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Dirty Projectors – Swing Lo Magellan

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Brooklyn brainiacs go back to basics? Not quite... For all their grand designs – the glitch operas, the whalesong cycles, the earnest attempts, as bandleader Dave Longstreth puts it, to “construct some sort of dialogue between West African guitar music and American hardcore, or between mid-2000s Timbaland and Mahlerian wind writing” – you always wondered what Dirty Projectors would sound like once they shed the conceptual baggage and went back to basics. And here’s the answer, kind of. For six months last year, Longstreth sequestered himself away in an abandoned house in rural Delaware County to write the songs for what would become the sixth Dirty Projectors album. Making the time-honoured pilgrimage upstate seems to have mellowed his approach. Previously, his music has rejected, even mocked the idea of heritage rock; on Swing Lo Magellan you can hear whole clumps of Townsend riffage and McCartney melody floating to the surface. That doesn’t mean it’s an easy listen. The album remains magnificently wordy – "this next one's a little ditty called 'Impregnable Question'!" – and Longstreth’s wriggling vocal lines and counter-intuitive, clip-clopping rhythms still require some getting used to. But once you've tuned into the DPs' frequency, you're rewarded with a relentlessly novel album that's generous with its wisdom and often exhilarating in its execution. When those blinding harmonies burst out of nowhere, you’re reminded that this band always set out to excite rather than confound or confuse. “Dance For You” is particularly irresistible, Longstreth singing gaily of boogieing down “gargoyle streets” hoping to “feel the breath of a force I cannot explain”. Amber Coffman’s lead vocal turn on “The Socialities” isn’t quite as arresting as her Aaliyah tribute “Stillness Is The Move”, but the understated arrangement highlights a ravishing melody. Overall, Swing Lo Magellan is closer in spirit to the choral campfire vibe of David Byrne collaboration “Knotty Pine” than much of predecessor Bitte Orca. Its freshness can be attributed to a 'first take best take' recording policy that lends each song a remarkable immediacy. Plenty of bands boast about “leaving in the mistakes”, as if a bit of sloppy guitar work will somehow transform their mediocre din into something raw and vital. But when you hear Dirty Projectors fluff a cue or miss a beat, it genuinely feels as if they’re too wrapped up in the songs to care. Conversely, the lyrics leave nothing to chance. For the first time, Longstreth’s words offer real value, rather than just verbose decoration – even if his cautionary, quasi-Biblical tales feel like they’re sometimes working at odds with the playful optimism of the music. “Offspring Are Blank” unfolds like a sinister creation myth, in which the “marriage of eagle and snake” leads to “shadows that lengthen from the sky to the ground/ And a silence that can swallow sound”. “Gun Has No Trigger” is a solemn fable about a Philistine getting their comeuppance. Meanwhile, the figure of 16th century circumnavigator Ferdinand Magellan is invoked on the title track as a symbol of our yearning to venture off the map in lives that often feel tediously pre-ordained. Of course, there’s the ever-present danger that Longstreth’s intellectual swaggering will come across to many as smug and superior. For an album he intended to be more direct and personal, it’s only on the closing track – a gloriously punch-drunk ballad called “Irresponsible Tune” – that he really comes close to opening up. “With our songs, we are outlaws/ With our songs, we’re alone” he notes, glumly acknowledging his outsider status in a “world crooked, fucked up and wrong”. Yet without music, Longstreth concludes, “life is pointless, harsh and long”. For that reason, we should be grateful that he continues to boogie down gargoyle streets to his own strange, alluring, irresponsible tune. Sam Richards Q&A Dave Longstreth How much did the abandoned house where you wrote and recorded Swing Lo Magellan influence the atmosphere of the record? I think not terribly much. What was cool about the house is that it was unfinished. Turns out an unfinished room is a pretty nice place to make stuff that doesn't exist yet. But in general I would not overplay this narrative of the house and the rural upstate. Basically, New York is an amazing place to absorb music and culture and hang out with friends and everything, but I don't think it's ever been a good place for writing music – unless it's a kind of angular, claustrophobic dissonance that you're after. Was it quite a new approach for you to start writing individual songs without any kind of grand plan? It was. When you're writing a story, like The Getty Address or Mount Wittenberg Orca, the writing is done when the story's done. This time, it was much more open. It was super-fresh and liberating. It felt like, “I'm going to open this window and just collect these leaves as they blow off the tree.” Why did you choose not to overdub or redo all the little imperfections? Perfection is such an over-esteemed virtue right now. I can understand it in the Renaissance or something when it was hard, but lot of music being produced at the moment has got this sort of cheap, digital perfection to it. I felt that showing a little bit of rawness or vulnerability made these songs feel more true to themselves. A lot of the demo elements are part of the finished record. A lot of the vocals are the first time I ever sang these songs. INTERVIEW: SAN RICHARDS

Brooklyn brainiacs go back to basics? Not quite…

For all their grand designs – the glitch operas, the whalesong cycles, the earnest attempts, as bandleader Dave Longstreth puts it, to “construct some sort of dialogue between West African guitar music and American hardcore, or between mid-2000s Timbaland and Mahlerian wind writing” – you always wondered what Dirty Projectors would sound like once they shed the conceptual baggage and went back to basics.

And here’s the answer, kind of. For six months last year, Longstreth sequestered himself away in an abandoned house in rural Delaware County to write the songs for what would become the sixth Dirty Projectors album. Making the time-honoured pilgrimage upstate seems to have mellowed his approach. Previously, his music has rejected, even mocked the idea of heritage rock; on Swing Lo Magellan you can hear whole clumps of Townsend riffage and McCartney melody floating to the surface.

That doesn’t mean it’s an easy listen. The album remains magnificently wordy – “this next one’s a little ditty called ‘Impregnable Question’!” – and Longstreth’s wriggling vocal lines and counter-intuitive, clip-clopping rhythms still require some getting used to. But once you’ve tuned into the DPs’ frequency, you’re rewarded with a relentlessly novel album that’s generous with its wisdom and often exhilarating in its execution.

When those blinding harmonies burst out of nowhere, you’re reminded that this band always set out to excite rather than confound or confuse. “Dance For You” is particularly irresistible, Longstreth singing gaily of boogieing down “gargoyle streets” hoping to “feel the breath of a force I cannot explain”. Amber Coffman’s lead vocal turn on “The Socialities” isn’t quite as arresting as her Aaliyah tribute “Stillness Is The Move”, but the understated arrangement highlights a ravishing melody.

Overall, Swing Lo Magellan is closer in spirit to the choral campfire vibe of David Byrne collaboration “Knotty Pine” than much of predecessor Bitte Orca. Its freshness can be attributed to a ‘first take best take’ recording policy that lends each song a remarkable immediacy. Plenty of bands boast about “leaving in the mistakes”, as if a bit of sloppy guitar work will somehow transform their mediocre din into something raw and vital. But when you hear Dirty Projectors fluff a cue or miss a beat, it genuinely feels as if they’re too wrapped up in the songs to care.

Conversely, the lyrics leave nothing to chance. For the first time, Longstreth’s words offer real value, rather than just verbose decoration – even if his cautionary, quasi-Biblical tales feel like they’re sometimes working at odds with the playful optimism of the music. “Offspring Are Blank” unfolds like a sinister creation myth, in which the “marriage of eagle and snake” leads to “shadows that lengthen from the sky to the ground/ And a silence that can swallow sound”. “Gun Has No Trigger” is a solemn fable about a Philistine getting their comeuppance. Meanwhile, the figure of 16th century circumnavigator Ferdinand Magellan is invoked on the title track as a symbol of our yearning to venture off the map in lives that often feel tediously pre-ordained.

Of course, there’s the ever-present danger that Longstreth’s intellectual swaggering will come across to many as smug and superior. For an album he intended to be more direct and personal, it’s only on the closing track – a gloriously punch-drunk ballad called “Irresponsible Tune” – that he really comes close to opening up. “With our songs, we are outlaws/ With our songs, we’re alone” he notes, glumly acknowledging his outsider status in a “world crooked, fucked up and wrong”. Yet without music, Longstreth concludes, “life is pointless, harsh and long”. For that reason, we should be grateful that he continues to boogie down gargoyle streets to his own strange, alluring, irresponsible tune.

Sam Richards

Q&A

Dave Longstreth

How much did the abandoned house where you wrote and recorded Swing Lo Magellan influence the atmosphere of the record?

I think not terribly much. What was cool about the house is that it was unfinished. Turns out an unfinished room is a pretty nice place to make stuff that doesn’t exist yet. But in general I would not overplay this narrative of the house and the rural upstate. Basically, New York is an amazing place to absorb music and culture and hang out with friends and everything, but I don’t think it’s ever been a good place for writing music – unless it’s a kind of angular, claustrophobic dissonance that you’re after.

Was it quite a new approach for you to start writing individual songs without any kind of grand plan?

It was. When you’re writing a story, like The Getty Address or Mount Wittenberg Orca, the writing is done when the story’s done. This time, it was much more open. It was super-fresh and liberating. It felt like, “I’m going to open this window and just collect these leaves as they blow off the tree.”

Why did you choose not to overdub or redo all the little imperfections?

Perfection is such an over-esteemed virtue right now. I can understand it in the Renaissance or something when it was hard, but lot of music being produced at the moment has got this sort of cheap, digital perfection to it. I felt that showing a little bit of rawness or vulnerability made these songs feel more true to themselves. A lot of the demo elements are part of the finished record. A lot of the vocals are the first time I ever sang these songs.

INTERVIEW: SAN RICHARDS

The Who announce American Quadrophenia tour

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The Who will be performing their 1973 album Quadrophenia in its entirety on their newly announced US tour, which begins on November 1 in Sunrise, Florida, visiting Boston, New York, Las Vegas, Los Angeles and more, finishing up in Providence, Rhode Island on February 26, 2013. Tickets will go on sa...

The Who will be performing their 1973 album Quadrophenia in its entirety on their newly announced US tour, which begins on November 1 in Sunrise, Florida, visiting Boston, New York, Las Vegas, Los Angeles and more, finishing up in Providence, Rhode Island on February 26, 2013.

Tickets will go on sale through the Who’s official fan club at 10 a.m. July 20th and to the public on Friday, July 27th.

Here are the upcoming tour dates:

1/11 Sunrise, FL – BankAtlantic Center

3/11 Orlando, FL – Amway Center

5/11 Duluth, GA – The Arena at Gwinnett Center

8/11 Greenville, SC – Bi-Lo Center

9/11 Greensboro, NC – Greensboro Coliseum

11/11 Pittsburgh, PA – CONSOL Energy Arena

13/11 Washington, DC – Verizon Center

14/11 Brooklyn, NY – Barclays Center

16/11 Boston, MA – TD Garden

20/11 Montreal, QC – Bell Centre (on sale 28/7)

23/11 Toronto, ON – Air Canada Centre

24/11 Detroit, MI – Joe Louis Arena

27/11 Minneapolis, MN – Target Center

29/11 Chicago, IL – Allstate Arena

2/12 Nashville, TN – Bridgestone Arena

5/12 New York, NY – Madison Square Garden

6/12 Newark, NJ – Prudential Center

8/12 Philadelphia, PA – Wells Fargo Center

9/12 Uncasville, CT – Mohegan Sun Arena

Leg Two:

28/1/2013 Anaheim, CA – Honda Center

30/1 Los Angeles, CA – STAPLES Center

1/2 Oakland, CA – Oracle Arena

2/2 Reno, NV – Reno Events Center

5/2 San Diego, CA – Valley View Casino Center

6/2 Glendale, AZ – Jobing.com Arena

8/2 Las Vegas, NV – The Joint at Hard Rock Hotel & Casino

12/2 Denver, CO – Pepsi Center

14/2 Tulsa, OK – BOK Center

16/2 Louisville, KY – KFC Yum! Arena

17/2 Columbus, OH – Schottenstein Center

19/2 Hamiltion, ON – Copps Coliseum

21/2 Uniondale, NY – Nassau Coliseum

22/2 Atlantic City, NJ – Boardwak Hall

24/2 Manchester, NH – Verizon Wireless Arena

26/6 Providence, RI – Dunkin’ Donuts Center

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Patti Smith to appear on Red Hot Chili Pepper Flea’s solo EP

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Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist Flea has revealed that Patti Smith will appear on his new solo EP. In a series of tweets, he wrote that the proceeds to the self-recorded Helen Burns EP will go towards Silverlake Conservatory for Music, the music school he set up in 2001. "I am putting out an EP I made by myself in a couple of days. It is obscure arty mostly instrumental music, except when Patti Smith sings," he wrote. "All proceeds from my Helen Burns EP will go towards the Silverlake Conservatory of Music". The release will use a Radiohead-style pay-what-you-want model, he wrote: "It will be available for download at any price you want to pay, it will be a donation to the Silverlake Conservatory of Music". However, an autographed vinyl version of the EP containing a piece of bass string will cost $75. For fans hoping to a Red Hot Chili Peppers-style record, Flea says the sound is completely different, writing: "I recorded most of the EP when we finished our tour for 'Stadium Arcadium'. It is not RHCP music or even close to it. It is a trippy freakout". Full details of how to get hold of the EP will be announced in the next two days. Red Hot Chili Peppers are set to release 18 singles over the next six months. The tracks, which were all recorded during the band's sessions for their 2011 studio album 'I'm With You', will be released as nine double A-sided 7'' singles from August 11. Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist Flea has revealed that Patti Smith will appear on his new solo EP.

In a series of tweets, he wrote that the proceeds to the self-recorded Helen Burns EP will go towards Silverlake Conservatory for Music, the music school he set up in 2001.

“I am putting out an EP I made by myself in a couple of days. It is obscure arty mostly instrumental music, except when Patti Smith sings,” he wrote. “All proceeds from my Helen Burns EP will go towards the Silverlake Conservatory of Music”.

The release will use a Radiohead-style pay-what-you-want model, he wrote: “It will be available for download at any price you want to pay, it will be a donation to the Silverlake Conservatory of Music”. However, an autographed vinyl version of the EP containing a piece of bass string will cost $75.

For fans hoping to a Red Hot Chili Peppers-style record, Flea says the sound is completely different, writing: “I recorded most of the EP when we finished our tour for ‘Stadium Arcadium’. It is not RHCP music or even close to it. It is a trippy freakout”.

Full details of how to get hold of the EP will be announced in the next two days.

Red Hot Chili Peppers are set to release 18 singles over the next six months. The tracks, which were all recorded during the band’s sessions for their 2011 studio album ‘I’m With You’, will be released as nine double A-sided 7” singles from August 11.

Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

Keith Richards: ‘I can’t remember Rolling Stones songs’

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Keith Richards has admitted he sometimes forgets how to play The Rolling Stones songs. The guitarist said that sometimes during the first few bars of a song he forgets how to play the entire track, but that he has become so accustomed to playing the songs, he remembers it automatically. 'When yo...

Keith Richards has admitted he sometimes forgets how to play The Rolling Stones songs.

The guitarist said that sometimes during the first few bars of a song he forgets how to play the entire track, but that he has become so accustomed to playing the songs, he remembers it automatically.

‘When you kick off a song you say, ‘I can’t remember how the middle bit goes’, but the fingers remember even if you don’t,” he told Absolute Radio.

He added: “I don’t practice as much as I should, probably. But now that we’re putting the act together again I’m getting the chops back together.”

Last week (July 14), Mick Jagger confirmed that The Rolling Stones will play together this autumn. The legendary band celebrated the 50th anniversary of their first ever gig earlier this month (July 12), and have been surrounded by rumours that they are preparing to play together once more to mark the half-centenary landmark.

Speaking at The Rolling Stones: 50 photography exhibition at London’s Somerset House, Jagger said: “You will definitely be seeing us all together soon. It’s been great fun being back together and there are a lot of memories in here. I can’t believe it’s been 50 years. We’ve been hanging out together, seeing quite a bit of each other and we want to do some gigs.”

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The Who’s Roger Daltrey gets honorary degree

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Roger Daltrey has been given an honorary degree by Middlesex University. The Who frontman has been recognised for his contribution to the music and acting industry over his six-decade career. He joined hundreds of students who were graduating, some of whom contributed visuals to his rock-opera Tomm...

Roger Daltrey has been given an honorary degree by Middlesex University.

The Who frontman has been recognised for his contribution to the music and acting industry over his six-decade career. He joined hundreds of students who were graduating, some of whom contributed visuals to his rock-opera Tommy.

Daltrey said: “If I had the power to give honours, the students would be getting extra honorary degrees from me. After having the privilege of working with them on my production of The Who’s Tommy, I was amazed with their vision and creativity. I look forward to seeing more of their work knowing that, within the visual creative industries, the future is a bright one. For me to receive this degree is an honour indeed.”

Middlesex University Vice-Chancellor Michael Driscoll added: “Roger Daltrey is one of the greatest musicians Britain has produced and he has been successful at everything he has turned his hand to.”

Daltrey was awarded a CBE for his services to music, the entertainment industry and charity in 2005. Back in May, he confirmed that organisers of the London 2012 Olympics asked whether drummer Keith Moon – who died in 1978 – would be able to take part in this summer’s celebrations.

He joked that the band’s management had responded to the invitation by suggesting they try contacting the deceased rocker themselves by holding a séance. “It could only happen in Britain,” he said. “We are so organised. We got a letter – well, an email – requesting could Keith Moon attend the opening ceremony.”

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Bryan Ferry: ‘Hyde Park shows are embarrassing’

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Bryan Ferry has said that the current run of Hyde Park concerts are an "embarrassment" to music. The singer spoke out after Bruce Springsteen’s Hyde Park Calling set on Saturday (July 14) was cut short during the final song, a duet with Paul McCartney, after he broke the sound curfew. The Roxy...

Bryan Ferry has said that the current run of Hyde Park concerts are an “embarrassment” to music.

The singer spoke out after Bruce Springsteen’s Hyde Park Calling set on Saturday (July 14) was cut short during the final song, a duet with Paul McCartney, after he broke the sound curfew.

The Roxy Music singer told the Evening Standard: “They shouldn’t have these events in Hyde Park any more if it’s going to cause embarrassing problems.”

Ferry also said that sound level restrictions mean the central London park is not suitable for rock concerts: “The problem with Hyde Park is that the volume is never loud enough. It’s always too quiet. I’m sorry for Paul McCartney and Bruce.”

Ferry recently headlined the final day at Guilfest in Guilford, Surrey and also ran over his allotted time: “We were in a similar situation — told to finish at 10pm, but we overran by five minutes. But at least the promoter didn’t turn off the volume.”

Yesterday (July 18), Live Nation’s Chief Operating Officer for Europe, Paul Latham, defended the promoter’s decision to pull the plug on the gig, saying that to continue hosting concerts in one of London’s most exclusive neighbourhoods, the company has to agree to a strict 10.30pm noise curfew with local authorities:

“The residents of Park Lane and Mayfair may not be numerous but they wield inordinate power over the Gogs and Magogs of City Hall and Parliament,” he said.

The decision on Saturday prompted consternation on Twitter, with Springsteen’s guitarist Steven Van Zandt leading a chorus of disapproval. He wrote: “Is there just too much fun in the world? We would have been off by 11 if we’d done one more. On a Saturday night! Who were we disturbing?”

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Uncut launches an iPad edition

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We’re delighted to announce that Uncut is now available to download digitally as an app from the iTunes store. This is great news for anyone who enjoys reading magazines and newspapers on the iPad: all your favourites, from our comprehensive reviews section to exclusive interviews and brilliant photography, are now available digitally. And it’s easy enough to get hold of. If you already subscribe to Uncut, you can download the iPad edition at no extra cost by clicking on this link and following the step-by-step instructions. Meanwhile, anyone else can download the Uncut iPad edition from iTunes store here. Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

We’re delighted to announce that Uncut is now available to download digitally as an app from the iTunes store.

This is great news for anyone who enjoys reading magazines and newspapers on the iPad: all your favourites, from our comprehensive reviews section to exclusive interviews and brilliant photography, are now available digitally.

And it’s easy enough to get hold of. If you already subscribe to Uncut, you can download the iPad edition at no extra cost by clicking on this

link and following the step-by-step instructions.

Meanwhile, anyone else can download the Uncut iPad edition from iTunes store here.

Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

The 29th Uncut Playlist Of 2012

Another issue in the bag, and these are the records that have got us through the last couple of days of production. Mostly very good, with a few probably glaring exceptions. The mystery album from last week’s list I can now reveal to be The XX’s “Coexist”. What else? The Sic Alps record is increasingly excellent, I think, as is Takoma vet Harry Taussig’s first in 47 years. The transition from Taussig’s American primitive guitar into Azealia Banks’ new free mixtape was not the smoothest mood segue, it’s fair to say… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Fennesz - Aun: the Beginning & the End of All Things (Ash International) 2 Y Niwl – 4 (Aderyn Papur) 3 Frank Ocean – Channel Orange (Def Jam) 4 Houndmouth – Houndmouth (Rough Trade) 5 Beth Orton – Sugaring Season (Anti-) 6 Mumford & Sons – Babel (Gentlemen Of The Road/Island) 7 Loscil – Sketches From New Brighton (Kranky) 8 The Fall – The Wonderful And Frightening World Of… (Beggars Banquet) 9 Sic Alps – Sic Alps (Drag City) 10 The XX – Coexist (XL) 11 Nathan Fake – Steam Days (Border Community) 12 Thee Oh Sees – Putrifiers II (In The Red) 13 JJ Doom – Key To The Kuffs (Lex) 14 Billy Faier – Banjo (Takoma) 15 Jens Lekman – I Know What Love Isn’t (Secretly Canadian) 16 Yokokimthurston – Yokokimthurston (Chimera Music) 17 Cat Power – Sun (Matador) 18 Asbo Kid – 2Tone Techno (Corsair) 19 Harry Taussig – Fate Is Only Twice (Tompkins Square) 20 Azealia Banks – Fantasea (http://www.nme.com/news/azealia-banks/64865)

Another issue in the bag, and these are the records that have got us through the last couple of days of production. Mostly very good, with a few probably glaring exceptions.

The mystery album from last week’s list I can now reveal to be The XX’s “Coexist”. What else? The Sic Alps record is increasingly excellent, I think, as is Takoma vet Harry Taussig’s first in 47 years. The transition from Taussig’s American primitive guitar into Azealia Banks’ new free mixtape was not the smoothest mood segue, it’s fair to say…

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

1 Fennesz – Aun: the Beginning & the End of All Things (Ash International)

2 Y Niwl – 4 (Aderyn Papur)

3 Frank Ocean – Channel Orange (Def Jam)

4 Houndmouth – Houndmouth (Rough Trade)

5 Beth Orton – Sugaring Season (Anti-)

6 Mumford & Sons – Babel (Gentlemen Of The Road/Island)

7 Loscil – Sketches From New Brighton (Kranky)

8 The Fall – The Wonderful And Frightening World Of… (Beggars Banquet)

9 Sic Alps – Sic Alps (Drag City)

10 The XX – Coexist (XL)

11 Nathan Fake – Steam Days (Border Community)

12 Thee Oh Sees – Putrifiers II (In The Red)

13 JJ Doom – Key To The Kuffs (Lex)

14 Billy Faier – Banjo (Takoma)

15 Jens Lekman – I Know What Love Isn’t (Secretly Canadian)

16 Yokokimthurston – Yokokimthurston (Chimera Music)

17 Cat Power – Sun (Matador)

18 Asbo Kid – 2Tone Techno (Corsair)

19 Harry Taussig – Fate Is Only Twice (Tompkins Square)

20 Azealia Banks – Fantasea (http://www.nme.com/news/azealia-banks/64865)

Bowie to re-issue “John, I’m Only Dancing” 7″

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David Bowie is to release a 40th anniversary limited edition 7" of his 1972 single, "John, I'm Only Dancing". 'John, I'm Only Dancing' was originally released on Friday, September 1, 1972 on RCA as the follow-up single to "Starman", it reached number 12 on the UK singles charts, although it never appeared on one of Bowie's studio albums. Recorded too late for inclusion on the Ziggy Stardust album, it was considered for the following year's Aladdin Sane, but never made it on to the final running order. There were two recordings of the original version, one produced by David and Ken Scott at Trident Studios on June 24th and a later, note-for-note production, by Bowie alone at Olympic Studios on June 26th, 1972. The new version, a punchier take, recorded in January 1973, featured tighter guitar and sax played by Keith Fordham (often referred to by fans as the 'sax version'), is on the AA-side of this anniversary 7". It replaced the original single version in April 1973, confusingly carrying the same catalogue number and B-side as the original single. The re-issue will be in shops on September 3. Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

David Bowie is to release a 40th anniversary limited edition 7″ of his 1972 single, “John, I’m Only Dancing”.

‘John, I’m Only Dancing’ was originally released on Friday, September 1, 1972 on RCA as the follow-up single to “Starman”, it reached number 12 on the UK singles charts, although it never appeared on one of Bowie’s studio albums. Recorded too late for inclusion on the Ziggy Stardust album, it was considered for the following year’s Aladdin Sane, but never made it on to the final running order.

There were two recordings of the original version, one produced by David and Ken Scott at Trident Studios on June 24th and a later, note-for-note production, by Bowie alone at Olympic Studios on June 26th, 1972. The new version, a punchier take, recorded in January 1973, featured tighter guitar and sax played by Keith Fordham (often referred to by fans as the ‘sax version’), is on the AA-side of this anniversary 7″.

It replaced the original single version in April 1973, confusingly carrying the same catalogue number and B-side as the original single.

The re-issue will be in shops on September 3.

Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

Pulp, Hot Chip, Warpaint, Black Lips and James Murphy to headline Coachella Cruise

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The organisers of Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival have announced that they will be launching a Coachella cruise, which is due to set sail in December. Headlined by Pulp, Hot Chip, Warpaint and Grimes, the luxury liner, called the S.S. Coachella, will head to the Bahamas between December 16-19 and then to Jamaica December between 19-23. Prices start at £320 ($500). Organisers are already touting a series of at-sea activities, including DJ tutorials and wine tastings hosted by former LCD Soundsystem frontman James Murphy. Speaking about the event, Yeasayer’s manager Jason Foster told the LA Times "It probably seems a little posh, and it's not the most punk rock thing you could probably do…This is a chance to play someplace we've never been. We've never tasted cruise ship food, and we've never played shuffleboard with our fans." The Coachella voyage is the latest artist-based cruise to set sail after similar trips including Weezer’s Caribbean festival and R Kelly’s Love Letter Cruise. The full S.S. Coachella lineup: Pulp Hot Chip Yeasayer Girl Talk James Murphy (DJ Set) Sleigh Bells Simian Mobile Disco Z-Trip !!1 Warpaint DJ Harvey El-P Killer Mike Black Lips The Gaslamp Killer Grimes Cloud Nothings Jason Bentley The Rapture (DJ Set) Father John Misty Tokimonsta Alf Alpha Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

The organisers of Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival have announced that they will be launching a Coachella cruise, which is due to set sail in December.

Headlined by Pulp, Hot Chip, Warpaint and Grimes, the luxury liner, called the S.S. Coachella, will head to the Bahamas between December 16-19 and then to Jamaica December between 19-23. Prices start at £320 ($500).

Organisers are already touting a series of at-sea activities, including DJ tutorials and wine tastings hosted by former LCD Soundsystem frontman James Murphy.

Speaking about the event, Yeasayer’s manager Jason Foster told the LA Times “It probably seems a little posh, and it’s not the most punk rock thing you could probably do…This is a chance to play someplace we’ve never been. We’ve never tasted cruise ship food, and we’ve never played shuffleboard with our fans.”

The Coachella voyage is the latest artist-based cruise to set sail after similar trips including Weezer’s Caribbean festival and R Kelly’s Love Letter Cruise.

The full S.S. Coachella lineup:

Pulp

Hot Chip

Yeasayer

Girl Talk

James Murphy (DJ Set)

Sleigh Bells

Simian Mobile Disco

Z-Trip

!!1

Warpaint

DJ Harvey

El-P

Killer Mike

Black Lips

The Gaslamp Killer

Grimes

Cloud Nothings

Jason Bentley

The Rapture (DJ Set)

Father John Misty

Tokimonsta

Alf Alpha

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Bruce Springsteen Hard Rock Calling curfew wasn’t for health and safety, officials say

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Health and safety officials have said that concert promoter Live Nation was "disingenuous" for citing health and safety concerns for pulling the plug on Bruce Springsteen’s headline set at Hard Rock Calling on Saturday night (July 14). The Boss brought the second night of the Hyde Park festival to a close with a 29-song set which lasted over three hours. When Paul McCartney joined Springsteen onstage at the end to perform "I Saw Her Standing There" and "Twist And Shout", the rock legends' microphones were switched off before they had chance to thank the crowd because Springsteen had already run over curfew. A statement from concert promoters Live Nation said that they pulled the plug in the "interest of the public's health and safety". However, Kevin Myers, deputy chief executive of the Health and Safety Executive (who was at the gig on Saturday) has said that this was not the case. In a post on the HSE’s website, he wrote: "The fans deserve the truth: there are no health and safety issues involved here. While public events may have licensing conditions dictating when they should end, this is not health and safety and it is disingenuous of Live Nation to say so." Yesterday (July 17), Live Nation's Chief Operating Officer for Europe, Paul Latham, defended the promoter’s decision to pull the plug on the gig, saying that to continue hosting concerts in one of London's most exclusive neighborhoods, the company has to agree to a strict 10:30pm noise curfew with local authorities: "For the last 12 months we have been fighting the good fight with the Local Authority and their licensing teams to retain the ability to stage concerts in Hyde Park," he wrote. "The current licences were granted on very strict noise restrictions, traffic plans and curfews with the “sword of Damocles” hanging over any future events if we broke any of the conditions." He added:[quote]Suffice to say the residents of Park Lane and Mayfair may not be numerous but they wield inordinate power over the Gogs and Magogs of City Hall and Parliament”. The decision prompted consternation on Twitter, with Springsteen's guitarist Steven Van Zandt leading a chorus of disapproval. He wrote: "Is there just too much fun in the world? We would have been off by 11 if we'd done one more. On a Saturday night! Who were we disturbing?" Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

Health and safety officials have said that concert promoter Live Nation was “disingenuous” for citing health and safety concerns for pulling the plug on Bruce Springsteen’s headline set at Hard Rock Calling on Saturday night (July 14).

The Boss brought the second night of the Hyde Park festival to a close with a 29-song set which lasted over three hours. When Paul McCartney joined Springsteen onstage at the end to perform “I Saw Her Standing There” and “Twist And Shout”, the rock legends’ microphones were switched off before they had chance to thank the crowd because Springsteen had already run over curfew.

A statement from concert promoters Live Nation said that they pulled the plug in the “interest of the public’s health and safety”. However, Kevin Myers, deputy chief executive of the Health and Safety Executive (who was at the gig on Saturday) has said that this was not the case. In a post on the HSE’s website, he wrote:

“The fans deserve the truth: there are no health and safety issues involved here. While public events may have licensing conditions dictating when they should end, this is not health and safety and it is disingenuous of Live Nation to say so.”

Yesterday (July 17), Live Nation‘s Chief Operating Officer for Europe, Paul Latham, defended the promoter’s decision to pull the plug on the gig, saying that to continue hosting concerts in one of London’s most exclusive neighborhoods, the company has to agree to a strict 10:30pm noise curfew with local authorities:

“For the last 12 months we have been fighting the good fight with the Local Authority and their licensing teams to retain the ability to stage concerts in Hyde Park,” he wrote. “The current licences were granted on very strict noise restrictions, traffic plans and curfews with the “sword of Damocles” hanging over any future events if we broke any of the conditions.” He added:[quote]Suffice to say the residents of Park Lane and Mayfair may not be numerous but they wield inordinate power over the Gogs and Magogs of City Hall and Parliament”.

The decision prompted consternation on Twitter, with Springsteen’s guitarist Steven Van Zandt leading a chorus of disapproval. He wrote: “Is there just too much fun in the world? We would have been off by 11 if we’d done one more. On a Saturday night! Who were we disturbing?”

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Funk Brothers’ bassist Bob Babbitt dies aged 74

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Bob Babbitt, bass player with Funk Brothers and legendary Motown studio musician, has died at the age of 74. Babbitt passed away yesterday (July 16) after he lost his ongoing fight with brain cancer. He died at his home in Nashville, Tennessee, where he had lived for many years, reports the Associ...

Bob Babbitt, bass player with Funk Brothers and legendary Motown studio musician, has died at the age of 74.

Babbitt passed away yesterday (July 16) after he lost his ongoing fight with brain cancer. He died at his home in Nashville, Tennessee, where he had lived for many years, reports the Associated Press.

The bassist played on a series of seminal tracks during his career, including the likes of Stevie Wonder’s “Signed, Sealed, Delivered, I’m Yours“, Smokey Robinson’s “The Tears of a Clown”, Marvin Gaye’s “Inner City Blues” and Edwin Starr’s “War”.

He also played on recordings with the likes of Bette Midler, Jim Croce, Bonnie Raitt and Frank Sinatra, and, in all, contributed to over 200 Top 40 hit singles.

Speaking about Babbitt, former Motown engineer Ed Wolfrum said: “Bob was a teddy bear of a guy and he was an extraordinary musician — a player’s player.”

Babbitt is survived by his wife, Ann Kreinar, and their children, Carolyn, Joseph and Karen.

Pic credit: Getty Images

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Lee Ranaldo speaks out about the future of Sonic Youth

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Sonic Youth guitarist Lee Ranaldo has spoken out about the future of the band. In an interview with BBC Radio 5 Live, which you can listen to below, Ranaldo confirmed that he was currently working on digitising the band's 30 year archive – as well as a potential deluxe edition of their 1987 albu...

Sonic Youth guitarist Lee Ranaldo has spoken out about the future of the band.

In an interview with BBC Radio 5 Live, which you can listen to below, Ranaldo confirmed that he was currently working on digitising the band’s 30 year archive – as well as a potential deluxe edition of their 1987 album Sister and a live film from 1985.

“I’m on good terms and talking with everyone,” he said. “But there’s definitely a lot of stuff shaking out right now.”

He continued: “There’s ways in which the four of us will be tied to each other for so long, in so many ways. As far as new recordings or new performances, it’s completely impossible for any of us to say right now. It’s such a tender thing for us right now that none of us are even thinking along those lines.”

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

Speaking of this, Ranaldo said: “I think after 30 years – unfortunate as it was the way it came about – maybe it’s a good time for an extended break. If we do come back together, I imagine we’ll be rejuvenated in a bunch of different ways and maybe looking to explore new avenues at that point. It’s impossible to say what the future holds there.”

Earlier this month, Thurston Moore unveiled the second track from his new band, Chelsea Light Moving. The song “Groovy & Linda” follows the band’s first release “Burroughs”, which is inspired by the last words of Beat author William Burroughs.

As well as Moore, the band also features Keith Wood on guitar, Samara Lubelski on bass and John Moloney on drums. They are currently working on their debut album with record label Matador.

Moore and Kim Gordon are also set to release a mini-album with Yoko Ono, titled YOKOKIMTHURSTON. The six track album will be released on September 24 and will reportedly feature the 14-minute long single “Early In The Morning”.

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Rare Blur images to go on display in London exhibition

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A series of rare images of Blur are to go on display in London to celebrate the band's 21-year career. Over 70 images from music photographers, designers and artists including Banksy, Julian Opie, Pennie Smith and Kevin Cummins will go on display at the Londonewcastle Project Space, London from the July 27 – August 14. The exhibition will celebrate 21 years since the release of the band's debut album Leisure. Earlier this month (July 2), Blur debuted two new tracks, "Under The Westway" and "The Puritan" which were written for their forthcoming sold-out Hyde Park gig on August 12, where they will top a bill which includes New Order and The Specials. The gig is being staged to coincide with the closing ceremony of the London Olympics. As a warm-up for Hyde Park, the band will embark on an intimate UK tour this August. The Britpop icons will play four shows, beginning at Margate's Winter Gardens on August 1. They will then play two shows at Wolverhampton's Civic Hall on August 5 and 6, before finishing off at Plymouth's Pavilions on August 7. Blur will release a career-spanning boxset on July 30. Titled 21, the collection includes the band's seven studio albums as well as over five hours of previously unreleased material including 65 tracks, rarities, three DVDs, a collector's edition book and special limited edition Seymour seven-inch vinyl. Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

A series of rare images of Blur are to go on display in London to celebrate the band’s 21-year career.

Over 70 images from music photographers, designers and artists including Banksy, Julian Opie, Pennie Smith and Kevin Cummins will go on display at the Londonewcastle Project Space, London from the July 27 – August 14.

The exhibition will celebrate 21 years since the release of the band’s debut album Leisure.

Earlier this month (July 2), Blur debuted two new tracks, “Under The Westway” and “The Puritan” which were written for their forthcoming sold-out Hyde Park gig on August 12, where they will top a bill which includes New Order and The Specials. The gig is being staged to coincide with the closing ceremony of the London Olympics.

As a warm-up for Hyde Park, the band will embark on an intimate UK tour this August. The Britpop icons will play four shows, beginning at Margate’s Winter Gardens on August 1. They will then play two shows at Wolverhampton’s Civic Hall on August 5 and 6, before finishing off at Plymouth’s Pavilions on August 7.

Blur will release a career-spanning boxset on July 30. Titled 21, the collection includes the band’s seven studio albums as well as over five hours of previously unreleased material including 65 tracks, rarities, three DVDs, a collector’s edition book and special limited edition Seymour seven-inch vinyl.

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That New Bob Dylan Album, Bruce and Macca unplugged….

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There was exciting news this morning about the release on September 10 of a new Bob Dylan album, which if you haven’t seen the official announcement is called Tempest. There was much talk of the record a few weeks ago, backstage at the Hop Farm Festival, where one or two people rather teasingly inferred they had heard it, or knew someone who had. This could easily have been a lot of old bluff, of course, as until this morning the album didn’t officially exist. But if what we managed to glean about it (via red hot pliers, socks full of sand used as coshes, the kind of treatment that loosens tongues) is even half-way true, Tempest sounds like it may turn out be Dylan’s best album since at least Time Out Of Mind, a late-career peak, anyway, and maybe even better than that. Needless to say, as soon as we are able, we’ll be bringing you more news on the album, including a track listing when we have one, and not long after that, I hope, details of what it actually sounds like. As mentioned last week, I had been thinking about going to see Bruce Springsteen and Paul Simon at the weekend in Hyde Park. I chickened out in the end, put off by the continued bad weather, and thus missed Springsteen and special guest Paul McCartney, who a couple of years ago made a similar late appearance with Neil Young at the end of Neil’s Hard Rock calling set, on a version of “A Day In The Life”. On that occasion, however, the plugs weren’t pulled as they were on Saturday when Bruce and McCartney’s chummy duet was unceremoniously curtailed after the show overran. Sad to read hear from some of the people who were there that there were a lot of complaints about the volume at both shows which was kept frustratingly low in deference to locals with sensitive hearing. Something similar afflicts events in Finsbury Park, where complaints from nearby residents have meant for some years that listening to even a band as normally loud as, say Gaslight Anthem, when they supported Dylan at last year’s Feis festival, was rather like straining to hear something being played on a transistor radio in a separate field, with the wind blowing in the opposite direction and the radio itself buried in a hole. The most preposterous example I can think of, however, of a festival set being kyboshed by volume restraints was at Reading in 1995. I’d dragged the then-publisher of what used to be Melody Maker down to the very front of the stage where we stood under a towering PA stack and to my dumbstruck surprise were able carry on a normal conversation with no need to bellow, yell or otherwise raise our voices. I think we could have spoken to each other in conspiratorial whispers and still made ourselves heard. This was especially disconcerting as what I’d hauled the MM publisher out of the backstage bar to see was the only UK appearance that summer of Neil Young who was playing the festival with Pearl Jam as his backing band. Under most conceivable circumstances, this should have been a deafening combination. And yet there we were, chatting away like we were having a casual chinwag over a garden fence about the price of creosote and crazy paving, while on the stage only a little to our left Neil and Pearl Jam were playing a version of “Cortez the Killer” whose comparative wispiness was akin to something by Laura Marling, when you might more reasonably have expected it to sound like the world coming to a noisy end. Anyway, I have to dash – look at the time! Have a good week! Bob Dylan at Hop Farm pic: Gus Stewart/Redferns/Getty

There was exciting news this morning about the release on September 10 of a new Bob Dylan album, which if you haven’t seen the official announcement is called Tempest. There was much talk of the record a few weeks ago, backstage at the Hop Farm Festival, where one or two people rather teasingly inferred they had heard it, or knew someone who had.

This could easily have been a lot of old bluff, of course, as until this morning the album didn’t officially exist. But if what we managed to glean about it (via red hot pliers, socks full of sand used as coshes, the kind of treatment that loosens tongues) is even half-way true, Tempest sounds like it may turn out be Dylan’s best album since at least Time Out Of Mind, a late-career peak, anyway, and maybe even better than that.

Needless to say, as soon as we are able, we’ll be bringing you more news on the album, including a track listing when we have one, and not long after that, I hope, details of what it actually sounds like.

As mentioned last week, I had been thinking about going to see Bruce Springsteen and Paul Simon at the weekend in Hyde Park. I chickened out in the end, put off by the continued bad weather, and thus missed Springsteen and special guest Paul McCartney, who a couple of years ago made a similar late appearance with Neil Young at the end of Neil’s Hard Rock calling set, on a version of “A Day In The Life”. On that occasion, however, the plugs weren’t pulled as they were on Saturday when Bruce and McCartney’s chummy duet was unceremoniously curtailed after the show overran.

Sad to read hear from some of the people who were there that there were a lot of complaints about the volume at both shows which was kept frustratingly low in deference to locals with sensitive hearing. Something similar afflicts events in Finsbury Park, where complaints from nearby residents have meant for some years that listening to even a band as normally loud as, say Gaslight Anthem, when they supported Dylan at last year’s Feis festival, was rather like straining to hear something being played on a transistor radio in a separate field, with the wind blowing in the opposite direction and the radio itself buried in a hole.

The most preposterous example I can think of, however, of a festival set being kyboshed by volume restraints was at Reading in 1995. I’d dragged the then-publisher of what used to be Melody Maker down to the very front of the stage where we stood under a towering PA stack and to my dumbstruck surprise were able carry on a normal conversation with no need to bellow, yell or otherwise raise our voices. I think we could have spoken to each other in conspiratorial whispers and still made ourselves heard. This was especially disconcerting as what I’d hauled the MM publisher out of the backstage bar to see was the only UK appearance that summer of Neil Young who was playing the festival with Pearl Jam as his backing band. Under most conceivable circumstances, this should have been a deafening combination.

And yet there we were, chatting away like we were having a casual chinwag over a garden fence about the price of creosote and crazy paving, while on the stage only a little to our left Neil and Pearl Jam were playing a version of “Cortez the Killer” whose comparative wispiness was akin to something by Laura Marling, when you might more reasonably have expected it to sound like the world coming to a noisy end.

Anyway, I have to dash – look at the time! Have a good week!

Bob Dylan at Hop Farm pic: Gus Stewart/Redferns/Getty

‘Queen of Country’ Kitty Wells dies at 92

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Country music singer Kitty Wells has died at the age of 92. The singer, known as "The Queen of Country", passed away at her home in Nashville earlier today (July 16) following complications from a stroke. Born in 1919, Wells began singing as a child and as a teenager performed with her sisters before going on to accompany her husband Johnnie Wright, who passed away last year. In 1949, Wells signed her own record deal with RCA but was dropped a year later. However, in 1952 she released the hit single "It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels" on the Decca label and fast became the most popular female country singer in the States. Scroll down to watch her perform the song that made her name. She went on to record around 50 albums and was regular performer at the Grand Ole Opry. In 1976 she became a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame, the second woman to be given the honour, following Patsy Cline's posthumous induction in 1973. Fellow country star Loretta Lynn has paid tribute to Wells, writing at Lorettalynn.com: "Kitty Wells will always be the greatest female country singer of all times. She was my hero. If I had never heard of Kitty Wells, I don’t think I would have been a singer myself. I wanted to sound just like her, but as far as I am concerned, no one will ever be as great as Kitty Wells. She truly is the Queen of Country Music." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tKleTa94dC8 Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks! Pic credit: Getty Images

Country music singer Kitty Wells has died at the age of 92.

The singer, known as “The Queen of Country”, passed away at her home in Nashville earlier today (July 16) following complications from a stroke.

Born in 1919, Wells began singing as a child and as a teenager performed with her sisters before going on to accompany her husband Johnnie Wright, who passed away last year. In 1949, Wells signed her own record deal with RCA but was dropped a year later.

However, in 1952 she released the hit single “It Wasn’t God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels” on the Decca label and fast became the most popular female country singer in the States. Scroll down to watch her perform the song that made her name. She went on to record around 50 albums and was regular performer at the Grand Ole Opry.

In 1976 she became a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame, the second woman to be given the honour, following Patsy Cline‘s posthumous induction in 1973.

Fellow country star Loretta Lynn has paid tribute to Wells, writing at Lorettalynn.com: “Kitty Wells will always be the greatest female country singer of all times. She was my hero. If I had never heard of Kitty Wells, I don’t think I would have been a singer myself. I wanted to sound just like her, but as far as I am concerned, no one will ever be as great as Kitty Wells. She truly is the Queen of Country Music.”

Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

Pic credit: Getty Images

Bob Dylan announces new studio album, Tempest

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Bob Dylan has announced that his new studio album will be titled Tempest and that it will be released in September. The album, which is the 35th studio LP of Dylan's career, will come out on September 10 in the UK and September 11 in the US. It contains a total of 10 tracks and has been produced ...

Bob Dylan has announced that his new studio album will be titled Tempest and that it will be released in September.

The album, which is the 35th studio LP of Dylan’s career, will come out on September 10 in the UK and 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 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 also headlined the UK’s Hop Farm Festival earlier this month. 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’

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First Look – Julien Temple’s London – The Modern Babylon

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Last night [July 16], the BBC pulled a documentary about last summer’s riots just hours before transmission after a court ruling prevented it from being broadcast. It’s foolish, of course, to speculate who initiated proceedings and for what purpose - although at the risk of sounding paranoid, you suspect there’s plenty of people who’d rather not have such pesky reminders of the riots on our screens in the run up to the Olympics. Footage from the London riots feature in London - The Modern Babylon, Julien Temple’s extraordinary trawl through the British Film Institute’s archives. Temple’s old partner in crime, Malcolm McLaren, in a 1991 interview, talks about “the London Mob” as a critical presence in the city’s history, one aspect of a continuous cycle of creation, destruction and rebirth that defines London. A very specific sense of time and place has always been crucial to Julien Temple’s films. It could be that period on the brink of the 1960s, before The Beatles and the Stones, in Absolute Beginners; or the mid-Seventies of The Filth And The Fury – “peeling, crumbling, falling apart” – or perhaps even Canvey Island in the Fifties and Glastonbury in the 1980s. But for London - The Modern Babylon, Temple has a more ambitious reach: his plan is to cover not just one specific time period, but an entire century, give or take, of London life, beginning with the earliest filmed footage of the capital and running up to the present day. The one through-line is Hetty Bower, a sprightly 106 year-old Hackney resident who remembers when going to watch Tower Bridge opening and closing “was an outing”. Nearly nine when World War I broke out, she recalls cheering soldiers "at Dalston Junction, going off in uniform, and we waved. And then I didn’t like what I saw when they started coming back.” A veteran of the 1936 Battle of Cable Street – “Mosley and his followers did not pass” – of today’s Occupy movement, she notes, “They’re asking for the basis of our society to be questioned, and I think that is correct.” Temple’s other interviewees range from Tony Benn to Ray Davies and Michael Horovitz (seen here both in footage from the International Poetry Incarnation at the Albert Hall in 1965 and in the present day), along side everyday Londoners, whose stories and memories provide a satisfyingly intimate element to the film's powerful narrative sweep. Temple’s piece is essentially a document of social transformation. From the British Empire at its peak, with Queen Victoria “opening her doors” to Jewish immigrants in the early 1900s, through Windrush up to the Eastern European influx of today, it’s part of what Suggs describes as “a process. People get taken in and become part of the city itself and change the city. And that’s the whole point. The place keeps changing.” Some things, however, remain sadly the same. Tony Benn tells how “when I was very young, we were taught at school there were only two kinds of people in the world: the British and foreigners. And there were an awful lot of foreigners.” A Jamaican interviewee remembers how his 11-Plus exam “was given to another [white] guy. I found out later from other black guys I know that the same things happened to them.” In archive film, one white resident of Southall, home to a large South Asian community, says, “There’s nothing left in this town any more for English people.” One man, in footage from the 1970s, talks in chillingly reasonable tones about “the National Socialist way.” But it’s not just immigrants who are repeatedly subjected to prejudice. Another thread in Temple’s film are the privations experienced by the working classes through the century, from the Victorian era to the property boom in the 1960s and again in the Eighties, as the docks were run down and eventually the land sold off to developers. “People feel that they’re being excluded from what many of us regard as our river,” says one East Ender, standing outside the entrance to a Thames-side gated community. One prescient scene from The Long Good Friday imagines a UK Olympic bid for the derelict Docklands area. Tracing London’s history chronologically through exhaustively researched newsreel footage, contemporary interviews, songs and movies, Temple’s film is an impressive contribution to the already considerable body of work dedicated to mapping London. As you’d expect, this being Temple it’s not some dry academic work. Temple himself presides over the film as it unspools on multiple TV screens in a CCTV control centre. Black and white footage of horseguards riding through an Edwardian smog is cut to Underworld’s “Born Slippy”; scenes from Tony Hancock’s The Rebel are elided with film of – God! – Quentin Crisp posing for a life-drawing class in his underpants. The material from the Sixties – “the rebellion of the longhairs”, Pink Floyd at the UFO, the Grosvenor Square anti-war march, Twiggy, Terrence Stamp, the Stones in their pomp – is familiar but exhilaratingly cut by Temple, reminding me of the breathless editing of Beatles’ footage in Martin Scorsese’s George Harrison documentary. Temple sees London as a palimpsest, with layers of collective memory built up over time: images of a hippie girl in the 1960s handing out flowers to bemused commuters at Bond Street tube station are cut into film of a Victorian East End flower girl; film of protesting suffragettes is cut to X-Ray Specs’ “Oh Bondage! Up Yours”. 1920s debutantes, hippies, punks, New Romantics have all had their moment of glory in London’s history. “The good old days?” Says Suggs towards the end of Temple’s film. “There were no good old days. London doesn’t belong to anyone. It’s whoever’s on the go at any given moment. London - The Modern Babylon will be released in the UK on August 3

Last night [July 16], the BBC pulled a documentary about last summer’s riots just hours before transmission after a court ruling prevented it from being broadcast. It’s foolish, of course, to speculate who initiated proceedings and for what purpose – although at the risk of sounding paranoid, you suspect there’s plenty of people who’d rather not have such pesky reminders of the riots on our screens in the run up to the Olympics. Footage from the London riots feature in London – The Modern Babylon, Julien Temple’s extraordinary trawl through the British Film Institute’s archives. Temple’s old partner in crime, Malcolm McLaren, in a 1991 interview, talks about “the London Mob” as a critical presence in the city’s history, one aspect of a continuous cycle of creation, destruction and rebirth that defines London.

A very specific sense of time and place has always been crucial to Julien Temple’s films. It could be that period on the brink of the 1960s, before The Beatles and the Stones, in Absolute Beginners; or the mid-Seventies of The Filth And The Fury – “peeling, crumbling, falling apart” – or perhaps even Canvey Island in the Fifties and Glastonbury in the 1980s. But for London – The Modern Babylon, Temple has a more ambitious reach: his plan is to cover not just one specific time period, but an entire century, give or take, of London life, beginning with the earliest filmed footage of the capital and running up to the present day.

The one through-line is Hetty Bower, a sprightly 106 year-old Hackney resident who remembers when going to watch Tower Bridge opening and closing “was an outing”. Nearly nine when World War I broke out, she recalls cheering soldiers “at Dalston Junction, going off in uniform, and we waved. And then I didn’t like what I saw when they started coming back.” A veteran of the 1936 Battle of Cable Street – “Mosley and his followers did not pass” – of today’s Occupy movement, she notes, “They’re asking for the basis of our society to be questioned, and I think that is correct.” Temple’s other interviewees range from Tony Benn to Ray Davies and Michael Horovitz (seen here both in footage from the International Poetry Incarnation at the Albert Hall in 1965 and in the present day), along side everyday Londoners, whose stories and memories provide a satisfyingly intimate element to the film’s powerful narrative sweep.

Temple’s piece is essentially a document of social transformation. From the British Empire at its peak, with Queen Victoria “opening her doors” to Jewish immigrants in the early 1900s, through Windrush up to the Eastern European influx of today, it’s part of what Suggs describes as “a process. People get taken in and become part of the city itself and change the city. And that’s the whole point. The place keeps changing.”

Some things, however, remain sadly the same. Tony Benn tells how “when I was very young, we were taught at school there were only two kinds of people in the world: the British and foreigners. And there were an awful lot of foreigners.” A Jamaican interviewee remembers how his 11-Plus exam “was given to another [white] guy. I found out later from other black guys I know that the same things happened to them.” In archive film, one white resident of Southall, home to a large South Asian community, says, “There’s nothing left in this town any more for English people.” One man, in footage from the 1970s, talks in chillingly reasonable tones about “the National Socialist way.”

But it’s not just immigrants who are repeatedly subjected to prejudice. Another thread in Temple’s film are the privations experienced by the working classes through the century, from the Victorian era to the property boom in the 1960s and again in the Eighties, as the docks were run down and eventually the land sold off to developers. “People feel that they’re being excluded from what many of us regard as our river,” says one East Ender, standing outside the entrance to a Thames-side gated community. One prescient scene from The Long Good Friday imagines a UK Olympic bid for the derelict Docklands area.

Tracing London’s history chronologically through exhaustively researched newsreel footage, contemporary interviews, songs and movies, Temple’s film is an impressive contribution to the already considerable body of work dedicated to mapping London. As you’d expect, this being Temple it’s not some dry academic work. Temple himself presides over the film as it unspools on multiple TV screens in a CCTV control centre. Black and white footage of horseguards riding through an Edwardian smog is cut to Underworld’s “Born Slippy”; scenes from Tony Hancock’s The Rebel are elided with film of – God! – Quentin Crisp posing for a life-drawing class in his underpants. The material from the Sixties – “the rebellion of the longhairs”, Pink Floyd at the UFO, the Grosvenor Square anti-war march, Twiggy, Terrence Stamp, the Stones in their pomp – is familiar but exhilaratingly cut by Temple, reminding me of the breathless editing of Beatles’ footage in Martin Scorsese’s George Harrison documentary.

Temple sees London as a palimpsest, with layers of collective memory built up over time: images of a hippie girl in the 1960s handing out flowers to bemused commuters at Bond Street tube station are cut into film of a Victorian East End flower girl; film of protesting suffragettes is cut to X-Ray Specs’ “Oh Bondage! Up Yours”. 1920s debutantes, hippies, punks, New Romantics have all had their moment of glory in London’s history. “The good old days?” Says Suggs towards the end of Temple’s film. “There were no good old days. London doesn’t belong to anyone. It’s whoever’s on the go at any given moment.

London – The Modern Babylon will be released in the UK on August 3

Deep Purple’s Jon Lord dies aged 71

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Jon Lord of Deep Purple has died at the age of 71. The co-founder and keyboard player with the metal pioneers passed away today (July 16) after suffering a pulmonary embolism. He had been suffering from pancreatic cancer and was surrounded by his family at the London Clinic. Lord founded Deep Purp...

Jon Lord of Deep Purple has died at the age of 71.

The co-founder and keyboard player with the metal pioneers passed away today (July 16) after suffering a pulmonary embolism. He had been suffering from pancreatic cancer and was surrounded by his family at the London Clinic.

Lord founded Deep Purple in 1968, and along with drummer Ian Paice was a constant in the band during their existence from 1968 to 1976. Her co-wrote many of the band’s songs, including the seminal “Smoke On The Water” and was responsible for the legendary organ riff on “Child In Time”. Watch the track below.

He remained with the band when they reformed in 1984, until his retirement in 2002.

Renowned for his fusion of rock and classical or baroque forms, he was perhaps best known for his Orchestral work Concerto For Group And Orchestra first performed at Royal Albert Hall with Deep Purple and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in 1969 and conducted by the renowned Malcolm Arnold. The feat was repeated in 1999 when it was again performed at the Royal Albert Hall by the London Symphony Orchestra and Deep Purple.

He also worked with Whitesnake, Paice, Ashton And Lord, The Artwoods and Flower Pot Men.

A statement from his representatives reads simply: “Jon passes from Darkness to Light”.

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Pic credit: Getty Images

Jeff Buckley biopic will do justice to late singer, says star

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Olivia Thirlby has promised that the Jeff Buckley biopic will be an "artistic film that does justice" to the late singer. American singer/actor Reeve Carney will play Buckley in the upcoming film, which has been titled Mystery White Boy after a posthumous Buckley live album released in 2000. The film is being helmed by Ridley Scott's son, Jake. During an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Thirlby declined to reveal exact details of her role in the film, but admitted that she depicts a fictional character. "I'm playing someone who's based on a real person that was in his life," she explained. Thirlby also suggested that Mystery White Boy will not follow the structure of a typical biopic. She added: "I would hate to call it straightforward, but it will be an artistic film that does justice hopefully to a true artist – someone who truly gave something to the world. I think that the goal for it is to be able to somewhat match the artistry of the music itself, hopefully." Buckley died in 1997 at the age of 30 after accidentally drowning in the Mississippi River. He had released just one studio album, 1994's classic Grace, but his legend has continued to build with the release of several posthumous compilations and the enduring popularity of his cover of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah". Thirlby, 25, is best known for her roles in Juno, No Strings Attached and The Darkest Hour. She will next be seen alongside Karl Urban in upcoming sci-fi reboot Dredd, which opens on September 7 in the UK and September 21 in the US. Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

Olivia Thirlby has promised that the Jeff Buckley biopic will be an “artistic film that does justice” to the late singer.

American singer/actor Reeve Carney will play Buckley in the upcoming film, which has been titled Mystery White Boy after a posthumous Buckley live album released in 2000. The film is being helmed by Ridley Scott’s son, Jake.

During an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Thirlby declined to reveal exact details of her role in the film, but admitted that she depicts a fictional character. “I’m playing someone who’s based on a real person that was in his life,” she explained.

Thirlby also suggested that Mystery White Boy will not follow the structure of a typical biopic. She added: “I would hate to call it straightforward, but it will be an artistic film that does justice hopefully to a true artist – someone who truly gave something to the world. I think that the goal for it is to be able to somewhat match the artistry of the music itself, hopefully.”

Buckley died in 1997 at the age of 30 after accidentally drowning in the Mississippi River. He had released just one studio album, 1994’s classic Grace, but his legend has continued to build with the release of several posthumous compilations and the enduring popularity of his cover of Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah”.

Thirlby, 25, is best known for her roles in Juno, No Strings Attached and The Darkest Hour. She will next be seen alongside Karl Urban in upcoming sci-fi reboot Dredd, which opens on September 7 in the UK and September 21 in the US.

Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!