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John Lennon’s killer Mark Chapman denied parole for the seventh time

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John Lennon's killer Mark Chapman has been denied parole for a seventh time. The 57-year-old, who shot Lennon in New York in December 1980, had applied for parole again this year, but was denied following a meeting of the New York State Board Of Parole, reports BBC News. Sally Thompson, the New Yo...

John Lennon‘s killer Mark Chapman has been denied parole for a seventh time.

The 57-year-old, who shot Lennon in New York in December 1980, had applied for parole again this year, but was denied following a meeting of the New York State Board Of Parole, reports BBC News.

Sally Thompson, the New York State Board Of Parole’s ‘deciding board member’, wrote to Chapman to tell him of their decision and said that they had decided not to release him as they believed it would “undermine respect for the law and tend to trivialise the tragic loss of life”.

The New York State Board Of Parole said in its decision: “Despite your positive efforts while incarcerated, your release at this time would greatly undermine respect for the law and tend to trivialise the tragic loss of life which you caused as a result of this heinous, unprovoked, violent, cold and calculated crime.”

Chapman, a former security guard, was transferred to the maximum security Wende Correctional Facility in western New York state earlier this year.

He is next eligible for a parole hearing in August 2014.

Picture credit: Iain MacMillan

This month in Uncut!

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The new issue of Uncut, which hits shelves today (August 24), features Nick Cave, David Byrne, Bob Dylan and Viv Stanshall. Cave is on the cover, and inside there’s an exclusive, extended interview with the songwriter about the screenplay and soundtrack for new film Lawless, the future of the Bad Seeds and his exceedingly short-lived acting career. David Byrne and St Vincent talk about their hyperactive collaborative album, Love This Giant, out September 10, Bob Dylan’s new album Tempest is reviewed by Uncut editor Allan Jones, and Viv Stanshall’s wilderness years of drunkenness, japes and genius are examined. Elsewhere, we look at the making of John Cooper Clarke’s “Beasley Street”, the Grateful Dead’s cosmic journey is chronicled through their live albums, and the revolutionary tale of The Dubliners is told. The news section includes chats with John Paul Jones, Grandaddy and First Aid Kit. As well as Dylan, the huge 38-page reviews section dissects albums from Grizzly Bear, The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, Calexico, The xx, Animal Collective, Frank Zappa and the Sex Pistols. Films including Lawless and Looper, DVDs such as The Monk and Produced By George Martin, and books including Mike Scott’s Adventures Of A Waterboy, are also reviewed. The live section features Elizabeth Fraser, the Ty Segall Band and Robert Plant, and the issue’s free CD boasts some stunning songs from the likes of Calexico, Patterson Hood, Dinosaur Jr and Mark Eitzel. The new issue is out now.

The new issue of Uncut, which hits shelves today (August 24), features Nick Cave, David Byrne, Bob Dylan and Viv Stanshall.

Cave is on the cover, and inside there’s an exclusive, extended interview with the songwriter about the screenplay and soundtrack for new film Lawless, the future of the Bad Seeds and his exceedingly short-lived acting career.

David Byrne and St Vincent talk about their hyperactive collaborative album, Love This Giant, out September 10, Bob Dylan’s new album Tempest is reviewed by Uncut editor Allan Jones, and Viv Stanshall’s wilderness years of drunkenness, japes and genius are examined.

Elsewhere, we look at the making of John Cooper Clarke’s “Beasley Street”, the Grateful Dead’s cosmic journey is chronicled through their live albums, and the revolutionary tale of The Dubliners is told.

The news section includes chats with John Paul Jones, Grandaddy and First Aid Kit.

As well as Dylan, the huge 38-page reviews section dissects albums from Grizzly Bear, The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, Calexico, The xx, Animal Collective, Frank Zappa and the Sex Pistols.

Films including Lawless and Looper, DVDs such as The Monk and Produced By George Martin, and books including Mike Scott’s Adventures Of A Waterboy, are also reviewed.

The live section features Elizabeth Fraser, the Ty Segall Band and Robert Plant, and the issue’s free CD boasts some stunning songs from the likes of Calexico, Patterson Hood, Dinosaur Jr and Mark Eitzel.

The new issue is out now.

Lynyrd Skynyrd: “We wanted to be America’s Rolling Stones”

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In this archive feature from the May 2006 (Take 108) issue of Uncut, the whole story of the ill-fated Southern rockers is told – from their days “acting crazy” and losing teeth, to their devastating, fatal plane crash. Words: Rob Hughes ______________________ Lord knows, Lynyrd Skynyrd had s...

In this archive feature from the May 2006 (Take 108) issue of Uncut, the whole story of the ill-fated Southern rockers is told – from their days “acting crazy” and losing teeth, to their devastating, fatal plane crash. Words: Rob Hughes

______________________

Lord knows, Lynyrd Skynyrd had seen it coming. On the flight from Florida to South Carolina, the band’s Convair CV-240 tour plane had begun spewing orange flames from its starboard engine. The two pilots seemed unfazed, insisting there wasn’t a problem. But by the time they landed in Greenville, some were spooked enough to book commercial flights to their next destination.

The following day, leader Ronnie Van Zant decided to board again for that night’s gig in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. In lieu of Skynyrd’s all-for-one credo, the rest of the 26 people – bandmembers and road crew – followed suit. Stepping aboard in the late afternoon of October 20, 1977, Van Zant turned to security guard Gene Odom: “C’mon, let’s go,” he said. “If it’s your time to go, it’s your time to go.”

At the point of departure, Lynyrd Skynyrd were approaching their commercial peak. Topping the bill on America’s massive outdoor festival circuit, they were now tilting at attendance figures set by the Stones. Fifth album Street Survivors – released three days earlier – would prove their biggest seller, eventually going multi-platinum.

“We wanted to be America’s Rolling Stones,” guitarist and co-founder Gary Rossington tells Uncut in February 2006, “to be the biggest band over here. And I believe we were on our way.”

Only an act of God – say, a horrific plane crash – could possibly stop them.

Hurtling from the Florida swamplands, Skynyrd’s slashing, triple-guitar crosstalk and plain wisdom – digging deep into country, blues and Dixie soul – marked them out as quintessential blue-collar champions. In ’70s America, they looked like Confederate rednecks, but songwriter Ronnie Van Zant carried a raw sensibility and sense of moral justice that flew directly in the face of backward Southern cliché.

Their blueprint can be traced through to modern-day heroes like Drive-By Truckers, whose 2001 album Southern Rock Opera is a sideways Skynyrd tribute. Metallica, Eminem, Kid Rock, Kings Of Leon and My Morning Jacket have all acknowledged a debt. And, however dubious the appropriation, two anthems are now indelibly sewn into the fabric of American life. KFC recently used “Sweet Home Alabama” on their ads, while American news teams reported hearing the strains of “Free Bird” emanating from armoured Strykers on the streets of Mosul, Iraq earlier this year. Unlike Southern contemporaries The Allman Brothers or The Marshall Tucker Band, Skynyrd connected on a gut level.

“We were kinda rebels,” says Rossington. “From the wrong side of the tracks. Down where we were raised, it was a tough town. [Fellow founder] Allen Collins, Ronnie and myself had this dream to be a big rock’n’roll band. We had fire in our eyes. And we vowed never to quit until we made it.”

A like-minded bunch of high-school drop-outs from Jacksonville, the band began as a five-piece in 1964, fired by the music of the British Invasion. By 1972, after gigging relentlessly and leaving behind two seven-inch singles and a trail of different monikers, they’d become Lynyrd Skynyrd, a vowel-play on the old schoolteacher who’d chastised them for being longhairs: Leonard Skinner. They’d already cut a bunch of Muscle Shoals demos when ’60s legend Al Kooper caught Skynyrd at a bar in Atlanta, Georgia, while scouting for his Sounds Of The South label.

The Beatles to reissue Magical Mystery Tour film

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The Beatles are set to reissue their 1967 film Magical Mystery Tour. Released in the wake of the release of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, Magical Mystery Tour was The Beatles' third film and documents a psychedelic coach trip to the seaside. Previously out of print, a fully restored editi...

The Beatles are set to reissue their 1967 film Magical Mystery Tour.

Released in the wake of the release of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, Magical Mystery Tour was The Beatles’ third film and documents a psychedelic coach trip to the seaside.

Previously out of print, a fully restored edition of the film will be released on October 9 with a remixed soundtrack and special features, including scenes that were cut from the original, as well as interviews with the band and cast.

A special boxed deluxe edition will also include both the DVD and Blu-ray version of the film, as well as a 60-page book and 7″ vinyl EP of the film’s six new Beatles songs, which were originally issued in the UK to complement the film’s 1967 release.

The film features a supporting cast including Ivor Cutler, comedy actors Victor Spinetti, Jessie Robins, Nat Jackley, Derek Royle and the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band.

Magical Mystery Tour will also be released for the big screen, showing in cinemas from September 27. The British Film Institute have also announced a special screening at London’s BFI Southbank on October 2.

Six Organs Of Admittance: “Ascent”

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With the new Uncut out tomorrow, it just occurred to me that I'd forgotten to post this review from the last issue. I did at least put up the full transcript of my email exchange with Ben Chasny, which you can check out by following this link. "Ascent" is on sale now, by the way. It isn’t, in all honesty, the most canonical and secure of musical judgments. Nevertheless, there is a small cabal of rock fans who will argue all day that a Santa Cruz five-piece called Comets On Fire were one of the great bands of the early 21st Century. Between 2001 and 2006, and over four albums of incrementally rising fidelity, the Comets mastered a hybrid of West Coast psychedelia, hardcore, white noise, classic rock and fever dream sci-fi. “Forward-thinking motherfuckers,” noted an admiring Julian Cope, transfixed by their savagery around the time of 2002’s second album, Field Recordings From The Sun. Around that time, too, Comets On Fire fell in with a guitarist called Ben Chasny, who was making brackish, witchy psych-folk on his own as Six Organs Of Admittance. Initially, Comets were engaged as the backing band for a putative Six Organs release. Soon enough, though, the sessions were aborted. Chasny would continue to release Six Organs records, but his relationship with Comets On Fire had changed: he had also become one of them. Perpetually distracted by their other projects, Comets dissolved sometime after 2006’s Avatar, with frontman Ethan Miller focusing on the brawny orthodoxies of his other band, Howlin Rain. Since then, Chasny has persisted with an adventurous career on the margins, as both an inveterate collaborator (notably with a fractious leftfield power trio, Rangda) and as the meditative Six Organs. It now seems he has decided to tie up some loose ends, too. The supporting players on Ascent, the 13th album released by Chasny under the Six Organs brand, are his old comrades from Comets On Fire: more experienced, steered by Chasny’s vision rather than their collective mania, but no less potent and exciting. Chasny is predominantly known as an acoustic player, with a style that is rooted in the folk ragas of Robbie Basho and Peter Walker, but privileges fervour and caprice, an unruly imagination, over doughty virtuosity. When he switches to electric, his songs often lock into swirling patterns and spiritual drones, orbiting around songforms that take the form of distant muttered incantations. Those frail melodies remain, but Ascent plays down the cyclical scrabbling. “A Thousand Birds” and “Close To The Sky” were both essayed during the doomed 2002 sessions (which Ethan Miller has made available at his blog, www.silvercurrant.blogspot.co.uk) before turning up in acoustic form on Six Organs’ Dark Noontide (2002) and Compathia (2003). Here, though, Utrillo Kushner (drums) and Ben Flashman (bass) wander into dogged Crazy Horse grooves, leaving Miller (a reverbed constant in the right channel) and Noel Von Harmonson to provide simmering guitar backup, and Chasny to fly untethered over the top. His solos may spit, writhe and yank the songs into new shapes, but Chasny is an unusually egoless player. For all the extensive fireworks, his style feels more punkish and exploratory than mere showboating: witness the doubled-up shredding that cuts a swathe through “Even If You Knew” (another tune retrieved from the 2002 batch), its fuzzy pulse related to the Doors’ “Five To One”. The strongest echo of Comets On Fire’s old work comes on the opening “Waswasa”, an overdriven belt-buckle boogie (in which Kushner, as Cope once put it, “is sometimes two drummers [who] both think they are Keith Moon.”) that recalls one of their more streamlined tracks, “Sour Smoke” (2006). Mostly, though, Ascent sounds like Chasny channelling a great band’s alchemical powers to his own ends, in the process making what may turn out to be a highpoint in his already rich and complex career. It adds, too, a pleasing new chapter to one of rock’s less celebrated cult stories, even if we should be wary of overplaying the sentimentality. In “Close To The Sky”, Chasny’s mammoth and elaborate solo is eventually tamed by a beautifully jangling acoustic line, which you’d initially assume to be an intuitive contribution by Miller. The idea of a mythical jam is a romantic one but, ultimately, Ascent is a Six Organs record. The acoustic guitar, it transpires, is an overdub added by Chasny himself, finessing his masterpiece long after the reunion sessions are over. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

With the new Uncut out tomorrow, it just occurred to me that I’d forgotten to post this review from the last issue. I did at least put up the full transcript of my email exchange with Ben Chasny, which you can check out by following this link. “Ascent” is on sale now, by the way.

It isn’t, in all honesty, the most canonical and secure of musical judgments. Nevertheless, there is a small cabal of rock fans who will argue all day that a Santa Cruz five-piece called Comets On Fire were one of the great bands of the early 21st Century. Between 2001 and 2006, and over four albums of incrementally rising fidelity, the Comets mastered a hybrid of West Coast psychedelia, hardcore, white noise, classic rock and fever dream sci-fi. “Forward-thinking motherfuckers,” noted an admiring Julian Cope, transfixed by their savagery around the time of 2002’s second album, Field Recordings From The Sun.

Around that time, too, Comets On Fire fell in with a guitarist called Ben Chasny, who was making brackish, witchy psych-folk on his own as Six Organs Of Admittance. Initially, Comets were engaged as the backing band for a putative Six Organs release. Soon enough, though, the sessions were aborted. Chasny would continue to release Six Organs records, but his relationship with Comets On Fire had changed: he had also become one of them.

Perpetually distracted by their other projects, Comets dissolved sometime after 2006’s Avatar, with frontman Ethan Miller focusing on the brawny orthodoxies of his other band, Howlin Rain. Since then, Chasny has persisted with an adventurous career on the margins, as both an inveterate collaborator (notably with a fractious leftfield power trio, Rangda) and as the meditative Six Organs. It now seems he has decided to tie up some loose ends, too. The supporting players on Ascent, the 13th album released by Chasny under the Six Organs brand, are his old comrades from Comets On Fire: more experienced, steered by Chasny’s vision rather than their collective mania, but no less potent and exciting.

Chasny is predominantly known as an acoustic player, with a style that is rooted in the folk ragas of Robbie Basho and Peter Walker, but privileges fervour and caprice, an unruly imagination, over doughty virtuosity. When he switches to electric, his songs often lock into swirling patterns and spiritual drones, orbiting around songforms that take the form of distant muttered incantations. Those frail melodies remain, but Ascent plays down the cyclical scrabbling. “A Thousand Birds” and “Close To The Sky” were both essayed during the doomed 2002 sessions (which Ethan Miller has made available at his blog, www.silvercurrant.blogspot.co.uk) before turning up in acoustic form on Six Organs’ Dark Noontide (2002) and Compathia (2003). Here, though, Utrillo Kushner (drums) and Ben Flashman (bass) wander into dogged Crazy Horse grooves, leaving Miller (a reverbed constant in the right channel) and Noel Von Harmonson to provide simmering guitar backup, and Chasny to fly untethered over the top.

His solos may spit, writhe and yank the songs into new shapes, but Chasny is an unusually egoless player. For all the extensive fireworks, his style feels more punkish and exploratory than mere showboating: witness the doubled-up shredding that cuts a swathe through “Even If You Knew” (another tune retrieved from the 2002 batch), its fuzzy pulse related to the Doors’ “Five To One”.

The strongest echo of Comets On Fire’s old work comes on the opening “Waswasa”, an overdriven belt-buckle boogie (in which Kushner, as Cope once put it, “is sometimes two drummers [who] both think they are Keith Moon.”) that recalls one of their more streamlined tracks, “Sour Smoke” (2006). Mostly, though, Ascent sounds like Chasny channelling a great band’s alchemical powers to his own ends, in the process making what may turn out to be a highpoint in his already rich and complex career.

It adds, too, a pleasing new chapter to one of rock’s less celebrated cult stories, even if we should be wary of overplaying the sentimentality. In “Close To The Sky”, Chasny’s mammoth and elaborate solo is eventually tamed by a beautifully jangling acoustic line, which you’d initially assume to be an intuitive contribution by Miller. The idea of a mythical jam is a romantic one but, ultimately, Ascent is a Six Organs record. The acoustic guitar, it transpires, is an overdub added by Chasny himself, finessing his masterpiece long after the reunion sessions are over.

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

October 2012

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The first time Melody Maker feels confident enough to send me abroad without fearing an international incident as a consequence, I'm dispatched to interview Frank Zappa in Paris, where The Mothers Of Invention are celebrating their 10th anniversary. This is September, 1974, a trip I was reminded of...

The first time Melody Maker feels confident enough to send me abroad without fearing an international incident as a consequence, I’m dispatched to interview Frank Zappa in Paris, where The Mothers Of Invention are celebrating their 10th anniversary.

This is September, 1974, a trip I was reminded of after reading the review in this issue of Zappa’s first 12 albums, re-mastered as part of a campaign that sees 60 of his recordings re-released in batches of a dozen per month until the end of the year. At the time, I was thrilled enough to be going to Paris, since I’d never been there and was looking forward to finding some dark bar on the Left Bank where I might drink cognac, smoke ostentatiously and perhaps fall in love with a beatnik girl, that kind of thing. I was less excited about the bits of the trip involving Zappa and his music, and this was entirely due to the month I spent when I first went to art school sharing a room in digs with a couple of fellow students. Bill was a garrulous Scouser with a taste for good weed and Blue Cheer. Graham by contrast was worryingly eccentric with some peculiar habits, such as sleeping with a large stuffed rabbit with which, from the grunts of ecstasy that nightly came from his side of the room, he seemed to enjoy a disconcerting carnal familiarity.

Among Graham’s other passions was Mahler, whose depressing symphonies he listened to standing in front of a wardrobe mirror, waving a conductor’s baton and wearing only a top hat, underpants and spats, a no doubt stylish look I was nevertheless not tempted to emulate. Other than Mahler, Graham played only Frank Zappa albums, mainly Uncle Meat, his favourite, which we were forced to endure at startling volume, repeatedly, while Graham cuddled his rabbit, amorously. I had not really been able to listen to Zappa since. But, hey, there’s at least a party to look forward to in Paris. It’s at swish nightspot The Alcazar, where I end up sitting next to a spectacularly fucked-up Stephen Stills, who may not if asked have been able to tell you where he was. The cabaret that follows a lavish banquet is amazing. Trapeze artists, 30 or 40 of them in various states of undress, swing across the stage, dangle from ropes, descend from great heights on escalators. Naked women frolic in bubble baths, making Stills whoop loudly. For the show’s climax, the stage is transformed into the legendary Moulin Rouge dance hall, can-can dancers kicking up a storm, a riot of skirts and frilly underwear. The trapeze gals are back in action, too, a blur of tits and tassels. Crescent moons and gondolas descend from above, each festooned with yet another naked beauty as still more Gallic stunners are delivered onto the stage via escalators. The stage is so crowded, there’s barely room for Zappa, who makes a short speech before being borne aloft on one of the moons, waving daintily.

The next day, Zappa cancels all his interviews, overcome by a mood so foul he carries it into a surly show at the Palais des Sports. He does, however, extend an invitation to join him for dinner at some swanky restaurant where even the cheapest meal on the menu costs at least twice as much as I earn a month on MM. Zappa’s mood continues to be for whatever reason completely sour, unsettling everyone around him and making him unapproachable. Charles Shaar Murray, here for the NME, is confident however of impressing Zappa with his wit and erudition, telling Frank he’s currently compiling what Charlie floridly describes as an analysis of Zappa’s “output macrostructure”, which I take to mean Zappa’s albums to date. Frank looks at Charlie as he might at a dog who’s just shit on his shoe, Charlie in his leathers, afro and mirror shades. “Do you know you look like Mike Bloomfield?” Frank asks Charlie, who with a swagger says he does. “He was a fucking idiot, too,” Frank says, ignoring Charlie for the rest of the meal, which no-one really has the appetite for.

Enjoy the issue! On Sale from Friday 24 August

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Franz Ferdinand’s Nick McCarthy unveils new band The Nice Nice Boys

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Franz Ferdinand's Nick McCarthy has unveiled his new side-project – The Nice Nice Boys. The guitarist has teamed up with Johnny Marr And The Healers' Andy Knowles and you can hear their new single 'Round Town', featuring rapper Marvellous Macc Mello, by scrolling down below. Recorded in McCarthy...

Franz Ferdinand‘s Nick McCarthy has unveiled his new side-project – The Nice Nice Boys.

The guitarist has teamed up with Johnny Marr And The Healers’ Andy Knowles and you can hear their new single ‘Round Town’, featuring rapper Marvellous Macc Mello, by scrolling down below. Recorded in McCarthy’s Sausage Studios and mixed at Abbey Road, the single is set to be released on McCarthy and Knowles’ label Meat Records.

The pair met at Glasgow School of Art in 2001 and hit the road together in Franz Ferdinand, with Knowles acting as an extra touring musician. Macc Mello’s debut single ‘Drop That Beat’, meanwhile, recently featured on E4’s Skins and the film Eden Lake.

Franz Ferdinand meanwhile, recently debuted four new songs – ‘Right Thoughts’, ‘Brief Encounters’, ‘Fresh Strawberries’ and ‘Trees And Animals’ – at various festivals including London’s Field Day.

They are currently working on a new album which is the follow-up to their 2009 LP ‘Tonight: Franz Ferdinand’. The band have a series of European dates lined up in the coming months but no further UK shows confirmed for the rest of the year.

Noel Gallagher: ‘I was the best-dressed roadie in the history of music’

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Noel Gallagher has declared himself "the best dressed roadie in rock n'roll history" and says he believes he'd still be setting up bands' gear now if he hadn't made it with Oasis. The guitarist, who released his debut solo album 'Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds' late last year, told The Sun that...

Noel Gallagher has declared himself “the best dressed roadie in rock n’roll history” and says he believes he’d still be setting up bands’ gear now if he hadn’t made it with Oasis.

The guitarist, who released his debut solo album ‘Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds’ late last year, told The Sun that he was convinced he’d still be touring with bands now as part of the backline crew as he did with Inspiral Carpets if Oasis had not gone on to become a successful band.

Asked what he reckoned he’d be doing if Oasis hadn’t made it, Gallagher said: “I would have been out there now, probably in an ill-fitting black T-shirt with a tattoo and some scruffy Converse trainers. Because that is what they all wear.”

He continued: “But I was maybe the best-dressed roadie in the history of music. I used to wear white jeans and never got them dirty. I was too quick for the dirt.”

Meanwhile, Gallagher has confirmed the release of his first solo live DVD on October 15. International Magic Live At The O2 will feature the full gig from his February 26 show plus a second disc which will include footage of his performance from the NME Awards, where he was crowned this year’s Godlike Genius, plus an acoustic set at The Mod Club in Toronto and three music videos from his recent singles.

Gallagher and his High Flying Birds will also play the iTunes Festival on September 12 at London’s Roundhouse. See itunesfestival.com for full details on how to get tickets.

David Byrne: “Working with women, there’s a lot less macho swagger to deal with”

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David Byrne has revealed how smoothly his recent collaboration with St Vincent went, in the new issue of Uncut, out on Friday (August 24). The two are set to release their joint album Love This Giant on September 10, and Byrne reckons the success of their team-up was partly down to the gender of ...

David Byrne has revealed how smoothly his recent collaboration with St Vincent went, in the new issue of Uncut, out on Friday (August 24).

The two are set to release their joint album Love This Giant on September 10, and Byrne reckons the success of their team-up was partly down to the gender of St Vincent, aka Annie Clark.

“Annie’s voice is in a range pretty close to mine,” the former Talking Heads frontman says. “That worked out pretty well. [When you’re working with women] there’s a little less – well, a lot less – macho swagger to deal with. You can be just dealing with the music, which is sometimes nice.”

For the rest of the interview with Byrne and Clark, check out the new issue of Uncut (October 2012, Take 185), which is out on Friday, August 24.

Picture credit: Pieter M Van Hattem

Jack White announces full UK and Ireland tour

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Jack White has announced a full UK and Ireland tour for later this year. The guitarist, singer and producer, who released his debut solo album, Blunderbuss, earlier this year, will play six shows on the trek in late October and early November. The run of dates begins at Dublin's O2 Arena on Octobe...

Jack White has announced a full UK and Ireland tour for later this year.

The guitarist, singer and producer, who released his debut solo album, Blunderbuss, earlier this year, will play six shows on the trek in late October and early November.

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

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

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

The Welsh crooner 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 Lane 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)

Bridlington Spa (4)

Blackpool Empress Ballroom (6)

O2 Academy Birmingham (7)

Edinburgh Usher Hall (8)

Picture credit: Pieter M Van Hattem

David Gray angers residents as he reveals plan to turn Bob Dylan, Radiohead studio into flats

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David Gray has angered residents in London's Crouch Hill after he announced that he is planning to turn historic recording studio The Church Studios into a block of flats and offices. The studio, which has hosted sessions by the likes of Bob Dylan, My Bloody Valentine, Radiohead, Kaiser Chiefs and...

David Gray has angered residents in London’s Crouch Hill after he announced that he is planning to turn historic recording studio The Church Studios into a block of flats and offices.

The studio, which has hosted sessions by the likes of Bob Dylan, My Bloody Valentine, Radiohead, Kaiser Chiefs and Bombay Bicycle Club, is a converted church and was originally owned by Eurythmics’ Dave Stewart before he sold it to Gray in 2003.

Local residents have expressed their disgust at the plans, with Sue Hessel, who chairman of Haslemere Road Residents’ Association, telling the Ham & High: “This is so sad. Crouch End has enough flats. Crouch End’s music heritage is what makes it such a special place to live. Turning such a culturally rich building into flats is not in the spirit of Crouch End.”

Gray’s architect, Mark Ruthven, has said that the studios are now “obsolete” and completely out of date, saying: “It is completely obsolete, it doesn’t get used. This is a way of the building being used. The heritage is preserved. The important thing is to find a re-use and that it is done in a sensitive way.”

Gray himself has issued a statement about the plans, with his representative blaming “the current upheaval in the music business” for his decision to try and convert the studios into flats.

The representative said: “Having owned and enjoyed the church for nearly 10 years, it is time to move on. David would be delighted to sell The Church Studios but given the current upheaval in the music business and the repercussions on commercial recording stuios, it is only prudent to explore other avenues, including redevelopment.”

Before Gray can procede with his plans, he will require planning permission from Haringey Council, who will rule on the bid at a later date.

David Gray released his ninth studio album ‘Foundling’ in 2010.

The xx: ”Coexist’ doesn’t seem a world away from our debut’

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Romy Madley Croft of The xx has said that the band's forthcoming second album, 'Coexist' – which is due for release on September 10 – isn't a "world away" from their eponymous 2010 debut. Speaking in Rolling Stone, she said that the new record "carries on" what they were doing on xx. She said: "It just sort of carries it on. It's developed, but it doesn't seem like completely a world away. I hope people will just enjoy it as a development of where we were before." Meanwhile, her bandmate and producer, Jamie Smith, has said the production on their second album is "just better" than his work on their first LP. The London band play a trio of intimate UK shows next month. 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 on September 7. The xx will also team up with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra for a special concert in the town of Bridlington on September 19, where they will play brand new orchestral material as well as tracks from their two albums. The new material has been written by composer Alex Baranowski, who has most recently worked on the National Theatre's productions of Hamlet and Frankenstein. For more information, visit BBC.co.uk/orchestras/philharmonic.

Romy Madley Croft of The xx has said that the band’s forthcoming second album, ‘Coexist’ – which is due for release on September 10 – isn’t a “world away” from their eponymous 2010 debut.

Speaking in Rolling Stone, she said that the new record “carries on” what they were doing on xx. She said: “It just sort of carries it on. It’s developed, but it doesn’t seem like completely a world away. I hope people will just enjoy it as a development of where we were before.”

Meanwhile, her bandmate and producer, Jamie Smith, has said the production on their second album is “just better” than his work on their first LP.

The London band play a trio of intimate UK shows next month. 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 on September 7.

The xx will also team up with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra for a special concert in the town of Bridlington on September 19, where they will play brand new orchestral material as well as tracks from their two albums.

The new material has been written by composer Alex Baranowski, who has most recently worked on the National Theatre’s productions of Hamlet and Frankenstein. For more information, visit BBC.co.uk/orchestras/philharmonic.

ZZ Top to release first album in nine years

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ZZ Top are set to release 'La Futura', their first new album in nine years, on September 10. The legendary guitar band's new album is their fifteenth studio LP, and has been produced by Rick Rubin and Billy Gibbons of the band. It is made up of 10 tracks and was recorded at Foam Box Recordings in H...

ZZ Top are set to release ‘La Futura’, their first new album in nine years, on September 10.

The legendary guitar band’s new album is their fifteenth studio LP, and has been produced by Rick Rubin and Billy Gibbons of the band. It is made up of 10 tracks and was recorded at Foam Box Recordings in Houston and at Shangri La Studios in Malibu.

Of the follow-up to 2003’s ‘Mescalero’, Gibbons says: “We thought long and hard about what this album should be. We wanted to recall the directness of our early stuff but not turn our backs on contemporary technology. The result of this melding of the past and the present is, of course, ‘La Futura’.”

Earlier this summer, Gibbons revealed that he and bandmate Dusty Hill once turned down an offer of $1 million (£638,000) to shave off their beards. The singer told Brave Worlds that he and Hill were approached by Gillette, who offered them the staggering amount of money to shave.

Asked why he turned it down, Gibbons said: “No dice. Even adjusted for inflation, this isn’t going to fly. They prospect of seeing oneself in the mirror clean-shaven is too close to a Vincent Price film… a prospect not to be contemplated, no matter the compensation.”

ZZ Top are currently on tour in North America.

The ‘La Futura’ tracklisting is:

‘I Gotsta Get Paid’

‘Chartreuse’

‘Consumption’

‘Over You’

‘Heartache In Blue’

‘I Don’t Wanna Lose, Lose, You’

‘Flyin’ High’

‘It’s Too Easy Mañana’

‘Big Shiny Nine’

‘Have A Little Mercy’

John Paul Jones: “Live with Zeppelin, I often had no idea what I was going to do”

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John Paul Jones has revealed that his latest project shares some live similarities with Led Zeppelin. In the new issue of Uncut, out Friday (August 24), the bassist explained that his work with Norwegian noisemakers Supersilent features improvisation in the same way his legendary group’s shows ...

John Paul Jones has revealed that his latest project shares some live similarities with Led Zeppelin.

In the new issue of Uncut, out Friday (August 24), the bassist explained that his work with Norwegian noisemakers Supersilent features improvisation in the same way his legendary group’s shows did in the late ’60s and ’70s.

“There were great unplanned improv sequences in Led Zep songs: ‘Dazed And Confused’, ‘Whole Lotta Love’,” Jones says. “Quite often I found myself on stage with absolutely no idea of what I was going to do, and that’s the fun of it.”

Unlike Zeppelin, though, his performances with Supersilent use complex electronic processing: “I love this style of playing – it can be extraordinarily delicate and beautiful, or it can sound like the end of the world.”

Supersilent Featuring John Paul Jones tour the UK in November.

The new issue of Uncut (October 2012, Take 185) is out on Friday, August 24.

Picture credit: Oscar Garcia Suarez

The 34th Uncut Playlist Of 2012

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A couple of notable absences here, I guess, since there remains no sign of Neil Young & Crazy Horse’s “Psychedelic Pill” (as we’re currently assuming it’s called), and only the editor has heard Bob Dylan’s “Tempest”, in some kind of fortified panic room at the Sony offices. Allan has written an extensive review of “Tempest”, though, which you can find in the new issue of Uncut, in the shops on Friday and possibly arriving for UK subscribers today or tomorrow. Plenty more in there to hype, as ever (Nick Cave, Vivian Stanshall, Mike Nesmith, The Dubliners, John Paul Jones, Grandaddy, for a start), but I’m especially keen on Jon Dale’s meticulous and invaluable guide to Grateful Dead live albums. Temptation resisted to spend the week digging into Jon’s Dead recommendations, here are the records we’ve actually played in the office over the past couple of days. Five I’m not so keen on, I think, but enduring love for the Cody ChesnuTT return, a belated understanding and appreciation of Dan Deacon, and a great new Lindstrøm album. The appearance of George Stavis, incidentally, is due to the Reviews Ed currently buying as many avant-garde banjo records as he can find on Ebay. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 George Stavis – Morning Mood (Aspen) 2 The Chris Robinson Brotherhood – The Magic Door (Silver Arrow) 3 Matmos – The Ganzfeld EP (Thrill Jockey) 4 Chrome Canyon – Elemental Themes (Stones Throw) 5 Jason Lytle – Dept Of Disappearance (Anti-) 6 The Touré-Raichel Collective – The Tel Aviv Session (Cumbancha) 7 Cody ChesnuTT – Landing On A Hundred (One Little Indian) 8 Jessica Bailiff – At The Down-Turned Jagged Rim Of The Sky (Kranky) 9 Dan Deacon – America (Domino) 10 White Denim – 2012-04-07 The Firebird (Bootleg) 11 Sophie Hutchings – Night Sky (Preservation) 12 Rebekka Karijord – We Become Ourselves (Freak Kitten) 13 Tops – Tender Opposites (Arbutus) 14 Sic Alps – Sic Alps (Drag City) 15 Lindstrøm – Smalhans (Smalltown Supersound) 16 Moon Duo – Circles (Souterrain Transmissions)

A couple of notable absences here, I guess, since there remains no sign of Neil Young & Crazy Horse’s “Psychedelic Pill” (as we’re currently assuming it’s called), and only the editor has heard Bob Dylan’s “Tempest”, in some kind of fortified panic room at the Sony offices.

Allan has written an extensive review of “Tempest”, though, which you can find in the new issue of Uncut, in the shops on Friday and possibly arriving for UK subscribers today or tomorrow. Plenty more in there to hype, as ever (Nick Cave, Vivian Stanshall, Mike Nesmith, The Dubliners, John Paul Jones, Grandaddy, for a start), but I’m especially keen on Jon Dale’s meticulous and invaluable guide to Grateful Dead live albums.

Temptation resisted to spend the week digging into Jon’s Dead recommendations, here are the records we’ve actually played in the office over the past couple of days. Five I’m not so keen on, I think, but enduring love for the Cody ChesnuTT return, a belated understanding and appreciation of Dan Deacon, and a great new Lindstrøm album. The appearance of George Stavis, incidentally, is due to the Reviews Ed currently buying as many avant-garde banjo records as he can find on Ebay.

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

1 George Stavis – Morning Mood (Aspen)

2 The Chris Robinson Brotherhood – The Magic Door (Silver Arrow)

3 Matmos – The Ganzfeld EP (Thrill Jockey)

4 Chrome Canyon – Elemental Themes (Stones Throw)

5 Jason Lytle – Dept Of Disappearance (Anti-)

6 The Touré-Raichel Collective – The Tel Aviv Session (Cumbancha)

7 Cody ChesnuTT – Landing On A Hundred (One Little Indian)

8 Jessica Bailiff – At The Down-Turned Jagged Rim Of The Sky (Kranky)

9 Dan Deacon – America (Domino)

10 White Denim – 2012-04-07 The Firebird (Bootleg)

11 Sophie Hutchings – Night Sky (Preservation)

12 Rebekka Karijord – We Become Ourselves (Freak Kitten)

13 Tops – Tender Opposites (Arbutus)

14 Sic Alps – Sic Alps (Drag City)

15 Lindstrøm – Smalhans (Smalltown Supersound)

16 Moon Duo – Circles (Souterrain Transmissions)

Nick Cave, Bob Dylan, The Grateful Dead in the new Uncut

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We’ve just had our copies of the new issue dropped off in the office, ahead of it going on sale later this week. Nick Cave’s on the cover, glowering menacingly. John Robinson went down to Brighton, where, as John memorably tells us, Nick lives in a house that’s ‘large and white, much as Russia in winter is large and white’. The occasion for Uncut dropping in on Cave was the release of Lawless, the terrific – and terrifically violent - new movie directed by Nick’s long-time collaborator, John Hillcoat, for which Cave has written the snappy screenplay. John found Cave in expansive mood, however, and the interview ranges over all areas of his work, including his abiding preoccupations as a songwriter, his hilariously short-lived acting career, previous film work, including The Proposition, which he also wrote for Hillcoat, the bonkers screenplay he was asked by Russell Crowe to write for a sequel to Gladiator and the soundtracks he has composed with Warren Ellis of The Dirty Three, who are also interviewed. There’s also a track by track guide to the brilliant Lawless soundtrack, which features contributions from Mark Lanegan, Emmylou Harris, Willie Nelson and 85 year-old bluegrass veteran Ralph Stanley, who turns in spellbinding covers of The Velvet Underground’s “White Light/White Heat” and Captain Beefheart’s “Sure ‘Nuff’N Yes I Do”, with the rest of the content supplied by The Bootleggers, the band specially-convened by Cave and Ellis for the project. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s a hefty review I’ve written of Bob Dylan’s tremendous new album, Tempest, which Uncut was finally allowed to listen to again after the sneak preview we had of it a few months ago. Tempest leads off a typically busy review section, which includes new releases from Grizzly Bear, The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, Calexico, The xx, Animal Collective and Cat Power. In our Archive session, meanwhile, David Cavanagh gets to grips with the first 12 Frank Zappa/Mothers Of Invention albums, re-mastered as part of a reissue campaign that sees 60 of his recordings re-released in batches of a dozen a month until the end of the year, John Lewis is fascinated by the three-CD plus DVD 35th Anniversary box set of The Sex Pistols’ Never Mind The Bollocks and Neil Spencer introduces Bill Wilson, whose 1973 album Ever Changing Minstrel is an obscure gem, rescued from obscurity by the admirable folk at Tompkins Square. Among this month’s features, we have an amazing guide to the Grateful Dead’s live archive, a vast repository of material that includes over 100 official live albums and numberless bootlegs. We also drop in on David Byrne and St Vincent in New York to discuss their new Love This Giant collaboration, Andy Gill looks at the strange and wonderful world of Vivian Stanshall, Ian Hunter talks us through his classic albums, we’re up for the craic with the story of The Dubliners, Mike Nesmith holds court in An Audience With and John Cooper Clarke guides us through the writing and recording of his classic track, “Beasley Street”. This month’s CD, before I go, is also ful of great stuff, including tracks from new albums by Calexico, Patterson Hood, Mark Eitzel, Dinosaur Jr, Chris Robinson Brotherhood, Jon Spencer, Dan Stuart, James Yorkston, The Oh Sees and Catherine Irwin. The new Uncut is on sale from Friday, August 24. Hope you enjoy it! Nick Cave pic: Sam Jones

We’ve just had our copies of the new issue dropped off in the office, ahead of it going on sale later this week. Nick Cave’s on the cover, glowering menacingly. John Robinson went down to Brighton, where, as John memorably tells us, Nick lives in a house that’s ‘large and white, much as Russia in winter is large and white’. The occasion for Uncut dropping in on Cave was the release of Lawless, the terrific – and terrifically violent – new movie directed by Nick’s long-time collaborator, John Hillcoat, for which Cave has written the snappy screenplay.

John found Cave in expansive mood, however, and the interview ranges over all areas of his work, including his abiding preoccupations as a songwriter, his hilariously short-lived acting career, previous film work, including The Proposition, which he also wrote for Hillcoat, the bonkers screenplay he was asked by Russell Crowe to write for a sequel to Gladiator and the soundtracks he has composed with Warren Ellis of The Dirty Three, who are also interviewed.

There’s also a track by track guide to the brilliant Lawless soundtrack, which features contributions from Mark Lanegan, Emmylou Harris, Willie Nelson and 85 year-old bluegrass veteran Ralph Stanley, who turns in spellbinding covers of The Velvet Underground’s “White Light/White Heat” and Captain Beefheart’s “Sure ‘Nuff’N Yes I Do”, with the rest of the content supplied by The Bootleggers, the band specially-convened by Cave and Ellis for the project.

Elsewhere in the issue, there’s a hefty review I’ve written of Bob Dylan’s tremendous new album, Tempest, which Uncut was finally allowed to listen to again after the sneak preview we had of it a few months ago. Tempest leads off a typically busy review section, which includes new releases from Grizzly Bear, The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, Calexico, The xx, Animal Collective and Cat Power. In our Archive session, meanwhile, David Cavanagh gets to grips with the first 12 Frank Zappa/Mothers Of Invention albums, re-mastered as part of a reissue campaign that sees 60 of his recordings re-released in batches of a dozen a month until the end of the year, John Lewis is fascinated by the three-CD plus DVD 35th Anniversary box set of The Sex Pistols’ Never Mind The Bollocks and Neil Spencer introduces Bill Wilson, whose 1973 album Ever Changing Minstrel is an obscure gem, rescued from obscurity by the admirable folk at Tompkins Square.

Among this month’s features, we have an amazing guide to the Grateful Dead’s live archive, a vast repository of material that includes over 100 official live albums and numberless bootlegs. We also drop in on David Byrne and St Vincent in New York to discuss their new Love This Giant collaboration, Andy Gill looks at the strange and wonderful world of Vivian Stanshall, Ian Hunter talks us through his classic albums, we’re up for the craic with the story of The Dubliners, Mike Nesmith holds court in An Audience With and John Cooper Clarke guides us through the writing and recording of his classic track, “Beasley Street”.

This month’s CD, before I go, is also ful of great stuff, including tracks from new albums by Calexico, Patterson Hood, Mark Eitzel, Dinosaur Jr, Chris Robinson Brotherhood, Jon Spencer, Dan Stuart, James Yorkston, The Oh Sees and Catherine Irwin.

The new Uncut is on sale from Friday, August 24. Hope you enjoy it!

Nick Cave pic: Sam Jones

Nick Cave: “Everyone assumes I’m musically inept…”

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Nick Cave sheds light on his script and soundtrack for the movie Lawless, and the future of the Bad Seeds, in the new issue of Uncut, out on Friday (August 24). In the cover feature, Uncut visits Cave at his home in Brighton to discuss topics including the songwriter’s short-lived acting career...

Nick Cave sheds light on his script and soundtrack for the movie Lawless, and the future of the Bad Seeds, in the new issue of Uncut, out on Friday (August 24).

In the cover feature, Uncut visits Cave at his home in Brighton to discuss topics including the songwriter’s short-lived acting career, working with Warren Ellis and his unused, out-there script for Gladiator 2.

Ellis and the rest of his group, the Dirty Three, are also interviewed in the piece, along with Lawless’ director, longtime Cave collaborator John Hillcoat.

With regards to how some in the movie industry see him and Ellis, Cave said: “It’s ridiculous, but because me and Warren come out of rock’n’roll, everyone assumes you’re half-retarded and musically inept. Which on some level is halfways true.”

The new issue of Uncut (October 2012, Take 185) is out on Friday, August 24.

Picture credit: Sam Jones

‘San Francisco’ singer Scott McKenzie dies aged 73

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Scott McKenzie, who sang the 1960s hit 'San Francisco (Be Sure To Wear Flowers In Your Hair)', has died, aged 73. The singer-songwriter passed away in his LA home on Saturday (August 18). He had been in and out of hospital since being diagnosed two years ago with Guillaine-Barré syndrome, a disease of the nervous system, and had been "very ill" in recent weeks, according to his official website, Scottmckenzie.info. A statement added: "It is with much sadness that we report the passing of Scott McKenzie in LA on 18th August, 2012. Scott had been very ill recently and passed away in his home after two weeks in hospital." It went on: "It has been our pleasure to maintain this web site over the past 15 years and this is the hardest update of them all. Farewell our much loved and wonderful friend." The singer was a close friend of The Mamas And The Papas' John Phillips, who wrote and produced the San Francisco track which became a global hit and an anthem for the 1960s counterculture movement. Born Philip Wallach Blondheim in January 1939, the singer grew up in North Carolina where he lived with his grandparents while his widowed mother worked in Washington DC. As a teenager, he met Phillips and formed a doowop band called The Abstracts. They moved to New York and became The Smoothies, where they played on the club circuit and recorded two singles. It was at this stage in his career that he changed his name, after complaints that Blondheim was unpronounceable, and comments by comedian Jackie Curtis that he looked like a Scottie dog - hence Scott. McKenzie declined an invitation to join The Mamas And The Papas in favour of becoming a solo star, but the two remained close friends. He returned to music in the late 80s when he replaced first Denny Doherty, and then an ailing Phillips, in a touring version of The Mamas And The Papas. He also co-wrote The Beach Boys hit 'Kokomo'.

Scott McKenzie, who sang the 1960s hit ‘San Francisco (Be Sure To Wear Flowers In Your Hair)’, has died, aged 73.

The singer-songwriter passed away in his LA home on Saturday (August 18).

He had been in and out of hospital since being diagnosed two years ago with Guillaine-Barré syndrome, a disease of the nervous system, and had been “very ill” in recent weeks, according to his official website, Scottmckenzie.info.

A statement added: “It is with much sadness that we report the passing of Scott McKenzie in LA on 18th August, 2012. Scott had been very ill recently and passed away in his home after two weeks in hospital.”

It went on: “It has been our pleasure to maintain this web site over the past 15 years and this is the hardest update of them all. Farewell our much loved and wonderful friend.”

The singer was a close friend of The Mamas And The Papas’ John Phillips, who wrote and produced the San Francisco track which became a global hit and an anthem for the 1960s counterculture movement.

Born Philip Wallach Blondheim in January 1939, the singer grew up in North Carolina where he lived with his grandparents while his widowed mother worked in Washington DC.

As a teenager, he met Phillips and formed a doowop band called The Abstracts. They moved to New York and became The Smoothies, where they played on the club circuit and recorded two singles. It was at this stage in his career that he changed his name, after complaints that Blondheim was unpronounceable, and comments by comedian Jackie Curtis that he looked like a Scottie dog – hence Scott.

McKenzie declined an invitation to join The Mamas And The Papas in favour of becoming a solo star, but the two remained close friends. He returned to music in the late 80s when he replaced first Denny Doherty, and then an ailing Phillips, in a touring version of The Mamas And The Papas.

He also co-wrote The Beach Boys hit ‘Kokomo’.

Happy Mondays announce two London shows

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Happy Mondays have announced plans to play two back to back shows in London later this year. The baggy legends will perform a double header at the Camden Roundhouse on December 19 and 20. Support will come from 808 State. Earlier this year, the band announced their return to the live stage, reu...

Happy Mondays have announced plans to play two back to back shows in London later this year.

The baggy legends will perform a double header at the Camden Roundhouse on December 19 and 20. Support will come from 808 State.

Earlier this year, the band announced their return to the live stage, reuniting the full original line up for the first time in over 19 years. In February, Bez announced that he wouldn’t be performing with the band on tour, but would instead act as compere and DJ at the shows.

They have reunited twice before, most recently in 2004, but without founding members Mark Day, Paul Davis and Paul Ryder. Paul had sworn he wanted nothing to do with the band again when they split for a second time in 2000.

Last month, the Mondays confirmed that they are working on a new album, which will be the first time all the original line-up have recorded a record of new material since 1992’s ‘Yes Please!’.

The band’s manager Warren Askew told NME: “Yes, we are now planning to record a new album, after the success of the tour and with the band all getting on so well. Shaun has been writing and the band have been getting together in the studio putting ideas down. I’m sure it will be a great Happy Mondays album.”

The band will play Mallorca Rocks tomorrow (August 21) and Ibiza Rocks on Wednesday (22).

Queens Of The Stone Age restart their sixth album sessions

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Queens Of The Stone Age are currently recording their sixth studio album. Writing on their official Facebook page, at Facebook.com/QOTSA, the band simply updated their status with the word "Recording", receiving tens of thousands of 'likes' in minutes. Late last year the band revealed that they...

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

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

Late last year the band revealed that they had started initial work on a new album. Again, they posted on their Facebook page, with frontman Josh Homme saying that they were “deep into makin’ [the] new album,”.

In December 2011, he wrote: “Locked away in the desert. & shit yeah. it. sounds. fuckin. killer.”

Talking earlier in 2011, the QOTSA frontman said the long-awaited sixth studio album would be done by the end of 2011, however, the album still hasn’t seen the light of day.

“We’re at a weird moment where we really don’t feel like we have anything to prove,” he told Radio 1. “We just want to play to the people that are into us and we want to play right at them.”

Queens guitarist Dean Fertita had previously said sessions for the follow-up to 2007’s ‘Era Vulgaris’ were going well. “We’ve got so many ideas started already,” he said. “I guess we’ll see what turns out to be everybody’s favourite. It’s very much still Homme’s band, but I think all of us really feel like we’ve found our space in it and can contribute to it as well.”