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Rolling Stones to headline Glastonbury 2013?

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The Rolling Stones are being lined up to headline next year's Glastonbury festival, according to reports. With the band's guitarist Keith Richards letting slip that they had been booked to play live shows in London and New York, and sax player Bobby Keys later claiming that the shows would take pl...

The Rolling Stones are being lined up to headline next year’s Glastonbury festival, according to reports.

With the band’s guitarist Keith Richards letting slip that they had been booked to play live shows in London and New York, and sax player Bobby Keys later claiming that the shows would take place in November, the legendary rockers look set to finally hit the road and celebrate their 50th anniversary.

Now, according to the Sun, a source has claimed that Glastonbury boss Michael Eavis is desperate to convince the band to top the bill at Worthy Farm in 2013. “The band are gearing up for a load of live dates but tend to leave big decisions like this until the last minute,” they said. “Michael Eavis is desperate to get the band confirmed and has made initial contact with their people.”

“It would be a massive coup to get the band playing Glasto on what could be their last round of live dates,” they added. “Getting a decision from the whole band can be tough and at the moment they are without an agent for live shows, which is not helping the situation. But there is a good chance 2013 will finally be the year they make it,”

Yesterday (October 11), the band debuted a new track titled “Doom And Gloom“. Recorded in Paris and produced by Don Was, “Doom And Gloom” is one of two brand new songs taken from the forthcoming hits collection GRRR!, which will be released on November 12. The other new track, titled “One More Shot”, is still under wraps, but “Doom And Gloom” is available to buy now.

The Who’s Pete Townshend: ‘We feel the ghosts of Keith and John’

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The Who's Pete Townshend has said he feels "the ghosts" of drummer Keith Moon and bassist John Entwistle onstage. The guitarist, who publishes his long-awaited memoir Who I Am yesterday (October 11), told Rolling Stone that he and singer Roger Daltrey feel the presence of their former band mates. Speaking about the difficulty he faced continuing the band after John Entwistle's death in 2002, he said: "We feel the ghosts of Keith and John. The second phase of The Who in a sense was really when we started to tour again around the year 2000, 2001. We were still able to evoke the sound, particularly with Zak Starkey. Now it's much more difficult even though Zak's there. John's sound was very big and rich and organic." He added: "When John died, there was a hole in the sound onstage and I was able to grow into that and find space. And I have to say as a guitar player, I prefer working without John. But as a member of The Who creating the incredible, powerful, driving, visceral sound, he's gone. I can't really do that again." The rocker also said that Daltrey had been pushing the band to take risks lately, adding that he had given the singer control of production and video for their up-coming North American Quadrophenia tour. "He's working on a new dramatic scenario for it, working on a new video, trying to find a way to be comfortable being the narrator," he said. Last month, Townshend broke his silence on the child pornography scandal that engulfed him in 2003. He said his his decision to investigate child pornography was a product of "white knight syndrome, an attempt to be seen to be the one that's helping", adding: "I had experienced something creepy as a child, so you imagine: what if I was a girl of nine or 10 and my uncle had raped me every week? I felt I had an understanding and I could help." Townshend - who is the founder of sexual abuse charity Double O - paid a £7 charge to a child pornography site, which he cancelled straight away, to expose the financial chain of child abuse from Russian orphanages. When police discovered the files, he was cautioned and placed on the sex offenders register for five years after he admitted to breaking the law.

The Who’s Pete Townshend has said he feels “the ghosts” of drummer Keith Moon and bassist John Entwistle onstage.

The guitarist, who publishes his long-awaited memoir Who I Am yesterday (October 11), told Rolling Stone that he and singer Roger Daltrey feel the presence of their former band mates.

Speaking about the difficulty he faced continuing the band after John Entwistle‘s death in 2002, he said: “We feel the ghosts of Keith and John. The second phase of The Who in a sense was really when we started to tour again around the year 2000, 2001. We were still able to evoke the sound, particularly with Zak Starkey. Now it’s much more difficult even though Zak’s there. John’s sound was very big and rich and organic.”

He added: “When John died, there was a hole in the sound onstage and I was able to grow into that and find space. And I have to say as a guitar player, I prefer working without John. But as a member of The Who creating the incredible, powerful, driving, visceral sound, he’s gone. I can’t really do that again.”

The rocker also said that Daltrey had been pushing the band to take risks lately, adding that he had given the singer control of production and video for their up-coming North American Quadrophenia tour. “He’s working on a new dramatic scenario for it, working on a new video, trying to find a way to be comfortable being the narrator,” he said.

Last month, Townshend broke his silence on the child pornography scandal that engulfed him in 2003. He said his his decision to investigate child pornography was a product of “white knight syndrome, an attempt to be seen to be the one that’s helping”, adding: “I had experienced something creepy as a child, so you imagine: what if I was a girl of nine or 10 and my uncle had raped me every week? I felt I had an understanding and I could help.”

Townshend – who is the founder of sexual abuse charity Double O – paid a £7 charge to a child pornography site, which he cancelled straight away, to expose the financial chain of child abuse from Russian orphanages. When police discovered the files, he was cautioned and placed on the sex offenders register for five years after he admitted to breaking the law.

The Black Keys and Wu-Tang Clan’s RZA collaborate on new song – listen

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The Black Keys and RZA of the Wu Tang Clan have teamed up for a new song, "The Baddest Man Alive". The song is taken from the soundtrack to the forthcoming movie The Man With The Iron Fists, which was written and directed by RZA, real name Robert Fitzgerald Diggs. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l1...

The Black Keys and RZA of the Wu Tang Clan have teamed up for a new song, “The Baddest Man Alive”.

The song is taken from the soundtrack to the forthcoming movie The Man With The Iron Fists, which was written and directed by RZA, real name Robert Fitzgerald Diggs.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l1VillVWmxE

The kung-fu movie is set for a US release next month (November 2).

The Black Keys and RZA have collaborated before, on 2009’s Blakroc album, which also saw the blues rock duo teaming up with Mos Def, Q-Tip, Raekwon, Ludacris and Pharoahe Monch.

The album also featured vocals from the late Wu-Tang Clan member Ol’ Dirty Bastard.

The Black Keys return to the UK later this year for a full arena tour. They will kick off their six-date trek at Newcastle Metro Radio Arena on December 7, before playing Glasgow SECC on November 8, Birmingham NIA on December 9 and Manchester Arena on December 11. The tour will conclude at London’s O2 Arena on December 12 and 13.

A year on the road with Leonard Cohen, by his bandmates

In this archive feature from December 2008 (Take 139), we get the inside story from Cohen’s bandmates on their extraordinary year with the singer-songwriter that even Bob Dylan calls “a real poetâ€. Interviews: Michael Bonner, Nick Hasted and John Lewis. Photograph: Lorca Cohen  ____________...

In this archive feature from December 2008 (Take 139), we get the inside story from Cohen’s bandmates on their extraordinary year with the singer-songwriter that even Bob Dylan calls “a real poetâ€. Interviews: Michael Bonner, Nick Hasted and John Lewis. Photograph: Lorca Cohen 

______________________

THE REHEARSALS: STUDIO INSTRUMENT RENTALS, LOS ANGELES, FEBRUARY/MARCH, 2008

Roscoe Beck [played on Cohen’s Recent Songs album in 1979; producer of Jennifer Warnes’ Famous Blue Raincoat album; bassist and musical director on the current tour]: Leonard called me at Thanksgiving and I flew out to LA and met with him. We started auditions for the band in January, and rehearsals in February. There were a lot of chord charts left over from the ’88/’93 touring band. Once the band was in place, Leonard would give guidance to the musicians, but he kinda sat back and said, “Let’s see what they come up with.â€

We scheduled a lot of rehearsal time. Leonard cares about his music and he cares about the audience that’s going to hear it. When we were hiring, his only instructions to me were: “Rossie, I only want the best band on the road this year.†No pressure, then.

Sharon Robinson [back-up singer since 1979; co-writer on the 10 New Songs and Dear Heather albums]: I came in a month into the process, in March. Leonard was definitely adjusting to another mode of living. He’s somewhat of a perfectionist. That part of him takes over.

Roscoe Beck: Was Leonard rusty? No, I don’t think so. He’s a very modest man, and he claims that rehearsals were mostly for him. But I don’t buy that at all. He’d been practising guitar in advance of this and boning up on his own material. He was in good shape, musically as well as physically. He quit smoking five years ago, and mentally he was ready for this tour.

Anne Militello [lighting designer]: He was so involved in every aspect of the look – the drapes, the wardrobe of the band and even the clothing of the crew. They all had fedoras!

Bruce Rodgers [set designer]: I wanted the feel of the set to be like him, subtle and silvery grey and translucent, mysterious and full of light at times, dark and moody at others. As far as the design and layout he was very involved, the master planner of the placement of all his band members. He wanted his musicians as close and intimate as possible.

Roscoe Beck: When we ran over the list of songs we just found that there was so much we couldn’t leave out. People told him concerts don’t run that long. His own children said, “Dad, concerts are like 90 minutes and then they’re gone!â€

Watch Jack White’s new video for ‘I’m Shakin”

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MvpoiiBW9bc Jack White has unveiled his new video for 'I'm Shakin'' – watch it above. In it, two Jack Whites – one in a pale blue suit, one in a dark blue suit – duel face-to-face in a rehearsal space, backed up by their correspondingly-dressed bands. The trac...

Jack White has unveiled his new video for ‘I’m Shakin” – watch it above.

In it, two Jack Whites – one in a pale blue suit, one in a dark blue suit – duel face-to-face in a rehearsal space, backed up by their correspondingly-dressed bands. The track is the fourth single to be taken from White’s debut solo album, Blunderbuss.

The seven-inch vinyl single will be available to pre-order from October 16 and will feature the B-side ‘Blues On Two Trees’. It will be released digitally on October 30.

The guitar virtuoso and former White Stripes man will return to the UK and Ireland this month for a string of live dates across October and November.

The run of dates begins at Dublin’s O2 Arena on October 31 and runs until November 8 when White headlines Edinburgh’s Usher Hall.

Jack White will play:

O2 Arena Dublin (October 31)

London Alexandra Palace (November 2)

Bridlington Spa (4)

Blackpool Empress Ballroom (6)

O2 Academy Birmingham (7)

Edinburgh Usher Hall (8)

Photo credit: Jo McCaughey

Freed Pussy Riot member vows to continue group’s fight

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Freed Pussy Riot member Yekaterina Samutsevich has vowed to continue the group's fight against Russian authorities. Samutsevich was released from jail yesterday (October 10) after a Moscow court accepted her appeal on the grounds that she had been thrown out of Moscow's main catherdral before she could remove her guitar from its case for the Pussy Riot's "punk prayer" protest against Putin. "We are not finished," she said in her first interview since leaving jail. "We have to act in such a way so that they (Russian authorities) do not learn about the concerts ahead of time, and be caught and jailed afterwards," she added. Three members of Pussy received two-year prison sentences on August 17 after being found guilty of hooliganism motivated by religious hatred after they were arrested following an anti-Putin gig in Moscow's main cathedral. While Samutsevich has been freed on appeal, the other two women - Maria Alyokhina and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova - have had their jail terms upheld. Although two of Samutsevich's bandmates remain behind bars, she says she has reunited with other members of Pussy Riot and will continue to take part in the movement that cast a global spotlight on Russia's political situation, telling journalists that Pussy Riot is "more united than ever … fighting for the freedom of Masha and Nadia!" In an interview last night with CNN, Samutsevich said: "We are not finished, nor are we going to end our political protest...The situation in the country has deteriorated since our performance and the trial itself is a testimony to that." Although she said she will be "more cautious" in her actions going forward, her "negative" attitude toward Vladimir Putin and what she calls his "mega authoritarian project" remains unchanged.

Freed Pussy Riot member Yekaterina Samutsevich has vowed to continue the group’s fight against Russian authorities.

Samutsevich was released from jail yesterday (October 10) after a Moscow court accepted her appeal on the grounds that she had been thrown out of Moscow’s main catherdral before she could remove her guitar from its case for the Pussy Riot’s “punk prayer” protest against Putin.

“We are not finished,” she said in her first interview since leaving jail. “We have to act in such a way so that they (Russian authorities) do not learn about the concerts ahead of time, and be caught and jailed afterwards,” she added.

Three members of Pussy received two-year prison sentences on August 17 after being found guilty of hooliganism motivated by religious hatred after they were arrested following an anti-Putin gig in Moscow’s main cathedral. While Samutsevich has been freed on appeal, the other two women – Maria Alyokhina and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova – have had their jail terms upheld.

Although two of Samutsevich’s bandmates remain behind bars, she says she has reunited with other members of Pussy Riot and will continue to take part in the movement that cast a global spotlight on Russia’s political situation, telling journalists that Pussy Riot is “more united than ever … fighting for the freedom of Masha and Nadia!”

In an interview last night with CNN, Samutsevich said: “We are not finished, nor are we going to end our political protest…The situation in the country has deteriorated since our performance and the trial itself is a testimony to that.”

Although she said she will be “more cautious” in her actions going forward, her “negative” attitude toward Vladimir Putin and what she calls his “mega authoritarian project” remains unchanged.

London’s O2 Arena up for sale

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The giant US concert venue company that runs London's O2 Arena is up for sale. Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG), who own a stake in David Beckham's football team LA Galaxy, also owns AEG Live – the world's second biggest ticket and live music company behind Live Nation, the Evening Standard reports. The firm's owners said it was "an appropriate time" to sell up as the company could "maximise value for all concerned". It has been speculated that the whole company could fetch £4.25 billion. The O2 arena is one of AEG's biggest venues after it turned the Millennium Dome into a massive gig arena. In the next few months alone it will host Muse, The Killers, Mumford and Sons, Florence and the Machine and The Black Keys. The Government sold the £850 million Dome for the reported sum of £1. AEG subsequently invested in the space to create the 20,000 seater venue, for which O2 pays a reported £6 million per year for the site's name.

The giant US concert venue company that runs London’s O2 Arena is up for sale.

Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG), who own a stake in David Beckham’s football team LA Galaxy, also owns AEG Live – the world’s second biggest ticket and live music company behind Live Nation, the Evening Standard reports.

The firm’s owners said it was “an appropriate time” to sell up as the company could “maximise value for all concerned”. It has been speculated that the whole company could fetch £4.25 billion.

The O2 arena is one of AEG’s biggest venues after it turned the Millennium Dome into a massive gig arena. In the next few months alone it will host Muse, The Killers, Mumford and Sons, Florence and the Machine and The Black Keys.

The Government sold the £850 million Dome for the reported sum of £1. AEG subsequently invested in the space to create the 20,000 seater venue, for which O2 pays a reported £6 million per year for the site’s name.

First Look – Tim Burton’s Frankenweenie

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Tim Burton's kid friendly Frankenstein opens this year's London Film Festival... It’s true, there is very little that's unfamiliar about Tim Burton’s Frankenweenie. The obsessive references to RKO horror movies, Ray Harryhausen and Edgar Allen Poe, designs that are pitched somewhere between Edward Gorey and Rod Sterling, the ongoing devotion to Vincent Price, an angry mob carrying flaming torches. Never let it be said that Tim Burton shies away from wearing his influences on his sleeve: Frankenweenie is a Frankenstein movie, sewn together from parts of other films, comic books, TV shows, and whatever vintage pop cultural detritus clutters up Burton’s mind. Weirdly, it’s also the filmmaker’s most straightforwardly enjoyable film in a long while. In its earliest incarnation, Frankenweenie was a live action 30 minute short, made in 1984 while Burton was working at Disney, which the studio rejected as being too scary for children. Resurrected now as a full-length, stop-motion feature, this new Frankenweenie is an amiable piece of kiddie-Gothery, not remotely scary but certainly a vast improvement on Burton’s last film, the wretched Dark Shadows. We’re in a suburban America town called New Holland – a black and white Twilight Zone of small-minded prejudice, picket fences and robust housewives that feels stuck in the 1950s. Young Victor Frankenstein makes Super 8 monster movies starring his cheery pup, Sparky. When Sparky is run over and killed, the enterprising Victor – inspired by the school science teacher and Vincent Price lookalike, Mr Rzykruski (Martin Landau) – retrieves the corpse from the pet cemetery and wires him into a Heath Robinson-style contraption and a handy thunderstorm revives him. See! He rises! Soon, the local school kids are all bringing their own deceased animals back to life, and before long, the horrified townsfolk are being terrorised by a roving band of zombie pets: a tortoise, Sea Monkeys, a hamster and a weird cat/bat hybrid. Clearly, no good will come of this. While enjoying his most commercially successful period, Tim Burton’s trajectory in the last ten years has also resembled a career in creative decline. His projects have been so-so remakes and adaptations that have gradually chipped away at the goodwill he’d earned up to the end of the Nineties. I’m aware that Alice In Wonderland was a massive box office hit for Burton – but I suspect that had more to do with the pull of Carroll’s book than Burton himself. The last Burton film I remember enjoying was 2005’s Corpse Bride –also a stop-motion animation, and another film in which a dead dog features prominently. It had a lightness of touch and, perhaps because of its brisk 77-minute running time, its felt focussed: particularly when compared to the cumbersome, rudderless Dark Shadows. I quite liked the swagger of Sweeney Todd, but it lacked any sense of danger. Frankenweenie is also Burton’s first film without Johnny Depp in almost a decade. Coincidentally, it’s also the first since Edward Scissorhands in 1990 to feature Winona Ryder (voicing Victor’s neighbour, called – what else? – Elsa Van Helsing). Hooking up with Ryder after a gap of 20 years and returning to a decades-old project might suggest Burton is tacitly acknowledging that he was at his most creative in his youth. Indeed, how much does Burton see of himself in Victor, the unconventional boy trapped in a conventional town, who dreams of being a filmmaker? Frankenweenie's narrative has an undeniably strong pull – the desire to bring back something that is gone forever. Yes, the film is sentimental; but it never quite slips into Spielbergian hokum. One of the film’s best scenes – where Victor, believing his attempts to resurrect Sparky have failed, embraces the dog, only for Sparky’s tail to slowly twitch back to life – is nicely understated. But the overwhelming vibe here of innocent fun; childlike, but not childish. Perhaps by going back to the very start of his career, Burton can now move forward. Frankenweenie opens in the UK on October 17 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2cqI6hPra7c

Tim Burton’s kid friendly Frankenstein opens this year’s London Film Festival…

It’s true, there is very little that’s unfamiliar about Tim Burton’s Frankenweenie. The obsessive references to RKO horror movies, Ray Harryhausen and Edgar Allen Poe, designs that are pitched somewhere between Edward Gorey and Rod Sterling, the ongoing devotion to Vincent Price, an angry mob carrying flaming torches. Never let it be said that Tim Burton shies away from wearing his influences on his sleeve: Frankenweenie is a Frankenstein movie, sewn together from parts of other films, comic books, TV shows, and whatever vintage pop cultural detritus clutters up Burton’s mind. Weirdly, it’s also the filmmaker’s most straightforwardly enjoyable film in a long while.

In its earliest incarnation, Frankenweenie was a live action 30 minute short, made in 1984 while Burton was working at Disney, which the studio rejected as being too scary for children. Resurrected now as a full-length, stop-motion feature, this new Frankenweenie is an amiable piece of kiddie-Gothery, not remotely scary but certainly a vast improvement on Burton’s last film, the wretched Dark Shadows. We’re in a suburban America town called New Holland – a black and white Twilight Zone of small-minded prejudice, picket fences and robust housewives that feels stuck in the 1950s. Young Victor Frankenstein makes Super 8 monster movies starring his cheery pup, Sparky. When Sparky is run over and killed, the enterprising Victor – inspired by the school science teacher and Vincent Price lookalike, Mr Rzykruski (Martin Landau) – retrieves the corpse from the pet cemetery and wires him into a Heath Robinson-style contraption and a handy thunderstorm revives him. See! He rises! Soon, the local school kids are all bringing their own deceased animals back to life, and before long, the horrified townsfolk are being terrorised by a roving band of zombie pets: a tortoise, Sea Monkeys, a hamster and a weird cat/bat hybrid. Clearly, no good will come of this.

While enjoying his most commercially successful period, Tim Burton’s trajectory in the last ten years has also resembled a career in creative decline. His projects have been so-so remakes and adaptations that have gradually chipped away at the goodwill he’d earned up to the end of the Nineties. I’m aware that Alice In Wonderland was a massive box office hit for Burton – but I suspect that had more to do with the pull of Carroll’s book than Burton himself. The last Burton film I remember enjoying was 2005’s Corpse Bride –also a stop-motion animation, and another film in which a dead dog features prominently. It had a lightness of touch and, perhaps because of its brisk 77-minute running time, its felt focussed: particularly when compared to the cumbersome, rudderless Dark Shadows. I quite liked the swagger of Sweeney Todd, but it lacked any sense of danger.

Frankenweenie is also Burton’s first film without Johnny Depp in almost a decade. Coincidentally, it’s also the first since Edward Scissorhands in 1990 to feature Winona Ryder (voicing Victor’s neighbour, called – what else? – Elsa Van Helsing). Hooking up with Ryder after a gap of 20 years and returning to a decades-old project might suggest Burton is tacitly acknowledging that he was at his most creative in his youth. Indeed, how much does Burton see of himself in Victor, the unconventional boy trapped in a conventional town, who dreams of being a filmmaker?

Frankenweenie‘s narrative has an undeniably strong pull – the desire to bring back something that is gone forever. Yes, the film is sentimental; but it never quite slips into Spielbergian hokum. One of the film’s best scenes – where Victor, believing his attempts to resurrect Sparky have failed, embraces the dog, only for Sparky’s tail to slowly twitch back to life – is nicely understated. But the overwhelming vibe here of innocent fun; childlike, but not childish. Perhaps by going back to the very start of his career, Burton can now move forward.

Frankenweenie opens in the UK on October 17

Daft Punk unveil new blues mix – listen

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Daft Punk have released new mix – and it's all blues. The 15-minute mix samples music by American bluesman Junior Kimbrough, including "I Gotta Try You Girl". It was created for designer Hedi Slimane's Yves Saint Laurent show at last week's Paris Fashion Week. Scroll down to listen to the track,...

Daft Punk have released new mix – and it’s all blues.

The 15-minute mix samples music by American bluesman Junior Kimbrough, including “I Gotta Try You Girl”. It was created for designer Hedi Slimane’s Yves Saint Laurent show at last week’s Paris Fashion Week. Scroll down to listen to the track, titled “Junior Kimbrough Edited by Daft Punk”.

Daft Punk are known to have been working on a new album with Chic frontman Nile Rogers and other collaborators. In August, Rogers said he ranked the work he had been doing with the French duo as amongst the finest of his career. Speaking about the sessions, he told Mixmag: “All I can say is those guys are geniuses and to think that after all these years we’ve been trying to get together, they just show up at my apartment in New York City and the vibe between us is so powerful and so strong – it’s unbelievable.”

Italian disco pioneer Giorgio Moroder is also known to have worked on the as-yet untitled record. Daft Punk’s last album was the Tron: Legacy soundtrack in 2010.

Jarvis Cocker: ‘I love The Beatles – even though I haven’t named any of my kids after them’

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Jarvis Cocker has professed his love for The Beatles, even though, he says: "I haven't named any kids after them." Writing in the Guardian, the Pulp frontman explained: "I love the Beatles. I haven't named any kids after them but I still really love them. They were the first group that I was ever p...

Jarvis Cocker has professed his love for The Beatles, even though, he says: “I haven’t named any kids after them.”

Writing in the Guardian, the Pulp frontman explained: “I love the Beatles. I haven’t named any kids after them but I still really love them. They were the first group that I was ever properly aware of. In my early teens I would sometimes stay in and listen to the radio all day in the hope that I would catch a song by them that I’d never heard before and be able to tape it on my radio-cassette player.”

He added that the power of The Beatles rested in their ‘ordinariness’.

He said they were “four working-class boys from Liverpool who showed that not only could they create art that stood comparison with that produced by ‘the establishment’ – they could create art that pissed all over it. From the ranks of the supposedly uncouth, unwashed barbarians came the greatest creative force of the 20th century.”

Cocker made the comments in a review of the Hunter Davies edited book The John Lennon Letters, in which he also asks why 1990s Britpop was doomed to failure. In answer to his own question, he writes: “Too many factors to go into here, but one was: too much information. Too much reverence. Wearing the same clothes and taking the same drugs will not make us into Beatles. It will make us fat and ill.”

Yesterday it was revealed that Jarvis Cocker will resurrect his Relaxed Muscle project in order to provide a live soundtrack to a contemporary dance production from the Michael Clark Company.

The shows will take place at London’s Barbican from October 17-27 and will also see the company performing to music by Scritti Politti.

Beatle ‘penises’ defaced at Liverpool gallery

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An artwork depicting the penises of the four members of The Beatles has been defaced while on public display at the Museum Of Liverpool, reports Click Liverpool. Titled The Beatles In America, the painting was created by artist Jonathan Gent, who donated it to Liverpool Love, an exhibition of artworks to be auctioned for children's charity Claire House. Gent said of his artwork: "It's as intimate a piece as you can get about The Beatles. What was really what I was after because they are such a global thing - this untouchable thing and that is what interests me most about them. So this idea of suddenly having their penises on a canvas it was, I guess, about closeness, getting close to this idol in some way" .The penises, rendered in still-soft oil paint and labelled for each band member, have been pressed and smudged in an attack carried out by unknown visitors to the exhibition. The artwork has been removed from display and specialists are assessing the damage. It is not known whether it will be auctioned as planned on October 17. A spokesperson for the museum says: "The damage is all the more regrettable because along with other works in the exhibition the painting is due to be auctioned to raise funds for children's charity Claire House. The decision as to whether the work will be displayed again, and included in the auction, is now dependent on what can be done to return the work to its original condition."

An artwork depicting the penises of the four members of The Beatles has been defaced while on public display at the Museum Of Liverpool, reports Click Liverpool.

Titled The Beatles In America, the painting was created by artist Jonathan Gent, who donated it to Liverpool Love, an exhibition of artworks to be auctioned for children’s charity Claire House. Gent said of his artwork: “It’s as intimate a piece as you can get about The Beatles. What was really what I was after because they are such a global thing – this untouchable thing and that is what interests me most about them. So this idea of suddenly having their penises on a canvas it was, I guess, about closeness, getting close to this idol in some way”

.The penises, rendered in still-soft oil paint and labelled for each band member, have been pressed and smudged in an attack carried out by unknown visitors to the exhibition. The artwork has been removed from display and specialists are assessing the damage. It is not known whether it will be auctioned as planned on October 17.

A spokesperson for the museum says: “The damage is all the more regrettable because along with other works in the exhibition the painting is due to be auctioned to raise funds for children’s charity Claire House. The decision as to whether the work will be displayed again, and included in the auction, is now dependent on what can be done to return the work to its original condition.”

Hear new Rolling Stones track ‘Doom And Gloom’

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The Rolling Stones have debuted brand new track 'Doom And Gloom' – click the video below to listen. The song premiered on BBC Radio 2 at 8.15am. Breakfast Show host Chris Evans played it twice, back to back. A hard-rocking, bluesy number, 'Doom And Gloom' recalls the likes of 'Gimme Shelter' and 'Honky Tonk Women'. "All I hear is doom and gloom, all is darkness in my room," say the lyrics. 'Doom And Gloom' is the result of the band's first studio session in seven years. Recorded in Paris and produced by Don Was, 'Doom and Gloom' is one of two brand new songs taken from the forthcoming hits collection 'GRRR!', which will be released on November 12. The other new track, titled 'One More Shot', is still under wraps, but 'Doom And Gloom' is available to buy now. Earlier this week, (October 8) guitarist Keith Richards revealed that the band have been booked to play live shows in London and New York, although he didn't reveal when the dates would take place. Two days later, the band's sax player Bobby Keys said that the shows will take place in November. "[The Rolling Stones are] gonna do some more concerts, starting in November with two in England and then a couple here in the States, then there's a few added concerts after that," Keys told Billboard. No live dates have been confirmed by the band at this point. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPFGWVKXxm0

The Rolling Stones have debuted brand new track ‘Doom And Gloom’ – click the video below to listen.

The song premiered on BBC Radio 2 at 8.15am. Breakfast Show host Chris Evans played it twice, back to back.

A hard-rocking, bluesy number, ‘Doom And Gloom’ recalls the likes of ‘Gimme Shelter’ and ‘Honky Tonk Women’. “All I hear is doom and gloom, all is darkness in my room,” say the lyrics.

‘Doom And Gloom’ is the result of the band’s first studio session in seven years.

Recorded in Paris and produced by Don Was, ‘Doom and Gloom’ is one of two brand new songs taken from the forthcoming hits collection ‘GRRR!’, which will be released on November 12. The other new track, titled ‘One More Shot’, is still under wraps, but ‘Doom And Gloom’ is available to buy now.

Earlier this week, (October 8) guitarist Keith Richards revealed that the band have been booked to play live shows in London and New York, although he didn’t reveal when the dates would take place.

Two days later, the band’s sax player Bobby Keys said that the shows will take place in November. “[The Rolling Stones are] gonna do some more concerts, starting in November with two in England and then a couple here in the States, then there’s a few added concerts after that,” Keys told Billboard.

No live dates have been confirmed by the band at this point.

The 41st Uncut Playlist Of 2012

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Pretty busy trying to finish an issue here, but as usual, Neil Young is providing a distraction. Today there’s an opportunity to see why we’ve been making such a fuss about “Psychedelic Pillâ€: a video for the 16-odd minute “Ramada Innâ€â€¦ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O8qkDQ_QP8A Also some way into “Waging Heavy Peaceâ€. This sentence on page 114 seems to sum it up thus far - “Point is, there were a lot of cars†– but if you’re further on than me, please let me know what you think. As for the playlist this week, a belated and wholehearted discovery of Goat here in the office, a fine new Michael Chapman venture, a lot of Godspeed’s extraordinary return, plus Mark Kozelek US TV debut, which is well worth a look… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Serafina Steer – The Moths Are Real (Stolen) 2 Villagers – Awayland (Domino) 3 Eternal Tapestry – A World Out Of Time (Thrill Jockey) 4 Michael Chapman – Pachyderm (Blast First Petite) 5 Tame Impala – Lonerism (Modular) 6 Goat – World Music (Rocket) 7 Yo La Tengo – Fade (Matador) 8 Bee Mask – Vaporware/Scanops (Room 40) 9 Gareth Dickson – Quite A Way Away (12k) 10 Mark Kozelek & The Roots – Mistress (Live on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon) 11 Godspeed You! Black Emperor – Allelujah! Don’t Bend Ascend (Constellation) 12 Woo – It’s Cosy Inside (Drag City) 13 Hiss Golden Messenger – Lord I Love The Rain (Jellyfant) 14 Arbouretum – Coming Out Of The Fog (Thrill Jockey) 15 Pelt – Effigy (MIE) 16 Various Artists – Pendle 1612 (Lancashire Folklore Tapes) 17 Charlie Boyer & The Voyeurs – I Watch You (Heavenly) 18 The Levon Helm Band - Midnight Ramble Sessions Volume 3 (Vanguard) 19 The White Meadows – A Time For Drunken Horses (Tor Press) 20 Obnox – Rojo (Permanent) 21 Fontanelle – Vitamin F (Southern Lord)

Pretty busy trying to finish an issue here, but as usual, Neil Young is providing a distraction. Today there’s an opportunity to see why we’ve been making such a fuss about “Psychedelic Pillâ€: a video for the 16-odd minute “Ramada Innâ€â€¦

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O8qkDQ_QP8A

Also some way into “Waging Heavy Peaceâ€. This sentence on page 114 seems to sum it up thus far – “Point is, there were a lot of cars†– but if you’re further on than me, please let me know what you think.

As for the playlist this week, a belated and wholehearted discovery of Goat here in the office, a fine new Michael Chapman venture, a lot of Godspeed’s extraordinary return, plus Mark Kozelek US TV debut, which is well worth a look…

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

1 Serafina Steer – The Moths Are Real (Stolen)

2 Villagers – Awayland (Domino)

3 Eternal Tapestry – A World Out Of Time (Thrill Jockey)

4 Michael Chapman – Pachyderm (Blast First Petite)

5 Tame Impala – Lonerism (Modular)

6 Goat – World Music (Rocket)

7 Yo La Tengo – Fade (Matador)

8 Bee Mask – Vaporware/Scanops (Room 40)

9 Gareth Dickson – Quite A Way Away (12k)

10 Mark Kozelek & The Roots – Mistress (Live on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon)

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

12 Woo – It’s Cosy Inside (Drag City)

13 Hiss Golden Messenger – Lord I Love The Rain (Jellyfant)

14 Arbouretum – Coming Out Of The Fog (Thrill Jockey)

15 Pelt – Effigy (MIE)

16 Various Artists – Pendle 1612 (Lancashire Folklore Tapes)

17 Charlie Boyer & The Voyeurs – I Watch You (Heavenly)

18 The Levon Helm Band – Midnight Ramble Sessions Volume 3 (Vanguard)

19 The White Meadows – A Time For Drunken Horses (Tor Press)

20 Obnox – Rojo (Permanent)

21 Fontanelle – Vitamin F (Southern Lord)

Led Zeppelin call journalist a “schmuck” at ‘Celebration Day’ press conference in New York

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Led Zeppelin clashed with journalists at a press conference in New York yesterday (October 9) when asked if the release of their concert DVD Celebration Day could lead to another reunion. Speaking at New York's Museum of Modern Art to promote the release of the DVD recording of their 2007 concert ...

Led Zeppelin clashed with journalists at a press conference in New York yesterday (October 9) when asked if the release of their concert DVD Celebration Day could lead to another reunion.

Speaking at New York’s Museum of Modern Art to promote the release of the DVD recording of their 2007 concert at London’s O2 Arena, the band got shirty with reporters when asked if the film could lead to another set of gigs, Rolling Stone reports. “We’ve been thinking about all sorts of things,” singer Robert Plant said. “And then we can’t remember what we were thinking of. Schmuck.”

“There are some people in here who are not journalists,” he said. “There’s a masseuse in here who’s not a journalist. I think that’s ever so exciting.”

Another journalist then praised the film but asked if it would satisfy fans who would rather see the rock legends reunite in the flesh. Plant replied simply, “Sorry!”.

He then added: “We’re pretty good at what we do but the tail should never wag the dog, really. If we’re capable of doing something, in our own time, that will be what will happen. So any inane questions from people who are from syndicated outlets, you should just really think about what it takes to answer a question like that in one second. We know what we’ve got, you know.”

Celebration Day, which is a concert film of the band’s 2007 appearance at London’s 02 Arena, will screen in cinemas from October 17. It will then get a general DVD release on November 19. A deluxe edition will also include footage of the Shepperton rehearsals, as well as BBC news footage.

Rolling Stones to play London in November, according to band source

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The Rolling Stones look set to play two shows in London in November, according to the band's long-time saxophonist. Earlier this week, (October 8) guitarist Keith Richards revealed that the band have been booked to play live shows in London and New York, although he didn't reveal when the dates wo...

The Rolling Stones look set to play two shows in London in November, according to the band’s long-time saxophonist.

Earlier this week, (October 8) guitarist Keith Richards revealed that the band have been booked to play live shows in London and New York, although he didn’t reveal when the dates would take place.

Now the band’s sax player Bobby Keys has said that the shows will take place in November, as previously denied by the band. “[The Rolling Stones are] gonna do some more concerts, starting in November with two in England and then a couple here in the States, then there’s a few added concerts after that,” Keys told Billboard.

“Keith told me a couple months ago there was something in the wind and just be ready to go. I’m waiting for them to send me the plane ticket and the information, and then I’ll go,” he said.

Music industry website Record Of The Day reports that it is rumoured that the dates will be 25 and 29 November, but this has not been confirmed.

When asked if the shows will mark the last live performances from the band, Keys added: “The reality is this train is going to pull into the last station pretty soon – I don’t know how soon. I’ve been saying this since 1980!” he said. “But I feel like it’s kind of winding down. This may be sort of the ‘Sayonara, see you later, had a good time, keep in touch.’ I don’t know that for sure. I haven’t officially been told anything…I just take my cue primarily from what Keith says, so we’ll have to see.”

The band had long been rumoured to be playing live again this year to celebrate their 50th anniversary, with frontman Mick Jagger claiming in July that they were planning on sharing a stage together this autumn.

The Rolling Stones release a new single, “Doom And Gloom”, on Thursday October 11. The single can be downloaded from iTunes.

“Doom And Gloom” marks the first time that Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts and Ronnie Wood have been in the studio together for seven years. Taken from the forthcoming Greatest Hits album GRRR!, “Doom And Gloom” was recorded in Paris and produced by longtime Rolling Stones producer Don Was.

Brian Wilson responds to Mike Love: ‘It sorta feels like we’re being fired from The Beach Boys’

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Brian Wilson has responded to Mike Love's letter claiming he didn't fire him from The Beach Boys. Last week (October 6) Love defended his plans to continue touring under the Beach Boys name after the band's current 50-year anniversary, which ended in London last month, in an open letter published b...

Brian Wilson has responded to Mike Love’s letter claiming he didn’t fire him from The Beach Boys.

Last week (October 6) Love defended his plans to continue touring under the Beach Boys name after the band’s current 50-year anniversary, which ended in London last month, in an open letter published by the LA Times.

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

However, now Wilson has responded with a letter in the same publication. “Normally I wouldn’t respond to something like this,” he wrote in the LA Times, “but because I love what the 50th has done for the band’s image and its legacy, I feel I need to.”

“As far as I know I can’t be fired – that wouldn’t be cool,” he wrote. “The negativity surrounding all the comments bummed me out. What’s confusing is that by Mike not wanting or letting Al, David and me tour with the band, it sort of feels like we’re being fired.”

He added: “What’s a bummer to Al and me is that we have numerous offers to continue, so why wouldn’t we want to? We all poured our hearts and souls into that album and the fans rewarded us by giving us a No. 3 debut on the Billboard charts, and selling out our shows. We were all blown away by the response. Al and I would like to be included in the continuous promotion of ‘That’s Why God Made The Radio‘. That’s what I’ve been doing for over a decade: making records and going out and supporting them. It’s what I do.” He concluded:

“It’s Al and my opinion that all of us together makes for a great representation of the Beach Boys. While I appreciate the nice cool things Mike said about me in his letter, and I do and always will love him as my cousin and bandmate, at the same time I’m still left wondering why he doesn’t want to continue this great trip we’re on. Al and I want to keep going because we believe we owe it to the music.

John Cooper Clarke, London Queen Elizabeth Hall, October 4 2012

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It was National Poetry Day last week, a date I’m sure you found your own ways to celebrate. I was at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, where John Cooper Clarke was in residence for the evening, headlining a show that also featured appearances by fellow poets Mike Garry and Luke Wright, a couple of sharp young wordsmiths who by the look of them may not have been capable of joined-up writing when Clarke was in his glorious early pomp and may possibly not even have been born then, Wright especially looking like he’s only just stopped being looked after by baby-sitters and cooed over in a crib. They were good, both of them, respective highlights of their sets “Saint Anthonyâ€, Garry’s clever, alliterative tribute to Anthony Wilson of Factory and Hacienda notoriety, and “Essex Lionâ€, Wright’s hilarious riff on the recent apparent sighting of a lion near a caravan park in Essex. Clarke was in no mood to be upstaged, however, by youthful upstarts, however talented, and once he hit his formidable high-speed stride left both trailing in his breezy wake, a human tsunami of wisecracks, torrential outpourings of poetic absurdity, rapid-fire versifying and side-spitting loquacity. He was, in other words, for 90 minutes wholly brilliant. He came on stage looking as ever like he was made out of pipe cleaners and a couple of old coat hangers, his back-combed Dylan bouffant piled so high it put at least an extra couple of feet on his height and so skinny he could easily have disappeared through a crack in the stage if there’d been one. Is he incapable of putting on weight, like the rest of us? He could probably disappear behind a pencil and very likely casts a shadow that looks like something scratched in the ground with the point of a very sharp stick. At 61, he is frighteningly trim, a scary hipster scarecrow with gold in his teeth, or at least the ones he has left, and a rasping Salford accent in which he still delivers his material at something only slightly less than the speed of sound, as if he’s commentating on the final furlong of a closely-run horse race or has otherwise lost his mind to excitable impulses, the words, either way, going by in something more than a blur, much like the world seen through the window of a bullet train. He spends some time tottering around a table piled with notebooks, scraps of paper, pages of text both hand-scrawled and typed, once or twice going into a wobble that makes you think he may fall over, and then starts off with a poem called “Guest Listâ€, which is hilarious but barely over before he asks, as if this is a question that’s been worrying him for some time: “If Jesus was Jewish, why the Spanish name?†This opens a floodgate of similar conundrums - “What is occasional furniture the rest of the time?†for instance – and a lot of great one-liners, Clarke as much of a stand-up comic as a poet, his patter relentless and usually side-splitting as he ranges across a variety of topics, anything that catches his fancy basically, in a weepingly funny cavalcade of jokes, asides, wry ruminations (“Getting old, it happens to us all, if we’re luckyâ€, “It’s a gift, isn’t it, to be able to laugh at the misfortunes of others.â€), anecdotes and rants at things that annoy or irritate him, which include marine biologists and Terry Pratchett. Sometimes these routines are even connected to the poems he manages to squeeze into the stream of riotous digressions, as when “Things Are Gonna Get Worse†is introduced by another quick quip - “I went to the doctor and the doctor said, ‘I haven’t seen you for a while, John.’ I said, ‘I’ve been ill,’†– which should in time-honoured fashion have been accompanied by a drum roll and cymbal splash. Among the newer poems elsewhere featured the highlight is “To A Tiki Shirtâ€, an ode to that most garish fashion accessory, the Hawaiian shirt, which develops into a wistful reflection on growing old and the ways in which we hold on to our pasts and is very touching. In a nod to his own past, towards the end, out comes the venerable “Beasley Streetâ€, delivered at astonishing speed – so fast, in fact, that it leaves him gasping for breath about half way through and the audience by the end in stunned exhaustion. I’ll leave you with a final thought, which he shared with us. “If you have déjà vu and amnesia at the same time, does it mean you can’t remember what happens next?†Have a good week. Pic: Rex Features

It was National Poetry Day last week, a date I’m sure you found your own ways to celebrate. I was at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, where John Cooper Clarke was in residence for the evening, headlining a show that also featured appearances by fellow poets Mike Garry and Luke Wright, a couple of sharp young wordsmiths who by the look of them may not have been capable of joined-up writing when Clarke was in his glorious early pomp and may possibly not even have been born then, Wright especially looking like he’s only just stopped being looked after by baby-sitters and cooed over in a crib.

They were good, both of them, respective highlights of their sets “Saint Anthonyâ€, Garry’s clever, alliterative tribute to Anthony Wilson of Factory and Hacienda notoriety, and “Essex Lionâ€, Wright’s hilarious riff on the recent apparent sighting of a lion near a caravan park in Essex. Clarke was in no mood to be upstaged, however, by youthful upstarts, however talented, and once he hit his formidable high-speed stride left both trailing in his breezy wake, a human tsunami of wisecracks, torrential outpourings of poetic absurdity, rapid-fire versifying and side-spitting loquacity. He was, in other words, for 90 minutes wholly brilliant.

He came on stage looking as ever like he was made out of pipe cleaners and a couple of old coat hangers, his back-combed Dylan bouffant piled so high it put at least an extra couple of feet on his height and so skinny he could easily have disappeared through a crack in the stage if there’d been one. Is he incapable of putting on weight, like the rest of us? He could probably disappear behind a pencil and very likely casts a shadow that looks like something scratched in the ground with the point of a very sharp stick.

At 61, he is frighteningly trim, a scary hipster scarecrow with gold in his teeth, or at least the ones he has left, and a rasping Salford accent in which he still delivers his material at something only slightly less than the speed of sound, as if he’s commentating on the final furlong of a closely-run horse race or has otherwise lost his mind to excitable impulses, the words, either way, going by in something more than a blur, much like the world seen through the window of a bullet train.

He spends some time tottering around a table piled with notebooks, scraps of paper, pages of text both hand-scrawled and typed, once or twice going into a wobble that makes you think he may fall over, and then starts off with a poem called “Guest Listâ€, which is hilarious but barely over before he asks, as if this is a question that’s been worrying him for some time: “If Jesus was Jewish, why the Spanish name?â€

This opens a floodgate of similar conundrums – “What is occasional furniture the rest of the time?†for instance – and a lot of great one-liners, Clarke as much of a stand-up comic as a poet, his patter relentless and usually side-splitting as he ranges across a variety of topics, anything that catches his fancy basically, in a weepingly funny cavalcade of jokes, asides, wry ruminations (“Getting old, it happens to us all, if we’re luckyâ€, “It’s a gift, isn’t it, to be able to laugh at the misfortunes of others.â€), anecdotes and rants at things that annoy or irritate him, which include marine biologists and Terry Pratchett.

Sometimes these routines are even connected to the poems he manages to squeeze into the stream of riotous digressions, as when “Things Are Gonna Get Worse†is introduced by another quick quip – “I went to the doctor and the doctor said, ‘I haven’t seen you for a while, John.’ I said, ‘I’ve been ill,’†– which should in time-honoured fashion have been accompanied by a drum roll and cymbal splash.

Among the newer poems elsewhere featured the highlight is “To A Tiki Shirtâ€, an ode to that most garish fashion accessory, the Hawaiian shirt, which develops into a wistful reflection on growing old and the ways in which we hold on to our pasts and is very touching. In a nod to his own past, towards the end, out comes the venerable “Beasley Streetâ€, delivered at astonishing speed – so fast, in fact, that it leaves him gasping for breath about half way through and the audience by the end in stunned exhaustion.

I’ll leave you with a final thought, which he shared with us.

“If you have déjà vu and amnesia at the same time, does it mean you can’t remember what happens next?â€

Have a good week.

Pic: Rex Features

First Look – Stoker

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Stoker arrives with some heavy expectations. It is the English language debut of South Korean filmmaker Park Chan-wook, the architect of the nerve-shredding Oldboy. It stars Nicole Kidman, playing the kind of cold, neurotic matriarch reminiscent of her performance in The Others; and – ladies! â...

Stoker arrives with some heavy expectations. It is the English language debut of South Korean filmmaker Park Chan-wook, the architect of the nerve-shredding Oldboy.

It stars Nicole Kidman, playing the kind of cold, neurotic matriarch reminiscent of her performance in The Others; and – ladies! – it’s written by Prison Break’s Wentworth Miller.

As the title suggests, Stoker has its roots in Gothic horror, though Hitchcock’s Shadow Of A Doubt also seems an appropriate reference. After India’s father dies, her uncle Charlie moves in with her and her unstable mother, Evelyn. Naturally, Charlie’s motives remain mysterious. Evelyn, it seems, is not on the best of terms with her daughter. “You know I’ve often wondered why it is we had children,†she tells India. “The conclusion I’ve come to is that we want someone to get it right this time. But not me. Personally speaking I can’t wait to watch life tear you apart.â€

As you’d expect from Park Chan-wook, something nasty looks set to happen in a phone box, there are some shears, something in the freezer cabinet in the cellar and one character gets stabbed through the hand with a pencil.

There is a suggestion Stoker is a vampire film – the allusions to Bram Stoker aside, Charlie (Matthew Goode) tells Evelyn (Kidman) that India (Mia Wasikowska) is “of ageâ€. “Of age for what?†“You have no idea.†Personally, I hope turns out not to be the case. There are the makings here of a fine, stylish psychological thriller – resolving it with a vampire reveal seems lazy. There’s a lot bubbling away here.

Anyway, here’s the trailer. Hope you enjoy it.

Stoker opens in March 2013

Neil Young & Crazy Horse: “Psychedelic Pill” – Full review

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Neil Young is not, at a guess, an artist who suffers much from writer’s block. In the past few years, many of his albums have felt like spontaneous dispatches from an over-productive mind. He has been provoked into action by a useless president, and by an obsessive need to apply driving metapho...

Neil Young is not, at a guess, an artist who suffers much from writer’s block. In the past few years, many of his albums have felt like spontaneous dispatches from an over-productive mind.

He has been provoked into action by a useless president, and by an obsessive need to apply driving metaphors to America’s parlous economic state. Some projects have been shaped by a new relationship – with, say, producer Daniel Lanois – while others have stemmed from reunions with old collaborators, as Young cycles through the musicians he has relied upon, with an admittedly capricious brand of loyalty, for over four decades. It is easy, too, to imagine Young foraging in his own archives, repeatedly postponing the next volume of his retrospective endeavours when something old stimulates him into creating something new, at speed.

Talking to Uncut a few months ago, Young gave the impression that bashing out a book came just as simply. “Writing was a very easy thing to do,†he told Jaan Uhelszki, “things came out.†Later, though, he suggested that his artistic hyperactivity was born of necessity: “They paid me some money to write the book,†he said, “and that means I don’t have to go on the road [he has subsequently, of course, gone back on the road]. I spend money as soon as I get it. I don’t care how much money I have, I can use it to do something.â€

In 2012, then, this haphazard magnate has found a cunning new way to build multiple revenue streams from one idea. First, he wrote what may be an autobiography: Waging Heavy Peace, due to be published this autumn. Secondly, he reconvened the doughty Crazy Horse to channel folk songs remembered from his youth into a scrappy, invigorating album, Americana. Finally, Young kept Ralph Molina, Billy Talbot and a notably engaged Frank Sampedro around for further sessions, that have coalesced into the 35th and longest studio album of his career: Psychedelic Pill, a remarkable series of jams that keep returning to the subject of writing a memoir.

Psychedelic Pill opens, quaintly, with a kind of acid flashback. As “Driftin’ Back†begins, Young is alone with his acoustic guitar, “dreaming about the way things sound now/Write about them in my book,†and grappling with the relationship between himself and his readers. After about 80 seconds, Crazy Horse join him for some unusually sweet, CSNY-like harmonies, but in an audacious coup de théâtre, they are gradually overwhelmed by another, electric version of the song. A looming jam on the song is faded in, midway through what proves to be one of many protean solos.

If “Driftin’ Back†is anything to go by, Waging Heavy Peace will be inventive, idiosyncratic, digressive and preposterously long. “Driftin’ Back†ebbs and flows for 27 minutes, anchored – if that’s the right word – by Ralph Molina’s highly personal interpretation of keeping time, while Young sorts through a wide selection of his most languid and mellifluous attack strategies. The best antecedent might be “Slip Away†on 1996’s undervalued Broken Arrow, an album that shares a good few similarities, at least sonically, with Psychedelic Pill. Verses here are strewn randomly across the rugged terrain, impressionistic snippets from various rants and reveries about the acts of creation and meditation, about “blocking out my anger†and, evidently, succumbing to it. “Don’t want my MP3,†he protests at one stage (somewhat ironically, given how Psychedelic Pill can only be reviewed as a digital stream), before complaining about the use of Picasso in wallpaper design. Much, much later, he will announce, bafflingly, “Gonna get me a hip-hop haircut,†and eventually conclude, more plausibly, “Finding my religion/I might be a pagan…â€

As a method of repelling the sceptics, it’s hard to think of a more effective album opener than “Driftin’ Back†in anyone’s catalogue. For those faithful Rusties who relished the “Horse Back†jam – a horizontal, 37-minute extrapolation of “Fuckin’ Up†and “Cortez The Killerâ€, posted on neilyoung.com this January to herald the return of Crazy Horse – the good news is that Psychedelic Pill features three more new classics in that unhurried, expansive style. Two of them, “Ramada Inn†and “Walk Like A Giantâ€, will already be familiar to fans who’ve listened assiduously to bootlegs of the recent Crazy Horse American tour.

“Ramada Inn†(16:50) is the more tender of the pair, with an uncharacteristically nuanced and coherent narrative about a long-term relationship being tested by alcoholism. The presence in recent setlists of “Love And Only Loveâ€, from 1990’s Ragged Glory, gives a clue as to the elegaic tone that Young conjures up with both his voice and his guitar, and the gentleness that he solicits from his traditionally rough and ready bandmates. Meanwhile, “Walk Like A Giant†(16:29; live, the Arc-style clanging finale stretches for ten more minutes) finds Young’s questing solos brought back down to earth by a jauntily whistled refrain.

The subject matter will be familiar from many of the vigorous and strange albums Young has made since Greendale in 2003 – namely, the failure of his generation to deliver on their strident promises to save the world. “I used to walk like a giant on the land,†he sings, “Now I feel like a leaf floating on the stream.†But if the lyrics allude to defeat, he manifestly still believes in the transformative possibilities of an electric guitar solo. As “Walk Like A Giant†sputters to its conclusion, he has rarely sounded so furious, and so potent.

In contrast, the fourth lengthy track, “She’s Always Dancingâ€, is a comparative trinket, clocking in at 8:33. Evidently delighted by “Driftin’ Backâ€â€™s opening gambit, Young repeats the trick, letting an a capella intro be consumed by another torrid and ecstatic jam, this one in the vein of “Like A Hurricaneâ€. The protagonist, a hazily-drawn free spirit much given to “burningâ€, is very like the woman in the “shiny dress†who practises her “party moves†in the title track. “Psychedelic Pill†itself is pretty flimsy stuff, in which Young finds a decent riff and lets a fragment of a tune cling on to it for dear life: he even introduced it, during an August show at Red Rocks, Colorado, by admitting, “It’s a new song but it sounds exactly like an old song. I don’t even know what it is.†“Cinnamon Girl†might be the reflex answer, but an even closer analogue is “Sign Of Love†from Le Noise (2010). The thinnest song on the album, Young stubbornly plays it twice, once in a “Phased Mix†that subjects the entire track to strafing effects, presumably in a stab at psychedelic resonance, or else as a crude, homebrewed response to Daniel Lanois’ sonic gerrymandering on Le Noise.

“Twisted Road†is a good-natured amble through nostalgic reference points (“Like A Rolling Stoneâ€, Hank Williams, Roy Orbison, “listening to the Dead on the radioâ€), written for what became the Le Noise sessions: Crazy Horse reportedly rehearsed it before they were dismissed in favour of Lanois’ gadgetry. “For The Love Of Manâ€, a heartfelt bit of schmaltz, is Psychedelic Pill’s “Hitchhiker†or “Ordinary People†– an unreleased curio plucked from the archives and revamped, for obscure reasons. Bootleg live versions of “For The Love Of Manâ€, often called “I Wonder Whyâ€, date it from 1981, and it shares an inspiration – Young’s son Ben, who has cerebral palsy – with that year’s Re-Ac-Tor, if not a style.

Psychedelic Pill runs for nearly 88 minutes, across two CDs, three vinyl records, or one of Young’s beloved Blu-Ray discs. It’s the work of a man still preoccupied with concepts of liberty, who still feels the need – both spiritually and, it seems, financially – to work, but who has engineered himself into a position where he can carry out his business with extraordinary freedom. Jonathan Demme, the director who has now collaborated on three films with Young, told Jaan Uhelszki, “Before Neil had the aneurysm [in 2005] he told me he used to feel like a giant, and now he feels like a leaf in the stream… It was a watershed moment. It’s allowed him to take bigger risks.â€

To some, Psychedelic Pill will seem like a monumental work of self-indulgence. To others, though, its heft and eccentricity make it one of the purest expressions of Young’s genius to date. At its centre is one last song, a cranky, boisterous little country number called “Born In Ontarioâ€, which compresses the themes of this enthralling record into a digestible nugget distantly related to “Everybody Knows This Is Nowhereâ€. “Born In Ontario†breezily encompasses roots, family, rough-hewn philosophy, the pursuit of freedom, life on the road, and the consolations of writing: “Once in a while, when things go wrong/ I pick up a pen, scribble on a page/Try to make sense of my inner rage.â€

Like many things that Neil Young sings, it comes across as rather facile on paper. In the context of this mammoth album, though, juxtaposed against so much eloquent and emotional guitarplay, it encapsulates the joy, depth and paradox of Psychedelic Pill: an album, inspired by the writing of a book, that is at its most profound when the words are swamped by a great, irresistible weight of music.

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

Bjork to release Biophilia remix album

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Bjork is set to release bastards, an album featuring remixed versions of songs from her most recent LP, Biophilia. bastards will come out on November 19 on her label One Little Indian and includes reworkings of Biophilia tracks by Death Grips, Hudson Mohawke, These New Puritans, Omar Souleyman and ...

Bjork is set to release bastards, an album featuring remixed versions of songs from her most recent LP, Biophilia.

bastards will come out on November 19 on her label One Little Indian and includes reworkings of Biophilia tracks by Death Grips, Hudson Mohawke, These New Puritans, Omar Souleyman and more. The remixes were previously released as part of an eight-part series.

Of the remix album, Bjork says: “I felt it important to gather together the essence of the remixes, so I picked a quarter of them for one CD for people who are perhaps not too sassy downloaders or don’t have the time or energy to partake in the hunter-gathering rituals of the internet.”

She continued: “I was incredibly impressed by how the core of the mixes took Biophilia somewhere else while still keeping its character, and like they so often do when at their best: the remixes gave the songs more beats; legs to dance on! I spent some time editing together not necessarily the best ones but the ones that made the strongest whole.”

The bastards tracklisting is:

‘Crystalline’ (Omar Souleyman Remix)

‘Virus’ (Hudson Mohawke “Peaches and Guacamol†Rework)

‘Sacrifice’ (Death Grips Remix)

‘Sacrifice’ ((Matthew Herbert’s Pins And Needles Mix) edit)

‘Mutual Core’ (These New Puritans Remix featuring Soloman Is. Song)

‘Hollow’ (16-bit Remix)

‘Mutual Core’ (Matthew Herbert’s “Teutonic Plates†Mix)

‘Thunderbolt’ (Death Grips Remix)

‘Dark Matter’ (Alva Noto Remodel)

‘Thunderbolt’ (Omar Souleyman Remix)

‘Solstice’ (Current Value Remix)

‘Moon’ (The Slips Remix)

‘Crystalline’ (Matthew Herbert Remix)