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Jack White extends his November UK and Ireland tour

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Jack White has extended his full UK and Ireland tour, which will take place later this year. The guitar virtuoso, who released his debut solo album Blunderbuss earlier this year, has added a second show at London Alexandra Palace on November 3, having previously announced a November 2 show at the v...

Jack White has extended his full UK and Ireland tour, which will take place later this year.

The guitar virtuoso, who released his debut solo album Blunderbuss earlier this year, has added a second show at London Alexandra Palace on November 3, having previously announced a November 2 show at the venue.

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

The tour also includes shows in Birmingham, Bridlington and Blackpool’s Empress Ballroom, the venue where The White Stripes recorded their first live DVD Under Blackpool Lights.

Last month, Tom Jones told NME that he “would love” to do a full album with Jack White.

Jones collaborated with White for a one-off release on his Third Man Records label earlier this year, recording a version of Frankie Lane’s track “Jezebel” and a cover of Howlin’ Wolf’s ‘Evil’ for the release.

Asked about working with White, the singer said: “Jack White had an idea for two songs ‘Evil’ and ‘Jezabel’, which is an old Frankie Laine song and he had a new arrangement for it. So he said to me ‘Do you know these songs?’ and I said ‘Yes, I know both of them’.”

He continued: “I was in Nashville at the time so we got together and we did the two songs. I’d love to do an album with Jack White in the future.”

Jack White will play:

O2 Arena Dublin (October 31)

London Alexandra Palace (November 2, 3)

Bridlington Spa (4)

Blackpool Empress Ballroom (6)

O2 Academy Birmingham (7)

Edinburgh Usher Hall (8)

Recordings of Ringo Starr’s first band discovered after 50 years

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Recordings of The Beatles' drummer Ringo Starr's first band Rory Storm And The Hurricanes have been discovered, 50 years after they were originally made. The tapes were recorded in March 1960, a full two years before Starr was asked by producer Brian Epstein to join The Beatles. The band performed alongside The Beatles during their stint in Hamburg and were considered to be one of the leading lights of the Liverpool scene. They were fronted by Rory Storm [whose real name is Alan Caldwell], who died in 1972. It is in the basement of his sister's house that the new tapes have been found. The tapes include tracks recorded at the Jive Hive club in north Liverpool, and at Storm's house, which was known locally as Stormsville, where bands including The Beatles would get together once clubs like The Cavern had shut at night. Storm's sister Iris Caldwell spoke about her brother, who she said was "so far ahead of his time". She told BBC News: "Rory was a performer. He wasn't, like The Beatles, a brilliant songwriter. They called him The Golden Boy and Mr Showbusiness. Rory was so far ahead of his time. He was doing glam rock then. I suppose these tapes have been in an old sealed box ever since [they were recorded]." Caldwell also said she believed Brian Epstein did not give her brother a real shot at becoming a major success because he "didn't want any major competition" for The Beatles. It is not yet whether the tapes will be released to the public as yet. Ringo Starr released his 16th solo album Ringo 2012 in January.

Recordings of The Beatles‘ drummer Ringo Starr’s first band Rory Storm And The Hurricanes have been discovered, 50 years after they were originally made.

The tapes were recorded in March 1960, a full two years before Starr was asked by producer Brian Epstein to join The Beatles.

The band performed alongside The Beatles during their stint in Hamburg and were considered to be one of the leading lights of the Liverpool scene. They were fronted by Rory Storm [whose real name is Alan Caldwell], who died in 1972. It is in the basement of his sister’s house that the new tapes have been found.

The tapes include tracks recorded at the Jive Hive club in north Liverpool, and at Storm’s house, which was known locally as Stormsville, where bands including The Beatles would get together once clubs like The Cavern had shut at night.

Storm’s sister Iris Caldwell spoke about her brother, who she said was “so far ahead of his time”. She told BBC News: “Rory was a performer. He wasn’t, like The Beatles, a brilliant songwriter. They called him The Golden Boy and Mr Showbusiness. Rory was so far ahead of his time. He was doing glam rock then. I suppose these tapes have been in an old sealed box ever since [they were recorded].”

Caldwell also said she believed Brian Epstein did not give her brother a real shot at becoming a major success because he “didn’t want any major competition” for The Beatles.

It is not yet whether the tapes will be released to the public as yet. Ringo Starr released his 16th solo album Ringo 2012 in January.

The xx: “We make music over iChat”

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The xx have revealed that they still make music separately in their bedrooms over iChat. In BBC Radio 1 documentary Night Time With The xx, which aired last night, singer Romy Madley-Croft revealed: "iChat is a really good way of working – that seperation is nice – but we do sit together and li...

The xx have revealed that they still make music separately in their bedrooms over iChat.

In BBC Radio 1 documentary Night Time With The xx, which aired last night, singer Romy Madley-Croft revealed: “iChat is a really good way of working – that seperation is nice – but we do sit together and listen to demos, talk about them.”

After initial sessions, they only regrouped later in a shared studio to make new album Coexist, which is released on Monday (September 10). In the documentary, presented by Huw Stephens, the band describe how growing up has affected their lyric writing.

“Our first songs were fantastical experiences about love – we were only 16, we didn’t know a lot and we hadn’t really gotten up to much,” said Oliver Sim. “But as time went on it became about stuff we were going through.”I thought this new album would be like a diary, because now we’ve actually had those experiences, but I’ve actually found myself reverting more to the fantastical – I’ve been storytelling, writing about how things could play out in my head, rather than how they have.”

The London band will celebrate the release of Coexist with a trio of intimate UK shows this month. They will take to the stage at the O2 Shepherds Bush Empire on September 10, followed by gigs at The Coal Exchange in Cardiff on September 11 and Edinburgh’s Usher Hall on September 12.

The xx are also booked to play Bestival on the Isle of Wight on Friday (September 7), making their only UK festival appearance of the summer on the event’s Main Stage before headliners Florence And The Machine. Appearing on the BBC documentary, Florence Welch describing the first time she encountered the band.

She said: “I went to one of [The xx’s] first gigs, maybe their very first gig. It was very subdued and I didn’t quite know what to make of it. I remember hearing the record and it clicked… there was something so moving about it, so quiet and seductive, and its minimalism was its power… like something tugging at your insides.”

The Black Keys debut video for “Little Black Submarines” – watch

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The Black Keys have today premiered the video for 'Little Black Submarines', the fourth single to be taken from last year's 'El Camino' album. The video sees the band playing at Nashville’s Springwater Supper Club, a former speakeasy. "It's a really cool building," singer Dan Auerbach told Rol...

The Black Keys have today premiered the video for ‘Little Black Submarines’, the fourth single to be taken from last year’s ‘El Camino’ album.

The video sees the band playing at Nashville’s Springwater Supper Club, a former speakeasy.

“It’s a really cool building,” singer Dan Auerbach told Rolling Stone. “It’s been there forever. It’s got a lot of history. It’s one of three or four different little small dive bars in town. It’s special because it’s so old.”

The Black Keys proved one of the big hits at last month’s Reading And Leeds Festivals. They return to Europe in November and December for their biggest tour to date. The Ohio duo will kick off their six-date UK leg at Newcastle’s Metro Radio Arena on December 7, concluding at London’s O2 Arena on December 12 and 13.

The Black Keys will play:

Newcastle Arena (December 7)

Glasgow SECC (8)

Birmingham National Indoor Arena (9)

Manchester Arena (11)

London O2 Arena (12-13)

Paul McCartney to be given France’s Legion Of Honour medal

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Paul McCartney is to be given a Legion Of Honour medal in France on Saturday (September 8). The medal will be given to the former Beatles man by French President Francois Hollande and is the highest public distinction that the President can bestow upon a member of the public. According to Reuters...

Paul McCartney is to be given a Legion Of Honour medal in France on Saturday (September 8).

The medal will be given to the former Beatles man by French President Francois Hollande and is the highest public distinction that the President can bestow upon a member of the public.

According to Reuters, McCartney will join the likes of Clint Eastwood and Liza Minnelli in being awarded the medal, which was first created in 1802 by Napoleon Bonaparte.

The honour carries social status but no money, and, McCartney will even have to buy his own medal from a licensed jeweler, with prices ranging from 169 euros to 700 euros (£134 to £553) for the highest rank.

Earlier this summer, it was reported that McCartney has reportedly recruited Mark Ronson to produce his new album.

The pair, who apparently met when Ronson was DJ at McCartney’s 2011 wedding to Nancy Shevell, are said to have spent this week working together in New York. A source told the Sunday Mirror: “This week they went to the studio and started knocking about together to see what they can do together. Everybody’s really excited about the prospect of Mark working with Paul.”

In February, McCartney released his 15th solo LP, an album of traditional pop and jazz covers called Kisses On The Bottom. However, the Beatles legend reportedly wants to return to a more contemporary sound for his next project. The source added: “Paul respects Mark’s knowledge and is wanting to produce a classic album with a young hip edge. And obviously Mark is over the moon to be working with a Beatle.”

Animal Collective – Centipede Hz

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“Sometimes you gotta go get mad!” The full gang reconvene in Baltimore for a feral but friendly ninth... Animal Collective are a group enamoured by the process of their own evolution, reliable only in the sense that every one of their records is reliably different. As with Charles Darwin’s theory, there’s no predestination here, no clear end in mind. Rather, this unassuming bunch of Baltimore nature kids have always made a point of adapting to their environment - whatever or wherever that might be. The last five years alone have witnessed a bewildering catalogue of mutations. Deprived of guitarist Josh Dibb following the sickly-sweet psych-outs of 2007’s Strawberry Jam, Animal Collective ditched freak-folk for electronics and samplers and made the rave-flecked Merriweather Post Pavilion, a sewing together of dreamy textures, aquatic reverb and Noah ‘Panda Bear’ Lennox’s tumbling Beach Boys harmonies that played a hand in inventing ‘chillwave’, cracked the Billboard Top 20 and would be voted Uncut’s 2009 Album Of The Year. Then, capitalising on a friendship with director Danny Perez, they made an daringly uncommercial follow-up – “visual album” ODDSAC, a retina-scorching blend of Kenneth Anger surrealism, B-movie gore and cream-cake food fights with a gooey, psychedelic soundtrack to match. Now, another shift. Bristly and urgent, red in tooth and claw, the songs on their ninth album recall wilder, more chaotic earlier outings such as 2003’s Here Comes The Indian or 2005’s Feels. With its mix of rattling percussion and mangled electronics, “Monkey Riches” sounds part deranged drum-circle, part soundtrack to some lost Donkey Kong platformer, while the jittery Tropicalia of “Today’s Supernatura” romps around with hackles up, Dave ‘Avey Tare’ Portner bawling: “Sometimes it won’t come so easy/Sometimes you’ve gotta go get maaaad!” But Centipede Hz is a more confident and elaborate piece than such primitive outings, a sign of a band more at ease with its protean nature. It works from an unusual mood board. Dave ‘Avey Tare’ Portner describes it as “less aquatic than some of our earlier records… it’s more rocks and angles”. HP Lovecraft and pulp sci-fi novels were amongst the inspirations, and to get into the right headspace, the band imagined music escaping our planet in the form of radio waves, finding their way to distant worlds to be heard and interpreted by alien ears. This idea works both figuratively – if George Lucas wanted to further update Star Wars, one could easily imagine hyperactive, hyper-melodic sing-songs like “Applesauce” and “Father Time” issuing from a back room at the Mos Eisley Cantina – and also more literally: the songs themselves are laced with snippets of old radio broadcasts, adverts and idents warped and fuzzed out and crammed in the cracks like stuffing. This new vitality is explicable. Whereas albums back to Strawberry Jam have been pieced together remotely, parts bounced back and forth via email, Centipede Hz was born out of three months of intense jamming in in the group’s native Baltimore, Lennox sat down behind a drum kit for the first time since Feels. At times it is a bit of a racket: the opening “Moonjock”, with its crashing carnival drums and curdled group choruses, may weed out the fair-weather sorts enticed by Merriweather’s cool lagoons of sound. Still, for all their renewed energy, Animal Collective now work with a certain restraint. Despite its uncanny material – all distorted drums, creaky-gate melodies, and bursts of unchecked electricity – “New Town Burnout” is balladic and beautiful, a tale of homecoming and hard-found catharsis. Similarly exceptional is “Wide Eyed”. Marking Josh ‘Deakin’ Dibb’s debut lead vocal with the band, it chains strobing synths and spasmodic, tumbling drums into a wistful, Flaming Lips-like spiritual: “What’s the change for the better,” ponders Dibb, “For a child who learns not to cry?” Key to Centipede Hz’s success, one suspects, is the presence of producer Ben Allen. A former engineer for P Diddy’s Bad Boy Records and producer for Gnarls Barkley, Allen was originally credited for bringing Merriweather’s pneumatic low-end. Here, though, his job is different; rhythms are kept crisp, and the chaos is tightly corralled so songs shine through. The result sounds a far cry from chillwave’s soft, gauzy textures; possessed of a strange beauty, hard and bright, and probably unlikely to elicit the broad appeal that was granted to Merriweather. Centipede Hz is an album that both gazes up into the cosmos, and stares down into the dirt - and perhaps that’s not so weird. “I’m going hiking/Are you coming hiking?” proffers Portner on the album’s closer, “Amainta”. Because that is where Animal Collective find themselves: forever on the move, over grass and under stars. Louis Pattison Q+A Animal Collective You recorded Centipede Hz back in your native Baltimore… Josh: My mother runs a spiritual community - there was a building like an old barn from the 19th century, like falling apart, and they had to tear it down. We just put up an basic a-frame on the same footprint… it’s like a workshop. Brian: We thought it might be too small at first – we probably had less square footage than this room to set up and play. But it was nice to play that close to one another. Noah: It was loud. Very loud. It sounds like the wild feel of some of your early material has leaked back in… Brian Weitz: At the end of touring Merriweather, we did this DJ set at David Holmes’ bar in Belfast. It was nothing serious, just ‘Do you guys wanna come by the bar and bring your iPods?’, so we had no expectations. We didn’t play techno or dance music - it was all rock music, psych… There was probably a lot of Can, Selda, because one of our friends was really into Turkish psych. I played “Autumn Almanac” by the Kinks and people went nuts - it felt like we couldn’t do anything wrong! One group of people came up and kept requesting Faust, and everyone was dancing but to this weird rock music. It became this really sweaty dance party – we wanted that really sweaty, high energy feel. INTERVIEW: LOUIS PATTISON

“Sometimes you gotta go get mad!” The full gang reconvene in Baltimore for a feral but friendly ninth…

Animal Collective are a group enamoured by the process of their own evolution, reliable only in the sense that every one of their records is reliably different. As with Charles Darwin’s theory, there’s no predestination here, no clear end in mind. Rather, this unassuming bunch of Baltimore nature kids have always made a point of adapting to their environment – whatever or wherever that might be.

The last five years alone have witnessed a bewildering catalogue of mutations. Deprived of guitarist Josh Dibb following the sickly-sweet psych-outs of 2007’s Strawberry Jam, Animal Collective ditched freak-folk for electronics and samplers and made the rave-flecked Merriweather Post Pavilion, a sewing together of dreamy textures, aquatic reverb and Noah ‘Panda Bear’ Lennox’s tumbling Beach Boys harmonies that played a hand in inventing ‘chillwave’, cracked the Billboard Top 20 and would be voted Uncut’s 2009 Album Of The Year. Then, capitalising on a friendship with director Danny Perez, they made an daringly uncommercial follow-up – “visual album” ODDSAC, a retina-scorching blend of Kenneth Anger surrealism, B-movie gore and cream-cake food fights with a gooey, psychedelic soundtrack to match.

Now, another shift. Bristly and urgent, red in tooth and claw, the songs on their ninth album recall wilder, more chaotic earlier outings such as 2003’s Here Comes The Indian or 2005’s Feels. With its mix of rattling percussion and mangled electronics, “Monkey Riches” sounds part deranged drum-circle, part soundtrack to some lost Donkey Kong platformer, while the jittery Tropicalia of “Today’s Supernatura” romps around with hackles up, Dave ‘Avey Tare’ Portner bawling: “Sometimes it won’t come so easy/Sometimes you’ve gotta go get maaaad!”

But Centipede Hz is a more confident and elaborate piece than such primitive outings, a sign of a band more at ease with its protean nature. It works from an unusual mood board. Dave ‘Avey Tare’ Portner describes it as “less aquatic than some of our earlier records… it’s more rocks and angles”. HP Lovecraft and pulp sci-fi novels were amongst the inspirations, and to get into the right headspace, the band imagined music escaping our planet in the form of radio waves, finding their way to distant worlds to be heard and interpreted by alien ears. This idea works both figuratively – if George Lucas wanted to further update Star Wars, one could easily imagine hyperactive, hyper-melodic sing-songs like “Applesauce” and “Father Time” issuing from a back room at the Mos Eisley Cantina – and also more literally: the songs themselves are laced with snippets of old radio broadcasts, adverts and idents warped and fuzzed out and crammed in the cracks like stuffing.

This new vitality is explicable. Whereas albums back to Strawberry Jam have been pieced together remotely, parts bounced back and forth via email, Centipede Hz was born out of three months of intense jamming in in the group’s native Baltimore, Lennox sat down behind a drum kit for the first time since Feels. At times it is a bit of a racket: the opening “Moonjock”, with its crashing carnival drums and curdled group choruses, may weed out the fair-weather sorts enticed by Merriweather’s cool lagoons of sound.

Still, for all their renewed energy, Animal Collective now work with a certain restraint. Despite its uncanny material – all distorted drums, creaky-gate melodies, and bursts of unchecked electricity – “New Town Burnout” is balladic and beautiful, a tale of homecoming and hard-found catharsis. Similarly exceptional is “Wide Eyed”. Marking Josh ‘Deakin’ Dibb’s debut lead vocal with the band, it chains strobing synths and spasmodic, tumbling drums into a wistful, Flaming Lips-like spiritual: “What’s the change for the better,” ponders Dibb, “For a child who learns not to cry?”

Key to Centipede Hz’s success, one suspects, is the presence of producer Ben Allen. A former engineer for P Diddy’s Bad Boy Records and producer for Gnarls Barkley, Allen was originally credited for bringing Merriweather’s pneumatic low-end. Here, though, his job is different; rhythms are kept crisp, and the chaos is tightly corralled so songs shine through.

The result sounds a far cry from chillwave’s soft, gauzy textures; possessed of a strange beauty, hard and bright, and probably unlikely to elicit the broad appeal that was granted to Merriweather. Centipede Hz is an album that both gazes up into the cosmos, and stares down into the dirt – and perhaps that’s not so weird. “I’m going hiking/Are you coming hiking?” proffers Portner on the album’s closer, “Amainta”. Because that is where Animal Collective find themselves: forever on the move, over grass and under stars.

Louis Pattison

Q+A

Animal Collective

You recorded Centipede Hz back in your native Baltimore…

Josh: My mother runs a spiritual community – there was a building like an old barn from the 19th century, like falling apart, and they had to tear it down. We just put up an basic a-frame on the same footprint… it’s like a workshop.

Brian: We thought it might be too small at first – we probably had less square footage than this room to set up and play. But it was nice to play that close to one another.

Noah: It was loud. Very loud.

It sounds like the wild feel of some of your early material has leaked back in…

Brian Weitz: At the end of touring Merriweather, we did this DJ set at David Holmes’ bar in Belfast. It was nothing serious, just ‘Do you guys wanna come by the bar and bring your iPods?’, so we had no expectations. We didn’t play techno or dance music – it was all rock music, psych… There was probably a lot of Can, Selda, because one of our friends was really into Turkish psych. I played “Autumn Almanac” by the Kinks and people went nuts – it felt like we couldn’t do anything wrong! One group of people came up and kept requesting Faust, and everyone was dancing but to this weird rock music. It became this really sweaty dance party – we wanted that really sweaty, high energy feel.

INTERVIEW: LOUIS PATTISON

Bob Dylan streams new album ‘Tempest’ online in full

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Bob Dylan is streaming his new album Tempest online in full via iTunes, click here to listen to the album. The album, which is the 35th studio LP of Dylan's career, will come out on Monday (September 10) in the UK and Tuesday (September 11) in the US. It contains a total of 10 tracks and has been...

Bob Dylan is streaming his new album Tempest online in full via iTunes, click here to listen to the album.

The album, which is the 35th studio LP of Dylan’s career, will come out on Monday (September 10) in the UK and Tuesday (September 11) in the US.

It contains a total of 10 tracks and has been produced by Dylan himself (although, as with his recent studio albums, the producer is named as ‘Jack Frost’). The album includes a special tribute to John Lennon, which is named ‘Roll On John’ and a 14-minute epic inspired by the Titanic, which is fittingly called “Tempest”.

The release of Tempest will coincide with the celebration of Dylan’s 50 years as a recording artist. He released his self-titled debut album back in March of 1962.

Dylan is currently completing a European tour and this weekend headlined Spain’s Benicassim Festival. He is expected to return for a full UK tour in 2013.

The tracklisting for Tempest is as follows:

‘Duquesne Whistle’

‘Soon After Midnight’

‘Narrow Way’

‘Long and Wasted Years’

‘Pay In Blood’

‘Scarlet Town’

‘Early Roman Kings’

‘Tin Angel’

‘Tempest’

‘Roll On John’

Exclusive preview! Hear two tracks from Nick Cave’s new film, Lawless

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We're delighted to give you the chance to hear exclusive previews of two songs from the soundtrack to Lawless, the new film written by Nick Cave. The tracks are "Fire And Brimstone" and "Midnight Run". "Fire And Brimstone" is performed by Mark Lanegan and The Bootleggers - that's Cave, regular Bad Seeds/Grinderman Warren Ellis and Martyn Casey, augmented by Groove Armada guitarist George Vjestica and composer/producer David Sardy. Here, Lanegan channels the hellfire, Stones-y spirit of Link Wray's 1971 original, while Ellis' fiddle hangs Appalachian meat on its frame. Meanwhile, "Midnight Run" is performed by Willie Nelson. It's a fine cover of Marc Copely's rousing entry in the moonshine-runner subgenre: "There might be trouble because everybody's got a gun..." The Lawless soundtrack is released on Monday, September 10 by Sony Music. You can pre-order it here. Lawless is in cinemas this Friday, and you can read our exclusive cover story with Nick Cave in the edition of Uncut on sale now.

We’re delighted to give you the chance to hear exclusive previews of two songs from the soundtrack to Lawless, the new film written by Nick Cave.

The tracks are “Fire And Brimstone” and “Midnight Run”.

Fire And Brimstone” is performed by Mark Lanegan and The Bootleggers – that’s Cave, regular Bad Seeds/Grinderman Warren Ellis and Martyn Casey, augmented by Groove Armada guitarist George Vjestica and composer/producer David Sardy. Here, Lanegan channels the hellfire, Stones-y spirit of Link Wray’s 1971 original, while Ellis’ fiddle hangs Appalachian meat on its frame.

Meanwhile, “Midnight Run” is performed by Willie Nelson. It’s a fine cover of Marc Copely’s rousing entry in the moonshine-runner subgenre: “There might be trouble because everybody’s got a gun…”

The Lawless soundtrack is released on Monday, September 10 by Sony Music. You can pre-order it here.

Lawless is in cinemas this Friday, and you can read our exclusive cover story with Nick Cave in the edition of Uncut on sale now.

Paul Weller – The Ultimate Music Guide

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Please excuse the wholly shameless plug, but I thought you might like to know that the next in our series of Ultimate Music Guides goes on sale tomorrow (September 6) and this one is dedicated to Paul Weller. In the by now time-honoured tradition of the Ultimate Music Guides, we take a new look at everything Weller’s recorded, from The Jam through The Style Council and his solo albums. There’s also a ton of legendary interviews, going back to The Jam's first major NME feature in May 1977 and including the classic encounter between the young upstart Weller and a somewhat gnarly Pete Townshend, arranged by Melody Maker, in which the two mod icons squared up to each other nervously, a surprising gulf emerging between Weller and one of his musical heroes. We also trawl through all the live albums and compilations, singles, collaborations, rarities and more and there’s a host of rare pictures, plus an exclusive introduction by Weller. “I don’t mind looking back now,” he observes, sounding more at ease with his past than he’s ever been, “because I’m still making new music that excites me, and that people want to hear.” Paul Weller – the Ultimate Music Guide will be on sale from all the usual outlets and also available to order online at www.uncut.co.uk/store or to download digitally at www.uncut.co.uk/download. At Uncut HQ, meanwhile, we’re busy finishing off the next issue to a soundtrack mostly of Psychedleic Pill, the new Neil Young and Crazy Horse album, as mentioned here last week, which is even more epic than anticipated, so much music on it that it will be released as a double CD and triple vinyl LP. John has already written about two of the album’s extended jams, “Walk Like A Giant” and “Ramada Inn”, but we’ve also been totally enthralled by the 27 minutes of “Drifting Back”. For a full review, don’t miss next month’s issue. In the lulls between blasts of Neil and Crazy Horse doing what they do so spectacularly, I’ve also been playing fine new albums by Dan Deacon, Allah-La’s, Grizzly Bear, Dan Stuart and Mark Eitzel’s Don’t Be a Stranger. Eitzel, by the way, headlines the Uncut Sessions at the fourth SXSC festival this coming Sunday (September 9) at The Railway in Winchester, topping a strong bill that also includes former Green on red front-man Dan Stuart and Hurray For The Riff Raff. For the full line-up and ticket details, go to www.railwaylive.co.uk. Have a good week. Allan

Please excuse the wholly shameless plug, but I thought you might like to know that the next in our series of Ultimate Music Guides goes on sale tomorrow (September 6) and this one is dedicated to Paul Weller.

In the by now time-honoured tradition of the Ultimate Music Guides, we take a new look at everything Weller’s recorded, from The Jam through The Style Council and his solo albums. There’s also a ton of legendary interviews, going back to The Jam’s first major NME feature in May 1977 and including the classic encounter between the young upstart Weller and a somewhat gnarly Pete Townshend, arranged by Melody Maker, in which the two mod icons squared up to each other nervously, a surprising gulf emerging between Weller and one of his musical heroes.

We also trawl through all the live albums and compilations, singles, collaborations, rarities and more and there’s a host of rare pictures, plus an exclusive introduction by Weller. “I don’t mind looking back now,” he observes, sounding more at ease with his past than he’s ever been, “because I’m still making new music that excites me, and that people want to hear.”

Paul Weller – the Ultimate Music Guide will be on sale from all the usual outlets and also available to order online at www.uncut.co.uk/store or to download digitally at www.uncut.co.uk/download.

At Uncut HQ, meanwhile, we’re busy finishing off the next issue to a soundtrack mostly of Psychedleic Pill, the new Neil Young and Crazy Horse album, as mentioned here last week, which is even more epic than anticipated, so much music on it that it will be released as a double CD and triple vinyl LP. John has already written about two of the album’s extended jams, “Walk Like A Giant” and “Ramada Inn”, but we’ve also been totally enthralled by the 27 minutes of “Drifting Back”. For a full review, don’t miss next month’s issue.

In the lulls between blasts of Neil and Crazy Horse doing what they do so spectacularly, I’ve also been playing fine new albums by Dan Deacon, Allah-La’s, Grizzly Bear, Dan Stuart and Mark Eitzel’s Don’t Be a Stranger. Eitzel, by the way, headlines the Uncut Sessions at the fourth SXSC festival this coming Sunday (September 9) at The Railway in Winchester, topping a strong bill that also includes former Green on red front-man Dan Stuart and Hurray For The Riff Raff. For the full line-up and ticket details, go to www.railwaylive.co.uk.

Have a good week.

Allan

The Rolling Stones confirm new greatest hits comp, plus two new songs

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The Rolling Stones have announced the release of a new 'greatest hits' compilation, Grrr!. The album will be released on November 12 in the UK and a day later in north America. Grrr! will be available across four different formats, including a 30 track triple CD set, and a 50 track edition. The al...

The Rolling Stones have announced the release of a new ‘greatest hits’ compilation, Grrr!.

The album will be released on November 12 in the UK and a day later in north America.

Grrr! will be available across four different formats, including a 30 track triple CD set, and a 50 track edition. The album will be a mix of singles and classic album tracks from the band’s catalogue, starting with their 1963 debut single, a cover of Chuck Berry’s “Come On”.

The album also features two new songs: “Gloom And Doom” and “One Last Shot“, which were recorded recently in Paris. These new recordings constitute the first time Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts and Ronnie Wood have all been together in the studio since completing the A Bigger Bang album in 2005.

Grrr! will be available in these formats:

50 Track 3CD album

3CD / 50 tracks in a digipack with 24 page booklet

50 Track 3CD Deluxe Edition

3CD / 50 tracks in a DVD size box with 36 page hardback book and 5 postcards

Super Deluxe Edition Box Set

4CD / 80 tracks plus Bonus CD, 7″ Vinyl, Hardback book, Poster, 5 postcards in a presentation box

12” Vinyl Box Set

5x 12” Vinyl / 50 tracks in a casebound LP Box

The Killers announce full UK arena tour for November

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The Killers have announced a full UK arena tour for this November. The Las Vegas band, who release their fourth studio album Battle Born on September 17, will play 11 shows on the trek. The run of dates begins at Glasgow's SECC on October 26 and runs until November 17 when the band headline the ...

The Killers have announced a full UK arena tour for this November.

The Las Vegas band, who release their fourth studio album Battle Born on September 17, will play 11 shows on the trek.

The run of dates begins at Glasgow’s SECC on October 26 and runs until November 17 when the band headline the second of two shows at London’s O2 Arena.

The tour also includes stops in Aberdeen, Birmingham, Nottingham, Newcastle, Cardiff, Sheffield, Liverpool and Manchester.

The band will also play two intimate UK shows this month, firstly performing a free show at London’s HMV Forum on September 10 and then a gig at London’s Roundhouse on September 11 as part of the iTunes Festival.

The Killers will play:

Glasgow SECC (October 26)

Aberdeen Exhibition Centre (27)

Birmingham LG Arena (31)

Nottingham Capital FM Arena (November 3)

Newcastle Metro Radio Arena (4)

Cardiff Motorpoint Arena (5)

Sheffield Motorpoint Arena (8)

Liverpool Echo Arena (9)

Manchester Arena (13)

London O2 Arena (16, 17)

Jesse Hughes: “New Queens Of The Stone Age album is badass”

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Eagles Of Death Metal frontman Jesse Hughes has said that the forthcoming new Queens Of The Stone Age album is "badass". Speaking to NME, Josh Homme's Eagles Of Death Metal bandmate added that the material he's heard from the follow-up to 2007's Era Vulgaris is "really cool". Hughes said: "The shit I've heard from the new Queens album is so badass. It's really cool. It's the kinda shit that makes John Holmes [legendary porn star] have a bigger dick and he's dead, so that's pretty rad." Queens Of The Stone Age are currently working on their sixth studio album. Last month the band took to their official Facebook page, at Facebook.com/QOTSA, and simply updated their status with the word "Recording", receiving tens of thousands of 'likes' in minutes. Hughes – who also records solo under the alias Boots Electric – told NME that "because Joshua Homme's my best friend, I'm very fortunate in that I get to be privy to a lot of the cool shit that happens… [including] the writing process for the new Queens album."

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

Speaking to NME, Josh Homme’s Eagles Of Death Metal bandmate added that the material he’s heard from the follow-up to 2007’s Era Vulgaris is “really cool”.

Hughes said: “The shit I’ve heard from the new Queens album is so badass. It’s really cool. It’s the kinda shit that makes John Holmes [legendary porn star] have a bigger dick and he’s dead, so that’s pretty rad.”

Queens Of The Stone Age are currently working on their sixth studio album.

Last month the band took to their official Facebook page, at Facebook.com/QOTSA, and simply updated their status with the word “Recording”, receiving tens of thousands of ‘likes’ in minutes.

Hughes – who also records solo under the alias Boots Electric – told NME that “because Joshua Homme’s my best friend, I’m very fortunate in that I get to be privy to a lot of the cool shit that happens… [including] the writing process for the new Queens album.”

Watch Pearl Jam and Jay-Z play “99 Problems” together live

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kxLqR-2ElEk&hl=en_US&feature=player_embedded&version=3 Pearl Jam were joined onstage on September 2 by Jay-Z for a version of the rapper's hit single, "99 Problems". The rockers were headlining the final night of the Made In America Festival in Philadelph...

Pearl Jam were joined onstage on September 2 by Jay-Z for a version of the rapper’s hit single, “99 Problems”.

The rockers were headlining the final night of the Made In America Festival in Philadelphia, when the event’s famous curator joined them to run through his 2004 single. Click above to watch fan-shot footage of the collaboration between the two massive acts.

Jay-Z headlined the first night of the festival (September 1), a day which also saw sets from Skrillex, Calvin Harris, Passion Pit and D’Angelo. Jay-Z’s set also included a pre-recorded message from US President, Barack Obama.

Sunday drew performances from The Hives, current UK chart topper Rita Ora, Santigold, Odd Future and Drake, with Pearl Jam closing the weekender with a 25-song set, which included covers of The Clash’s “Know Your Rights”, “Love Reign O’er Me” by The Who and Neil Young’s “Rockin’ In The Free World”.

Pearl Jam played:

‘Go’

‘Corduroy’

‘Save You’

‘Given To Fly’

‘Elderly Woman Behind The Counter In A Small Town’

‘Unemployable’

‘Even Flow’

‘Got Some’

‘Daughter’

‘Unthought Known’

‘The Fixer’

‘Nothingman’

‘Do The Evolution’

‘Jeremy’

‘Know Your Rights’

‘Rearviewmirror’

‘Love, Reign O’er Me’

‘Spin The Black Circle’

‘Better Man’

‘Comatose’

‘Black’

‘Alive’

‘WMA’

’99 Problems’

‘Rockin’ In The Free World’

Blur’s Alex James: ‘I want to work with Johnny Marr’

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Blur's Alex James has revealed that he wants to work with Johnny Marr. Talking to the Daily Star, James – who is organising his own food and music event, The Big Feastival, from his Oxfordshire farm this weekend – said that while he wouldn't be interested in pursuing a solo career, he'd like to join Marr and Nile Rodgers in a supergroup. The former Smiths guitarist joined the Chic man onstage earlier this year at Manchester's Parklife Weekender, with Marr later hinting that the pair could continue their collaboration by entering the studio together. James said: "Although I hadn't done it for a while, I know what to do in Blur. Playing the bass in a rock 'n' roll band is a straightforward activity – you just have to stand still. I'd like to do something next year. I'm no frontman, so a solo album wouldn't work. I'm picky and it's a big commitment to make music properly." He added: "More than anyone else, I'd like to play with that new band of Nile Rodgers and Johnny Marr – that's what I call a fucking supergroup." Earlier this month, Blur returned to play a huge show at Hyde Park, three years after their two acclaimed comeback gigs at the central London venue. The band subsequently revealed that they will release a recording of the Olympic closing ceremony concert – titled 'Parklive', the 3CD set features tracks from the Hyde Park show and a bonus disc of previously unreleased live material from the band's recent warm-up shows in Margate, Plymouth and Wolverhampton. It's unlikely fans will get to hear any more new material soon, however, as guitarist Graham Coxon said earlier this month that the band have no definite future plans to record together.

Blur’s Alex James has revealed that he wants to work with Johnny Marr.

Talking to the Daily Star, James – who is organising his own food and music event, The Big Feastival, from his Oxfordshire farm this weekend – said that while he wouldn’t be interested in pursuing a solo career, he’d like to join Marr and Nile Rodgers in a supergroup.

The former Smiths guitarist joined the Chic man onstage earlier this year at Manchester’s Parklife Weekender, with Marr later hinting that the pair could continue their collaboration by entering the studio together.

James said: “Although I hadn’t done it for a while, I know what to do in Blur. Playing the bass in a rock ‘n’ roll band is a straightforward activity – you just have to stand still. I’d like to do something next year. I’m no frontman, so a solo album wouldn’t work. I’m picky and it’s a big commitment to make music properly.”

He added: “More than anyone else, I’d like to play with that new band of Nile Rodgers and Johnny Marr – that’s what I call a fucking supergroup.”

Earlier this month, Blur returned to play a huge show at Hyde Park, three years after their two acclaimed comeback gigs at the central London venue. The band subsequently revealed that they will release a recording of the Olympic closing ceremony concert – titled ‘Parklive’, the 3CD set features tracks from the Hyde Park show and a bonus disc of previously unreleased live material from the band’s recent warm-up shows in Margate, Plymouth and Wolverhampton.

It’s unlikely fans will get to hear any more new material soon, however, as guitarist Graham Coxon said earlier this month that the band have no definite future plans to record together.

Songwriter Hal David dies at 91

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Legendary lyricist Hal David has died at the age of 91. David passed away yesterday (September 1) following complications from a stroke at Cedars Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, reports Rolling Stone. David was Burt Bacharach's songwriting partner and wrote the lyrics for such classic tracks as "Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head", "I'll Never Fall In Love Again", "Do You Know The Way To San Jose", "Walk On By", "What The World Needs Now Is Love", "I Say A Little Prayer" and "(There's) Always Something There To Remind Me". Born in New York City in 1921, Harold Lane David started writing lyrics in the 1940s, first working with the bandleaders Sammy Kaye and Guy Lombardo. He partnered with Bacharach in 1957 after being introduced at the famous Brill Building. The pair went on to write songs for the likes of Dionne Warwick, Dusty Springfield, Tom Jones, The Carpenters and many more. Click above to listen to Warwick perform "Do You Know The Way To San Jose". David and Bacharach were nominAted for Oscars for their work on the films What's New Pussycat?, Alfie and Casino Royale and they won the Academy Award for the song "Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head", which was used in the film Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid.

Legendary lyricist Hal David has died at the age of 91.

David passed away yesterday (September 1) following complications from a stroke at Cedars Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, reports Rolling Stone.

David was Burt Bacharach’s songwriting partner and wrote the lyrics for such classic tracks as “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head”, “I’ll Never Fall In Love Again”, “Do You Know The Way To San Jose”, “Walk On By”, “What The World Needs Now Is Love”, “I Say A Little Prayer” and “(There’s) Always Something There To Remind Me”.

Born in New York City in 1921, Harold Lane David started writing lyrics in the 1940s, first working with the bandleaders Sammy Kaye and Guy Lombardo.

He partnered with Bacharach in 1957 after being introduced at the famous Brill Building. The pair went on to write songs for the likes of Dionne Warwick, Dusty Springfield, Tom Jones, The Carpenters and many more. Click above to listen to Warwick perform “Do You Know The Way To San Jose”.

David and Bacharach were nominAted for Oscars for their work on the films What’s New Pussycat?, Alfie and Casino Royale and they won the Academy Award for the song “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head”, which was used in the film Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid.

The xx’s Jamie Smith building ‘new instrument’

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The xx's Jamie Smith has revealed that he is working on building a brand new instrument based on both an MPC sequencer and an iPad. The producer and DJ told the Observer that he is planning on making a see-through device which will make music via "colourful graphics" and finger taps. The band's v...

The xx‘s Jamie Smith has revealed that he is working on building a brand new instrument based on both an MPC sequencer and an iPad.

The producer and DJ told the Observer that he is planning on making a see-through device which will make music via “colourful graphics” and finger taps.

The band’s vocalist Oliver Sim also explained that he has written a song for Beyonce. He said that he has written a track which isn’t right for The xx, but which he hopes Beyonce would like to record “if he can work up the courage to ask”.

Earlier this week, Sim told Q that he went for dinner with the pop legend around the time of BBC Radio 1’s Hackney Weekend in June. He said: “We all went for dinner. There may have been a husband of hers there. I always had a lot of things I wanted to say to her and I completely choked. Beyonce is very special. I think the super-pop thing that supposedly died with Michael Jackson is still there, with her. I saw her at Glastonbury and I may have shed a tear.”

The xx will release their second album, ‘Coexist’, on September 10. To launch the LP, the band play a trio of intimate UK shows. They will take to the stage at the O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire on September 10, followed by gigs at The Coal Exchange in Cardiff on September 11 and Edinburgh’s Usher Hall on September 12. They will also play Bestival on the Isle of Wight next weekend.

Stevie Wonder apologises for ‘confused’ comment about Frank Ocean’s sexuality

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Stevie Wonder has spoken out about comments he made regarding the sexuality of soul singer Frank Ocean last week. Speaking to the Guardian, Wonder had said that he thought Ocean – who publicly revealed that his first love had been a man earlier this year – might be 'confused'. He said: "I think...

Stevie Wonder has spoken out about comments he made regarding the sexuality of soul singer Frank Ocean last week.

Speaking to the Guardian, Wonder had said that he thought Ocean – who publicly revealed that his first love had been a man earlier this year – might be ‘confused’. He said: “I think honestly, some people who think they’re gay, they’re confused. People can misconstrue closeness for love. People can feel connected, they bond.”

However, Wonder has now explained that he had been ‘misunderstood’. Rolling Stone reports that Wonder has issued a statement in which he says: “I’m sorry that my words about anyone feeling confused about their love were misunderstood. No-one has been a greater advocate for the power of love in this world than I; both in my life and in my music.

“Clearly, love is love, between a man and a woman, a woman and a man, a woman and a woman and a man and a man. What I’m not confused about is the world needing much more love, no hate, no prejudice, no bigotry and more unity, peace and understanding. Period.”

The legendary soul singer, who released his 23rd studio album in 2005, will headline this year’s Bestival over the coming weekend. Bestival takes place from September 6–9 at Robin Hill Park on the Isle Of Wight, with New Order and Florence And The Machine set to join Wonder as headliners.

Other artists confirmed for this year’s Bestival include Friendly Fires, Death In Vegas, Django Django, The xx, Sigur Ros, The Horrors, Two Door Cinema Club, Azealia Banks, Soulwax, Nero, Emeli Sande, Warpaint, Spiritualized, Gary Numan, Charli XCX, First Aid Kit, Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs, Turbowolf, De La Soul, Major Lazer, Justice and Gallows.

End Of The Road Festival – Day 3

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Even though each artist gets at least a 45-minute slot - and everyone on the main stage gets an hour or more - there's still a lack of epic outros at End Of The Road. At least Americana-tinged indie-rockers, and Uncut favorites, Woods, playing the Woods Stage, of course, are here to level the score, ending their set with a climactic echo-drenched jam. Although that's perhaps the wrong word - their imploding, superloud ending (at least seven minutes long, I'd estimate) appears far too structured for that. Either way, it's an impressive ending to a set that really brightens up a wet day. Graham Coxon bounds onto the stage next, with a cute "Have you had your tea?" You would imagine that a set from the guitarist's 2009 psych-folk album, The Spinning Top, would be ideal for End Of The Road, but of course this is Noisy Coxon on show today, supporting his brilliantly caustic A&E. Though he plays his biggest indie hits, including "Freakin' Out", "Spectacular" and "I Can't Look At Your Skin", it's the songs from A&E that are the most noisily invigorating - the opening "Advice", "Running For Your Life" and "The Truth" ("Here's another jolly one," Coxon jokes after the latter's noisy misanthropy). There's sadly no outing for "Seven Naked Valleys", an exceptional, grooving Stooges-like grind, though. There's also a good deal of typical Coxon larking about - spitting beer on the microphone, blaming the perfect-pitch-possessing bassist for not noticing Graham was badly out of tune on "What'll It Take", and hurting his finger while thrashing during one wild solo, a common occurrence at Coxon gigs. It's his guitar playing that really shines through, though, and he nets a large crowd. Who would have known Patti Smith enjoyed Graham Coxon's set as much as the rest of us, though? "The band who were on before were great, I really enjoyed them," she gushes. "Sorry, I don't know their names. They're Blur but not Blur..." And that's merely the tip of the iceberg of Smith's stage chat, even more unrestrained than usual. Talk of "winged horses", being free and projecting love might seem a bit mumbo-jumbo-y if you're feeling cynical, but it's nevertheless hard to argue with the songs Smith and her band - featuring Lenny Kaye and Jay Dee Daugherty - play. The set begins with "Dancing Barefoot" and ends with a thrilling trilogy of "Gloria", "Banga" and "Rock'n'roll Nigger", Smith praising Pussy Riot during Horses' opening track. We then briefly slip off to the Tipi Tent to see French space-rockers Yeti Lane. The duo, on guitar, keys and vocals, and drums and synths, create a mighty noise for a two-piece, analogue synths and cavernous guitars pulsating over Krauty drums (of the jazzier Jaki Liebezeit variety rather than the straighter motorik of Klaus Dinger). "Analog Wheel", especially, moves from sparse, ambient bleeps to full-on dronebeat, before collapsing into an exultant coda you imagine could soundtrack interstellar sports highlights from a distant galaxy. Grandaddy were always known for their shambolic live shows - but after reuniting this year, Jason Lytle claimed that a lot of the old equipment had been replaced, meaning the gigs would be a lot smoother. He didn't reckon on projector problems shaving around 20 minutes off their set, though - a sad loss considering how mighty their performance is. From the opening trio of Sumday songs, "El Caminos In The West", "Now It's On" and "Yeah Is What We Had", to the midset lesser-knowns, including "Levitz" and "Chartsengrafs", the group sound tight, powerful and content, every synth arpeggio and creaky sample in the right place for once. "There's this thing called a curfew," says Lytle before the final two songs, "Stray Dog And The Chocolate Shake" and "He's Simple, He's Dumb, He's The Pilot", "and we're law-abiding people." How very Grandaddy that some technical problems should be the only blot on a stunning return. Tom Pinnock Check out Uncut's blogs from the rest of the weekend: End Of The Road – Day 1 End Of The Road – Day 2 Picture: Andy Sheppard/Redferns via Getty Images

Even though each artist gets at least a 45-minute slot – and everyone on the main stage gets an hour or more – there’s still a lack of epic outros at End Of The Road.

At least Americana-tinged indie-rockers, and Uncut favorites, Woods, playing the Woods Stage, of course, are here to level the score, ending their set with a climactic echo-drenched jam. Although that’s perhaps the wrong word – their imploding, superloud ending (at least seven minutes long, I’d estimate) appears far too structured for that. Either way, it’s an impressive ending to a set that really brightens up a wet day.

Graham Coxon bounds onto the stage next, with a cute “Have you had your tea?” You would imagine that a set from the guitarist’s 2009 psych-folk album, The Spinning Top, would be ideal for End Of The Road, but of course this is Noisy Coxon on show today, supporting his brilliantly caustic A&E.

Though he plays his biggest indie hits, including “Freakin’ Out”, “Spectacular” and “I Can’t Look At Your Skin”, it’s the songs from A&E that are the most noisily invigorating – the opening “Advice”, “Running For Your Life” and “The Truth” (“Here’s another jolly one,” Coxon jokes after the latter’s noisy misanthropy). There’s sadly no outing for “Seven Naked Valleys”, an exceptional, grooving Stooges-like grind, though.

There’s also a good deal of typical Coxon larking about – spitting beer on the microphone, blaming the perfect-pitch-possessing bassist for not noticing Graham was badly out of tune on “What’ll It Take”, and hurting his finger while thrashing during one wild solo, a common occurrence at Coxon gigs. It’s his guitar playing that really shines through, though, and he nets a large crowd.

Who would have known Patti Smith enjoyed Graham Coxon’s set as much as the rest of us, though? “The band who were on before were great, I really enjoyed them,” she gushes. “Sorry, I don’t know their names. They’re Blur but not Blur…”

And that’s merely the tip of the iceberg of Smith’s stage chat, even more unrestrained than usual. Talk of “winged horses”, being free and projecting love might seem a bit mumbo-jumbo-y if you’re feeling cynical, but it’s nevertheless hard to argue with the songs Smith and her band – featuring Lenny Kaye and Jay Dee Daugherty – play. The set begins with “Dancing Barefoot” and ends with a thrilling trilogy of “Gloria”, “Banga” and “Rock’n’roll Nigger”, Smith praising Pussy Riot during Horses’ opening track.

We then briefly slip off to the Tipi Tent to see French space-rockers Yeti Lane. The duo, on guitar, keys and vocals, and drums and synths, create a mighty noise for a two-piece, analogue synths and cavernous guitars pulsating over Krauty drums (of the jazzier Jaki Liebezeit variety rather than the straighter motorik of Klaus Dinger).

“Analog Wheel”, especially, moves from sparse, ambient bleeps to full-on dronebeat, before collapsing into an exultant coda you imagine could soundtrack interstellar sports highlights from a distant galaxy.

Grandaddy were always known for their shambolic live shows – but after reuniting this year, Jason Lytle claimed that a lot of the old equipment had been replaced, meaning the gigs would be a lot smoother. He didn’t reckon on projector problems shaving around 20 minutes off their set, though – a sad loss considering how mighty their performance is. From the opening trio of Sumday songs, “El Caminos In The West”, “Now It’s On” and “Yeah Is What We Had”, to the midset lesser-knowns, including “Levitz” and “Chartsengrafs”, the group sound tight, powerful and content, every synth arpeggio and creaky sample in the right place for once.

“There’s this thing called a curfew,” says Lytle before the final two songs, “Stray Dog And The Chocolate Shake” and “He’s Simple, He’s Dumb, He’s The Pilot”, “and we’re law-abiding people.” How very Grandaddy that some technical problems should be the only blot on a stunning return.

Tom Pinnock

Check out Uncut’s blogs from the rest of the weekend:

End Of The Road – Day 1

End Of The Road – Day 2

Picture: Andy Sheppard/Redferns via Getty Images

Bill Fay – Life Is People

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Beautifully measured return to the studio from this humble master of English song... It’s been around forty years, since English singer-songwriter Bill Fay last saw a studio album from conception to completion. This has little to do with Fay’s vision and almost everything to do with the vagaries of an industry that tends to work at cross purposes to the artists that populate it. Fay’s legend rests on two albums released just as the benign visions of the sixties turned inward and self-destructive in the early seventies, a narrative arc that’s reflected in the shift from the Edenic and redemptive song poems of Fay’s debut, self-titled album from 1970, garlanded as they were with orchestra and captured in autumnal colours, to the explosive force of 1971’s Time Of The Last Persecution, where Fay, alongside guitarist Ray Russell and their group, drilled free improvisation into songs sung from what sounded like the end of the world. Both records subsequently all but disappeared from view, and Fay’s attempted third album sat on the shelf until his eventual rediscovery in the noughties, where the patronage of artists like Jim O’Rourke, Current 93’s David Tibet, and especially Jeff Tweedy and Wilco brought Fay’s songs back into the half-light. Tweedy picked up on the beatific bucolics of the first album, covering “Be Not So Fearful” live; Tibet, whose label has released two albums by Fay, delved deep into the dark heart of Last Persecution. But with Life Is People, Fay’s songs rest in the hands of American producer Joshua Henry, who gathered musicians such as Matt Deighton, Tim Weller, Mikey Rowe, with varying histories (Oasis, Paul Weller, Stevie Nicks), to bring some of Fay’s home-recorded demos off the ferric oxide and into plain view. It could have been a mess – the hip young producer refashioning his songwriter hero in his own vision. But, fair play to Henry, he’s found a perfect balance here, wrapping Fay’s heart-breaking songs up in production and arrangements that respect the material’s weight, whether with strings and organ on “The Healing Day”, or a gospel choir to support the humanitarian vision of “Be At Peace With Yourself”. The latter already appeared on 2010’s Still Some Light as a home-recorded demo, and it’s wild to hear it transformed from a song from a dusty shelf into a modern hymn, the choir swathing Fay’s vulnerable voice in beams of light. There’s a case to be made for Life Is People as Fay’s most diverse, divergent album, thanks to Henry’s approach to the material: “This World” essays joy through an easy, unassuming pop song; “Cosmic Concerto (Life Is People)” builds from church-organ soul to a beautiful, forlorn two-chord rock Passion, a classic Fay song that’s more than fit to sit alongside past gems like “Be Not So Fearful” or “Pictures Of Adolf Again”. But as great as the arrangements are, the most devastating performances come from Fay on his lonesome. There’s something in the intimate consort between his piano playing and his vocals that is simply unparalleled, and even when he’s taking on another’s material, like his masterful reading of Wilco’s “Jesus Etc.”, he’s able to imbue the performance with both the necessary gravitas, and an unassuming grace. Indeed, it’s grace that’s writ most strongly through Life Is People. These songs are far removed from the eschatological visions that mark out Time Of The Last Persecution, and the broad sweep of the arrangements underwrite the songs with a classicist art that’s fundamentally different to the small-group playing that fleshed out the late ‘70s sessions on Tomorrow, Tomorrow And Tomorrow. Henry has shepherded a clutch of graceful songs from demo tapes into a song suite that’s richly arranged without being over-egged, the better to capture the compassion and humanitarian spirit of Fay’s writing. And ultimately, it’s that compassionate vision of song that resonates through Life Is People, as Fay observes the passing of the days with redemption in mind. Jon Dale Q&A BILL FAY How did it feel to be entering the studio again after such a long time? It’s a good place to be, a studio. It’s like everybody’s there to do their best by the music. I was walking into the unknown, but we started with “Be At Peace With Yourself”, and everything kind of fell into place. We did a run through, and I could feel the rapport between Matt Deighton, Mike Rowe, and Matt Armstrong, who knew each other and had played together. Alan Rushton was there, and Joshua was saying where he’d like drums to come in. These songs have a kind of grace that wasn’t there on Time Of The Last Persecution. How have the times impacted on your songs? I’d only just come to believe in the things I sang about on Time Of The Last Persecution, and so they had an urgency that was totally met by the way Ray Russell, Alan Rushton, and Daryl Runswick played together at the time. It was Ray’s and their album as much as mine… I think I’m fundamentally a plaintive songwriter, with other things thrown in, and anything I’ve ever written since back then is really a variation of the same themes that were in those early albums. INTERVIEW: JON DALE

Beautifully measured return to the studio from this humble master of English song…

It’s been around forty years, since English singer-songwriter Bill Fay last saw a studio album from conception to completion. This has little to do with Fay’s vision and almost everything to do with the vagaries of an industry that tends to work at cross purposes to the artists that populate it. Fay’s legend rests on two albums released just as the benign visions of the sixties turned inward and self-destructive in the early seventies, a narrative arc that’s reflected in the shift from the Edenic and redemptive song poems of Fay’s debut, self-titled album from 1970, garlanded as they were with orchestra and captured in autumnal colours, to the explosive force of 1971’s Time Of The Last Persecution, where Fay, alongside guitarist Ray Russell and their group, drilled free improvisation into songs sung from what sounded like the end of the world.

Both records subsequently all but disappeared from view, and Fay’s attempted third album sat on the shelf until his eventual rediscovery in the noughties, where the patronage of artists like Jim O’Rourke, Current 93’s David Tibet, and especially Jeff Tweedy and Wilco brought Fay’s songs back into the half-light. Tweedy picked up on the beatific bucolics of the first album, covering “Be Not So Fearful” live; Tibet, whose label has released two albums by Fay, delved deep into the dark heart of Last Persecution. But with Life Is People, Fay’s songs rest in the hands of American producer Joshua Henry, who gathered musicians such as Matt Deighton, Tim Weller, Mikey Rowe, with varying histories (Oasis, Paul Weller, Stevie Nicks), to bring some of Fay’s home-recorded demos off the ferric oxide and into plain view.

It could have been a mess – the hip young producer refashioning his songwriter hero in his own vision. But, fair play to Henry, he’s found a perfect balance here, wrapping Fay’s heart-breaking songs up in production and arrangements that respect the material’s weight, whether with strings and organ on “The Healing Day”, or a gospel choir to support the humanitarian vision of “Be At Peace With Yourself”. The latter already appeared on 2010’s Still Some Light as a home-recorded demo, and it’s wild to hear it transformed from a song from a dusty shelf into a modern hymn, the choir swathing Fay’s vulnerable voice in beams of light.

There’s a case to be made for Life Is People as Fay’s most diverse, divergent album, thanks to Henry’s approach to the material: “This World” essays joy through an easy, unassuming pop song; “Cosmic Concerto (Life Is People)” builds from church-organ soul to a beautiful, forlorn two-chord rock Passion, a classic Fay song that’s more than fit to sit alongside past gems like “Be Not So Fearful” or “Pictures Of Adolf Again”. But as great as the arrangements are, the most devastating performances come from Fay on his lonesome. There’s something in the intimate consort between his piano playing and his vocals that is simply unparalleled, and even when he’s taking on another’s material, like his masterful reading of Wilco’s “Jesus Etc.”, he’s able to imbue the performance with both the necessary gravitas, and an unassuming grace.

Indeed, it’s grace that’s writ most strongly through Life Is People. These songs are far removed from the eschatological visions that mark out Time Of The Last Persecution, and the broad sweep of the arrangements underwrite the songs with a classicist art that’s fundamentally different to the small-group playing that fleshed out the late ‘70s sessions on Tomorrow, Tomorrow And Tomorrow. Henry has shepherded a clutch of graceful songs from demo tapes into a song suite that’s richly arranged without being over-egged, the better to capture the compassion and humanitarian spirit of Fay’s writing. And ultimately, it’s that compassionate vision of song that resonates through Life Is People, as Fay observes the passing of the days with redemption in mind.

Jon Dale

Q&A

BILL FAY

How did it feel to be entering the studio again after such a long time?

It’s a good place to be, a studio. It’s like everybody’s there to do their best by the music. I was walking into the unknown, but we started with “Be At Peace With Yourself”, and everything kind of fell into place. We did a run through, and I could feel the rapport between Matt Deighton, Mike Rowe, and Matt Armstrong, who knew each other and had played together. Alan Rushton was there, and Joshua was saying where he’d like drums to come in.

These songs have a kind of grace that wasn’t there on Time Of The Last Persecution. How have the times impacted on your songs?

I’d only just come to believe in the things I sang about on Time Of The Last Persecution, and so they had an urgency that was totally met by the way Ray Russell, Alan Rushton, and Daryl Runswick played together at the time. It was Ray’s and their album as much as mine… I think I’m fundamentally a plaintive songwriter, with other things thrown in, and anything I’ve ever written since back then is really a variation of the same themes that were in those early albums.

INTERVIEW: JON DALE

End Of The Road Festival – Day 2

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The second day of Dorset's End Of The Road is a scorcher – not bad for the first day of autumn. Van Dyke Parks must be pleasantly surprised, if he's still around. Despite the dark subject matter of some of The Antlers' songs, their glistening, laconic music perfectly suits the afternoon sun, and hundreds of people at the main stage are lying down, sunning themselves or drifting off to the angelic sound of Peter Silberman's voice. Next, it's to the Garden Stage, where Jeffrey Lewis is playing an even greater set with quite a different voice - nasal and slightly tuneless but perfect for his geeky, philosophical and supremely witty songs. Backed by his band, The Junkyard, Lewis intersperses songs with his mosquito-killing rap and a sonnet about Sonic Youth's "Dirty Boots". The highlight for me is the opening song, "Krongu Green Slime", a subtle, hilarious rant against corporatisation, using the monopolization of the primordial ooze market as a metaphor (as you can see, Lewis' songs can't really be explained well in text). As Lewis finishes, we head off to the main Woods Stage, where Alabama Shakes are drawing the biggest crowd of the festival so far. People stretch out of the field and right across the path towards the food stalls. Despite their success, it seems like Brittany Howard and her band can't quite believe it, either. The Shakes run through a solid set, to huge applause after the majority of songs - but it sometimes seems like we've just stepped into a standard Alabama Shakes show, rather than something more special, and more in keeping with a festival. Professional, yes - transcendent, no. After sampling from the aforementioned food stalls, we head to the Tipi Tent to see Robyn Hitchcock. The singer-songwriter is joined by Abigail Washburn, who played her banjo while opening the Garden Stage earlier in the day, as well as a virtuoso cellist and two backing vocalists. The set, which begins with "Sounds Great When You're Dead" from I Often Dream Of Trains, draws heavily from Hitchcock's limited-release album for Norway from last year, Tromso, Kaptein - "Savannah" is a sultry highlight. Of course, there's the usual brilliant Hitchcockian between-song weirdness – "this song is about where babies come from, but not where they go back to - unless they're lucky" introduces "Ole Tarantula". It's heartening to see the tent packed to the flaps - Hitchcock, though very much a cult artist, is proving himself to be one of our most consistent and inspired songwriters of the last 30 years. Then to the main Woods Stage, where Grizzly Bear are closing Saturday night. The set is heavy with material from the new album, Shields, and their crowd is a lot smaller than Alabama Shakes', but they feel more like headliners - lined up along the front of the stage like the Shakes, they put on a dynamic, enticing performance. The interplay between frontmen Ed Droste and Daniel Rossen is especially impressive - each having the skills and charisma to individually front a band. After closing their main set with "Two Weeks" and two new tracks, the band suddenly realizes they've got nearly 20 minutes left of their allotted time. "Hang on, we've got to work out what to play," says Droste, while the group discuss the options among themselves. "Ok, we're going to take a vote..." The ensuing epic, "Colorado", is very much worth the prevarication. Tom Pinnock Check out Uncut's blogs from the rest of the weekend: End Of The Road – Day 1 End Of The Road – Day 3 Picture: Andy Sheppard/Redferns via Getty Images

The second day of Dorset’s End Of The Road is a scorcher – not bad for the first day of autumn. Van Dyke Parks must be pleasantly surprised, if he’s still around.

Despite the dark subject matter of some of The Antlers‘ songs, their glistening, laconic music perfectly suits the afternoon sun, and hundreds of people at the main stage are lying down, sunning themselves or drifting off to the angelic sound of Peter Silberman’s voice.

Next, it’s to the Garden Stage, where Jeffrey Lewis is playing an even greater set with quite a different voice – nasal and slightly tuneless but perfect for his geeky, philosophical and supremely witty songs. Backed by his band, The Junkyard, Lewis intersperses songs with his mosquito-killing rap and a sonnet about Sonic Youth’s “Dirty Boots”.

The highlight for me is the opening song, “Krongu Green Slime”, a subtle, hilarious rant against corporatisation, using the monopolization of the primordial ooze market as a metaphor (as you can see, Lewis’ songs can’t really be explained well in text).

As Lewis finishes, we head off to the main Woods Stage, where Alabama Shakes are drawing the biggest crowd of the festival so far. People stretch out of the field and right across the path towards the food stalls. Despite their success, it seems like Brittany Howard and her band can’t quite believe it, either.

The Shakes run through a solid set, to huge applause after the majority of songs – but it sometimes seems like we’ve just stepped into a standard Alabama Shakes show, rather than something more special, and more in keeping with a festival. Professional, yes – transcendent, no.

After sampling from the aforementioned food stalls, we head to the Tipi Tent to see Robyn Hitchcock. The singer-songwriter is joined by Abigail Washburn, who played her banjo while opening the Garden Stage earlier in the day, as well as a virtuoso cellist and two backing vocalists. The set, which begins with “Sounds Great When You’re Dead” from I Often Dream Of Trains, draws heavily from Hitchcock’s limited-release album for Norway from last year, Tromso, Kaptein – “Savannah” is a sultry highlight.

Of course, there’s the usual brilliant Hitchcockian between-song weirdness – “this song is about where babies come from, but not where they go back to – unless they’re lucky” introduces “Ole Tarantula”.

It’s heartening to see the tent packed to the flaps – Hitchcock, though very much a cult artist, is proving himself to be one of our most consistent and inspired songwriters of the last 30 years.

Then to the main Woods Stage, where Grizzly Bear are closing Saturday night. The set is heavy with material from the new album, Shields, and their crowd is a lot smaller than Alabama Shakes’, but they feel more like headliners – lined up along the front of the stage like the Shakes, they put on a dynamic, enticing performance. The interplay between frontmen Ed Droste and Daniel Rossen is especially impressive – each having the skills and charisma to individually front a band.

After closing their main set with “Two Weeks” and two new tracks, the band suddenly realizes they’ve got nearly 20 minutes left of their allotted time. “Hang on, we’ve got to work out what to play,” says Droste, while the group discuss the options among themselves.

“Ok, we’re going to take a vote…” The ensuing epic, “Colorado”, is very much worth the prevarication.

Tom Pinnock

Check out Uncut’s blogs from the rest of the weekend:

End Of The Road – Day 1

End Of The Road – Day 3

Picture: Andy Sheppard/Redferns via Getty Images