – Pachyderm (Blast First Petite) 11 Ulrich Schnauss – A Long Way To Fall (Domino) 12 The Who – Live At Hull 1970 (Universal) 13 Junior Kimbrough – You Better Run: The Essential Junior Kimbrough (Fat Possum) 14 Rachel Zeffira – The Deserters (RAF) 15 Cayucas – Cayucos (Secretly Canadian) 16 Goat – World Music (Rocket) 17 Red River Dialect – Awellupontheway (Lono) 18 Godspeed You! Black Emperor – Allelujah! Don’t Bend Ascend (Constellation) 19 Purling Hiss – Run From The City (Fan Death)

Most important things first: apparently www.neilyoung.com will be streaming the whole of “Psychedelic Pill” today. Once you’ve had a listen, let me know what you think.

In the meantime, a couple of nice things to listen to here, and a special gold star for Robert Stillman’s excellent new album (that’s him in the picture). I wrote this about his last one, “Machine’s Song”, but “Station Wagon Interior Perspective” is more orchestrated: a John Fahey requiem that cleverly avoids the use of any guitar, favouring instead a horn-heavy band sound initially redolent of Mingus’ Town Hall Concert and maybe some of Moondog’s orchestral pieces.

Much love, too, for the new “Imaginational Anthems” guitar soli comp, Pantha Du Prince (+ carillon) and the Junior Kimbrough comp that the Reviews Ed just bought. The new Uncut is out now, if you hadn’t seen; besides all the headline business, I’ve contributed reviews of the new Brian Eno album and Sylvie Simmons’ Leonard Cohen biography. Enjoy, and so on…

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

1 Robert Stillman – Station Wagon Interior Perspective (A Requiem for John Fahey) (Archaic Future)

2 Various Artists – Imaginational Anthems Volume 5 (Tompkins Square)

3 Cornershop Featuring Sinead O’Connor & Chris Constantinou – Posing As An Angel (Ample Play)

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

5 Colossal Yes – Loosen The Lead And Spoil The Dogs (Jackpot)

6 Sinkane – Mars (City Slang)

7 Wooden Wand – Blood Oaths Of The New Blues (Fire)

8 Various Artists – Man Chest Hair (Finders Keepers)

9 Six Organs Of Admittance – Ascent (Drag City)

10 Michael Chapman – Pachyderm (Blast First Petite)

11 Ulrich Schnauss – A Long Way To Fall (Domino)

12 The Who – Live At Hull 1970 (Universal)

13 Junior Kimbrough – You Better Run: The Essential Junior Kimbrough (Fat Possum)

14 Rachel Zeffira – The Deserters (RAF)

15 Cayucas – Cayucos (Secretly Canadian)

16 Goat – World Music (Rocket)

17 Red River Dialect – Awellupontheway (Lono)

18 Godspeed You! Black Emperor – Allelujah! Don’t Bend Ascend (Constellation)

19 Purling Hiss – Run From The City (Fan Death)

Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon auctions guitar made from a whiskey barrel

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Bon Iver frontman Justin Vernon is auctioning a guitar made from a whiskey barrel. The custom axe is called The 1608 and was made by Vernon in conjunction with master luthier Gordy Bischoff. Crafted from white oak wood taken from Bushmills Irish Whiskey barrels, the guitar came about as a result of...

Bon Iver frontman Justin Vernon is auctioning a guitar made from a whiskey barrel.

The custom axe is called The 1608 and was made by Vernon in conjunction with master luthier Gordy Bischoff. Crafted from white oak wood taken from Bushmills Irish Whiskey barrels, the guitar came about as a result of Bon Iver’s advertising deal with the drinks brand.

The volume and tone control knobs are made of bottle caps and whiskey was added to the guitar humidor during the making process, so the instrument smells every so slightly booze-y.

Proceeds from the sale of the guitar will go to The Confluence Community Arts Center in Vernon’s hometown of Eau Claire, Wisconsin, reports Consequence of Sound.

Bidding for the guitar – which is one of four – is currently underway on eBay. At the time of writing, bidding for the guitar had reached $7,100.

The listing reads: “This baritone guitar is made almost entirely out of the white oak wood from the whiskey barrels, with only a touch of additional wood added to the internal structure. The nine-pound guitar features two separate pickup systems, an acoustic transducer and two passive electric pickups, and features a neck made from hard rock maple and Ebony.”

The auction ends on November 1.

Bon Iver embark on an arena tour of the UK and Ireland next month. The gigs kick off on November 8 at London’s Wembley Arena and run until November 12 when the band headline Dublin’s O2 Arena. They will also play dates in Manchester and Glasgow.

Neil Young to answer fan questions on Twitter

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A month after he joined the social networking site, Neil Young is set to answer questions from fans on Twitter. Young will participate in a live Q&A on Twitter later today [Wednesday, October 24], as part of the site's #LegendsOnTwitter series. Young will respond to questions tweeted to his Twitter account, @NeilYoung, and flagged with the hashhtag #AskNeil. Previously, The Beach Boys took part in #LegendsOnTwitter on September 18. Meanwhile, Neil Young & Crazy Horse release their new album, Psychedelic Pill, on October 30.

A month after he joined the social networking site, Neil Young is set to answer questions from fans on Twitter.

Young will participate in a live Q&A on Twitter later today [Wednesday, October 24], as part of the site’s #LegendsOnTwitter series.

Young will respond to questions tweeted to his Twitter account, @NeilYoung, and flagged with the hashhtag #AskNeil.

Previously, The Beach Boys took part in #LegendsOnTwitter on September 18.

Meanwhile, Neil Young & Crazy Horse release their new album, Psychedelic Pill, on October 30.

Six Organs Of Admittance/Red River Dialect/Colossal Yes, Dalston Birthdays, October 22, 2012

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Usual excuses about too much work to do (currently: a forthcoming Ultimate Music Guide on The Kinks, and the dark mathematics of Uncut’s end-of-year charts, as well as the rest of the next issue) mean that I failed yesterday to write a review of the Six Organs Of Admittance show at Birthdays in Dalston. Anyhow, Six Organs/Comets On Fire drummer Utrillo Kushner opened, moonlighting as Colossal Yes, with a rented keyboard he described as “shit” and having a “horrible sound”, and a harmonica damaged in some obscure way on a plane to resemble a “broken penis”. Not quite the sprightly/plaintive Van Dyke Parks/Harry Nilsson vibes of my favourite of his records, “Acapulco Roughs”, perhaps as a consequence, but still pretty nice (I’ve only just got hold of his new one, “Loosen The Lead And Spoil The Dogs”) . As were Red River Dialect from Cornwall, more or less, who are now transcending a relatively self-conscious start (their newest release, “Awellupontheway”, is by some distance the best) with some fervid three-guitar + fiddle workouts. You could place them as an Anglo-celt analogue to folk-rock churners like Arbouretum and, especially, PG Six, though there’s something of The Waterboys circa “A Pagan Place” in there, too. What a clunky paragraph that was. Ben Chasny has been toggling between his own Six Organs and the more democratic free-rock symposium of Rangda for a while now (there’s a neat compare-and-contrast review of both bands’ London shows at Dalston Sound). In Rangda, drummer Chris Corsano plots trajectories that are as liberated and tricksy as those of Chasny and Sir Richard Bishop. The current Electric Six Organs configuration, however, is anchored by the comparatively disciplined backline of Kushner and bassist Ben Flashman, who stay tight while Chasny solos vigorously over the top. It’s easy to see this as a kind of econo-Comets On Fire, with Ethan Miller and Noel Von Harmonson (who figured with their three old Comets bandmates on Six Organs’ mighty “Ascent”) presumably busy with Howlin Rain and Sic Alps respectively. The thing about Chasny, though, is that he’s one of those restless artists who is never content to play straight, but continuously reinvents his own music. So while much of this swift and furious set is based on “Ascent”, the sound has pragmatically shifted a little: from primal but ornate two or three guitar jams, on to rearing power trio theatrics. A long simmering intro leads to a paint-stripping invocation from Chasny, and then “Waswasa”, the intricate boogie of the recorded version being burned off and replaced with slashed grandstanding. This being Chasny, again, it’s hardly crass posturing, for all the dry ice that shrouds Kushner and Flashman’s habit of firing his bass at the roof. As I’ve seen him do in Rangda and Comets, Chasny plants himself way off to one side, obscured to some degree by the amps, only to lurch forward violently as he doubles up over his guitar. With no Miller to play off, Chasny has a lot of work to do on these superb songs – “Even If You Knew”, “Close To The Sky”, “A Thousand Birds” – and he oftens opts for an elevated kind of shredding to compensate. Amidst all the frenzy, though. the arcs and protean melodies of these pieces are still apparent. Where Chasny will take Six Organs next is anyone’s guess – it’s hard to imagine him being content to stick with this throbbing, heavy iteration for much longer. Right now, though, it’s maybe my favourite manifestation thus far of this endlessly interesting musician. Bit of back-up: my review of “Ascent”; and my Q&A with Chasny about the record. This was initially planned to be an intro to my usual Wednesday playlist, by the way, but it got out of hand. I’ll post that later in the day, all being well. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

Usual excuses about too much work to do (currently: a forthcoming Ultimate Music Guide on The Kinks, and the dark mathematics of Uncut’s end-of-year charts, as well as the rest of the next issue) mean that I failed yesterday to write a review of the Six Organs Of Admittance show at Birthdays in Dalston.

Anyhow, Six Organs/Comets On Fire drummer Utrillo Kushner opened, moonlighting as Colossal Yes, with a rented keyboard he described as “shit” and having a “horrible sound”, and a harmonica damaged in some obscure way on a plane to resemble a “broken penis”. Not quite the sprightly/plaintive Van Dyke Parks/Harry Nilsson vibes of my favourite of his records, “Acapulco Roughs”, perhaps as a consequence, but still pretty nice (I’ve only just got hold of his new one, “Loosen The Lead And Spoil The Dogs”) . As were Red River Dialect from Cornwall, more or less, who are now transcending a relatively self-conscious start (their newest release, “Awellupontheway”, is by some distance the best) with some fervid three-guitar + fiddle workouts. You could place them as an Anglo-celt analogue to folk-rock churners like Arbouretum and, especially, PG Six, though there’s something of The Waterboys circa “A Pagan Place” in there, too. What a clunky paragraph that was.

Ben Chasny has been toggling between his own Six Organs and the more democratic free-rock symposium of Rangda for a while now (there’s a neat compare-and-contrast review of both bands’ London shows at Dalston Sound). In Rangda, drummer Chris Corsano plots trajectories that are as liberated and tricksy as those of Chasny and Sir Richard Bishop. The current Electric Six Organs configuration, however, is anchored by the comparatively disciplined backline of Kushner and bassist Ben Flashman, who stay tight while Chasny solos vigorously over the top.

It’s easy to see this as a kind of econo-Comets On Fire, with Ethan Miller and Noel Von Harmonson (who figured with their three old Comets bandmates on Six Organs’ mighty “Ascent”) presumably busy with Howlin Rain and Sic Alps respectively. The thing about Chasny, though, is that he’s one of those restless artists who is never content to play straight, but continuously reinvents his own music.

So while much of this swift and furious set is based on “Ascent”, the sound has pragmatically shifted a little: from primal but ornate two or three guitar jams, on to rearing power trio theatrics. A long simmering intro leads to a paint-stripping invocation from Chasny, and then “Waswasa”, the intricate boogie of the recorded version being burned off and replaced with slashed grandstanding.

This being Chasny, again, it’s hardly crass posturing, for all the dry ice that shrouds Kushner and Flashman’s habit of firing his bass at the roof. As I’ve seen him do in Rangda and Comets, Chasny plants himself way off to one side, obscured to some degree by the amps, only to lurch forward violently as he doubles up over his guitar. With no Miller to play off, Chasny has a lot of work to do on these superb songs – “Even If You Knew”, “Close To The Sky”, “A Thousand Birds” – and he oftens opts for an elevated kind of shredding to compensate.

Amidst all the frenzy, though. the arcs and protean melodies of these pieces are still apparent. Where Chasny will take Six Organs next is anyone’s guess – it’s hard to imagine him being content to stick with this throbbing, heavy iteration for much longer. Right now, though, it’s maybe my favourite manifestation thus far of this endlessly interesting musician.

Bit of back-up: my review of “Ascent”; and my Q&A with Chasny about the record.

This was initially planned to be an intro to my usual Wednesday playlist, by the way, but it got out of hand. I’ll post that later in the day, all being well.

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

The Rolling Stones to play tiny warm-up gigs, says Ronnie Wood

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The Rolling Stones will play small warm-up shows, possibly to take place in Paris, for their forthcoming sold-out dates in London and New York, Ronnie Wood says. Speaking to NME, guitarist Ronnie Wood said the band may perform under their Cockroaches guise in breaks from rehearsing in Paris. Wood...

The Rolling Stones will play small warm-up shows, possibly to take place in Paris, for their forthcoming sold-out dates in London and New York, Ronnie Wood says.

Speaking to NME, guitarist Ronnie Wood said the band may perform under their Cockroaches guise in breaks from rehearsing in Paris.

Wood said: “We’re all making a concentrated effort of being there on time every day, we start at three o’clock in the afternoon, we go through to dinner time, we have one break and so far everything has been [like] an operation, nose to the grindstone. We wanna give 200 per cent.”

He said: “There’s going to be little club gigs that we’re gonna surprise ourselves to do as well, we’ll bung a few in next week or the week after, so look out for any Cockroaches gigs or whatever! I don’t know who we’ll be billed as but we’ll turn up somewhere and put a few to the test. Tiny, 200, 300 people kind of places.”

Last week, The Rolling Stones announced two huge London dates for November. The band will play London’s O2 Arena on November 25 and 29 to celebrate 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. All the dates sold out in minutes.

The New Uncut: The Rolling Stones

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Allan’s off today – something about a cat in the well, I think – so he’s asked me to write this week’s newsletter blog. It’s not an especially difficult task seeing as a new issue of Uncut goes on sale this week. You might have already caught some of our recent news stories on www.www.uncut.co.uk, in which case you’ll already know that our cover stars this month are the Rolling Stones. With contributions from band members, their confidants and crew, John Robinson has written a terrific piece about the game-changing Exile tour of 1972, while I spoke to Mick Jagger about the Stones' new film, Crossfire Hurricane, and their forthcoming greatest hits compilation, GRRR!. Also in this month’s issue, Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood answers your questions in An Audience With..., David Cavanagh speaks to Godley, Creme and Gouldman about the origins of 10CC, Kris Kristofferson talks us through his incredible career in Album By Album and there's also Jaan Uhelszki's hilarious interview with Donald Fagen. Elsewhere in the issue, Rob Young tells the story of one of Britain’s great lost singer-songwriters, Kevin Coyne, while Art Garfunkel looks through his life in pictures in Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes and in The Making Of… Suicide’s Alan Vega and Marty Rev reveal all about their psychotic classic, “Frankie Teardrop”. In a busy reviews section, there's Scott Walker, Brian Eno, The Jam, Woody Guthrie, Allah-Las, Led Zeppelin, the Stones (again) and Mickey Newbury, as well as books by Neil Young, Pete Townshend, Leonard Cohen and Rod Stewart. And in film, I review Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master, Ben Affleck’s Argo and Michael Haneke’s brilliant Amour. As usual, please drop Allan a line at Allan_Jones@ipcmedia.com and let him know what you think of the issue. And one final thing: Bryan Ferry will be in the hotseat for a forthcoming An Audience With…. So do please send any questions you'd like to ask Bryan to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com by Monday, October 29. Well, I think that’s about it. Enjoy the rest of your week. Cheers! Michael Pic credit: Robert Knight Archive/Redferns

Allan’s off today – something about a cat in the well, I think – so he’s asked me to write this week’s newsletter blog. It’s not an especially difficult task seeing as a new issue of Uncut goes on sale this week. You might have already caught some of our recent news stories on www.www.uncut.co.uk, in which case you’ll already know that our cover stars this month are the Rolling Stones.

With contributions from band members, their confidants and crew, John Robinson has written a terrific piece about the game-changing Exile tour of 1972, while I spoke to Mick Jagger about the Stones’ new film, Crossfire Hurricane, and their forthcoming greatest hits compilation, GRRR!. Also in this month’s issue, Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood answers your questions in An Audience With…, David Cavanagh speaks to Godley, Creme and Gouldman about the origins of 10CC, Kris Kristofferson talks us through his incredible career in Album By Album and there’s also Jaan Uhelszki’s hilarious interview with Donald Fagen. Elsewhere in the issue, Rob Young tells the story of one of Britain’s great lost singer-songwriters, Kevin Coyne, while Art Garfunkel looks through his life in pictures in Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes and in The Making Of… Suicide’s Alan Vega and Marty Rev reveal all about their psychotic classic, “Frankie Teardrop”. In a busy reviews section, there’s Scott Walker, Brian Eno, The Jam, Woody Guthrie, Allah-Las, Led Zeppelin, the Stones (again) and Mickey Newbury, as well as books by Neil Young, Pete Townshend, Leonard Cohen and Rod Stewart. And in film, I review Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master, Ben Affleck’s Argo and Michael Haneke’s brilliant Amour.

As usual, please drop Allan a line at Allan_Jones@ipcmedia.com and let him know what you think of the issue.

And one final thing: Bryan Ferry will be in the hotseat for a forthcoming An Audience With…. So do please send any questions you’d like to ask Bryan to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com by Monday, October 29.

Well, I think that’s about it. Enjoy the rest of your week.

Cheers!

Michael

Pic credit: Robert Knight Archive/Redferns

Mick Jagger to produce James Brown biopic

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Mick Jagger is to help turn James Brown's life story into a movie. The Rolling Stones frontman has joined Hollywood veteran Brian Grazer as a producer on the upcoming biopic. Grazer has been working on the project for some time, hatching plans with James Brown himself before the singer passed away ...

Mick Jagger is to help turn James Brown’s life story into a movie.

The Rolling Stones frontman has joined Hollywood veteran Brian Grazer as a producer on the upcoming biopic. Grazer has been working on the project for some time, hatching plans with James Brown himself before the singer passed away in 2006.

The biopic has a script by Jez Butterworth and John-Henry Butterworth, writers of 2010 White House drama Fair Game. It will chart Brown’s rise from a young boy born in extreme poverty to become The Godfather Of Soul. Brown’s career spanned six decades and he is recognised as one of the most dynamic performers in rock history.

Jagger said in a statement to Deadline: “It’s a great honour to be involved with a project as rich as the story of the legendary James Brown. He was a mesmerising performer with a fascinating life.”

Meanwhile, The Help director Tate Taylor is in negotiations to helm the biopic, which does not have a title yet. Brown’s family will also contribute. The singer’s widow Tommie Rae Brown said in a statement: “I am deeply honoured that Mick Jagger and Brian Grazer, two of my husband James Brown’s favourite people, have entered into a partnership to bring his inspirational story to the big screen.”

There is no word yet on who could play James Brown, though Deadline moots Eddie Murphy and The Hurt Locker star Anthony Mackie as potential contenders.

Donald Fagen – Sunken Condos

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An unexpected new treat from the Hall of Famer... Morph The Cat, the final volume of Donald Fagen’s Nightfly Trilogy, which appeared in 2006, is introspective and jittery, reflecting the cumulative impact of 9/11 and his own sense of encroaching mortality – making it at once the darkest and most personal chapter in the Steely Dan canon. While Morph was a musically dazzling and emotionally intense work, it would have been a distressingly bleak way to close the book. Happily, solo album number four – which arrives with little advance warning – dispenses with mortal dread as Fagen re-immerses himself in the finer things – or the “Good Stuff”, as he puts it in one song – amid the life challenges facing aging Boomers (Fagen is 64). As these nine tracks make abundantly clear, his current mood is reassuringly effervescent and self- mocking. Sunken Condos is loaded with Fagen’s instantly familiar signature moves, as he breaks out his long-codified and precisely calibrated vocabulary. Here there’s righteously swingin’ grooves (powered by drummer “Earl Cooke, Jr.”, whose name curiously fails to come up in a Google search), extended chords (there’s no chord too obscure for this crew) from a superb (what else?) studio band led by co-producer/multi-instrumentalist and Dan mainstay Michael Leonhart, and Donald’s sharply drawn, irony-laden narratives. The album’s bookends, “Slinky Thing” and “Planet D’Rhonda”, revisit the generation- spanning romantic escapades of Gaucho’s “Hey 19”. In the opener, fueled by a groove that matches its title, the narrator is “a burned-out hippie clown” who meets and tries to put the make on “a lithe young beauty”, to the amusement of observers as the mismatched couple makes the rounds of various public gatherings. Here and elsewhere, the rich tones of latter-day Dan guitarist Jon Herington provide the ultra- cool counterpoint to Fagen’s decidedly uncool leading man in his increasingly desperate attempts to “Hold on to that slinky thing”. The closing “Planet D’Rhonda” finds an older guy lusting after a chick who’s “somewhere between nineteen and thirty-eight”, and “When she does the Philly Dog – I gotta have CPR”, though the poor schlub knows full well that “It’s never gonna happen”. Coursing through the track is some wild post-bop improvising from jazz guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel, the aural equivalent of the narrator’s racing pulse. The sense of yearning for the unattainable is also played out at the album’s midpoint on “The New Breed”, wherein a similarly love-struck dinosaur (“He's ready for Jurassic Park”) is dumped by his girl in favor of the young dude who upgraded her software, so the old-timer steps aside, leaving her “To your new dotcom slash life”. Fagen’s propensity for embedded mysteries has rarely been more intriguingly manifested than it is on “Memorabilia”, a song as slippery as it is catchy, with its references to US nuclear tests in the South Pacific during the 1950s. In the hook-filled “Miss Marlene”, the protagonist finds love in a bowling alley, of all places. The album’s most sublime piece is “Weather In My Head”, a modified midtempo blues in the manner of “Pretzel Logic” and another scintillating workout for Herington, with its slam-dunk payoff, “They may fix the weather in the world/Just like Mr. Gore said/But tell me what's to be done/Lord –’bout the weather in my head”. The lone misstep is a cover of Isaac Hayes’ 1978 funk workout “Out Of The Ghetto”, but the band blows through it with such exhilaration that Fagen can be forgiven for this indulgence. What, then, does this new, post-trilogy work represent for Fagen? A second wind? A therapeutically induced acceptance of things as they are, perhaps? In any case, Dan aficionados will undoubtedly receive Sunken Condos as a fascinating new puzzle – or series of puzzles – to be endlessly debated if never actually solved. What matters is that Donald’s in back in his self-referencing sweet spot, and all’s right with the world. Bud Scoppa

An unexpected new treat from the Hall of Famer…

Morph The Cat, the final volume of Donald Fagen’s Nightfly Trilogy, which appeared in 2006, is introspective and jittery, reflecting the cumulative impact of 9/11 and his own sense of encroaching mortality – making it at once the darkest and most personal chapter in the Steely Dan canon. While Morph was a musically dazzling and emotionally intense work, it would have been a distressingly bleak way to close the book.

Happily, solo album number four – which arrives with little advance warning – dispenses with mortal dread as Fagen re-immerses himself in the finer things – or the “Good Stuff”, as he puts it in one song – amid the life challenges facing aging Boomers (Fagen is 64).

As these nine tracks make abundantly clear, his current mood is reassuringly effervescent and self- mocking. Sunken Condos is loaded with Fagen’s instantly familiar signature moves, as he breaks out his long-codified and precisely calibrated vocabulary. Here there’s righteously swingin’ grooves (powered by drummer “Earl Cooke, Jr.”, whose name curiously fails to come up in a Google search), extended chords (there’s no chord too obscure for this crew) from a superb (what else?) studio band led by co-producer/multi-instrumentalist and Dan mainstay Michael Leonhart, and Donald’s sharply drawn, irony-laden narratives.

The album’s bookends, “Slinky Thing” and “Planet D’Rhonda”, revisit the generation- spanning romantic escapades of Gaucho’s “Hey 19”. In the opener, fueled by a groove that matches its title, the narrator is “a burned-out hippie clown” who meets and tries to put the make on “a lithe young beauty”, to the amusement of observers as the mismatched couple makes the rounds of various public gatherings. Here and elsewhere, the rich tones of latter-day Dan guitarist Jon Herington provide the ultra- cool counterpoint to Fagen’s decidedly uncool leading man in his increasingly desperate attempts to “Hold on to that slinky thing”. The closing “Planet D’Rhonda” finds an older guy lusting after a chick who’s “somewhere between nineteen and thirty-eight”, and “When she does the Philly Dog – I gotta have CPR”, though the poor schlub knows full well that “It’s never gonna happen”. Coursing through the track is some wild post-bop improvising from jazz guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel, the aural equivalent of the narrator’s racing pulse.

The sense of yearning for the unattainable is also played out at the album’s midpoint on “The New Breed”, wherein a similarly love-struck dinosaur (“He’s ready for Jurassic Park”) is dumped by his girl in favor of the young dude who upgraded her software, so the old-timer steps aside, leaving her “To your new dotcom slash life”. Fagen’s propensity for embedded mysteries has rarely been more intriguingly manifested than it is on “Memorabilia”, a song as slippery as it is catchy, with its references to US nuclear tests in the South Pacific during the 1950s. In the hook-filled “Miss Marlene”, the protagonist finds love in a bowling alley, of all places. The album’s most sublime piece is “Weather In My Head”, a modified midtempo blues in the manner of “Pretzel Logic” and another scintillating workout for Herington, with its slam-dunk payoff, “They may fix the weather in the world/Just like Mr. Gore said/But tell me what’s to be done/Lord –’bout the weather in my head”. The lone misstep is a cover of Isaac Hayes’ 1978 funk workout “Out Of The Ghetto”, but the band blows through it with such exhilaration that Fagen can be forgiven for this indulgence.

What, then, does this new, post-trilogy work represent for Fagen? A second wind? A therapeutically induced acceptance of things as they are, perhaps? In any case, Dan aficionados will undoubtedly receive Sunken Condos as a fascinating new puzzle – or series of puzzles – to be endlessly debated if never actually solved. What matters is that Donald’s in back in his self-referencing sweet spot, and all’s right with the world.

Bud Scoppa

Crosby, Stills & Nash release CSN iPad App

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Crosby, Stills & Nash are releasing the first subscription-based iPad app for a recording artist. According to a post on the group's website, for $3.99 a month/$39.99 a year subscribers will have access to exclusive content, updates, and premium fan features. "All users will experience a detai...

Crosby, Stills & Nash are releasing the first subscription-based iPad app for a recording artist.

According to a post on the group’s website, for $3.99 a month/$39.99 a year subscribers will have access to exclusive content, updates, and premium fan features.

“All users will experience a detailed, media-rich overview of CSN’s history, with links to the group’s official website, social media sites, and to iTunes,” runs the post. “For $3.99 a month, subscribers to the CSN app will have access to exclusive content, updates, and premium fan features-subscriptions can be purchased via an in-app link.”

“Use this app as an open door to our music,” says Graham Nash. “And, as usual, when one door closes-another one opens…enjoy exploring.”

The App will be split into four sections – “The Attic,” “The Studio,” “The Road,” and “The Living Room” – and also include a store for merchandise. In addition to CSN content, the app will also include the histories and music of Crosby, Stills and Nash’s previous bands, The Byrds, Buffalo Springfield, and The Hollies, respectively.

The app is free to install. There is no confirmation yet whether the CSN app is only available via iTunes in America.

Last night [October 22], CSN wrapped up their 2012 world tour with the last of five dates at the Beacon Theatre in New York. They concluded their show by playing their self-titled 1969 debut album in its entirety.

Live Nation quits Hyde Park over noise and curfew issues

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Concert promoter Live Nation is pulling out of Hyde Park after more than a decade of putting on events there. The live music company, which has hosted a raft of concerts and festivals including Hard Rock Calling, Wireless and the Bruce Springsteen concert this summer, has cited issues including noise restrictions and curfews for the decision, The Guardian reports. The company has reportedly written a formal letter of complaint to the Royal Parks Agency over the tender process for the new five-year contract for the central London site, dubbing it "flawed". According to the Guardian, the letter raises issues such as noise, crowd safety considerations and unrealistic revenue assumptions. It is thought to be highly critical of the tender document, arguing that it doesn't take into account the complicated logistics of running big events in a central London location. The Hyde Park location has come under fire this summer after Bruce Springsteen and Paul McCartney's duet in July was switched off due to curfew issues, while Blur fans were left disappointed after noise restrictions meant many fans couldn't hear their Olympic reunion gigs. Live Nation has been putting on gigs in Hyde Park for over a decade.

Concert promoter Live Nation is pulling out of Hyde Park after more than a decade of putting on events there.

The live music company, which has hosted a raft of concerts and festivals including Hard Rock Calling, Wireless and the Bruce Springsteen concert this summer, has cited issues including noise restrictions and curfews for the decision, The Guardian reports.

The company has reportedly written a formal letter of complaint to the Royal Parks Agency over the tender process for the new five-year contract for the central London site, dubbing it “flawed”.

According to the Guardian, the letter raises issues such as noise, crowd safety considerations and unrealistic revenue assumptions. It is thought to be highly critical of the tender document, arguing that it doesn’t take into account the complicated logistics of running big events in a central London location.

The Hyde Park location has come under fire this summer after Bruce Springsteen and Paul McCartney’s duet in July was switched off due to curfew issues, while Blur fans were left disappointed after noise restrictions meant many fans couldn’t hear their Olympic reunion gigs.

Live Nation has been putting on gigs in Hyde Park for over a decade.

This Month In Uncut!

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The new issue of Uncut, out today (October 23), features The Rolling Stones, Neil Young, Led Zeppelin, Donald Fagen and Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood. The Stones are on the cover, and inside, Mick Jagger talks to us about the band’s new film, Crossfire Hurricane, their two new songs, and the future of the band. The story of the group’s groundbreaking, debauched 1972 tour of the US in support of Exile On Main St is also told by the people who were there on the inside. Neil Young’s autobiography, Waging Heavy Peace, is reviewed, along with Led Zeppelin’s DVD of their O2 performance, Celebration Day, in the issue. Steely Dan’s Donald Fagen talks to us about his new solo album, Sunken Condos, and reveals why he thinks all his past work is “garbage”, while Jonny Greenwood answers your questions on everything from unreleased Radiohead songs to his favourite computer games. Elsewhere, Kris Kristofferson talks us through his best albums, Suicide recall the making of the terrifying and groundbreaking “Frankie Teardrop” and 10cc tell the unique tale of their rapid rise and fall, Gizmos, arguments, high concepts and all. Albums from Scott Walker, Brian Eno, the Allah-Las and The Rolling Stones are reviewed, and Wilco & Joanna Newsom, and Ray Davies are checked out in the live section. A host of books, including autobiographies from Rod Stewart and Pete Townshend, are also reviewed, while the free CD includes tracks from Tame Impala, The Mountain Goats, Two Gallants and more. The December issue of Uncut is out today (Tuesday, October 23).

The new issue of Uncut, out today (October 23), features The Rolling Stones, Neil Young, Led Zeppelin, Donald Fagen and Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood.

The Stones are on the cover, and inside, Mick Jagger talks to us about the band’s new film, Crossfire Hurricane, their two new songs, and the future of the band.

The story of the group’s groundbreaking, debauched 1972 tour of the US in support of Exile On Main St is also told by the people who were there on the inside.

Neil Young’s autobiography, Waging Heavy Peace, is reviewed, along with Led Zeppelin’s DVD of their O2 performance, Celebration Day, in the issue. Steely Dan’s Donald Fagen talks to us about his new solo album, Sunken Condos, and reveals why he thinks all his past work is “garbage”, while Jonny Greenwood answers your questions on everything from unreleased Radiohead songs to his favourite computer games.

Elsewhere, Kris Kristofferson talks us through his best albums, Suicide recall the making of the terrifying and groundbreaking “Frankie Teardrop” and 10cc tell the unique tale of their rapid rise and fall, Gizmos, arguments, high concepts and all.

Albums from Scott Walker, Brian Eno, the Allah-Las and The Rolling Stones are reviewed, and Wilco & Joanna Newsom, and Ray Davies are checked out in the live section.

A host of books, including autobiographies from Rod Stewart and Pete Townshend, are also reviewed, while the free CD includes tracks from Tame Impala, The Mountain Goats, Two Gallants and more.

The December issue of Uncut is out today (Tuesday, October 23).

Stone Roses documentary will get a cinema release, confirm producers

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Shane Meadows' documentary tracing The Stone Roses' reunion is to be released in cinemas next year. The as-yet untitled film was shot by the This Is England filmmaker at and around the band's reunion gigs in 2012, including those at Manchester's Heaton Park in June and July. Producers Warp Films are hoping to see the story hit the big screen in spring 2013. Mark Herbert from Warp Films, the company behind Submarine as well as a number of Arctic Monkeys videos, said that Meadows is almost ready to show the first draft of the film to Ian Brown and the rest of the Roses. Speaking to BBC 6Music, Herbert said: "Shane's got it into a shape now to show the band and the plan is that we'll lock it by Christmas and do post-production in the new year for release sometime next year." Herbert adds: "We haven’t set a release date yet, it won't be physically finished until the spring but it will be released in cinemas. We deliberately didn't want it to be something that went straight to DVD. It's Shane Meadows making a movie with The Stone Roses and there's lots of Shane Meadows trademarks in there." The Stone Roses played three homecoming gigs in Manchester's Heaton Park between June 29 and July 1 this year, entering the Guinness Book of World Records as the fastest selling rock concerts in UK history. According to reports, The Stone Roses are reportedly set to release a new studio album in 2013. The Manchester band, who originally split up in 1996, reunited last year and have taken part in globe trotting reunion tour including a number of festival headline sets. The band signed a two-album deal with Universal Records on reuniting, but have debuted no new material in their live sets so far. Earlier this month, John Squire confirmed to NME that the band are still writing new material.

Shane Meadows’ documentary tracing The Stone Roses‘ reunion is to be released in cinemas next year.

The as-yet untitled film was shot by the This Is England filmmaker at and around the band’s reunion gigs in 2012, including those at Manchester’s Heaton Park in June and July. Producers Warp Films are hoping to see the story hit the big screen in spring 2013.

Mark Herbert from Warp Films, the company behind Submarine as well as a number of Arctic Monkeys videos, said that Meadows is almost ready to show the first draft of the film to Ian Brown and the rest of the Roses. Speaking to BBC 6Music, Herbert said: “Shane’s got it into a shape now to show the band and the plan is that we’ll lock it by Christmas and do post-production in the new year for release sometime next year.”

Herbert adds: “We haven’t set a release date yet, it won’t be physically finished until the spring but it will be released in cinemas. We deliberately didn’t want it to be something that went straight to DVD. It’s Shane Meadows making a movie with The Stone Roses and there’s lots of Shane Meadows trademarks in there.”

The Stone Roses played three homecoming gigs in Manchester’s Heaton Park between June 29 and July 1 this year, entering the Guinness Book of World Records as the fastest selling rock concerts in UK history.

According to reports, The Stone Roses are reportedly set to release a new studio album in 2013. The Manchester band, who originally split up in 1996, reunited last year and have taken part in globe trotting reunion tour including a number of festival headline sets. The band signed a two-album deal with Universal Records on reuniting, but have debuted no new material in their live sets so far. Earlier this month, John Squire confirmed to NME that the band are still writing new material.

Eddie Vedder, Jack White and Guns N’ Roses play Neil Young’s fundraiser

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Guns N' Roses, Jack White and surprise guest Eddie Vedder played Neil Young's annual Bridge School Benefit in California this weekend. The event, celebrating its 26th anniversary, featured an all-star line up with The Flaming Lips, Foster The People, Steve Martin, kd Lang and Ray LaMontagne all featuring on the strictly acoustic bill. According to Rolling Stone, Young opened the all-day event by performing a short set, including a duet with his wife Pegi on "Comes A Time". Guns N' Roses were due on at 4pm but, as is often the way when Axl Rose is involved, the band's arrival was delayed. Fans were treated to an unexpected guest slot from Pearl Jam frontman Vedder. "This is the last place I thought I'd be when I woke up today... opening for Guns N' Roses," he told the audience before playing 'Elderly Woman' and 'Last Kiss'. Jack White performed with his all-female backing band The Peacocks, running through a set comprised of songs from his solo album 'Blunderbuss' as well as White Stripes hits. Axl Rose and co made their way onstage eventually, playing an acoustic set including the expletive-heavy 'You're Crazy'. The band were then joined by students from the Bridge School for renditions of classic hits 'Welcome To The Jungle', 'Paradise City' and 'Sweet Child O' Mine'. The fundraiser ended with all of the musical stars, bar Axl Rose, joining Neil Young onstage as he closed the show with a solo set. Jack White, Eddie Vedder, Mark Foster, kd Lang, Wayne Coyne and more all joined Young on 'Rockin' In The Free World' as the all-day event came to a close. Proceeds from the annual concert benefit the Bridge School in Hillsborough, California, which assists children with severe physical impairments and complex communication needs. Two of his Neil Young's children, Zeke and Ben, were diagnosed with cerebral palsy at an early age.

Guns N’ Roses, Jack White and surprise guest Eddie Vedder played Neil Young‘s annual Bridge School Benefit in California this weekend.

The event, celebrating its 26th anniversary, featured an all-star line up with The Flaming Lips, Foster The People, Steve Martin, kd Lang and Ray LaMontagne all featuring on the strictly acoustic bill. According to Rolling Stone, Young opened the all-day event by performing a short set, including a duet with his wife Pegi on “Comes A Time”.

Guns N’ Roses were due on at 4pm but, as is often the way when Axl Rose is involved, the band’s arrival was delayed. Fans were treated to an unexpected guest slot from Pearl Jam frontman Vedder. “This is the last place I thought I’d be when I woke up today… opening for Guns N’ Roses,” he told the audience before playing ‘Elderly Woman’ and ‘Last Kiss’.

Jack White performed with his all-female backing band The Peacocks, running through a set comprised of songs from his solo album ‘Blunderbuss’ as well as White Stripes hits.

Axl Rose and co made their way onstage eventually, playing an acoustic set including the expletive-heavy ‘You’re Crazy’. The band were then joined by students from the Bridge School for renditions of classic hits ‘Welcome To The Jungle’, ‘Paradise City’ and ‘Sweet Child O’ Mine’.

The fundraiser ended with all of the musical stars, bar Axl Rose, joining Neil Young onstage as he closed the show with a solo set. Jack White, Eddie Vedder, Mark Foster, kd Lang, Wayne Coyne and more all joined Young on ‘Rockin’ In The Free World’ as the all-day event came to a close.

Proceeds from the annual concert benefit the Bridge School in Hillsborough, California, which assists children with severe physical impairments and complex communication needs. Two of his Neil Young’s children, Zeke and Ben, were diagnosed with cerebral palsy at an early age.

Ask Bryan Ferry

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Ahead of the release of his new album The Jazz Age - where he's reinterpreted his own solo hits as well as those by Roxy Music - Bryan Ferry is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With… feature. So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask him? Whatever happened to the planned Roxy Music album from a few years ago? Who's his tailor? As a big Dylan fan, which Dylan song would he like to give The Jazz Age treatment? Send up your questions by noon, Monday, October 29 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com. The best questions, and Bryan's answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question. Photo credit: David Ellis

Ahead of the release of his new album The Jazz Age – where he’s reinterpreted his own solo hits as well as those by Roxy Music – Bryan Ferry is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask him?

Whatever happened to the planned Roxy Music album from a few years ago?

Who’s his tailor?

As a big Dylan fan, which Dylan song would he like to give The Jazz Age treatment?

Send up your questions by noon, Monday, October 29 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com. The best questions, and Bryan’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

Photo credit: David Ellis

Beasts Of The Southern Wild

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In 2009, Uncut spoke to The Wire’s creator David Simon, shortly before the broadcast of his follow-up series, Treme. The show was set during the aftermath of 2005’s Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, a city that Simon felt had effectively been abandoned by the rest of America since the storm. “The only thing that brought this city back was the people who understand its unique culture and who participate in that culture refused to give that up,” he told us. Treme shares with the slender but significant body of work devoted to post-Katrina New Orleans a focus on the devastating effects the hurricane had on the citizens themselves, from the politicians and the city’s storied musicians down to the people on the street. Spike Lee’s four-hour documentary, When The Levee Breaks, is the most thorough look at how the people of New Orleans picked themselves up after the storm. Werner Herzog’s Bad Lieutenant: Port Of Call – New Orleans, meanwhile, can claim to be the strangest, inhabiting a wild and surreal place where normal service has been temporarily suspended. Beasts Of The Southern Wild is yet another iteration of life in New Orleans during this turbulent period. Director Benh Zeitlin's debut is set beyond the levee, in an isolated bayou community called the Bathtub, a bric-a-brac world of lopsided motor homes, rusting trailers and makeshift shacks. The people here are almost entirely self-sufficient, living off the seafood that the bayou provides, or occasionally trading amongst themselves what little items of value they possess. I’m initially reminded of the remote Ozark clans in Debra Granik’s Winter’s Bone – the difference though is that the good folks living in Bathtub are less inclined towards illegal activity than the suspicious, pinched-faced addicts in Winter’s Bone. They don't much resemble the murderous Cajun settlement in Southern Comfort, either. Indeed, life in the Bathtub appears mildly anarchic and carefree – removed from the worries of consumerism, these people live for the moment, happy with shrimp, music and beer. Among the denizens of Bathtub is six-year-old Hushpuppy (Quvenzhané Wallis), who narrates the film and who we first see picking up birds and animals from the wetlands, listening intently to their heartbeats. She is in tune with the natural world. Aged six, she has a slippery grasp on reality: she fantasises that she is being hunted by giant, prehistoric aurochs. The natural world is cranked up to 11. The influence of Terrence Malick is palpable here – but you might also detect riffs on Spike Jonze’s adaptation of Where The Wild Things Are, another film about a child who couldn’t distinguish between the real and the fantastical. Wallis is a bracing presence, scowling and storming through the film, a terrific force of nature who’s alive to the mysticism of swamps, well removed from Spielbergian notions of cute child actors. Hushpuppy lives with her father, Wink (Dwight Henry; like Wallis, a non-professional actor), an unreliable alcoholic, who is prone to disappearances and mood swings. He is clearly still heartbroken that Hushpuppy’s mother “swam away”: we learn Hushpuppy’s mother was so beautiful she could ignite a hob on a gas stove just by walking past it. When left alone, Hushpuppy imagines conversations with her absent mother. Wink is also ill, and tries to teach Hushpuppy to survive on her own. There’s something here of The Road, John Hillcoat’s version of Cormac McCarthy’s novel, in which a man and his child pass through a dangerous landscape, the man trying to instil in his child skills needed to prevail. The relationship between Hushpuppy and Wink is rough and tumble and vivid. When Katrina hits, for those in the Bathtub it’s all about survival. The land is ruined, the bloated corpses of animals drift along on the current, the water polluted. There’s echoes of Willard’s journey down the Mekong in Apocalypse Now – or maybe even the journey down river in Night Of The Hunter, another sultry slice of Southern Gothic. There are passages of silence as Zeitlin’s camera records the devastation. But crucially, Zeitlin's film - adapted from a play by Lucy Alibar - works best as a celebration of life, and of the magic of the world seen through a child's eyes. Beasts Of The Southern Wild is in cinemas now

In 2009, Uncut spoke to The Wire’s creator David Simon, shortly before the broadcast of his follow-up series, Treme. The show was set during the aftermath of 2005’s Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, a city that Simon felt had effectively been abandoned by the rest of America since the storm. “The only thing that brought this city back was the people who understand its unique culture and who participate in that culture refused to give that up,” he told us.

Treme shares with the slender but significant body of work devoted to post-Katrina New Orleans a focus on the devastating effects the hurricane had on the citizens themselves, from the politicians and the city’s storied musicians down to the people on the street. Spike Lee’s four-hour documentary, When The Levee Breaks, is the most thorough look at how the people of New Orleans picked themselves up after the storm. Werner Herzog’s Bad Lieutenant: Port Of Call – New Orleans, meanwhile, can claim to be the strangest, inhabiting a wild and surreal place where normal service has been temporarily suspended.

Beasts Of The Southern Wild is yet another iteration of life in New Orleans during this turbulent period. Director Benh Zeitlin’s debut is set beyond the levee, in an isolated bayou community called the Bathtub, a bric-a-brac world of lopsided motor homes, rusting trailers and makeshift shacks. The people here are almost entirely self-sufficient, living off the seafood that the bayou provides, or occasionally trading amongst themselves what little items of value they possess. I’m initially reminded of the remote Ozark clans in Debra Granik’s Winter’s Bone – the difference though is that the good folks living in Bathtub are less inclined towards illegal activity than the suspicious, pinched-faced addicts in Winter’s Bone. They don’t much resemble the murderous Cajun settlement in Southern Comfort, either. Indeed, life in the Bathtub appears mildly anarchic and carefree – removed from the worries of consumerism, these people live for the moment, happy with shrimp, music and beer.

Among the denizens of Bathtub is six-year-old Hushpuppy (Quvenzhané Wallis), who narrates the film and who we first see picking up birds and animals from the wetlands, listening intently to their heartbeats. She is in tune with the natural world. Aged six, she has a slippery grasp on reality: she fantasises that she is being hunted by giant, prehistoric aurochs. The natural world is cranked up to 11. The influence of Terrence Malick is palpable here – but you might also detect riffs on Spike Jonze’s adaptation of Where The Wild Things Are, another film about a child who couldn’t distinguish between the real and the fantastical. Wallis is a bracing presence, scowling and storming through the film, a terrific force of nature who’s alive to the mysticism of swamps, well removed from Spielbergian notions of cute child actors.

Hushpuppy lives with her father, Wink (Dwight Henry; like Wallis, a non-professional actor), an unreliable alcoholic, who is prone to disappearances and mood swings. He is clearly still heartbroken that Hushpuppy’s mother “swam away”: we learn Hushpuppy’s mother was so beautiful she could ignite a hob on a gas stove just by walking past it. When left alone, Hushpuppy imagines conversations with her absent mother. Wink is also ill, and tries to teach Hushpuppy to survive on her own. There’s something here of The Road, John Hillcoat’s version of Cormac McCarthy’s novel, in which a man and his child pass through a dangerous landscape, the man trying to instil in his child skills needed to prevail. The relationship between Hushpuppy and Wink is rough and tumble and vivid. When Katrina hits, for those in the Bathtub it’s all about survival. The land is ruined, the bloated corpses of animals drift along on the current, the water polluted. There’s echoes of Willard’s journey down the Mekong in Apocalypse Now – or maybe even the journey down river in Night Of The Hunter, another sultry slice of Southern Gothic. There are passages of silence as Zeitlin’s camera records the devastation. But crucially, Zeitlin’s film – adapted from a play by Lucy Alibar – works best as a celebration of life, and of the magic of the world seen through a child’s eyes.

Beasts Of The Southern Wild is in cinemas now

Mark Eitzel – Don’t Be A Stranger

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More heartbreak and droll humour from one of America’s underrated greats... Mark Eitzel is a songwriter who repeatedly revisits old wounds and trauma, taking slightly different positions on the same handful of concerns – love, relationships, misanthropy. This repetition often yields great results – the many songs drawn from his early muse, Kathleen, are a case in point. But it also means that Eitzel can risk falling into self-parody, or at least predictability, a fine line that he walks through many of his albums. It may have been a long time since American Music Club earned their stripes, with the media attention around 1991’s Everclear, but there’s a case to be made for many of the songs on that album sitting, with a slightly less tortured rictus, on Don’t Be A Stranger, his third solo album. The album itself comes after a trying time for Eitzel, suffering from a heart attack in 2011, dealing with the passing of long-time drummer Tim Mooney in June of this year, and seeing the reformed American Music Club disintegrate after two great albums, in particular 2004’s unrelenting, almost claustrophobic Love Songs For Patriots. (More so than his lauded ‘90s classics, Patriots feels like Eitzel at his peak, his most essential.) On the flipside, he’s also worked on a musical with Simon Stephens, Marine Parade, and had his new album funded by the most unexpected of routes – a friend gifting him studio time through a lottery win. That studio time, working with co-producer Sheldon Gomberg, is both blessing and curse. Curse because, at its most polite, Don’t Be A Stranger comes uncomfortably close to smoothed-over, rote singer-songwriter territory, with Eitzel’s voice adrift in a hermetically sealed environment, no rough edges, no real character. It takes a leap of faith to read this as a seductive foil to Eitzel’s tales of dejection, though really it’s only his warmth and the occasional barbs in his lyrics that save the more lugubrious moments on Don’t Be A Stranger. Thankfully, more often than not Eitzel is on great form. He’s already said that he was hoping to make his Harvest or Five Leaves Left here, though Scott Walker's 1960s albums sometimes feel like closer companions: the strings that hover spectrally over “I Know The Bill Is Due”, an early highlight on the album, recall Walker’s similarly eerie “It’s Raining Today”. This is also one of Eitzel’s best vocal performances on the album, and indeed it’s his voice that really stands out across Don’t Be A Stranger’s eleven songs, a warm, understated thing that has lost the overt drama and dynamics of his times in American Music Club, and is all the better for it. The other highlight is “We All Have To Find Our Own Way Out”, where Eitzel sings to the piano about ‘broken child stars’ and suicidal souls, with Eitzel addressing his other, ‘I don’t love you enough for your despair’. It’s a beautifully sad moment on a record that could use a few more of them. If the ‘American Morrissey’ tag that Eitzel was once saddled with ever made sense – it generally didn’t – it’s because, like Morrissey, Eitzel’s moments of droll humour deflect. He could serve to be yet more mordant, more dark-hearted. Much like The Smiths at their most abject, Eitzel excels at, and in, misery. It’s what makes his songs compelling – his forensic character dissections, and his disentangling of the fallacious language of love, both speak to an ability to write with both a brutal critical voice, and the artfulness of great poetics. But with Don’t Be A Stranger, Eitzel has traded some of that intensity for a slightly more pacific understanding of the vicissitudes of the real. Ultimately, it’s a fair trade, revealing Eitzel, yet again, as an underappreciated, misunderstood, great American song writer. Jon Dale

More heartbreak and droll humour from one of America’s underrated greats…

Mark Eitzel is a songwriter who repeatedly revisits old wounds and trauma, taking slightly different positions on the same handful of concerns – love, relationships, misanthropy. This repetition often yields great results – the many songs drawn from his early muse, Kathleen, are a case in point. But it also means that Eitzel can risk falling into self-parody, or at least predictability, a fine line that he walks through many of his albums. It may have been a long time since American Music Club earned their stripes, with the media attention around 1991’s Everclear, but there’s a case to be made for many of the songs on that album sitting, with a slightly less tortured rictus, on Don’t Be A Stranger, his third solo album.

The album itself comes after a trying time for Eitzel, suffering from a heart attack in 2011, dealing with the passing of long-time drummer Tim Mooney in June of this year, and seeing the reformed American Music Club disintegrate after two great albums, in particular 2004’s unrelenting, almost claustrophobic Love Songs For Patriots. (More so than his lauded ‘90s classics, Patriots feels like Eitzel at his peak, his most essential.) On the flipside, he’s also worked on a musical with Simon Stephens, Marine Parade, and had his new album funded by the most unexpected of routes – a friend gifting him studio time through a lottery win.

That studio time, working with co-producer Sheldon Gomberg, is both blessing and curse. Curse because, at its most polite, Don’t Be A Stranger comes uncomfortably close to smoothed-over, rote singer-songwriter territory, with Eitzel’s voice adrift in a hermetically sealed environment, no rough edges, no real character. It takes a leap of faith to read this as a seductive foil to Eitzel’s tales of dejection, though really it’s only his warmth and the occasional barbs in his lyrics that save the more lugubrious moments on Don’t Be A Stranger.

Thankfully, more often than not Eitzel is on great form. He’s already said that he was hoping to make his Harvest or Five Leaves Left here, though Scott Walker‘s 1960s albums sometimes feel like closer companions: the strings that hover spectrally over “I Know The Bill Is Due”, an early highlight on the album, recall Walker’s similarly eerie “It’s Raining Today”. This is also one of Eitzel’s best vocal performances on the album, and indeed it’s his voice that really stands out across Don’t Be A Stranger’s eleven songs, a warm, understated thing that has lost the overt drama and dynamics of his times in American Music Club, and is all the better for it.

The other highlight is “We All Have To Find Our Own Way Out”, where Eitzel sings to the piano about ‘broken child stars’ and suicidal souls, with Eitzel addressing his other, ‘I don’t love you enough for your despair’. It’s a beautifully sad moment on a record that could use a few more of them. If the ‘American Morrissey’ tag that Eitzel was once saddled with ever made sense – it generally didn’t – it’s because, like Morrissey, Eitzel’s moments of droll humour deflect. He could serve to be yet more mordant, more dark-hearted. Much like The Smiths at their most abject, Eitzel excels at, and in, misery. It’s what makes his songs compelling – his forensic character dissections, and his disentangling of the fallacious language of love, both speak to an ability to write with both a brutal critical voice, and the artfulness of great poetics.

But with Don’t Be A Stranger, Eitzel has traded some of that intensity for a slightly more pacific understanding of the vicissitudes of the real. Ultimately, it’s a fair trade, revealing Eitzel, yet again, as an underappreciated, misunderstood, great American song writer.

Jon Dale