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10cc to release 40th Anniversary box set

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10cc are to release a five-disc box set, Tenology, on November 19 to celebrate their 40th anniversary. Tenology has been compiled with the involvement of the original members – Lol Creme, Kevin Godley, Graham Gouldman and Eric Stewart –and features four CDs (the singles, selected album tracks, ...

10cc are to release a five-disc box set, Tenology, on November 19 to celebrate their 40th anniversary.

Tenology has been compiled with the involvement of the original members – Lol Creme, Kevin Godley, Graham Gouldman and Eric Stewart –and features four CDs (the singles, selected album tracks, the B-sides and rarities) and a DVD (featuring a selection of their promo videos and TV performances on Top Of The Pops, BBC In Concert, See You Sunday and Six Fifty Five Special).

The full track listing is:

Disc One

Donna (1972)

Johnny Don’t Do It (1972)

Rubber Bullets (1973)

The Dean and I (1973)

Sand in My Face (1973)

Somewhere In Hollywood (1973)

The Worst Band in the World (1974)

Headline Hustler (1974)

The Wall Street Shuffle (1974)

Silly Love (1974)

Life Is a Minestrone (1975)

I’m Not in Love (1975)

Art for Art’s Sake (1975)

I’m Mandy, Fly Me (1976)

Lazy Ways (1976)

The Things We Do For Love (1976)

Good Morning Judge (1977)

People in Love (1977)

Disc Two

Dreadlock Holiday (1978)

Reds in My Bed (1978)

For You And I (1978)

One Two Five (1980)

From Rochdale to Ocho Rios (1978)

It Doesn’t Matter At All (1980)

Les Nouveaux Riches (1981)

Don’t Turn Me Away (1981)

The Power of Love (1981)

Run Away (1981)

24 Hours (1983)

Feel the Love (1983)

Woman in Love (1992)

Welcome To Paradise (1992)

Disc Three

The Hospital Song (1973)

Fresh Air for My Momma (1973)

Clockwork Creep (1974)

Oh Effendi (1974)

The Sacro-illiac (1974)

Hotel (1974)

Old Wild Men (1974)

Une Nuit A Paris (1975)

Blackmail (1975)

Flying Junk (1975)

The Second Sitting for the Last Supper (1975)

Iceberg (1976)

I Wanna Rule the World (1976)

Rock and Roll Lullaby (1976)

Don’t Hang Up (1976)

Feel the Benefit (1977)

I Bought A Flat Guitar Tutor (1977)

Take These Chains (1978)

Disc Four – B-sides

Bee in My Bonnet (1972)

Hot Sun Rock (1972)

4% Of Something (1972)

Waterfall (1973)

18 Carat Man Of Means (1974)

Gismo My Way (1974)

Channel Swimmer (1975)

Good News (1975)

Get It While You Can (1976)

Hot To Trot (1977)

Don’t Squeeze Me Like Toothpaste (1977)

I’m So Laid Back, I’m Laid out (1977)

Nothing Can Move Me (1978)

People in Love (The Voodoo Boogie) (1976)

The Recording of the Dean And I (1973)

Disc Five – DVD

Rubber Bullets – Top Of The Pops – 25/12/1973

Life Is a Minestrone – Top Of The Pops – 10/04/1975

I’m Not in Love – Top Of The Pops – 25/12/1975

Dreadlock Holiday – Top Of The Pops – 17/08/1978

Silly Love – BBC In Concert – 21/08/1974

The Wall Street Shuffle – BBC In Concert – 21/08/1974

Baron Samendi – BBC In Concert – 21/08/1974

Old Wild Men – BBC In Concert – 21/08/1974

Oh Effendi – BBC In Concert – 21/08/1974

Fresh Air for My Momma – BBC In Concert – 21/08/1974

Rubber Bullets – BBC In Concert – 21/08/1974

Fresh Air for Momma – See You Sunday – 21/04/1974

The Wall Street Shuffle – See You Sunday – 21/04/1974

Dreadlock Holiday – Six Fifty Five Special – 27/07/1982

Run Away – Six Fifty Five Special – 27/07/1982

Promo Videos

Donna

I’m Not in Love

Art for Art’s Sake

I’m Mandy Fly Me

Good Morning Judge

People in Love

Dreadlock Holiday

One Two Five

Feel the Love

Woman in Love

Sonic Youth get stolen guitars back after 13 years

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Two guitars stolen at a Sonic Youth gig in 1999 have been returned, 13 years later. The band's rented truck full of their equipment was stolen in the middle of the night before a festival appearance in Orange County. The truck was later found in Los Angeles, empty. However, over the years, fans of the band have remained diligent to try and recover the lost gear, which had been heavily modified by the band after guitarist Lee Ranaldo issued a plea at the time. Several have already cropped up, but this month the sixth and seventh guitars both mysteriously appeared, according to Pitchfork. Ranaldo said: "It's kind of wild. After all this time, things are still surfacing thanks to the diligence of fans." A white Jazzmaster, used by Thurston Moore on songs including "Bull In The Heather" and "Dirty Boots" was picked up by a fan in Belgium on eBay. The other, Ranaldo's Jazzmaster used on A Thousand Leaves' "French Tickler" was discovered for sale in a pawn shop and discovered in a thread on guitar forum OffsettGuitars. Sonic Youth will release a new live album, recorded in August 1985 at Chicago’s Smart Bar. The album was recorded on a four-track tape recorder and will be released on November 14 via the band's label Goofin' Records. In October last year, Moore and his partner Kim Gordon announced they would be separating after 27 years of marriage. The announcement raised doubts over the future of Sonic Youth after Matador revealed that plans for the band remained "uncertain".

Two guitars stolen at a Sonic Youth gig in 1999 have been returned, 13 years later.

The band’s rented truck full of their equipment was stolen in the middle of the night before a festival appearance in Orange County. The truck was later found in Los Angeles, empty.

However, over the years, fans of the band have remained diligent to try and recover the lost gear, which had been heavily modified by the band after guitarist Lee Ranaldo issued a plea at the time. Several have already cropped up, but this month the sixth and seventh guitars both mysteriously appeared, according to Pitchfork.

Ranaldo said: “It’s kind of wild. After all this time, things are still surfacing thanks to the diligence of fans.”

A white Jazzmaster, used by Thurston Moore on songs including “Bull In The Heather” and “Dirty Boots” was picked up by a fan in Belgium on eBay. The other, Ranaldo’s Jazzmaster used on A Thousand Leaves’ “French Tickler” was discovered for sale in a pawn shop and discovered in a thread on guitar forum OffsettGuitars.

Sonic Youth will release a new live album, recorded in August 1985 at Chicago’s Smart Bar. The album was recorded on a four-track tape recorder and will be released on November 14 via the band’s label Goofin’ Records.

In October last year, Moore and his partner Kim Gordon announced they would be separating after 27 years of marriage. The announcement raised doubts over the future of Sonic Youth after Matador revealed that plans for the band remained “uncertain”.

The XX – Coexist

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Sensual second proves even better than the first... Few bands invent a sound. But The xx’s strange and beautiful blend of stark indie-pop, late-night soul and post-dubstep texture felt brand new in 2009. Non-believers pointed out the south Londoners’ sonic similarities to The Cure’s gothically ringing guitar and the chamber-punk sparseness of Young Marble Giants, but twin vocalists Romy Madley-Croft and Oliver Sim did not whine like Robert Smith nor deadpan like Alison Stratton. Their voices were proudly mid-Atlantic; pop-soul vocals cast adrift in Jamie Smith’s stripped dub production, evincing a natural clashing of styles, as all great new pop music should. But when a band takes three years to make a follow-up to a classic debut, alarm bells sound. While Smith established himself as DJ, producer and remixer – numbering Radiohead, Adele, the late Gil Scott-Heron and R&B star Drake among his clients – were his band struggling to meet the expectations of a fanbase who saw them as heroes? As it turns out… nope. The three simply bought their first flats, built their own studio, ignored the demand for more product and took their own sweet time. The result is exactly what fans of a great debut album always want but rarely get: the same again, but stronger, deeper, better. Coexist – a perfect word to encapsulate both the trio’s friendship and romantic unease – is a masterpiece. An eleven-song journey into private agonies, Coexist is, essentially, the story of a relationship broken by the protagonists’ tendency to love too much while being unable to express their need to each other. Whereas the first album’s lyrics were written by Madley-Croft and Sim swapping words by email, this time around they sat in a room together and played ping-pong with each other’s heartbreak testimonies. The result is songs that sound like mutual diary entries, scarred by repeated references to dead-end words like ‘lose’, ‘leave’ and ‘end’, summed up by the sensual croon of Madley-Croft’s key lines from “Chained”: “Did I hold you too tight?/Did I not let enough light in?”. Musically, the highlights are the stripped Phil Spectorisms of “Angels”; the tension between house beats and rock ‘n’ roll bass that underpins the repressed catharsis of “Chained”; the steel drum-flecked eroticism of “Reunion” and the subverted disco of “Sunset”, which throws a whole new crying-on-the-dancefloor spin on what US black radio DJ’s used to call ‘quiet storm’ seduction music. As for the mystery at The xx’s heart, its impossible to listen to the closing “Our Song” and not hear Romy and Oliver as former lovers, singing to the world the emotions they couldn’t say to each other. “I know all the words to take you apart”, they harmonise, quiet and deadly, as the guitar shimmers like a Cocteau Twin and the song dissolves into bristling tape hiss. But, as The xx are fond of insisting, their private lives are not the point. This is music that sounds like universal heartbreak, made all the more poignant by its refusal to descend into gender war. Sim – sounding ever more like Stuart Staples – and Madley-Croft – a kind of Sade-meets-Tracey Thorn – feel the same pain and express it in the same naked, direct and honest manner. So sultry and sensual it makes The xx sound like beginners’ luck, Coexist is going to be the midnight soundtrack to thousands of seductions over the next few decades. But all these lovers might be wise not to listen too closely to the words. Because this is an album that believes that every blissful moment of intimate pleasure is only a prelude to the end of everything. Best to leave that conversation to the morning. Garry Mullholland Q&A Jamie xx Coexist sounds supremely confident. Were there no ‘second album syndrome’ palpitations? No. The first record was made very naively. We didn’t even think about putting it out. So with this one we wanted to be in that same headspace. Now we wonder if we should have thought about it a little bit more. You’re always the first person to hear Romy and Oliver’s latest, painfully personal lyrics. Is it like reading your mates’ diaries? Ha! I guess that’s why a lot of people relate to it. But the lyrics are purposely ambiguous so people can relate to them. I mean… if I listen carefully, I do know about their lives intimately so I can guess what they’re about. But they don’t even tell each other what they’re singing about. You are all famously shy. How are you dealing with adulation? It’s been hard. But we’ve gained a lot of confidence from being forced to meet people and philosophise about our music endlessly. So although we were very reluctant to be in the limelight, it’s helped our confidence as people, in real life. Was their any temptation to change musical direction? No. We’re quite restrained people. And because we can’t separate music from our lives, that’s what we do and that’s what we are. I don’t think its possible for us to make something that’s different to how we are as people. INTERVIEW: GARRY MULHOLLAND

Sensual second proves even better than the first…

Few bands invent a sound. But The xx’s strange and beautiful blend of stark indie-pop, late-night soul and post-dubstep texture felt brand new in 2009. Non-believers pointed out the south Londoners’ sonic similarities to The Cure’s gothically ringing guitar and the chamber-punk sparseness of Young Marble Giants, but twin vocalists Romy Madley-Croft and Oliver Sim did not whine like Robert Smith nor deadpan like Alison Stratton. Their voices were proudly mid-Atlantic; pop-soul vocals cast adrift in Jamie Smith’s stripped dub production, evincing a natural clashing of styles, as all great new pop music should.

But when a band takes three years to make a follow-up to a classic debut, alarm bells sound. While Smith established himself as DJ, producer and remixer – numbering Radiohead, Adele, the late Gil Scott-Heron and R&B star Drake among his clients – were his band struggling to meet the expectations of a fanbase who saw them as heroes? As it turns out… nope. The three simply bought their first flats, built their own studio, ignored the demand for more product and took their own sweet time. The result is exactly what fans of a great debut album always want but rarely get: the same again, but stronger, deeper, better. Coexist – a perfect word to encapsulate both the trio’s friendship and romantic unease – is a masterpiece.

An eleven-song journey into private agonies, Coexist is, essentially, the story of a relationship broken by the protagonists’ tendency to love too much while being unable to express their need to each other. Whereas the first album’s lyrics were written by Madley-Croft and Sim swapping words by email, this time around they sat in a room together and played ping-pong with each other’s heartbreak testimonies. The result is songs that sound like mutual diary entries, scarred by repeated references to dead-end words like ‘lose’, ‘leave’ and ‘end’, summed up by the sensual croon of Madley-Croft’s key lines from “Chained”: “Did I hold you too tight?/Did I not let enough light in?”.

Musically, the highlights are the stripped Phil Spectorisms of “Angels”; the tension between house beats and rock ‘n’ roll bass that underpins the repressed catharsis of “Chained”; the steel drum-flecked eroticism of “Reunion” and the subverted disco of “Sunset”, which throws a whole new crying-on-the-dancefloor spin on what US black radio DJ’s used to call ‘quiet storm’ seduction music.

As for the mystery at The xx’s heart, its impossible to listen to the closing “Our Song” and not hear Romy and Oliver as former lovers, singing to the world the emotions they couldn’t say to each other. “I know all the words to take you apart”, they harmonise, quiet and deadly, as the guitar shimmers like a Cocteau Twin and the song dissolves into bristling tape hiss.

But, as The xx are fond of insisting, their private lives are not the point. This is music that sounds like universal heartbreak, made all the more poignant by its refusal to descend into gender war. Sim – sounding ever more like Stuart Staples – and Madley-Croft – a kind of Sade-meets-Tracey Thorn – feel the same pain and express it in the same naked, direct and honest manner.

So sultry and sensual it makes The xx sound like beginners’ luck, Coexist is going to be the midnight soundtrack to thousands of seductions over the next few decades. But all these lovers might be wise not to listen too closely to the words. Because this is an album that believes that every blissful moment of intimate pleasure is only a prelude to the end of everything. Best to leave that conversation to the morning.

Garry Mullholland

Q&A

Jamie xx

Coexist sounds supremely confident. Were there no ‘second album syndrome’ palpitations?

No. The first record was made very naively. We didn’t even think about putting it out. So with this one we wanted to be in that same headspace. Now we wonder if we should have thought about it a little bit more.

You’re always the first person to hear Romy and Oliver’s latest, painfully personal lyrics. Is it like reading your mates’ diaries?

Ha! I guess that’s why a lot of people relate to it. But the lyrics are purposely ambiguous so people can relate to them. I mean… if I listen carefully, I do know about their lives intimately so I can guess what they’re about. But they don’t even tell each other what they’re singing about.

You are all famously shy. How are you dealing with adulation?

It’s been hard. But we’ve gained a lot of confidence from being forced to meet people and philosophise about our music endlessly. So although we were very reluctant to be in the limelight, it’s helped our confidence as people, in real life.

Was their any temptation to change musical direction?

No. We’re quite restrained people. And because we can’t separate music from our lives, that’s what we do and that’s what we are. I don’t think its possible for us to make something that’s different to how we are as people.

INTERVIEW: GARRY MULHOLLAND

Pussy Riot: ‘We had nothing to do in prison but read the Bible’

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Jailed Russian punk collective Pussy Riot have spoken out about their time in prison and claimed they had been spending their time reading the Bible. Nadia Tolokonnikova, Maria Alekhina and Yekaterina Samutsevich received two-year prison sentences on August 17 after being found guilty of hooliganism motivated by religious hatred – and in an interview with GQ, Tolokonnikova revealed that the only text she had been able to read to stave off boredom was the Christian tome. "Prison is a good place to learn to really listen to your own mind and your own body," she said. "I've learned to read much more deeply, for instance. For four months, I had nothing to read but the Bible, so I read it for all four months – diligently, picking everything apart." She added: "Prison is like a monastery – it's a place for ascetic practices. After a month here, I became a vegetarian. Walking in circles for an hour in that tiny dusty yard gets you into a pretty meditative state as well. We don't get much in the way of news. But enough to get inspired." When asked about a report published in a Moscow newspaper which alleged that the three women had been enjoying 'VIP' treatment in prison, meanwhile, she responded: "Did Auschwitz have VIP death lounges? If yes, then I suppose you can call our conditions VIP treatment." She also spoke about the support the band had received from the Western world, adding: "I still can't shake the feeling that I've spent the last six months acting in a big-budget movie. The amount of Western support that we got is a miracle. I believe that if Russia had independent national media, our performance would be better understood at home as well. "Right now we're in hell here. It's hard living in a place where everyone can hate you because of something they heard on TV. That's why every gesture of support is so important and so much appreciated." The three jailed women's case is up for appeal on October 1. Meanwhile, other members of Pussy Riot recently delivered a video message to their supporters, which you can watch below. The video features members of the collective abseiling down a wall before setting fire to an image of President Vladimir Putin. "We've been fighting for the right to sing, to think, to criticise," they say. "To be musicians and artists ready to do everything to change our country. No matter the risks, we go on with our musical fight in Russia". "Start the pussy riot and never stop," they conclude. "The fight for freedom is an endless battle that is bigger than life."

Jailed Russian punk collective Pussy Riot have spoken out about their time in prison and claimed they had been spending their time reading the Bible.

Nadia Tolokonnikova, Maria Alekhina and Yekaterina Samutsevich received two-year prison sentences on August 17 after being found guilty of hooliganism motivated by religious hatred – and in an interview with GQ, Tolokonnikova revealed that the only text she had been able to read to stave off boredom was the Christian tome.

“Prison is a good place to learn to really listen to your own mind and your own body,” she said. “I’ve learned to read much more deeply, for instance. For four months, I had nothing to read but the Bible, so I read it for all four months – diligently, picking everything apart.”

She added: “Prison is like a monastery – it’s a place for ascetic practices. After a month here, I became a vegetarian. Walking in circles for an hour in that tiny dusty yard gets you into a pretty meditative state as well. We don’t get much in the way of news. But enough to get inspired.”

When asked about a report published in a Moscow newspaper which alleged that the three women had been enjoying ‘VIP’ treatment in prison, meanwhile, she responded: “Did Auschwitz have VIP death lounges? If yes, then I suppose you can call our conditions VIP treatment.”

She also spoke about the support the band had received from the Western world, adding: “I still can’t shake the feeling that I’ve spent the last six months acting in a big-budget movie. The amount of Western support that we got is a miracle. I believe that if Russia had independent national media, our performance would be better understood at home as well.

“Right now we’re in hell here. It’s hard living in a place where everyone can hate you because of something they heard on TV. That’s why every gesture of support is so important and so much appreciated.”

The three jailed women’s case is up for appeal on October 1. Meanwhile, other members of Pussy Riot recently delivered a video message to their supporters, which you can watch below. The video features members of the collective abseiling down a wall before setting fire to an image of President Vladimir Putin.

“We’ve been fighting for the right to sing, to think, to criticise,” they say. “To be musicians and artists ready to do everything to change our country. No matter the risks, we go on with our musical fight in Russia”.

“Start the pussy riot and never stop,” they conclude. “The fight for freedom is an endless battle that is bigger than life.”

Rolling Stones’ Ronnie Wood angrily denies memorabilia auction reports

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Ronnie Wood has angrily denied claims that he has teamed up with his ex-wife to auction off stacks of Rolling Stones memorabilia. It was reported earlier today that Wood and his former spouse Jo, who separated in 2011 following allegations that Wood had an extra-marital affair with a waitress – ...

Ronnie Wood has angrily denied claims that he has teamed up with his ex-wife to auction off stacks of Rolling Stones memorabilia.

It was reported earlier today that Wood and his former spouse Jo, who separated in 2011 following allegations that Wood had an extra-marital affair with a waitress – were selling off their shared possessions, which included a wealth of Rolling Stones-related items.

The collection spans four decades of the band’s history and includes everything from custom-painted Fender Stratocasters, tour clothing and backstage passes to portraits painted by Wood of fellow rock elder statesmen Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton and Keith Richards.

However, a representative for Wood has released a statement insisting that he has nothing to do with the auction. “Ronnie was asked by Jo some time ago if he wished to add some items to an auction and he said he did not want to participate,” they said. “He is therefore shocked and disappointed that this auction is being misrepresented as a joint sale. This is not the case.”

They added: “Furthermore he is staggered that some of the items being offered at the auction are clearly his personal belongings, which did not pass to Jo as part of the divorce proceedings.

“The Tour Clothes being offered belong to The Rolling Stones and are not hers to sell. Ronnie feels saddened that Jo has taken this course of action and wants the public to know he has NOT teamed up with Jo on this outrageous sale.”

The goods are set to go under the hammer at Julien’s Auctions in Beverly Hills on October 27. Speaking earlier about the collection, the auction house’s Darren Julien predicted that the sale would go “very well”. He also seemingly contradicted Woods’ statement about the auction by claiming that the former spouses were “still very good friends” and had “just decided it was time to simplify and sell some of their property”.

The Rolling Stones will a brand new Greatest Hits compilation in November titled GRRR! in November. The collection, which is being released to coincide with the band’s 50th anniversary, will feature two brand new songs, “Gloom And Doom” and “One Last Shot”, which were recorded in Paris last month. This is the first new material the band have recorded since their 2005 album A Bigger Bang.

Singer Andy Williams dies aged 84

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Andy Williams has died at the age of 84. USA Today reports that the singer passed away at his home in Brnason, Missouri on Tuesday evening (September 25) following a lengthy battle with bladder cancer. Williams revealed that he had been diagnosed with the illness in November last year and vowed t...

Andy Williams has died at the age of 84.

USA Today reports that the singer passed away at his home in Brnason, Missouri on Tuesday evening (September 25) following a lengthy battle with bladder cancer.

Williams revealed that he had been diagnosed with the illness in November last year and vowed to beat the disease and return to the stage, insisting that cancer was “no longer a death sentence”. But a representative for the singer has now confirmed that he has succumbed to the condition.

Williams scored his first hit single in 1953 and went on to put out 18 albums which were certified gold and three which were certified platinum. In total, he recorded 42 studio albums and became renowned as one of the most popular vocalists of the 60s.

In addition to his singing career, he also ran the Andy Williams Moon River Theater in his home town – named after the track with which he became closely associated – and in 1962 starred in his own TV programme, The Andy Williams show, which won three Emmy Awards.

His most recent hit single in the UK was a newly recorded version of “Can’t Take My Eyes Off You”, which he re-recorded as a duet with singer Denise Van Outen. It reached Number 23 in 2002. Williams is survived by his wife, Debbie, and his three children, Robert, Noelle and Christian.

First Look – Looper

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It’s a pretty auspicious day, according to my Twitter feed. No, it’s not just that Neil Young has joined Twitter – 21,300 followers and rising. No - sit down, folks - today Mark Hamill is the same age as Alec Guinness was when principal photography began on Star Wars. This, incidentally, has been re-Tweeted repeatedly through my timeline this morning by everyone from the good folks at Empire magazine to Graham Linehan. This endless capacity for Star Wars geekery aside, I was reminded recently that the best science fiction tends to be satirical, passing comment on the present from a vantage point located somewhere in the future. It seems to me that science fiction – in film, at least – has become more about fulfilling audience’s role-playing fantasies than displaying its satirical edge. The last science fiction I remember that really felt like it was digging claws in was Alfonso Cuaron's 2006 film, Children Of Men. This year, science fiction hasn't been particularly well served in film. As much as I enjoyed Prometheus, it took us further away from the reactionary, groundbreaking aesthetic of Ridley Scott's original. Dredd felt more like a straight-ahead action film, lacking the black-comedy satire of the best 2000AD strips. Oh, and Colin Farrell in a remake of Total Recall? No, thanks. Looper, which opens this week, is being talked about as a proper science fiction film – distinctive, intelligent, etc. Being as it is a sci-fi thriller involving Bruce Willis travelling back into his own past, an initial reference point could be Twelve Monkeys. But it’s just that bit too clean, a bit too arch; it lacks Terry Gilliam’s scratchy, bug-eyed madness. Looper is set mostly in Kansas, 2044. This is a place where objects familiar from our own time sit next to more fancy, technological creations: where old school pick-up trucks jostle for space on the highways with hover bikes, where drugs are administered optically but people still listen to Richard and Linda Thompson’s “I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight”. The most effective way of shooting a 
man is with a blunderbuss. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2iQuhsmtfHw Looper is the third film from director Rian Johnson, whose 2005 debut, Brick, identified him as a filmmaker who enjoys playing around with genres. Brick brilliantly transposed the hardboiled crime fiction of Dashiell Hammett into the contemporary world of a suburban Californian high school. His follow-up, 2009’s The Brothers Bloom, was a deadpan con-man movie, too dry for some. For Looper, Johnson is reunited with his Brick star Joseph Gordon-Levitt, who plays Joe, employed 
by mobsters in the future to assassinate marks who’re sent back in time to 2004, where Joe 
whacks them in a cornfield outside town. At some point, as every Looper knows, they will have to kill their future selves – thus tying up awkward loose ends in the tomorrow. So it is that Gordon-Levitt finds himself facing himself 
from 20 years hence: Bruce Willis, looking uncannily like a bulked-up Brian Eno. Nothing good can clearly come of this. Turned into an unlikely action hero by Christopher Nolan in Inception and The Dark Knight Rises, Gordon-Levitt has the wiry and muscular frame of a flyweight boxer. There is
 some strong support from Paul Dano as a fellow Looper and Jeff Daniels as an avuncular mob
boss – even Emily Blunt is passably tolerable as a 
single mother. Johnson’s clever, chatty script often plays out in ways you don’t expect it to. Indeed, there are many pleasures here. Perhaps the most satisfying of all is watching Bruce Willis doing good gear in his second film this year, after all-but stealing Wes Anderson's Moonrise Kingdom. Although I'm fond of Willis as a lead actor in particular movies - off the top of my head, Last Man Standing, Armageddon, The Sixth Sense, 16 Blocks - I think he is far more interesting as a supporting actor (as is his willingness to be unlikable) in films like Death Becomes Her, Billy Bathgate and Pulp Fiction. In Looper, I guess what's important is how he plays against type: yes, he is Bruce Willis waving a big gun around in a science fiction film. But, look, beneath that is a man so beaten up by grief and self-hatred that he will kill a child. This is not the kind of thing John McClane would do. Looper opens in the UK on Friday.

It’s a pretty auspicious day, according to my Twitter feed. No, it’s not just that Neil Young has joined Twitter – 21,300 followers and rising.

No – sit down, folks – today Mark Hamill is the same age as Alec Guinness was when principal photography began on Star Wars. This, incidentally, has been re-Tweeted repeatedly through my timeline this morning by everyone from the good folks at Empire magazine to Graham Linehan.

This endless capacity for Star Wars geekery aside, I was reminded recently that the best science fiction tends to be satirical, passing comment on the present from a vantage point located somewhere in the future. It seems to me that science fiction – in film, at least – has become more about fulfilling audience’s role-playing fantasies than displaying its satirical edge. The last science fiction I remember that really felt like it was digging claws in was Alfonso Cuaron’s 2006 film, Children Of Men. This year, science fiction hasn’t been particularly well served in film. As much as I enjoyed Prometheus, it took us further away from the reactionary, groundbreaking aesthetic of Ridley Scott’s original. Dredd felt more like a straight-ahead action film, lacking the black-comedy satire of the best 2000AD strips. Oh, and Colin Farrell in a remake of Total Recall? No, thanks.

Looper, which opens this week, is being talked about as a proper science fiction film – distinctive, intelligent, etc. Being as it is a sci-fi thriller involving Bruce Willis travelling back into his own past, an initial reference point could be Twelve Monkeys. But it’s just that bit too clean, a bit too arch; it lacks Terry Gilliam’s scratchy, bug-eyed madness. Looper is set mostly in Kansas, 2044. This is a place where objects familiar from our own time sit next to more fancy, technological creations: where old school pick-up trucks jostle for space on the highways with hover bikes, where drugs are administered optically but people still listen to Richard and Linda Thompson’s “I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight”. The most effective way of shooting a 
man is with a blunderbuss.

Looper is the third film from director Rian Johnson, whose 2005 debut, Brick, identified him as a filmmaker who enjoys playing around with genres. Brick brilliantly transposed the hardboiled crime fiction of Dashiell Hammett into the contemporary world of a suburban Californian high school. His follow-up, 2009’s The Brothers Bloom, was a deadpan con-man movie, too dry for some. For Looper, Johnson is reunited with his Brick star Joseph Gordon-Levitt, who plays Joe, employed 
by mobsters in the future to assassinate marks who’re sent back in time to 2004, where Joe 
whacks them in a cornfield outside town.

At some point, as every Looper knows, they will have to kill their future selves – thus tying up awkward loose ends in the tomorrow. So it is that Gordon-Levitt finds himself facing himself 
from 20 years hence: Bruce Willis, looking uncannily like a bulked-up Brian Eno. Nothing good can clearly come of this.

Turned into an unlikely action hero by Christopher Nolan in Inception and The Dark Knight Rises, Gordon-Levitt has the wiry and muscular frame of a flyweight boxer. There is
 some strong support from Paul Dano as a fellow Looper and Jeff Daniels as an avuncular mob
boss – even Emily Blunt is passably tolerable as a 
single mother. Johnson’s clever, chatty script often plays out in ways you don’t expect it to. Indeed, there are many pleasures here. Perhaps the most satisfying of all is watching Bruce Willis doing good gear in his second film this year, after all-but stealing Wes Anderson’s Moonrise Kingdom. Although I’m fond of Willis as a lead actor in particular movies – off the top of my head, Last Man Standing, Armageddon, The Sixth Sense, 16 Blocks – I think he is far more interesting as a supporting actor (as is his willingness to be unlikable) in films like Death Becomes Her, Billy Bathgate and Pulp Fiction. In Looper, I guess what’s important is how he plays against type: yes, he is Bruce Willis waving a big gun around in a science fiction film. But, look, beneath that is a man so beaten up by grief and self-hatred that he will kill a child. This is not the kind of thing John McClane would do.

Looper opens in the UK on Friday.

The 39th Uncut Playlist Of 2012

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This week I seem to have read more people expending energy on how much they despise Mumford & Sons rather than focusing on music they actually like. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bemz-7fofcs Positive vibes here, mostly, as usual. Continuing love for Neil, The Cairo Gang, Heckatin, Ryan Francesconi, Pelt, Holly Herndon, Donald Fagen and Matthew E White (Bon Iver fans, among others, should possibly check the latter out). Number Six is a new project featuring Alan Sparhawk. Number 11 is essentially a ‘70s Miles Davis jam re-enacted by Sunn O))) affiliates. Number 13 is out next January. Number 14 is out now. And Number Nine, as you may have heard, features a variety of farting. This, on that subject, is a good read. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 The Cairo Gang – The Corner Man (Empty Cellar) 2 Ryan Francesconi And Mirabai Peart - Road To Palios (listen here) 3 Tim Hecker & Daniel Lopatin – Instrumental Tourist (Software) 4 Holly Herndon – Movement (RVNG INTL) 5 Pelt – Effigy (MIE) 6 Neil Young & Crazy Horse – Psychedelic Pill (Reprise) 7 The Murder Of Crows – Your Battle (Youtube) 8 Aerosmith – Music From Another Dimension (Columbia) 9 Scott Walker – Bish Bosch (4AD) 10 Matthew E White – Big Inner (Hometapes) 11 Fontanelle – Vitamin F (Southern Lord) 12 Emeralds – Just To Feel Anything (Editions Mego) 13 Arbouretum – Coming Out Of The Fog (Thrill Jockey) 14 Sun Araw – The Inner Treaty (Drag City) 15 Donald Fagen – Sunken Condos (Warner Bros) 16 Savages – City’s Full (Pop Noire) 17 Various Artists – Diablos Del Ritmo: The Colombian Melting Pot 1960-1985 (Analog Africa) 18 Alexander Turnquist – Like Sunburned Snowflakes (VHF)

This week I seem to have read more people expending energy on how much they despise Mumford & Sons rather than focusing on music they actually like.

Positive vibes here, mostly, as usual. Continuing love for Neil, The Cairo Gang, Heckatin, Ryan Francesconi, Pelt, Holly Herndon, Donald Fagen and Matthew E White (Bon Iver fans, among others, should possibly check the latter out). Number Six is a new project featuring Alan Sparhawk. Number 11 is essentially a ‘70s Miles Davis jam re-enacted by Sunn O))) affiliates. Number 13 is out next January. Number 14 is out now. And Number Nine, as you may have heard, features a variety of farting. This, on that subject, is a good read.

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

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

2 Ryan Francesconi And Mirabai Peart – Road To Palios (listen here)

3 Tim Hecker & Daniel Lopatin – Instrumental Tourist (Software)

4 Holly Herndon – Movement (RVNG INTL)

5 Pelt – Effigy (MIE)

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

7 The Murder Of Crows – Your Battle (Youtube)

8 Aerosmith – Music From Another Dimension (Columbia)

9 Scott Walker – Bish Bosch (4AD)

10 Matthew E White – Big Inner (Hometapes)

11 Fontanelle – Vitamin F (Southern Lord)

12 Emeralds – Just To Feel Anything (Editions Mego)

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

14 Sun Araw – The Inner Treaty (Drag City)

15 Donald Fagen – Sunken Condos (Warner Bros)

16 Savages – City’s Full (Pop Noire)

17 Various Artists – Diablos Del Ritmo: The Colombian Melting Pot 1960-1985 (Analog Africa)

18 Alexander Turnquist – Like Sunburned Snowflakes (VHF)

Feist wins Canada’s Polaris Music Prize

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Feist has won the 2012 Polaris Music Prize, Canada's answer to the Mercury, for her fourth album Metals. The singer, who was also nominated for the record's 2007 predecessor The Reminder, collected the $30,000 (£19,000) cheque at last night's (September 24) prize gala in Toronto. Feist accepted t...

Feist has won the 2012 Polaris Music Prize, Canada’s answer to the Mercury, for her fourth album Metals.

The singer, who was also nominated for the record’s 2007 predecessor The Reminder, collected the $30,000 (£19,000) cheque at last night’s (September 24) prize gala in Toronto.

Feist accepted the award from Jeremy Gara and Tim Kingsbury of Arcade Fire, who won the gong in 2011, after lying on the floor in shock and shying away from a conventional speech.

She said: “I’ve been living in a tiny bubble on tour, where I don’t really know or see anything but the city in front of me. I’ve been really grateful tonight, and learned so much about the amazing stuff that was going on. Every single band that was up here, not to mention every band on the shortlist – not to mention so many bands that didn’t make the shortlist – belonged to be here tonight, and belong to be standing here… with a novelty cheque.”

In a post-gala press conference, Feist went on to compliment the “inspiring” performances of Cold Specks, Grimes, Cadence Weapon and Fucked Up, ultimately admitting that winning the top prize was “like getting a valentine from the right boy – the secret admirer”.

The ceremony took place at Toronto’s Masonic Temple and was dedicated to recently deceased Canadian record store-owner Sam ‘The Record Man’ Sniderman. Performances throughout the gala came from nominees Fucked Up, Cadence Weapon, Cold Specks, Kathleen Edwards, Grimes, YAMANTAKA // SONIC TITAN and Feist, although Drake had to withdraw due to illness. Grimes performed ‘Visions’ tracks ‘Symphonia IX (My Wait Is U)’ and ‘Genesis’ accompanied by a male pole-dancer called Gary, who wore black glitter hot-pants only.

Nine other shortlist nominees all received $2,000. The full list of nominees was:

Cadence Weapon – ‘Hope In Dirt City’

Cold Specks – ‘I Predict A Graceful Expulsion’

Drake – ‘Take Care’

Kathleen Edwards – ‘Voyageur’

Feist – ‘Metals’

Fucked Up – ‘David Comes To Life’

Grimes – ‘Visions’

Handsome Furs – ‘Sound Kapital’

Japandroids – ‘Celebration Rock’

YAMANTAKA // SONIC TITAN – ‘YT//ST’

Hop Farm festival organisers call in administrators

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The company behind Hop Farm and Benicassim festivals is preparing to go into administration. Shares in Vince Power's ailing Music Festivals company were worth 66.5p last June, valuing the company at £10m, but they were suspended at just 2.12p on Friday (September 21), making the company worth just £310,000, The Guardian reports. The company's prospects looked shaky at the beginning of the summer, when it told investors that ticket sales for Spanish bash Benicassim and Kent's Hop Farm looked disappointing. Both events proved to be loss-making despite big-name headliners such as Bob Dylan. In August, the company told investors that it expected to make losses for the year and admitted that it was looking for a financial lifeline. Last week, after the search had proved fruitless, it moved for its shares to be suspended. "The board has in recent weeks pursued a number of different funding proposals but the company has not been able to procure the necessary funding it requires," it said in a statement. Power owns 23 per cent of the company and, along with relatives, the family stake adds up to more than 40 per cent. Power had also propped up the company with a £750,000 unsecured loan in July. Industry experts have cited the wet summer and an increasingly crowded festival market – there are now thought to be over 700 festivals taking place each year – as well as the Olympics for the company's woes. Power opened his first venue, Mean Fiddler, in north-west London in 1982. He opened many more venues and events, including London's Forum and Reading festival, turning Mean Fiddler into the largest promoter in Europe. In 2002, he took operational control of Glastonbury for a three-year stint. He sold Mean Fiddler in 2005 for £38 million. Meanwhile, Surrey music festival Guilfest will shut down after 21 years. Organisers cite the worst weather conditions in its history this summer, and increased competition from other events as the main reasons for pulling the plug on the bash in Guilford, according to BBC News. "I'd love to see Guilfest keep going, but I think it's got to be somebody who takes the helm or somebody who would need deeper pockets," organiser Tony Scott said. His company Scotty Events Ltd has been left with debts of around £300,000. This year's bash – which was headlined by Jools Holland, Ash, Olly Murs and Bryan Ferry – faced heavy rain over three days in July. "It rained on the Saturday and Sunday in 2011, but this year I've never known anything like it," Scott said. "It was a quagmire by Saturday and [by] Sunday it had turned into sticky bog." He added: "There was a lot of competition this year. The Olympics were on, a lot of people were going to that...There was Tom Jones playing up the road at Sandown Park, Bruce Springsteen was playing in London, and there was an awful lot going on around our weekend as well as the bad weather."

The company behind Hop Farm and Benicassim festivals is preparing to go into administration.

Shares in Vince Power’s ailing Music Festivals company were worth 66.5p last June, valuing the company at £10m, but they were suspended at just 2.12p on Friday (September 21), making the company worth just £310,000, The Guardian reports.

The company’s prospects looked shaky at the beginning of the summer, when it told investors that ticket sales for Spanish bash Benicassim and Kent’s Hop Farm looked disappointing. Both events proved to be loss-making despite big-name headliners such as Bob Dylan.

In August, the company told investors that it expected to make losses for the year and admitted that it was looking for a financial lifeline. Last week, after the search had proved fruitless, it moved for its shares to be suspended.

“The board has in recent weeks pursued a number of different funding proposals but the company has not been able to procure the necessary funding it requires,” it said in a statement.

Power owns 23 per cent of the company and, along with relatives, the family stake adds up to more than 40 per cent. Power had also propped up the company with a £750,000 unsecured loan in July. Industry experts have cited the wet summer and an increasingly crowded festival market – there are now thought to be over 700 festivals taking place each year – as well as the Olympics for the company’s woes.

Power opened his first venue, Mean Fiddler, in north-west London in 1982. He opened many more venues and events, including London’s Forum and Reading festival, turning Mean Fiddler into the largest promoter in Europe. In 2002, he took operational control of Glastonbury for a three-year stint. He sold Mean Fiddler in 2005 for £38 million.

Meanwhile, Surrey music festival Guilfest will shut down after 21 years.

Organisers cite the worst weather conditions in its history this summer, and increased competition from other events as the main reasons for pulling the plug on the bash in Guilford, according to BBC News.

“I’d love to see Guilfest keep going, but I think it’s got to be somebody who takes the helm or somebody who would need deeper pockets,” organiser Tony Scott said. His company Scotty Events Ltd has been left with debts of around £300,000.

This year’s bash – which was headlined by Jools Holland, Ash, Olly Murs and Bryan Ferry – faced heavy rain over three days in July. “It rained on the Saturday and Sunday in 2011, but this year I’ve never known anything like it,” Scott said. “It was a quagmire by Saturday and [by] Sunday it had turned into sticky bog.”

He added: “There was a lot of competition this year. The Olympics were on, a lot of people were going to that…There was Tom Jones playing up the road at Sandown Park, Bruce Springsteen was playing in London, and there was an awful lot going on around our weekend as well as the bad weather.”

Neil Young joins Twitter, unveils “Walk Like A Giant” video

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Neil Young has joined social networking site Twitter. The legendary rocker revealed his account yesterday [September 25], and explained that he would be doing a Q&A session on the site ahead of the release of his new album, Psychedelic Pill. He wrote: @neilyoung Look forward to talking to al...

Neil Young has joined social networking site Twitter.

The legendary rocker revealed his account yesterday [September 25], and explained that he would be doing a Q&A session on the site ahead of the release of his new album, Psychedelic Pill. He wrote:

@neilyoung

Look forward to talking to all of you music lovers. Will be doing a #TwitterLegends Q&A with fans about #PsychPill before the release!

He also revealed a link to the official video for his and Crazy Horse’s new song, “Walk Like A Giant“. Scroll down to watch the video.

Earlier this month, Neil Young revealed that he quit booze and drugs one year ago. He gave up drinking alcohol and smoking marijuana in order to write his memoir, Waging Heavy Peace, which comes out in the UK on October 11.

“I did it for 40 years. Now I want to see what it’s like to not do it,” said Young to the New York Times. “It’s just a different perspective.”

Neil Young And Crazy Horse release their second album of this year, Psychedelic Pill, on October 29. The album follows June’s covers LP Americana.

Watch trailer for Rolling Stones doc, Crossfire Hurricane

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Scroll down to watch the trailer for the Rolling Stones new documentary, Crossfire Hurricane. Crossfire Hurricane, will simultaneously premiere at a host of cinemas in the UK and Ireland on October 18. The film, directed by Brett Morgen, documents the band's career from their early road trips and gigs in the 1960s, via the release of 1972's seminal 'Exile On Main Street' right up to present day. Over 250 cinemas across the country will screen the movie live from the 2012 London Film Festival in London's Leicester Square. The multi-cinema screenings will also show Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts and Ronnie Wood's red carpet interviews as well as an interview with Morgen. Tickets for the screenings are on sale now at: crossfire-hurriance.com. The screenings begin at 6.15pm (BST) and will run for 150 minutes. The movie will feature stacks of unseen footage of the band, including commentaries from Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts, Ronnie Wood and former Stones Bill Wyman and Mick Taylor. Director Morgen said: "Crossfire Hurricane invites the audience to experience firsthand the Stones' nearly mythical journey from outsiders to rock and roll royalty. This is not an academic history lesson. Crossfire Hurricane allows the viewer to experience the Stones' journey from a unique vantage point. It's an aural and visual rollercoaster ride." Crossfire Hurricane will go on general release in November. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jRodNxDEiYc

Scroll down to watch the trailer for the Rolling Stones new documentary, Crossfire Hurricane.

Crossfire Hurricane, will simultaneously premiere at a host of cinemas in the UK and Ireland on October 18.

The film, directed by Brett Morgen, documents the band’s career from their early road trips and gigs in the 1960s, via the release of 1972’s seminal ‘Exile On Main Street’ right up to present day.

Over 250 cinemas across the country will screen the movie live from the 2012 London Film Festival in London’s Leicester Square. The multi-cinema screenings will also show Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts and Ronnie Wood’s red carpet interviews as well as an interview with Morgen.

Tickets for the screenings are on sale now at: crossfire-hurriance.com. The screenings begin at 6.15pm (BST) and will run for 150 minutes.

The movie will feature stacks of unseen footage of the band, including commentaries from Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts, Ronnie Wood and former Stones Bill Wyman and Mick Taylor.

Director Morgen said: “Crossfire Hurricane invites the audience to experience firsthand the Stones’ nearly mythical journey from outsiders to rock and roll royalty. This is not an academic history lesson. Crossfire Hurricane allows the viewer to experience the Stones’ journey from a unique vantage point. It’s an aural and visual rollercoaster ride.”

Crossfire Hurricane will go on general release in November.

More On the Byrds in Uncut

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The new Uncut’s only been on sale since the end of last week, but there’s already been a fair amount of correspondence about our cover story on The Byrds. Most of it’s been about our Top 20 countdown of The Byrds’s greatest tracks. You were broadly in agreement with what was included, but many of you wondered aloud at certain omissions – “Chestnut Mare” was particularly missed by many, including me it must be said. To make it clear, the tracks on the Top 20 were voted for by the artists we approached who we knew were big Byrds fans, and much to my surprise none of them went for that particular late classic from (Untitled). The Clarence White-era Byrds were in fact, in your general opinion, quite woefully unrepresented. And in answer to several reader emails, yes, I do know how good that line-up of The Byrds was. I saw them at Bristol’s Colston Hall in 1971, when the highlight of a brilliant set was the extended version of “Eight Miles High”. They truly blew my mind that night. Anyway, there’ll be more from Uncut readers about The Byrds and what was and what wasn’t included in our Top 20 in the next issue. In the meantime, among the artists we spoke to about their favourite Byrds songs was Brett Rademaker of Beachwood Sparks, a band who owe a conspicuous debt to The Byrds. It turned out that Brett’s favourite album is The Notorious Byrd Brothers. So as well as waxing lyrical about “Lady Friend”, the 1967 single penned and mostly performed by David Crosby, he was so keen to tell us about how he discovered the album and the impact it had on him that he wrote the following piece for us, which I thought I’d share with you. Have a good week. Allan The Notorious Byrd Brothers Most records that "change your life" don't literally change your life, for me this one really did. Here's how. I first bought The Notorious Byrd Brothers on cassette in 1985 in Tampa, Florida at a thrift shop. I had been a fan of everything I had ever heard by The Byrds on the radio and one of my favorite groups named checked Roger McGuinn in a song (“Consolation Prize” by Orange Juice), but I never owned any of their albums despite them being referenced in many articles and record reviews I had read on my favorite groups. REM was constantly being compared to them and I held both Murmer and Reckoning real dear. Why did it take me almost three more years before I listened to this tape and what finally made me do it? Lysergic Acid Diethylamide – LSD - "that crazy acid" that was the spark, pun intended. I dropped my first (and only) full hit of acid on a hot summer night in 1989 after playing a show with my group at the time, Shadowland. Shadowland was a band my brother Darren and I started in 1987 in Los Angeles that within a three year period took on the jaded LA club scene, signed to Geffen records, recorded an EP and LP at Rockfield studios in Wales, toured with The Meat Puppets/Del Amitri and morphed into our beloved Further band after being fucked with and dropped by Geffen right as they were about to release Sonic Youth’s Goo and Teenage Fanclub’s Bandwagonesque, which left us to do it ourselves. The funny thing is that Geffen and our A&R man Tom Zutaut had heard us play our Dylan ala Byrds covers at our shows and pushed us to record them. Of course they came out flat and slick. It was at the end of this period that I discovered Notorious. My best friend Pete Kinne, "Sleigher" as he came to be known later as the tambourine player of Beachwood Sparks, and I were a bit drunk after the show and when we returned home to our house in Silverlake we wanted to stay up for a while. The only issue was the living room was being used as our drummer Kevin Fitzgerald’s bedroom. When the Geffen money was running low we all lived like The Monkees in one house. Some folks at the label and our booking agent used to call us The Monkees as we always rode around in my big green four door 1971 Dodge Coronet named "Hollywood Undercover". We ended up at the kitchen table with a gallon of OJ, two hits of acid and a boom box. I ducked into my bedroom (a converted breakfast nook covered with a big pirate flag that was once used as a heavy metal band’s back drop) and grabbed a few cassettes. The Notorious Byrd Brothers tape was a bit old and although I couldn't remember ever playing it, someone sure had played the heck out of it. I'd imagined a Vietnam vet buying it through the Columbia Tape Club and blasting it in his 4-wheel drive truck in the swamps of Florida. We were just two guys tripping away, staring at a screen in the window not knowing what we were in for. WOW! as I pressed play and the horns of “Artificial Energy” came blasting out, I swear I saw silver and gold bells of trumpets coming out of the tiny speakers. I had played the trumpet all my life but never associated horns with The Byrds. I liked the use of horns from Chicago to The Teardrop Explodes to The Waterboys, but horns and The Byrds? Even cooler. I remember being stopped in our tracks at the line about being "in jail for killing a queen" - what the fuck? Scary. Lucky for us the next song, “Goin' Back”, mellowed us into a perfect moment of friendship and sense of self. Musically you hear so many things, where “Artificial Energy” was a link to our love of Julian Cope and Teardrop Explodes, “Goin' Back” was very much like the Bunnymen circa Ocean Rain. All grace and perfection, with a stop and start bass line - it's not always about referencing The Beatles, but Liverpool nonetheless I guess. Although I later found out it wasn't written by The Byrds, but in part by Carol King, a woman I came to know from my job on Melrose at Fred Segal lunch counter where she was a frequent after hours visitor of mine. She loved my cafe au lait. Little did either of us know that later on two of her songs would make up the basis for Beachwood Sparks - the "rivers of our vision" would eventually flow into one another I guess. It's kind of the way my brother and I loved punk, but liked the more melodic side more than the political motives. "A little bit of courage is all we lack". Moving on through side one and “Natural Harmony” and that phased-out sound and jazzy freak-out sliding into “Draft Morning”, the bass baby, that's the place. The bass is my love and listening to Chris Hillman’s playing on this album is the thing. It's still something I haven't attempted. I stay in the ballpark of “Wasn't Born to Follow” in his honor. That night, Pete and I perked up and remembered hearing it in the Easy Rider film, talk about a double whammy! It crept into our psyche and all I could think of was the scene in the catacombs of New Orleans. This one song served as the template for many Beachwood Sparks tunes, although we never stole any melodies or lyrics from The Byrds. “Get To You”, the closing song on side one, is not one I remember from that night, but it has served as a theme song on every trip to London for many years after. Time to flip the tape and take a bathroom break. "Stay away from the mirror," is what I remember Pete telling me and from there we spent an hour cracking each other up by making the most insane faces we could manage. There's even a picture we snapped that night where Pete looks like something from Middle Earth as I recall. Maybe you can see the cassette sitting on the table, I will have to try to find it and take a look. Side two – “Changes Now” and more pulsing bass and a country and western feel. This is acid rock as it very finest, backwards guitar lyrics about what's real? “Old John Robertson” was actually my first favorite song from this LP. It had everything to do with that night and that string quartet breakdown, although is only last for 20 seconds, I remember the two of us just delighting in the fact that it appeared out of nowhere. I think David Crosby has two tunes on side two – “Tribal Gathering”, which has that Take Five feel and that explosion of sound that Beachwood likes to go to from time to time. This one and “Dolphin Smile” don't sound as finished as other songs on the record. I especially love them as we were two guys who surfed everyday and grew up dreaming of being Oceanographers or Marine Biologists. “Space Odyssey” brought us in for a safe landing. "PRESS EJECT AND GIVE ME THE TAPE"! We ended up "coming to" on Zuma Beach the next morning with only a hand towel to sit on despite miles of hot sand. I remember saying it was like sitting on a postage stamp not a magic carpet. How did this experience impact on me? I really don't know but in 1996 as our band Further was melting and ‘97 was coming into its own, Chris Gunst, Farmer Dave, Ben Knight and Jimi Hey were at my house on Sparks Street listening to this album and retreating to the "cold room" and trying our hand at playing country jazz freak-outs of our own. And as Chris suggested as he passed Beachwood Ave we called it Beachwood Sparks. Suddenly all the things I ever wanted in a group were there and at the same time folks were actually coming to hear us in fairly big numbers by when we merged what was left of Further (Josh Schwartz, Tom Sanford , Pete Kinne) with our new Beachwood Sparks and it was really taking off. Our shows were effortless affairs with amazing results. Some nights if we had 30 minutes of set time, we would jam for 20 and then play one or two of our songs. We had real camaraderie as well, but ironically we lost our brilliant drummer Tom after two shows where he had dropped so much acid we couldn't follow or relate to what he was playing or saying. Looking back, I wished we had talked it out a bit more. If you get the CD Columbia re-issue of Notorious Byrd Brothers and listen past the last track to the "hidden" song, you'll hear The Byrds taking a stab at recording Crosby’s tune “Dolphin Smile”. It gives you a glimpse of what you don't see but does go on. It's sad. I always feel uncomfortable with Beachwood Sparks write-ups that mention Gram Parsons and Cosmic American Music. Sure we love Gram (although I don't even own a copy of Sweetheart Of The Rodeo) and the Burrito Bros, but if they don't mention The Notorious Byrd Brothers, I know they probably don't know what they are talking about or are just being lazy. It's true that the first and only goal that Beachwood Sparks had was to play a Gram Parsons festival in Joshua Tree. Funny enough, we were rejected. Once we got access to a real recording studio, we really strived to capture, not only our own sound and feelings, but the sound of Notorious as well. While mixing the Cowboy Robots Cry, I attempted to dial in the same drum sound as “Get To You”, got pretty darn close too. The phased out section of “You Take The Gold” from our second LP, Once We Were Trees, was the second stab at creating that “Wasn't Born To Follow” middle eight, we also tried it on “Something I Don’t Recognize” from the debut LP. Maybe we should have dosed the engineer’s coffee with LSD, because we fell a bit short both times. The point is, we try because we simply love it and when I said earlier that all the things I ever wanted in a group came to Beachwood Sparks -- it had what the groups I had with my brother (A New Personality, Further, Shadowland) had and more. A sense of purpose and inspiration that never wears out plus we found success within the music scene of our hometown and a great record label in Sub Pop, who have stuck behind us through thick and thin. This record has had so much to do with it. If someone really likes our group and hasn't heard this record, I always urge them to go and listen to it first so as not to be found out later. Can a record really change your life? Yes! The places I have gone, the moves I have made, the friendships and relationships that have shaped my life for the last 20 years can be directly traced back to that summer night in our kitchen in Silverlake listening to the Notorious Byrd Brothers. One day I will connect all the dots and prove it. Brent Rademaker

The new Uncut’s only been on sale since the end of last week, but there’s already been a fair amount of correspondence about our cover story on The Byrds. Most of it’s been about our Top 20 countdown of The Byrds’s greatest tracks. You were broadly in agreement with what was included, but many of you wondered aloud at certain omissions – “Chestnut Mare” was particularly missed by many, including me it must be said.

To make it clear, the tracks on the Top 20 were voted for by the artists we approached who we knew were big Byrds fans, and much to my surprise none of them went for that particular late classic from (Untitled). The Clarence White-era Byrds were in fact, in your general opinion, quite woefully unrepresented.

And in answer to several reader emails, yes, I do know how good that line-up of The Byrds was. I saw them at Bristol’s Colston Hall in 1971, when the highlight of a brilliant set was the extended version of “Eight Miles High”. They truly blew my mind that night.

Anyway, there’ll be more from Uncut readers about The Byrds and what was and what wasn’t included in our Top 20 in the next issue. In the meantime, among the artists we spoke to about their favourite Byrds songs was Brett Rademaker of Beachwood Sparks, a band who owe a conspicuous debt to The Byrds. It turned out that Brett’s favourite album is The Notorious Byrd Brothers. So as well as waxing lyrical about “Lady Friend”, the 1967 single penned and mostly performed by David Crosby, he was so keen to tell us about how he discovered the album and the impact it had on him that he wrote the following piece for us, which I thought I’d share with you.

Have a good week.

Allan

The Notorious Byrd Brothers

Most records that “change your life” don’t literally change your life, for me this one really did. Here’s how.

I first bought The Notorious Byrd Brothers on cassette in 1985 in Tampa, Florida at a thrift shop. I had been a fan of everything I had ever heard by The Byrds on the radio and one of my favorite groups named checked Roger McGuinn in a song (“Consolation Prize” by Orange Juice), but I never owned any of their albums despite them being referenced in many articles and record reviews I had read on my favorite groups. REM was constantly being compared to them and I held both Murmer and Reckoning real dear. Why did it take me almost three more years before I listened to this tape and what finally made me do it? Lysergic Acid Diethylamide – LSD – “that crazy acid” that was the spark, pun intended.

I dropped my first (and only) full hit of acid on a hot summer night in 1989 after playing a show with my group at the time, Shadowland. Shadowland was a band my brother Darren and I started in 1987 in Los Angeles that within a three year period took on the jaded LA club scene, signed to Geffen records, recorded an EP and LP at Rockfield studios in Wales, toured with The Meat Puppets/Del Amitri and morphed into our beloved Further band after being fucked with and dropped by Geffen right as they were about to release Sonic Youth’s Goo and Teenage Fanclub’s Bandwagonesque, which left us to do it ourselves.

The funny thing is that Geffen and our A&R man Tom Zutaut had heard us play our Dylan ala Byrds covers at our shows and pushed us to record them. Of course they came out flat and slick. It was at the end of this period that I discovered Notorious. My best friend Pete Kinne, “Sleigher” as he came to be known later as the tambourine player of Beachwood Sparks, and I were a bit drunk after the show and when we returned home to our house in Silverlake we wanted to stay up for a while. The only issue was the living room was being used as our drummer Kevin Fitzgerald’s bedroom. When the Geffen money was running low we all lived like The Monkees in one house. Some folks at the label and our booking agent used to call us The Monkees as we always rode around in my big green four door 1971 Dodge Coronet named “Hollywood Undercover”. We ended up at the kitchen table with a gallon of OJ, two hits of acid and a boom box.

I ducked into my bedroom (a converted breakfast nook covered with a big pirate flag that was once used as a heavy metal band’s back drop) and grabbed a few cassettes. The Notorious Byrd Brothers tape was a bit old and although I couldn’t remember ever playing it, someone sure had played the heck out of it. I’d imagined a Vietnam vet buying it through the Columbia Tape Club and blasting it in his 4-wheel drive truck in the swamps of Florida. We were just two guys tripping away, staring at a screen in the window not knowing what we were in for.

WOW! as I pressed play and the horns of “Artificial Energy” came blasting out, I swear I saw silver and gold bells of trumpets coming out of the tiny speakers. I had played the trumpet all my life but never associated horns with The Byrds. I liked the use of horns from Chicago to The Teardrop Explodes to The Waterboys, but horns and The Byrds? Even cooler. I remember being stopped in our tracks at the line about being “in jail for killing a queen” – what the fuck? Scary. Lucky for us the next song, “Goin’ Back”, mellowed us into a perfect moment of friendship and sense of self. Musically you hear so many things, where “Artificial Energy” was a link to our love of Julian Cope and Teardrop Explodes, “Goin’ Back” was very much like the Bunnymen circa Ocean Rain. All grace and perfection, with a stop and start bass line – it’s not always about referencing The Beatles, but Liverpool nonetheless I guess. Although I later found out it wasn’t written by The Byrds, but in part by Carol King, a woman I came to know from my job on Melrose at Fred Segal lunch counter where she was a frequent after hours visitor of mine. She loved my cafe au lait. Little did either of us know that later on two of her songs would make up the basis for Beachwood Sparks – the “rivers of our vision” would eventually flow into one another I guess. It’s kind of the way my brother and I loved punk, but liked the more melodic side more than the political motives. “A little bit of courage is all we lack”.

Moving on through side one and “Natural Harmony” and that phased-out sound and jazzy freak-out sliding into “Draft Morning”, the bass baby, that’s the place. The bass is my love and listening to Chris Hillman’s playing on this album is the thing. It’s still something I haven’t attempted. I stay in the ballpark of “Wasn’t Born to Follow” in his honor. That night, Pete and I perked up and remembered hearing it in the Easy Rider film, talk about a double whammy! It crept into our psyche and all I could think of was the scene in the catacombs of New Orleans. This one song served as the template for many Beachwood Sparks tunes, although we never stole any melodies or lyrics from The Byrds. “Get To You”, the closing song on side one, is not one I remember from that night, but it has served as a theme song on every trip to London for many years after.

Time to flip the tape and take a bathroom break. “Stay away from the mirror,” is what I remember Pete telling me and from there we spent an hour cracking each other up by making the most insane faces we could manage. There’s even a picture we snapped that night where Pete looks like something from Middle Earth as I recall. Maybe you can see the cassette sitting on the table, I will have to try to find it and take a look. Side two – “Changes Now” and more pulsing bass and a country and western feel. This is acid rock as it very finest, backwards guitar lyrics about what’s real?

“Old John Robertson” was actually my first favorite song from this LP. It had everything to do with that night and that string quartet breakdown, although is only last for 20 seconds, I remember the two of us just delighting in the fact that it appeared out of nowhere. I think David Crosby has two tunes on side two – “Tribal Gathering”, which has that Take Five feel and that explosion of sound that Beachwood likes to go to from time to time. This one and “Dolphin Smile” don’t sound as finished as other songs on the record. I especially love them as we were two guys who surfed everyday and grew up dreaming of being Oceanographers or Marine Biologists. “Space Odyssey” brought us in for a safe landing. “PRESS EJECT AND GIVE ME THE TAPE”! We ended up “coming to” on Zuma Beach the next morning with only a hand towel to sit on despite miles of hot sand. I remember saying it was like sitting on a postage stamp not a magic carpet.

How did this experience impact on me? I really don’t know but in 1996 as our band Further was melting and ‘97 was coming into its own, Chris Gunst, Farmer Dave, Ben Knight and Jimi Hey were at my house on Sparks Street listening to this album and retreating to the “cold room” and trying our hand at playing country jazz freak-outs of our own. And as Chris suggested as he passed Beachwood Ave we called it Beachwood Sparks. Suddenly all the things I ever wanted in a group were there and at the same time folks were actually coming to hear us in fairly big numbers by when we merged what was left of Further (Josh Schwartz, Tom Sanford , Pete Kinne) with our new Beachwood Sparks and it was really taking off. Our shows were effortless affairs with amazing results. Some nights if we had 30 minutes of set time, we would jam for 20 and then play one or two of our songs. We had real camaraderie as well, but ironically we lost our brilliant drummer Tom after two shows where he had dropped so much acid we couldn’t follow or relate to what he was playing or saying. Looking back, I wished we had talked it out a bit more.

If you get the CD Columbia re-issue of Notorious Byrd Brothers and listen past the last track to the “hidden” song, you’ll hear The Byrds taking a stab at recording Crosby’s tune “Dolphin Smile”. It gives you a glimpse of what you don’t see but does go on. It’s sad.

I always feel uncomfortable with Beachwood Sparks write-ups that mention Gram Parsons and Cosmic American Music. Sure we love Gram (although I don’t even own a copy of Sweetheart Of The Rodeo) and the Burrito Bros, but if they don’t mention The Notorious Byrd Brothers, I know they probably don’t know what they are talking about or are just being lazy. It’s true that the first and only goal that Beachwood Sparks had was to play a Gram Parsons festival in Joshua Tree. Funny enough, we were rejected. Once we got access to a real recording studio, we really strived to capture, not only our own sound and feelings, but the sound of Notorious as well. While mixing the Cowboy Robots Cry, I attempted to dial in the same drum sound as “Get To You”, got pretty darn close too. The phased out section of “You Take The Gold” from our second LP, Once We Were Trees, was the second stab at creating that “Wasn’t Born To Follow” middle eight, we also tried it on “Something I Don’t Recognize” from the debut LP.

Maybe we should have dosed the engineer’s coffee with LSD, because we fell a bit short both times. The point is, we try because we simply love it and when I said earlier that all the things I ever wanted in a group came to Beachwood Sparks — it had what the groups I had with my brother (A New Personality, Further, Shadowland) had and more. A sense of purpose and inspiration that never wears out plus we found success within the music scene of our hometown and a great record label in Sub Pop, who have stuck behind us through thick and thin. This record has had so much to do with it. If someone really likes our group and hasn’t heard this record, I always urge them to go and listen to it first so as not to be found out later.

Can a record really change your life? Yes! The places I have gone, the moves I have made, the friendships and relationships that have shaped my life for the last 20 years can be directly traced back to that summer night in our kitchen in Silverlake listening to the Notorious Byrd Brothers.

One day I will connect all the dots and prove it.

Brent Rademaker

Beach Boys to continue touring without Brian Wilson, Al Jardine and David Marks

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According to reports, Mike Love is to continue touring without Brian Wilson, Al Jardine and David Marks when the current 50th anniversary tour finishes at the end of this week. The line-up for future shows will instead consist of Love, Bruce Johnston along with their regular touring band. "As we move on, Bruce and I look forward to performing live for Beach Boys fans everywhere," Love said in a press release, also noting, "The 50th Reunion Tour was designed to be a set tour with a beginning and an end to mark a special 50-year milestone for the band." Rolling Stone reports comments Brian Wilson made to CNN about the situation. "I'm disappointed and can't understand why [Love] doesn't want to tour with Al, David and me. We are out here having so much fun. After all, we are the real Beach Boys." Meanwhile, Al Jardine has posted a petition on his Facebook page for fans to sign. The letter reads: "To Mike Love. "In order to preserve the validity of 'The Beach Boys' as a whole, and not as a 'money saving, stripped down version' that only contains one original member, and one member that joined in 1965, we ask you to reinstate the three other members to the touring group for your final years performing. It's the right thing to do, and it's what the fans want!" The Beach Boys play the Royal Albert Hall on September 27 and Wembley Arena on September 28.

According to reports, Mike Love is to continue touring without Brian Wilson, Al Jardine and David Marks when the current 50th anniversary tour finishes at the end of this week. The line-up for future shows will instead consist of Love, Bruce Johnston along with their regular touring band.

“As we move on, Bruce and I look forward to performing live for Beach Boys fans everywhere,” Love said in a press release, also noting, “The 50th Reunion Tour was designed to be a set tour with a beginning and an end to mark a special 50-year milestone for the band.”

Rolling Stone reports comments Brian Wilson made to CNN about the situation. “I’m disappointed and can’t understand why [Love] doesn’t want to tour with Al, David and me. We are out here having so much fun. After all, we are the real Beach Boys.”

Meanwhile, Al Jardine has posted a petition on his Facebook page for fans to sign. The letter reads:

“To Mike Love.

“In order to preserve the validity of ‘The Beach Boys’ as a whole, and not as a ‘money saving, stripped down version’ that only contains one original member, and one member that joined in 1965, we ask you to reinstate the three other members to the touring group for your final years performing. It’s the right thing to do, and it’s what the fans want!”

The Beach Boys play the Royal Albert Hall on September 27 and Wembley Arena on September 28.

Levon Helm Band to release ‘Midnight Ramble Sessions Vol 3’

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A new CD featuring live songs from Levon Helm’s Midnight Ramble house concerts, will be released on November 20, according to a report on Rolling Stone. Midnight Ramble Sessions Volume 3 is one of the last projects Helm completed before he died on April 19. He and producer Brendan McDonough are reported to have sifted through hundreds of gigs which took place at the Rambles held in Helm's Woodstock barn. Guests on the album include Chris Robinson and Allen Toussaint. A tribute concert, Love For Levon, will be held on October 3, at the Izod Center in East Rutherford, New Jersey. Pink Floyd's Roger Waters, The Eagles' Joe Walsh, Gregg Allman and Bruce Hornsby are all scheduled to perform.

A new CD featuring live songs from Levon Helm’s Midnight Ramble house concerts, will be released on November 20, according to a report on Rolling Stone.

Midnight Ramble Sessions Volume 3 is one of the last projects Helm completed before he died on April 19. He and producer Brendan McDonough are reported to have sifted through hundreds of gigs which took place at the Rambles held in Helm’s Woodstock barn. Guests on the album include Chris Robinson and Allen Toussaint.

A tribute concert, Love For Levon, will be held on October 3, at the Izod Center in East Rutherford, New Jersey. Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters, The Eagles’ Joe Walsh, Gregg Allman and Bruce Hornsby are all scheduled to perform.

John Lydon slams Sex Pistols’ ‘Never Mind The Bollocks…’ reissue

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John Lydon has slammed the reissue campaign surrounding the Sex Pistols' seminal album 'Never Mind The Bollocks…'. Speaking to NME, the Public Image Ltd. frontman said that although he was happy the album was being "re-released properly" and given a sonic overhaul, he was keeping himself "distan...

John Lydon has slammed the reissue campaign surrounding the Sex Pistols’ seminal album ‘Never Mind The Bollocks…’.

Speaking to NME, the Public Image Ltd. frontman said that although he was happy the album was being “re-released properly” and given a sonic overhaul, he was keeping himself “distant” from the media furore.

A new super deluxe boxset of the LP is being released today (September 24) to celebrate the album’s 35th anniversary which includes music, videos, interviews pictures and replica memorabilia. But Lydon said: “As you must know, I’m keeping myself distant from that.”

Then, referencing the campaign earlier this year which tried to get “God Save The Queen” to the Number One spot in the Official UK Singles Chart to coincide with the Golden Jubilee, he continued: “It wasn’t right from the start. I don’t mind the records being re-released properly, that’s a good thing, but I don’t like the vacuous nonsense of trying to create false agendas and pretending to want to be Number One. Hello? Never did nothing for Number One. Not ever. Not in my entire life. What the fuck are you lot thinking of? I’m immediately at war with them on that.”

He continued: “It’s so ridiculous. They don’t realise they’re actually killing the fucking spirit of the thing. This is not KISS.”

The singer then went on to claim that Universal should have signed Public Image Ltd. rather than the Sex Pistols, stating: “There’s been bizarre, millions-of-pound offers for tours. I don’t want it for any price; I could do with the money, you know, but not on that level. I can’t write a song for them anymore. I’ve moved on. It’s over.”

“I don’t see any progress from working with the chaps,” he continued. “To me, they’re still pocketed 30 years back and they haven’t grown out of that. That’s not fair to me, to expect me to take 10 steps back and wreck what is a perfectly healthy thing that I’m doing right now. If Universal had any sense, they’d have signed fucking PiL and not the Pistols.”

Public Image Ltd. released their latest album This Is PiL in May of this year. The LP, which was the follow-up to the band’s 1992 effort That What Is Not, was their first official studio album in 20 years and was released through their own PiL Official label.

Justin Vernon to ‘walk away’ from Bon Iver Bon Iver

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Bon Iver frontman Justin Vernon has said that he plans to 'walk away' from his double Grammy award winning act. Speaking to 89.3 The Current - via The Daily Swarm - Vernon said of the band: "I really feel the need to walk away from it while I still care about it. And then if I come back to it – i...

Bon Iver frontman Justin Vernon has said that he plans to ‘walk away’ from his double Grammy award winning act.

Speaking to 89.3 The Current – via The Daily Swarm – Vernon said of the band: “I really feel the need to walk away from it while I still care about it. And then if I come back to it – if at all – I’ll feel better about it and be renewed or something to do that.”

When asked what the latest was with Bon Iver, he said he was: Winding it down. I look at it like a faucet. I have to turn it off and walk away from it because so much of how that music comes together is subconscious or discovering. There’s so much attention on the band, it can be distracting at times.

Justin Vernon recently asked fans to design him a new tattoo based on his favourite TV show. He is offering a cash prize to the winner of his 99designs competition and will have the top illustration inked on his arm.

Vernon has published a long description detailing the requirements he wants from his new body art, with the singer choosing five finalists to propose designs influenced by the TV series Northern Exposure – the same show which was the inspiration behind his band’s name, and the name of his new record label.

Bon Iver embark on an arena tour of the UK and Ireland in November this year. 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.

Produced By George Martin

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A fascinating journey through the life of the producer who changed the world... This DVD is, significantly, a production for the BBC’s Arena, which gives it the edge over ITV/ Sky’s slicker, more promo-faced South Bank Show. Here we get the familiar story of George Martin told with a brilliant freshness. Naturally The Beatles’ story is threaded through Martin’s (Ringo and Sir Paul contribute, both full of affection for their old headmaster), but for once we get the early years (the breadline childhood, the Fleet Air Arm), the comedy years (Bernard Cribbins and Rolf Harris), and the post-Fabs years (Mahavishnu Orchestra!), as well as a visit to Montserrat, where Martin built his second Air Studios (destroyed by Hurricane Hugo). The story is told in a pleasantly jumbled up fashion, as if someone just threw the tapes up in the air. Martin’s son Giles conducts several interviews, and at one point is charmingly admonished by his dad for trying to make him admit that he was ambitious. Macca recalls a dinner in Paris hosted by Epstein where they were served “phallic delicacies”. Ringo reveals a collective Beatle fancying of Judy, now Lady Martin. Michael Palin discusses The Goons with Sir George. And throughout the programme there is a strong sense of just how extraordinary a person George Martin is. He remains the modest patrician, the polite innovator, and the man whose suggestions helped to change popular music (at one point, he explains how McCartney’s staccato verses for “Eleanor Rigby” reminded him of Bernard Hermann, which led him to the sawing orchestral arrangement - Psycho out of Father Mackenzie!) You also get a sense of the man’s inner steel. This is a producer unfazed by neither Lennon nor McCartney. Told by EMI that The Beatles didn’t want his name on Let It Be, he says, “I wasn’t having that,” adding that he suggested the credit should be “produced by George Martin, over-produced by Phil Spector”. Martin was never a yes-man (Rolf Harris, interviewed, is still amazed that George bluntly told him the aboriginal music he wanted on “Sun Arise” was “boring”). After years of the Lennon version of history, in which Martin’s role as the mythic fifth Beatle was sharply denigrated, it’s good to be shown how important he was, moving from practical suggestions (beginning a song with the chorus) to introducing the band to new ideas, and then working as an equal partner on creating new worlds. The origins of these new worlds were unknown to Phil Spector. Martin says of his first encounter with The Beatles, “I didn’t know them from Adam, but they knew me,” Martin says, because the band had seen his name on records by Peter Sellers and Spike Milligan. When he adds, “Building up Sergeant Pepper became a bit like working on a Peter Sellers record,” he says, you see how a career as a comedy producer gave him both The Beatles’ respect – The Goons were as important to Lennon as Chuck Berry – and the open-mindedness to make a record like “Strawberry Fields Forever”. (And in the end, he could have said, after the disaster of Let It Be, they came crawling back to make Abbey Road.) This is a brilliant DVD, with huge chunks of Martin productions, from America to Irene Handl, from Humphrey Lyttelton to Jeff Beck (the extras are extended Giles Martin interviews, as well as tributes from the slightly random trio of Rick Rubin, T-Bone Burnett and Ken Scott). Its most poignant moment comes when Martin, now in his 80s, visits the devastated Air Studios in Montserrat. “It's like everything in life,” he says, “Everything has a period. You bring something out of nothing but it always goes back to nothing again.” Looking at George Martin’s career, it’s impossible to believe that’s true. EXTRAS: Extended interviews. 6/10 DAVID QUANTICK

A fascinating journey through the life of the producer who changed the world…

This DVD is, significantly, a production for the BBC’s Arena, which gives it the edge over ITV/ Sky’s slicker, more promo-faced South Bank Show. Here we get the familiar story of George Martin told with a brilliant freshness. Naturally The Beatles’ story is threaded through Martin’s (Ringo and Sir Paul contribute, both full of affection for their old headmaster), but for once we get the early years (the breadline childhood, the Fleet Air Arm), the comedy years (Bernard Cribbins and Rolf Harris), and the post-Fabs years (Mahavishnu Orchestra!), as well as a visit to Montserrat, where Martin built his second Air Studios (destroyed by Hurricane Hugo).

The story is told in a pleasantly jumbled up fashion, as if someone just threw the tapes up in the air. Martin’s son Giles conducts several interviews, and at one point is charmingly admonished by his dad for trying to make him admit that he was ambitious. Macca recalls a dinner in Paris hosted by Epstein where they were served “phallic delicacies”. Ringo reveals a collective Beatle fancying of Judy, now Lady Martin. Michael Palin discusses The Goons with Sir George. And throughout the programme there is a strong sense of just how extraordinary a person George Martin is. He remains the modest patrician, the polite innovator, and the man whose suggestions helped to change popular music (at one point, he explains how McCartney’s staccato verses for “Eleanor Rigby” reminded him of Bernard Hermann, which led him to the sawing orchestral arrangement – Psycho out of Father Mackenzie!)

You also get a sense of the man’s inner steel. This is a producer unfazed by neither Lennon nor McCartney. Told by EMI that The Beatles didn’t want his name on Let It Be, he says, “I wasn’t having that,” adding that he suggested the credit should be “produced by George Martin, over-produced by Phil Spector”. Martin was never a yes-man (Rolf Harris, interviewed, is still amazed that George bluntly told him the aboriginal music he wanted on “Sun Arise” was “boring”). After years of the Lennon version of history, in which Martin’s role as the mythic fifth Beatle was sharply denigrated, it’s good to be shown how important he was, moving from practical suggestions (beginning a song with the chorus) to introducing the band to new ideas, and then working as an equal partner on creating new worlds.

The origins of these new worlds were unknown to Phil Spector. Martin says of his first encounter with The Beatles, “I didn’t know them from Adam, but they knew me,” Martin says, because the band had seen his name on records by Peter Sellers and Spike Milligan. When he adds, “Building up Sergeant Pepper became a bit like working on a Peter Sellers record,” he says, you see how a career as a comedy producer gave him both The Beatles’ respect – The Goons were as important to Lennon as Chuck Berry – and the open-mindedness to make a record like “Strawberry Fields Forever”. (And in the end, he could have said, after the disaster of Let It Be, they came crawling back to make Abbey Road.)

This is a brilliant DVD, with huge chunks of Martin productions, from America to Irene Handl, from Humphrey Lyttelton to Jeff Beck (the extras are extended Giles Martin interviews, as well as tributes from the slightly random trio of Rick Rubin, T-Bone Burnett and Ken Scott). Its most poignant moment comes when Martin, now in his 80s, visits the devastated Air Studios in Montserrat. “It’s like everything in life,” he says, “Everything has a period. You bring something out of nothing but it always goes back to nothing again.” Looking at George Martin’s career, it’s impossible to believe that’s true.

EXTRAS: Extended interviews.

6/10

DAVID QUANTICK

The Cairo Gang: “The Corner Man”

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Emmett Kelly has been making records as The Cairo Gang for a good few years now but, if he’s known at all, chances are it’s for his unusually enduring role in Will Oldham’s band: the amazing Royal Stable site suggests he’s been in on most Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy projects since 2006. The...

Emmett Kelly has been making records as The Cairo Gang for a good few years now but, if he’s known at all, chances are it’s for his unusually enduring role in Will Oldham’s band: the amazing Royal Stable site suggests he’s been in on most Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy projects since 2006.

The most prominent of these, I guess, would be 2010’s “Wonder Show Of The World”, for which The Cairo Gang got equal billing with Billy. Kelly co-wrote the album, one of Oldham’s best – though I didn’t know about the joint credit when I posted this review of “Wonder Show…”.

Listening to “The Corner Man”, Kelly’s first solo LP for six years – and I haven’t listened to a great deal else over the weekend – that becomes pretty obvious (“There Is Something Here”, especially, sounds like a sequel of sorts to one of my favourite Oldham songs, “That’s What Our Love Is”) . Kelly’s skills for a spare, courtly kind of music are much in evidence, but his voice is also reminiscent of Will Oldham’s. Perhaps, in fairness, it’s the shapes of the vocal melodies that seem familiar. Kelly never tries to copy Oldham’s eccentricities, and his voice is a more orthodox instrument: when the instruments totally drop out for a while on “Ill Force”, it sounds strong, true and uncannily beautiful.

I’m conscious, useful context though it might be, of examining this lovely record solely through the prism of Will Oldham. Even when I find other references worth citing – the classical acoustic guitar used in a not dissimilar way to Mark Kozelek’s work on “Admiral Fell Promises”; a forlorn soulfulness to “Gland In Gland” that recalls Liam Hayes’ Plush – it occurs that both those excellent musicians collaborated with Oldham, fleetingly.

Casting the net wider, I still find it weirdly hard to get out of Louisville: the last record I remember having a comparable atmosphere and potency was Elephant Micah’s “Louder Than Thou” right at the start of the year. Kelly has a great sense of dynamics, too, and occasionally these insidious and understated songs rear up with banked electric guitars, provided at least in part by a noted alumnus of Wilco, Leroy Bach.

At some point in the last couple of days, though, I finally found another way of looking at this fine album. I was playing “Gone Is The Light”, and it struck me that Kelly’s delicacy, the uncertain air of warmth and melancholy, had something of Chris Bell’s solo work to it. I keep meaning to dig out “I Am The Cosmos” to check.

Hopefully, anyhow, this index of possible references will have whetted a few appetites. You can check out “Now You Are One Of Us”, from “The Corner Man”, here. Give it a listen and, as ever, let me know what you think.

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

AC/DC’s Bon Scott to have monument erected in birthplace

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AC/DC singer Bon Scott, who died aged 33 in 1980, is to have a monument honouring him erected in his birthplace. Scott was born in Kirriemuir in Scotland in 1946, before his family moved to Australia when he was six, and a community group want to honour their local hero by erecting a statue. DD8 Music, who are also behind the annual Bon Scott music festival in the town, have approached sculptor John McKenna to design a statue as a lasting tribute, reports The Daily Record. McKenna told the newspaper: "It's early days, but it's a great honour. Bon Scott was an icon from my teenage years.: The tribute to the late singer has received backing from former AC/DC bassist Mark Evans, who told Ultimate Classic Rock: "It’s so amazing that Bon is getting honoured like this, especially since Scotland is such an important place in the history of AC/DC. Bon already had a street named after him in Kirriemuir and now this!" Scott has a statue in his honour in his hometown of Claremont, Australia. Erected in 2008, the monument is situated at the Freemantle Fishing Boat Harbour.

AC/DC singer Bon Scott, who died aged 33 in 1980, is to have a monument honouring him erected in his birthplace.

Scott was born in Kirriemuir in Scotland in 1946, before his family moved to Australia when he was six, and a community group want to honour their local hero by erecting a statue.

DD8 Music, who are also behind the annual Bon Scott music festival in the town, have approached sculptor John McKenna to design a statue as a lasting tribute, reports The Daily Record.

McKenna told the newspaper: “It’s early days, but it’s a great honour. Bon Scott was an icon from my teenage years.:

The tribute to the late singer has received backing from former AC/DC bassist Mark Evans, who told Ultimate Classic Rock: “It’s so amazing that Bon is getting honoured like this, especially since Scotland is such an important place in the history of AC/DC. Bon already had a street named after him in Kirriemuir and now this!”

Scott has a statue in his honour in his hometown of Claremont, Australia. Erected in 2008, the monument is situated at the Freemantle Fishing Boat Harbour.