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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.

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Ryan Adams and Mandy Moore to record album together

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Ryan Adams is set to record an album with his wife Mandy Moore. The couple, who married in March 2009, are set to work together on Moore's new studio album, which is due out in 2013. Speaking about her plans for her seventh studio album, Moore told CBS News: "I'm probably going to work with my h...

Ryan Adams is set to record an album with his wife Mandy Moore.

The couple, who married in March 2009, are set to work together on Moore’s new studio album, which is due out in 2013.

Speaking about her plans for her seventh studio album, Moore told CBS News: “I’m probably going to work with my husband on this album. I’m not sure necessarily in what capacity, but we’ve been writing a little bit together. He has a studio, so I definitely want to make my record there.”

She continued: “He certainly inspires me. There’s tremendous influence right now around the house – from the music I’ve been introduced to, and being very happy and in a healthy, happy relationship. I think that still garners a lot of material to write about.”

The album, which will be the follow-up to Moore’s 2009 effort Amanda Leigh, will be recorded later this year.

Ryan Adams himself released his 13th studio album Ashes & Fire last year and is currently putting the finishing touches to his new Live After Deaf boxset of live recordings.

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Radiohead’s Thom Yorke blasts the banks at Spanish festival

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Radiohead singer Thom Yorke slammed the Spanish banks during their headlining set at the BBK festival in Bilbao this weekend. The band were headlining the Spanish festival when he urged fans to take to the streets over the actions of the banking sector and its effect on the country's economy. The ...

Radiohead singer Thom Yorke slammed the Spanish banks during their headlining set at the BBK festival in Bilbao this weekend.

The band were headlining the Spanish festival when he urged fans to take to the streets over the actions of the banking sector and its effect on the country’s economy. The comments were especially controversial since the festival was sponsored by savings bank Bilbao Bizkaia Kutxa (BBK).

In-between the band playing “The Daily Mail” and “Myxamatosis”, Yorke said: “We know in Spain you’re having a lot of trouble. Cuts cuts, no money no money. Well we think you should be taking to the streets. Someone stole that money off you. The banks.”

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Philadelphia International Records:The 40th Anniversary Box Set

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Sleek, mammoth 10 CD box from Seventies soul’s orchestral kings... For most of the 1970s Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff ruled soul music like twin emperors. They weren’t the era’s most influential presence – that accolade belongs to James Brown – or the most artistically inspired – for that you can squabble about Sly, Marvin, Stevie, Curtis and more – but in terms of relentless chart success their productions swept all aside. Using 1960s Motown as their template, Gamble and Huff created a hit factory with an array of acts defined by the ‘Sound of Philadelphia’, a woozy orchestral overload which could punch on the dancefloor with The O’Jays’ “Love Train”, go into sob meltdown on Harold Melvin and the Bluenotes’ “If You Don’t Know Me By Now”, or play sexy sophisticate on Billy Paul’s “Me and Mrs. Jones”. Along with The Three Degrees’ “When Will I See You Again”, these and other tunes reached way beyond black America and its devotees to become a global presence. That these creations have never really gone away testifies to a songwriting team comparable to that of Lieber/Stoller or Rogers/Hammerstein. Like them, Gamble/Huff were products of Tin Pan Alley, working out of Philadelphia’s Schubert building, where they clocked in, wrote, made records with their own group, The Romeos, and hussled for production jobs, landing Dusty Springfield and Laura Nyro among others. In 1972 they founded Philadelphia International Records (PIR). Their breakthrough was instant with the O’Jays Back Stabbers (1972), still the group’s and the label’s finest hour. It married Eddie Levert’s gritty vocals to classy arrangements by Thom Bell, a key player in the PIR team.Writers McFadden and Whitehead were another key part of this, penning many of the album’s lyrics, including those to “Love Train”, a triumphant, gospel-tinged call for global unity. After that Gamble and Huff went on what they term “a creative rampage”. Spotting that Harold Melvin’s drummer, Teddy Pendergrass, was a far better vocalist than Harold himself provided them with a sexy new star, and they fashioned another from 37 year old local crooner Billy Paul with the adulterous“Mrs Jones”, a number that might have been in Sinatra’s repertoire a decade before. Much of what PIR produced was amiably bland, including “T.S.O.P.”, which became theme tune to US TV’s pivotal Soul Train, but the formula of fat drums, sweet strings and polished horn parts was a winner, and was easily applied to a roster that included old-timers like The Intruders, Lou Rawls and Jerry Butler, and younger acts like The Jacksons (off Motown without Michael), The Jones Girls and Jean Carn. As at Motown, PIR’s production line inevitably blurred acts’ identities, but the O‘ Jays were always handed strong material, with their Ship Ahoy album a powerful commentary on slavery (on the ten minute title track), greed (“The Love of Money”), and pollution (“The Air I Breathe”). Even Pendergrass, who specialised in romantic anguish like “If You Don’t Know Me By Now” and “Don’t Leave Me This Way” (borrowed by Motown’s Thelma Houston) had a message song in “Wake Up Everybody”. While many soul labels were wiped out by disco, PIR surfed the wave. The Bluenotes’ “Bad Luck” and The People’s Choice’s “Do It Anyway You Wanna” were immense on the dancefloor, as was 1979’s “Ain’t No Stopping Us Now”, where McFadden and Whitehead stepped up from backroom duties. Simultaneously PIR expanded into jazz-funk, chiefly via Dexter Wansel, who had a penchant for sci-fi themes like “Life On Mars”. With the change of decade, PIR’s success slowed, though the Jones Girls, whose “Nights Over Egypt” (1981) remains a soul anthem, prosperered alongside the ill-starred but gifted Phyllis Hyman and Teddy Pendergrass, whose 1982 car crash, whiCh left him semi-paralysed, seemed to mark the end of Philly’s rule. The Box Set sets out the PIR story in accessible style, roughly chronologically but always with an eye on theme and continuity. Itts 175 tracks are more than most will want, but it’s impossible to imagine a better testament to a glorious chapter in black American history. Neil Spencer Q&A Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff There’s a huge gap between your early productions – ‘Northern Soul” to us Brits - and the sound of PIR. What happened? Gamble: We were evolving fast, but the essential thing was adding the orchestra, the sound of a french horn or a string section, and the rapid development of technology through 2, 4, 12 and 24 track consoles. Huff: We had a great team, and the Romeos became supreme players. We were travelling at the speed of thought, eh Gamble? Gamble: I marvel at how in the world we did it all. There were always message songs amid the love tunes – even in a disco number like “Clean Up The Ghetto”by the Philly All Stars… Gamble: We wrote to make people dance, to feel but also to think. There was an O’Jays song, “Music is the Message” but the real message is always love. Who were your inspirations? Gamble: James Brown’s “Say It Loud I’m Black and I’m Proud)” is the most inspirational song ever. What is your favourite Philly song, and which did you feel got away? Huff: “Love Train”. Gamble: Everything is in that record, Huff! Huff: Some of our best productions were b-sides – like Jerry Butler’s “Brand New Me” which became a hit for Dusty. You guys call each other by your surnames? Gamble: I can’t ever recall a time I called him Leon or he called me Kenny! INTERVIEW: NEIL SPENCER

Sleek, mammoth 10 CD box from Seventies soul’s orchestral kings…

For most of the 1970s Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff ruled soul music like twin emperors. They weren’t the era’s most influential presence – that accolade belongs to James Brown – or the most artistically inspired – for that you can squabble about Sly, Marvin, Stevie, Curtis and more – but in terms of relentless chart success their productions swept all aside.

Using 1960s Motown as their template, Gamble and Huff created a hit factory with an array of acts defined by the ‘Sound of Philadelphia’, a woozy orchestral overload which could punch on the dancefloor with The O’Jays’ “Love Train”, go into sob meltdown on Harold Melvin and the Bluenotes’ “If You Don’t Know Me By Now”, or play sexy sophisticate on Billy Paul’s “Me and Mrs. Jones”. Along with The Three Degrees’ “When Will I See You Again”, these and other tunes reached way beyond black America and its devotees to become a global presence.

That these creations have never really gone away testifies to a songwriting team comparable to that of Lieber/Stoller or Rogers/Hammerstein. Like them, Gamble/Huff were products of Tin Pan Alley, working out of Philadelphia’s Schubert building, where they clocked in, wrote, made records with their own group, The Romeos, and hussled for production jobs, landing Dusty Springfield and Laura Nyro among others. In 1972 they founded Philadelphia International Records (PIR).

Their breakthrough was instant with the O’Jays Back Stabbers (1972), still the group’s and the label’s finest hour. It married Eddie Levert’s gritty vocals to classy arrangements by Thom Bell, a key player in the PIR team.Writers McFadden and Whitehead were another key part of this, penning many of the album’s lyrics, including those to “Love Train”, a triumphant, gospel-tinged call for global unity.

After that Gamble and Huff went on what they term “a creative rampage”. Spotting that Harold Melvin’s drummer, Teddy Pendergrass, was a far better vocalist than Harold himself provided them with a sexy new star, and they fashioned another from 37 year old local crooner Billy Paul with the adulterous“Mrs Jones”, a number that might have been in Sinatra’s repertoire a decade before. Much of what PIR produced was amiably bland, including “T.S.O.P.”, which became theme tune to US TV’s pivotal Soul Train, but the formula of fat drums, sweet strings and polished horn parts was a winner, and was easily applied to a roster that included old-timers like The Intruders, Lou Rawls and Jerry Butler, and younger acts like The Jacksons (off Motown without Michael), The Jones Girls and Jean Carn.

As at Motown, PIR’s production line inevitably blurred acts’ identities, but the O‘ Jays were always handed strong material, with their Ship Ahoy album a powerful commentary on slavery (on the ten minute title track), greed (“The Love of Money”), and pollution (“The Air I Breathe”). Even Pendergrass, who specialised in romantic anguish like “If You Don’t Know Me By Now” and “Don’t Leave Me This Way” (borrowed by Motown’s Thelma Houston) had a message song in “Wake Up Everybody”.

While many soul labels were wiped out by disco, PIR surfed the wave. The Bluenotes’ “Bad Luck” and The People’s Choice’s “Do It Anyway You Wanna” were immense on the dancefloor, as was 1979’s “Ain’t No Stopping Us Now”, where McFadden and Whitehead stepped up from backroom duties. Simultaneously PIR expanded into jazz-funk, chiefly via Dexter Wansel, who had a penchant for sci-fi themes like “Life On Mars”. With the change of decade, PIR’s success slowed, though the Jones Girls, whose “Nights Over Egypt” (1981) remains a soul anthem, prosperered alongside the ill-starred but gifted Phyllis Hyman and Teddy Pendergrass, whose 1982 car crash, whiCh left him semi-paralysed, seemed to mark the end of Philly’s rule.

The Box Set sets out the PIR story in accessible style, roughly chronologically but always with an eye on theme and continuity. Itts 175 tracks are more than most will want, but it’s impossible to imagine a better testament to a glorious chapter in black American history.

Neil Spencer

Q&A

Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff

There’s a huge gap between your early productions – ‘Northern Soul” to us Brits – and the sound of PIR. What happened?

Gamble: We were evolving fast, but the essential thing was adding the orchestra, the sound of a french horn or a string section, and the rapid development of technology through 2, 4, 12 and 24 track consoles.

Huff: We had a great team, and the Romeos became supreme players. We were travelling at the speed of thought, eh Gamble?

Gamble: I marvel at how in the world we did it all.

There were always message songs amid the love tunes – even in a disco number like “Clean Up The Ghetto”by the Philly All Stars…

Gamble: We wrote to make people dance, to feel but also to think. There was an O’Jays song, “Music is the Message” but the real message is always love.

Who were your inspirations?

Gamble: James Brown’s “Say It Loud I’m Black and I’m Proud)” is the most inspirational song ever.

What is your favourite Philly song, and which did you feel got away?

Huff: “Love Train”.

Gamble: Everything is in that record, Huff!

Huff: Some of our best productions were b-sides – like Jerry Butler’s “Brand New Me” which became a hit for Dusty.

You guys call each other by your surnames?

Gamble: I can’t ever recall a time I called him Leon or he called me Kenny!

INTERVIEW: NEIL SPENCER

The Cure headline Optimus Alive with epic three-hour-set

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The Cure played an epic three-hour set at Portugal's Optimus Alive festival on Friday (July 14), closing the main stage at 3am after coming back for three encores. The band, who were forced to play an acoustic set at Spain's BBK festival earlier this weekend after their equipment failed, were on to...

The Cure played an epic three-hour set at Portugal’s Optimus Alive festival on Friday (July 14), closing the main stage at 3am after coming back for three encores.

The band, who were forced to play an acoustic set at Spain’s BBK festival earlier this weekend after their equipment failed, were on top form, maintaining a huge crowd throughout their epic set.

Robert Smith and bandmates drew from their entire back catalogue and ended with a string of big-hitters including “Close To Me”, “Boys Don’t Cry” and “The Caterpillar”. After a lengthy wait, they returned to the stage for a final encore of ’10:15 Saturday Night” and “Killing An Arab”.

Earlier, Mumford and Sons had played a well-received slot on the same stage, delivering a selection of tracks from their upcoming second album before ending with a crowd-pleasing rendition of “The Cave”. Morcheeba also performed, having been drafted in as last-minute replacements for Florence and the Machine, who was forced to pull out of the festival due to illness.

Throughout the day, the Tent Stage witnessed performances from Katy B, Big Deal and The Antlers, who performed the whole of their forthcoming ‘Undersea’ EP alongside tracks from their back catalogue. LCD Soundsystem frontman James Murphy rounded off the festival’s second day with a late-night DJ set on the Clubbing Stage.

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Queen’s ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ named as ‘UK’s Favourite Number One single’

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Queen's classic single "Bohemian Rhapsody" has been voted as the UK's 'Favourite Number One Single'. The poll, which has been carried out by the Official Charts Company, asked people to vote for their favourite UK Number One single of the last 60 years and revealed its winner last night (July 15). The 1975 single, which sold over one million copies during its five-week stint at Number One, saw off strong competition from Michael Jackson's "Billie Jean", which was narrowly in second place. Surprisingly high up was Adele's "Someone Like You", which, despite only being released in 2011, came out in third spot. Oasis were fourth with "Don't Look Back In Anger", while The Beatles only managed to take fifth spot with "Hey Jude". John Lennon's classic "Imagine" came sixth, with Britney Spears' "...Baby One More Time" in seventh spot and ABBA's "Dancing Queen" in eighth place. Whitney Houston came in ninth with "I Will Always Love You" while Kylie Minogue brought up the rear with "Can't Get You Out Of My Head". The UK's 'Favourite Number One Singles Of The Last 60 Years' are as follows: 1. Queen – 'Bohemian Rhapsody' 2. Michael Jackson – 'Billie Jean' 3. Adele – 'Someone Like You' 4. Oasis – 'Don't Look Back In Anger' 5. The Beatles – 'Hey Jude' 6. John Lennon – 'Imagine' 7. Britney Spears – '...Baby One More Time' 8. Abba – 'Dancing Queen' 9. Whitney Houston – 'I Will Always Love You' 10. Kylie Minogue – 'Can't Get You Out Of My Head' 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!

Queen’s classic single “Bohemian Rhapsody” has been voted as the UK’s ‘Favourite Number One Single’.

The poll, which has been carried out by the Official Charts Company, asked people to vote for their favourite UK Number One single of the last 60 years and revealed its winner last night (July 15).

The 1975 single, which sold over one million copies during its five-week stint at Number One, saw off strong competition from Michael Jackson’s “Billie Jean“, which was narrowly in second place.

Surprisingly high up was Adele’s “Someone Like You”, which, despite only being released in 2011, came out in third spot. Oasis were fourth with “Don’t Look Back In Anger”, while The Beatles only managed to take fifth spot with “Hey Jude”.

John Lennon’s classic “Imagine” came sixth, with Britney Spears’ “…Baby One More Time” in seventh spot and ABBA’s “Dancing Queen” in eighth place. Whitney Houston came in ninth with “I Will Always Love You” while Kylie Minogue brought up the rear with “Can’t Get You Out Of My Head”.

The UK’s ‘Favourite Number One Singles Of The Last 60 Years’ are as follows:

1. Queen – ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’

2. Michael Jackson – ‘Billie Jean’

3. Adele – ‘Someone Like You’

4. Oasis – ‘Don’t Look Back In Anger’

5. The Beatles – ‘Hey Jude’

6. John Lennon – ‘Imagine’

7. Britney Spears – ‘…Baby One More Time’

8. Abba – ‘Dancing Queen’

9. Whitney Houston – ‘I Will Always Love You’

10. Kylie Minogue – ‘Can’t Get You Out Of My Head’

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Mick Jagger: ‘The Rolling Stones will play together this autumn’

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Mick Jagger has 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 constantly surrounded by rumours that they are preparing to play together once more to mark the h...

Mick Jagger has 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 constantly surrounded by rumours that they are preparing to play together once more to mark the half-centenary landmark.

Earlier this week, Jagger revealed that they had turned down the chance to play the Olympics opening ceremony because they weren’t “stage ready”, while guitarist Keith Richards said that although he and his bandmates had been rehearsing and would “definitely” play together again, he couldn’t predict when they would be taking to the stage.

When asked by the Evening Standard when the band would next perform live together, however, Jagger replied: “This autumn”.

Speaking at The Rolling Stones: 50 photography exhibition at London’s Somerset House, he added: “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.”

Richards, meanwhile, said: “This is like walking into a room full of memories. It’s great being back with the guys, but I can’t tell you anything about any shows. My lips are sealed.”

The free Rolling Stones: 50 exhibition will be held from July 13-August 27 in the landmark venue’s East Wing Galleries and will coincide with the release of a book of the same time. The book will feature 700 shots and words from the band on their history, and will hit UK bookshops today.

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Hard Rock Calling explains decision to cut off Springsteen and McCartney

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The organisers of Hard Rock Calling have explained their decision to pull the plug on Bruce Springsteen and Paul McCartney last night. Yesterday (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. His performance featured guest appearances from John Fogerty and Tom Morello and culminated in two duets with Paul McCartney. The Beatle joined Springsteen onstage right at the end to perform 'I Saw Her Standing There' and 'Twist And Shout'. However, the rock legends' microphones and PA were switched off before they could finish the latter song and thank the crowd because Springsteen had already run over curfew. 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?" Explaining the decision, a spokesman for event organisers Live Nation said: "It was unfortunate that the three hour plus performance by Bruce Springsteen was stopped right at the very end but the curfew is laid down by the authorities in the interest of the public's health and safety. Road closures around Hyde Park are put in place at specific times to make sure everyone can exit the area in safety." Before the controversial ending, the show had featured appearances by John Fogerty and Tom Morello. Fogerty played on 'The Promised Land' and Morello joined in on the songs from the 'Wrecking Ball' album he's featured on, as well as 'The Ghost Of Tom Joad'. The show also included a version of rarity 'Take 'Em As They Come', from 'The River' era, which was requested by a fan in the front row. Springsteen has only played this song live nine times before, with the last occasion being on June 14, 2003 in Copenhagen, Denmark. Earlier in the day, Bruce had also joined John Fogerty during his support set on 'Rockin' All Over The World'. As well as the pulling of the plug early, the show was also marred by extremely quiet sound throughout, with many of the 70,000-strong audience complaining on Twitter that they could not hear the show properly. Bruce Springsteen played: 'Thunder Road' 'Badlands' 'We Take Care Of Our Own' 'Wrecking Ball' 'Death To My Hometown' 'My City Of Ruins' 'Spirit In The Night' 'The Promised Land' 'Take 'Em As They Come' Jack Of All Trades' 'Empty Sky' 'Because The Night' 'Johnny 99' 'Darlington County' 'Workin' On The Highway' 'Shackled & Drawn' 'Waitin On A Sunny Day' 'Raise Your Hand' 'The River' 'The Ghost Of Tom Joad' 'The Rising' 'Land Of Hope And Dreams' 'We Are Alive' 'Born In The USA' 'Born To Run' 'Glory Days' 'Dancing In The Dark' 'I Saw Her Standing There' 'Twist And Shout' 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 Hard Rock Calling have explained their decision to pull the plug on Bruce Springsteen and Paul McCartney last night.

Yesterday (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. His performance featured guest appearances from John Fogerty and Tom Morello and culminated in two duets with Paul McCartney.

The Beatle joined Springsteen onstage right at the end to perform ‘I Saw Her Standing There’ and ‘Twist And Shout’. However, the rock legends’ microphones and PA were switched off before they could finish the latter song and thank the crowd because Springsteen had already run over curfew.

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?”

Explaining the decision, a spokesman for event organisers Live Nation said: “It was unfortunate that the three hour plus performance by Bruce Springsteen was stopped right at the very end but the curfew is laid down by the authorities in the interest of the public’s health and safety. Road closures around Hyde Park are put in place at specific times to make sure everyone can exit the area in safety.”

Before the controversial ending, the show had featured appearances by John Fogerty and Tom Morello. Fogerty played on ‘The Promised Land’ and Morello joined in on the songs from the ‘Wrecking Ball’ album he’s featured on, as well as ‘The Ghost Of Tom Joad’.

The show also included a version of rarity ‘Take ‘Em As They Come’, from ‘The River’ era, which was requested by a fan in the front row. Springsteen has only played this song live nine times before, with the last occasion being on June 14, 2003 in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Earlier in the day, Bruce had also joined John Fogerty during his support set on ‘Rockin’ All Over The World’.

As well as the pulling of the plug early, the show was also marred by extremely quiet sound throughout, with many of the 70,000-strong audience complaining on Twitter that they could not hear the show properly.

Bruce Springsteen played:

‘Thunder Road’

‘Badlands’

‘We Take Care Of Our Own’

‘Wrecking Ball’

‘Death To My Hometown’

‘My City Of Ruins’

‘Spirit In The Night’

‘The Promised Land’

‘Take ‘Em As They Come’

Jack Of All Trades’

‘Empty Sky’

‘Because The Night’

‘Johnny 99’

‘Darlington County’

‘Workin’ On The Highway’

‘Shackled & Drawn’

‘Waitin On A Sunny Day’

‘Raise Your Hand’

‘The River’

‘The Ghost Of Tom Joad’

‘The Rising’

‘Land Of Hope And Dreams’

‘We Are Alive’

‘Born In The USA’

‘Born To Run’

‘Glory Days’

‘Dancing In The Dark’

‘I Saw Her Standing There’

‘Twist And Shout’

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Detachment

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We don't need no education... If you’ve heard of Tony Kaye before, it’s probably as the director of 1998’s American History X – a film that assumed heavy duty notoriety in its day due to the spat between Kaye, the film’s star Ed Norton and distributor, New Line. After taking a Catholic priest, a rabbi and a Buddhist monk to a meeting between himself and New Line studio executives, Kaye attempted to get his name taken off the film. Yhe refusal from the Director’s Guild of America to accept his suggested replacements – ‘Humpty Dumpty’, or ‘Ralph Coates’, after the former Spurs winger – caused Kaye to retaliate with a $200 million lawsuit. Around the time of the World Trade Center attacks, Kaye began dressing as Osama Bin Laden. It’s hard to think how much more damage one man could wilfully inflict on his own career. Detachment is Kaye’s first film to be released since the American History X debacle – an abortion documentary, Lake Of Fire, was well-received in 2007, though another feature, Black Water Transit, from 2009, is still without a distributor. Detachment is essentially a left-field addition to the canon of inspirational high school dramas. Adrien Brody – who himself has fallen far from the tree in recent years – plays a substitute teacher drafted into a New York high school. Just as the school itself is ailing – “You’re in a foxhole, and you’re fucked,” Marcia Gay Harden’s principal is told – Brody’s Henry Barthes is in crisis. His dying grandfather is in care, but the carers are incompetent. There is some unspecified trauma from his childhood involving his mother. Henry is afraid of emotional attachments, but finds himself drawn into three, with a fellow teacher (Mad Men’s Christina Hendricks), an overweight but gifted pupil (Betty Kaye) and a teenage prostitute (Sami Gayle). Nothing good will come of any of this. Kaye has pulled in some big name support – James Caan, Blythe Danner and Lucy Liu are great as harassed fellow teachers – and while The Awfulness Of It All begins to grate after a while, Brody’s stoic calm provides a welcome respite. Michael Bonner

We don’t need no education…

If you’ve heard of Tony Kaye before, it’s probably as the director of 1998’s American History X – a film that assumed heavy duty notoriety in its day due to the spat between Kaye, the film’s star Ed Norton and distributor, New Line. After taking a Catholic priest, a rabbi and a Buddhist monk to a meeting between himself and New Line studio executives, Kaye attempted to get his name taken off the film. Yhe refusal from the Director’s Guild of America to accept his suggested replacements – ‘Humpty Dumpty’, or ‘Ralph Coates’, after the former Spurs winger – caused Kaye to retaliate with a $200 million lawsuit. Around the time of the World Trade Center attacks, Kaye began dressing as Osama Bin Laden. It’s hard to think how much more damage one man could wilfully inflict on his own career.

Detachment is Kaye’s first film to be released since the American History X debacle – an abortion documentary, Lake Of Fire, was well-received in 2007, though another feature, Black Water Transit, from 2009, is still without a distributor. Detachment is essentially a left-field addition to the canon of inspirational high school dramas. Adrien Brody – who himself has fallen far from the tree in recent years – plays a substitute teacher drafted into a New York high school. Just as the school itself is ailing – “You’re in a foxhole, and you’re fucked,” Marcia Gay Harden’s principal is told – Brody’s Henry Barthes is in crisis. His dying grandfather is in care, but the carers are incompetent. There is some unspecified trauma from his childhood involving his mother. Henry is afraid of emotional attachments, but finds himself drawn into three, with a fellow teacher (Mad Men’s Christina Hendricks), an overweight but gifted pupil (Betty Kaye) and a teenage prostitute (Sami Gayle). Nothing good will come of any of this. Kaye has pulled in some big name support – James Caan, Blythe Danner and Lucy Liu are great as harassed fellow teachers – and while The Awfulness Of It All begins to grate after a while, Brody’s stoic calm provides a welcome respite.

Michael Bonner

Sun Kil Moon: “Among The Leaves”

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Twenty years of touring and recording, of inspiration and graft for moderate acclaim, and it comes down to this. Mark Kozelek, the pivot of first Red House Painters and now Sun Kil Moon, is engaged in one more slog around Europe. It is not going well. In Helsinki (spoilers alert), he foists a bunch of new songs on an audience who want him to play early ‘90s perennials, flirts unsuccessfully with a local girl, and ends up back in his hotel room weeping for a dead cat. In London, a city Kozelek plainly despises, he is given a lunchtime festival slot only to be drowned out by a “retro ‘80s band” (scrutiny of the lineup and site map for Field Day 2011 suggests he may be referring to Connan Mockasin). There are “fucking shuttle buses”, poorly-attended gigs on boats, nights of “horseshit” in pubs, further thwarted seductions and, finally, a show in Belfast where Kozelek performs to a “half-empty room full of clowns”. “When I was done,” he sings, “some drunk Irish man said, ‘Worst night I’ve had since Bill Callahan.’” At which point does a singer-songwriter stop romanticising his misery and, to some degree, start making a joke out of it? For Mark Kozelek, the penny seems to have dropped in time for his 12th studio album, Among The Leaves. The European tour yarns are drawn not from a weary interview, but from “UK Blues” and “UK Blues 2”, two songs near the end of this long, engrossing and unexpectedly droll record. Homesickness has been a recurring theme in Kozelek’s work; from the Red House Painters’ “Over My Head” (1995), to Sun Kil Moon’s “Third And Seneca” (2010). But where once it would be presented as a numinous poetic condition, now it is played for laughs as much as for pity; as if Kozelek has finally completed the transition from a protracted sensitive adolescence to a self-aware, albeit somewhat grouchy, maturity. In many ways, though, Among The Leaves is entirely consistent with the rest of Kozelek’s fine catalogue: a familiar tragic history, repeated as comedy. His songs unravel slowly and delicately, freighted but not overwhelmed by the work of Nick Drake, Joni Mitchell, Paul Simon and Andres Segovia. Mostly, they consist solely of Kozelek’s voice – a voice that cannot help but sound dolorous, it seems – and his exquisite playing of a nylon-stringed Spanish classical guitar. There are songs about women he has loved, tried to love and wanted to love; songs about his hometown of San Francisco, and how he feels when he’s away from it; numerous allusions to boxers and cats. The difference this time is that a fair number of the 17 tracks sound more spontaneous than usual - more like sketches, or documentary clips, than finely-wrought reveries. The opening “I Know It’s Pathetic But That Was The Greatest Night Of My Life” tells of another failed pick-up at a gig, this time in Moscow, and feels like an extract from a Sun Kil Moon song rather than a complete one; at 1:47, it’s roughly a third of Kozelek’s default length. But as Among The Leaves progresses, the fragments begin to flow gracefully into one, thanks to the sustained tone (sceptics would doubtless conclude that Kozelek’s songs all sound the same) and his artful knitting together of themes. For a while, the songs dwell on promiscuity and deeply flawed old relationships. One lover is a crackhead who has run away from hospital (“Elaine”). Another leaves Kozelek for a substantially richer man (“The Winery”): she dines “at French Laundry, burning through money”; he’s “eatin’ pistachio nuts over by the taco truck”. Money remains an intermittent concern, though Kozelek’s management of his own label Caldo Verde, with its frequent live albums, rarities comps and special editions, should provide a model for minimalist singer-songwriters looking to earn a living out of their cult status. If those loyal fans fetishise Kozelek as a doomed romantic victim, he is keen to put them right on Among The Leaves, and in some cases ridicule them. “My band played here a lot in the ‘90s when we had lots of female fans and fuck they all were cute,” he reflects in “Sunshine In Chicago”, “now I just sign posters for guys in tennis shoes.” “That Bird Has A Broken Wing”, meanwhile, suggests that Kozelek’s old penchant for covering AC/DC songs was due to an unexpected empathy with Bon Scott’s lusty sensibilities. “I’m half man, other half alleycat,” he claims, after complaining of a burning that turns out to be an STD picked up on tour (“Cipro” – presumably the antibiotic Ciprofloxacin – is cited as useful in these circumstances). In the 2002 introduction to his book of lyrics, Nights Of Passed Over, Kozelek says of his formative records, “My younger, higher pitched voice had me cringeing. And fused with some melodramatic lines and cliché rhymes, I felt embarrassed.” Treasured as those Red House Painters albums may be, it is easy to see his point when comparing these wry narratives with some of the less nuanced angst on Down Colorful Hill, his 1992 debut. Nevertheless, a couple of outstanding group performances here do explicitly recall Kozelek’s earlier work: the title track, with its nimble, brushed beat, would have sat neatly on Ocean Beach (1995); while the electric churn of “King Fish” harks back to the stunned Crazy Horse jams that proliferated between Songs For A Blue Guitar (1996) and April (2008). Kozelek guested with old bandmates in similar settings on their Desertshore album earlier this year (“UK Blues” is a co-write with them), but it would be nice to see him grapple with that sound more extensively once again. Perhaps a full band project is financially impractical as well as aesthetically undesirable. If Among The Leaves is an accumulation of anecdotes from the past two decades, “Track Number 8” reveals where Mark Kozelek actually finds himself in 2012. The title is unnecessarily self-effacing - “I wrote this one and I know it ain’t great/Will probably sequence it track number eight” – and the subject matter is songwriting itself. The itch that was an STD earlier in the album is now the creative impulse, which Kozelek describes as something of a curse, namechecking contemporaries – Elliott Smith, Mark Linkous, Acetone’s Richie Lee, Blind Melon’s Shannon Hoon – who he implies fell victim to it. In the same song, though, he remembers as a child dreaming “of a life close to what I’m livin’.” He loves his neighbourhood, the local stray cats, and his girlfriend. “Sure there were others, but nothin’ this nice,” he sings artlessly of her, and one last shocking revelation about Mark Kozelek comes slowly into focus: at 45, for all the grumbling and snarky jokes, he might just have found contentment.

Twenty years of touring and recording, of inspiration and graft for moderate acclaim, and it comes down to this. Mark Kozelek, the pivot of first Red House Painters and now Sun Kil Moon, is engaged in one more slog around Europe. It is not going well.

In Helsinki (spoilers alert), he foists a bunch of new songs on an audience who want him to play early ‘90s perennials, flirts unsuccessfully with a local girl, and ends up back in his hotel room weeping for a dead cat. In London, a city Kozelek plainly despises, he is given a lunchtime festival slot only to be drowned out by a “retro ‘80s band” (scrutiny of the lineup and site map for Field Day 2011 suggests he may be referring to Connan Mockasin). There are “fucking shuttle buses”, poorly-attended gigs on boats, nights of “horseshit” in pubs, further thwarted seductions and, finally, a show in Belfast where Kozelek performs to a “half-empty room full of clowns”. “When I was done,” he sings, “some drunk Irish man said, ‘Worst night I’ve had since Bill Callahan.’”

At which point does a singer-songwriter stop romanticising his misery and, to some degree, start making a joke out of it? For Mark Kozelek, the penny seems to have dropped in time for his 12th studio album, Among The Leaves. The European tour yarns are drawn not from a weary interview, but from “UK Blues” and “UK Blues 2”, two songs near the end of this long, engrossing and unexpectedly droll record. Homesickness has been a recurring theme in Kozelek’s work; from the Red House Painters’ “Over My Head” (1995), to Sun Kil Moon’s “Third And Seneca” (2010). But where once it would be presented as a numinous poetic condition, now it is played for laughs as much as for pity; as if Kozelek has finally completed the transition from a protracted sensitive adolescence to a self-aware, albeit somewhat grouchy, maturity.

In many ways, though, Among The Leaves is entirely consistent with the rest of Kozelek’s fine catalogue: a familiar tragic history, repeated as comedy. His songs unravel slowly and delicately, freighted but not overwhelmed by the work of Nick Drake, Joni Mitchell, Paul Simon and Andres Segovia. Mostly, they consist solely of Kozelek’s voice – a voice that cannot help but sound dolorous, it seems – and his exquisite playing of a nylon-stringed Spanish classical guitar. There are songs about women he has loved, tried to love and wanted to love; songs about his hometown of San Francisco, and how he feels when he’s away from it; numerous allusions to boxers and cats.

The difference this time is that a fair number of the 17 tracks sound more spontaneous than usual – more like sketches, or documentary clips, than finely-wrought reveries. The opening “I Know It’s Pathetic But That Was The Greatest Night Of My Life” tells of another failed pick-up at a gig, this time in Moscow, and feels like an extract from a Sun Kil Moon song rather than a complete one; at 1:47, it’s roughly a third of Kozelek’s default length. But as Among The Leaves progresses, the fragments begin to flow gracefully into one, thanks to the sustained tone (sceptics would doubtless conclude that Kozelek’s songs all sound the same) and his artful knitting together of themes.

For a while, the songs dwell on promiscuity and deeply flawed old relationships. One lover is a crackhead who has run away from hospital (“Elaine”). Another leaves Kozelek for a substantially richer man (“The Winery”): she dines “at French Laundry, burning through money”; he’s “eatin’ pistachio nuts over by the taco truck”. Money remains an intermittent concern, though Kozelek’s management of his own label Caldo Verde, with its frequent live albums, rarities comps and special editions, should provide a model for minimalist singer-songwriters looking to earn a living out of their cult status.

If those loyal fans fetishise Kozelek as a doomed romantic victim, he is keen to put them right on Among The Leaves, and in some cases ridicule them. “My band played here a lot in the ‘90s when we had lots of female fans and fuck they all were cute,” he reflects in “Sunshine In Chicago”, “now I just sign posters for guys in tennis shoes.” “That Bird Has A Broken Wing”, meanwhile, suggests that Kozelek’s old penchant for covering AC/DC songs was due to an unexpected empathy with Bon Scott’s lusty sensibilities. “I’m half man, other half alleycat,” he claims, after complaining of a burning that turns out to be an STD picked up on tour (“Cipro” – presumably the antibiotic Ciprofloxacin – is cited as useful in these circumstances).

In the 2002 introduction to his book of lyrics, Nights Of Passed Over, Kozelek says of his formative records, “My younger, higher pitched voice had me cringeing. And fused with some melodramatic lines and cliché rhymes, I felt embarrassed.” Treasured as those Red House Painters albums may be, it is easy to see his point when comparing these wry narratives with some of the less nuanced angst on Down Colorful Hill, his 1992 debut. Nevertheless, a couple of outstanding group performances here do explicitly recall Kozelek’s earlier work: the title track, with its nimble, brushed beat, would have sat neatly on Ocean Beach (1995); while the electric churn of “King Fish” harks back to the stunned Crazy Horse jams that proliferated between Songs For A Blue Guitar (1996) and April (2008). Kozelek guested with old bandmates in similar settings on their Desertshore album earlier this year (“UK Blues” is a co-write with them), but it would be nice to see him grapple with that sound more extensively once again.

Perhaps a full band project is financially impractical as well as aesthetically undesirable. If Among The Leaves is an accumulation of anecdotes from the past two decades, “Track Number 8” reveals where Mark Kozelek actually finds himself in 2012. The title is unnecessarily self-effacing – “I wrote this one and I know it ain’t great/Will probably sequence it track number eight” – and the subject matter is songwriting itself. The itch that was an STD earlier in the album is now the creative impulse, which Kozelek describes as something of a curse, namechecking contemporaries – Elliott Smith, Mark Linkous, Acetone’s Richie Lee, Blind Melon’s Shannon Hoon – who he implies fell victim to it.

In the same song, though, he remembers as a child dreaming “of a life close to what I’m livin’.” He loves his neighbourhood, the local stray cats, and his girlfriend. “Sure there were others, but nothin’ this nice,” he sings artlessly of her, and one last shocking revelation about Mark Kozelek comes slowly into focus: at 45, for all the grumbling and snarky jokes, he might just have found contentment.

The Dream Syndicate reunite for anniversary shows

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The legendary Paisley Underground band, The Dream Syndicate, have reformed to play four dates in Spain in September to celebrate the 30th anniversary of their debut album, The Days Of Wine And Roses. According to Slicing Up Eyeballs, Dream Syndicate rontman Steve Wynn announced the reunion shows - billed as the band's first since 1988 - on his Facebook page. The line-up will feature Wynn, original drummer Dennis Duck, bassist Mark Walton (who joined after 1984′s Medicine Show) and guitarist Jason Victor, who plays in Wynn’s current band, The Miracle Three. Wynn wrote: “This September marks the 30 year anniversary of the release of The Days of Wine and I’m excited to say The Dream Syndicate will be commemorating the date by reforming for a handful of shows in Spain, the first time that Dennis Duck, Mark Walton and I will have performed as the Dream Syndicate since we walked off stage at the I-Beam in San Francisco back in 1988. We’re going to be joined for these dates (and very possibly some more beyond) by Jason Victor who has so ably carried the torch of the guitarists who have played these songs with us before. I’m really looking forward to these shows and I hope that some of you will have the chance to come down and see them for yourselves.” The Dream Syndicate will play: September 21: Barcelona, Spain September 22: Valenica, Spain September 25: Madrid, Spain September 29: Bilbao, Spain 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 legendary Paisley Underground band, The Dream Syndicate, have reformed to play four dates in Spain in September to celebrate the 30th anniversary of their debut album, The Days Of Wine And Roses.

According to Slicing Up Eyeballs, Dream Syndicate rontman Steve Wynn announced the reunion shows – billed as the band’s first since 1988 – on his Facebook page. The line-up will feature Wynn, original drummer Dennis Duck, bassist Mark Walton (who joined after 1984′s Medicine Show) and guitarist Jason Victor, who plays in Wynn’s current band, The Miracle Three.

Wynn wrote: “This September marks the 30 year anniversary of the release of The Days of Wine and I’m excited to say The Dream Syndicate will be commemorating the date by reforming for a handful of shows in Spain, the first time that Dennis Duck, Mark Walton and I will have performed as the Dream Syndicate since we walked off stage at the I-Beam in San Francisco back in 1988. We’re going to be joined for these dates (and very possibly some more beyond) by Jason Victor who has so ably carried the torch of the guitarists who have played these songs with us before. I’m really looking forward to these shows and I hope that some of you will have the chance to come down and see them for yourselves.”

The Dream Syndicate will play:

September 21: Barcelona, Spain

September 22: Valenica, Spain

September 25: Madrid, Spain

September 29: Bilbao, Spain

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!

Old Crow Medicine Show – Carry Me Back

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Definitive statement from the whip-smart, uncompromising string band... Since 1998, when old-time music buffs Ketch Secor, Critter Fuqua and Willie Watson first joined forces as travelling buskers, the Old Crow Medicine Show have survived and prospered through a combination of serendipity and resoucefulness. After relocating from upstate New York to the Appalachian village of Boone, N.C., Old Crow caught the ear of Doc Watson while playing in front of a local drugstore, which landed them their first big break – a slot on Doc’s MerleFest in 2000. Soon thereafter, they moved to Nashville, where they were taken under the wing of Marty Stuart, who booked them on the Grand Ole Opry. They also hooked up with Gillian Welch and David Rawlings, which led to Rawlings producing their first two LPs, 2004’s O.C.M.S. and 2006’s Big Iron World. During that period, Old Crow became regulars on the National Public Radio show The Prairie Home Companion, giving them a national profile with precisely the right audience. Meanwhile, “Wagon Wheel”, a single off of O.C.M.S. that Secor had written as a teenager around the chorus of an unfinished Bob Dylan song, was selling consistently as a download, yet spreading almost exclusively via word of mouth in an improbable collision of digital technology and the oral tradition. That timeless-sounding tune has sold more than 600,000 units while being performed nightly by countless groups in bars and on college campuses. The band’s catalog, also including 2008’s Don Was-produced Tennessee Pusher, is now up to 700,000 in album sales. Since their beginnings, they’ve been touring their asses off, including jaunts with Stuart and Merle Haggard, while in 2011 they joined Mumford & Sons and Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros on a train tour, the subject of the documentary feature Big Easy Express. What’s more, mandolin player Cory Younts is currently on loan to Jack White as a member of his “male” band. And if OCMS still aren’t on the mainstream radar in their native country, the band is undeniably a grass-roots phenomenon of uncommon scale. Clearly, this hard-working, virtuosic string band has reached a pivotal moment in its career arc, with the all-important fourth album on a new label – Dave Matthews’ ATO – produced by Ted Hutt (Gaslight Anthem, Dropkick Murphys, Flogging Molly). During the sessions, they welcomed back Fuqua, who’d split awhile back, and parted ways with Watson – but not before the latter contributed significantly to the new album, most notably on the group’s signature wood-grain-textured high harmonies. If this is Watson’s swan song, it’s a hell of a way to go out. Carry Me Back is the apotheosis of Old Crow’s distinctive musical recipe, which juxtaposes homespun original songs that sound like they’re coming off scratchy 78s with an attitude laced with punk-like exuberance, as they address contemporary themes with compassion and conviction, much like their forebears, from Seeger to Dylan. This drum-less, all-acoustic band has never sounded more supercharged than on the Civil War narrative “Carry Me Back To Virginia”, the amphetamine square dance reel “Sewanee Mountain Catfight”(“girls gone wild/on the Tennessee line”), the sly Hank Williams salute “Country Gal” (“honey let’s have a roll in the hay/good-lookin’ country gal”) and the lathered-up “Mississippi Saturday Night”. The latter song harnesses a Jerry Lee Lewis-like abandon to a resonant example of what Secor calls “the topical format”, as the narrator sucks down “forties in a Skylark” amid the physical and emotional ravages left on the land and its inhabitants by Katrina and the Gulf oil spill. The somber subject matter of “We Don’t Grow Tobacco” and “Half Mile Down”, laments for rural Southerners who have lost what had been the basis of their lives for generations, is offset by spirited, life-affirming performances. With all the percolating energy the album delivers, its three most memorable songs are ballads: the gut-wrenching, Dylanesque “Levi”, the true story of a country boy who was killed in the Iraq War, and the hardscrabble anthems of endurance “Ain’t It Enough” and “Ways of Man”. In “Ain’t It Enough”, Secor and his bandmates raise their earthy voices on what could serve as the credo for this single-minded populist band: “Throw your arms round each other/and love one another/ for it’s only one life that we’ve got/and ain’t it enough? Bud Scoppa Q&A Ketch Secor I hear echoes of The Band, the Stones and the Byrds in your music. What we have in common is a reverence for American folk songs, for artists of the generation before them. The real kinship between us lies in our record collections. What sets you apart from other roots bands? What’s different about Old Crow is that we really are playing the music of the American South – it’s not to a dance beat or with electronic instruments. So the application of it has to do with the songwriting. Hear we’ve written these brand new songs with a contemporary focus and scope, but we’re using the instrumentation of our region. There’s nothing remotely academic about your approach. The tendency with a lot of bluegrass and old-time string bands is they play those instruments from behind the glass case that they’re in, and Old Crow just wanted to bust them out. These instruments are meant to be not just played but beat on. We started on the street corner, where the test is, can you play louder than howling dogs and ambulances? I like to think that finally we’ve got a record in which all of the songs will pass that test. It feels like your moment has arrived. The fact that it coincides with the passing away of Doc Watson is a profound coincidence. INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA 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!

Definitive statement from the whip-smart, uncompromising string band…

Since 1998, when old-time music buffs Ketch Secor, Critter Fuqua and Willie Watson first joined forces as travelling buskers, the Old Crow Medicine Show have survived and prospered through a combination of serendipity and resoucefulness. After relocating from upstate New York to the Appalachian village of Boone, N.C., Old Crow caught the ear of Doc Watson while playing in front of a local drugstore, which landed them their first big break – a slot on Doc’s MerleFest in 2000. Soon thereafter, they moved to Nashville, where they were taken under the wing of Marty Stuart, who booked them on the Grand Ole Opry. They also hooked up with Gillian Welch and David Rawlings, which led to Rawlings producing their first two LPs, 2004’s O.C.M.S. and 2006’s Big Iron World. During that period, Old Crow became regulars on the National Public Radio show The Prairie Home Companion, giving them a national profile with precisely the right audience.

Meanwhile, “Wagon Wheel”, a single off of O.C.M.S. that Secor had written as a teenager around the chorus of an unfinished Bob Dylan song, was selling consistently as a download, yet spreading almost exclusively via word of mouth in an improbable collision of digital technology and the oral tradition. That timeless-sounding tune has sold more than 600,000 units while being performed nightly by countless groups in bars and on college campuses. The band’s catalog, also including 2008’s Don Was-produced Tennessee Pusher, is now up to 700,000 in album sales. Since their beginnings, they’ve been touring their asses off, including jaunts with Stuart and Merle Haggard, while in 2011 they joined Mumford & Sons and Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros on a train tour, the subject of the documentary feature Big Easy Express. What’s more, mandolin player Cory Younts is currently on loan to Jack White as a member of his “male” band. And if OCMS still aren’t on the mainstream radar in their native country, the band is undeniably a grass-roots phenomenon of uncommon scale.

Clearly, this hard-working, virtuosic string band has reached a pivotal moment in its career arc, with the all-important fourth album on a new label – Dave Matthews’ ATO – produced by Ted Hutt (Gaslight Anthem, Dropkick Murphys, Flogging Molly). During the sessions, they welcomed back Fuqua, who’d split awhile back, and parted ways with Watson – but not before the latter contributed significantly to the new album, most notably on the group’s signature wood-grain-textured high harmonies. If this is Watson’s swan song, it’s a hell of a way to go out. Carry Me Back is the apotheosis of Old Crow’s distinctive musical recipe, which juxtaposes homespun original songs that sound like they’re coming off scratchy 78s with an attitude laced with punk-like exuberance, as they address contemporary themes with compassion and conviction, much like their forebears, from Seeger to Dylan.

This drum-less, all-acoustic band has never sounded more supercharged than on the Civil War narrative “Carry Me Back To Virginia”, the amphetamine square dance reel “Sewanee Mountain Catfight”(“girls gone wild/on the Tennessee line”), the sly Hank Williams salute “Country Gal” (“honey let’s have a roll in the hay/good-lookin’ country gal”) and the lathered-up “Mississippi Saturday Night”. The latter song harnesses a Jerry Lee Lewis-like abandon to a resonant example of what Secor calls “the topical format”, as the narrator sucks down “forties in a Skylark” amid the physical and emotional ravages left on the land and its inhabitants by Katrina and the Gulf oil spill. The somber subject matter of “We Don’t Grow Tobacco” and “Half Mile Down”, laments for rural Southerners who have lost what had been the basis of their lives for generations, is offset by spirited, life-affirming performances.

With all the percolating energy the album delivers, its three most memorable songs are ballads: the gut-wrenching, Dylanesque “Levi”, the true story of a country boy who was killed in the Iraq War, and the hardscrabble anthems of endurance “Ain’t It Enough” and “Ways of Man”. In “Ain’t It Enough”, Secor and his bandmates raise their earthy voices on what could serve as the credo for this single-minded populist band: “Throw your arms round each other/and love one another/ for it’s only one life that we’ve got/and ain’t it enough?

Bud Scoppa

Q&A

Ketch Secor

I hear echoes of The Band, the Stones and the Byrds in your music.

What we have in common is a reverence for American folk songs, for artists of the generation before them. The real kinship between us lies in our record collections.

What sets you apart from other roots bands?

What’s different about Old Crow is that we really are playing the music of the American South – it’s not to a dance beat or with electronic instruments. So the application of it has to do with the songwriting. Hear we’ve written these brand new songs with a contemporary focus and scope, but we’re using the instrumentation of our region.

There’s nothing remotely academic about your approach.

The tendency with a lot of bluegrass and old-time string bands is they play those instruments from behind the glass case that they’re in, and Old Crow just wanted to bust them out. These instruments are meant to be not just played but beat on. We started on the street corner, where the test is, can you play louder than howling dogs and ambulances? I like to think that finally we’ve got a record in which all of the songs will pass that test.

It feels like your moment has arrived.

The fact that it coincides with the passing away of Doc Watson is a profound coincidence.

INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

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!

Watch Jack White’s “Freedom At 21” video

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Jack White has released a teaser clip for his new video "Freedom At 21". Scroll down to watch it. The "Freedom At 21" promo is White's first collaboration with video director Hype Williams, best known for his work with hip-hop artists like Missy Elliott and 2Pac. Williams's recent clips include Nic...

Jack White has released a teaser clip for his new video “Freedom At 21”. Scroll down to watch it.

The “Freedom At 21” promo is White’s first collaboration with video director Hype Williams, best known for his work with hip-hop artists like Missy Elliott and 2Pac. Williams’s recent clips include Nicki Minaj’s “Stupid Hoe” and Kanye West’s “All Of The Lights”.

The full-length video premieres next Monday (July 16), but a 34-second trailer has now appeared online. The clip begins with the caption “REV YOUR ENGINES” before cutting to scenes of White driving a neon green car and getting arrested.

“Freedom At 21” is the third single from White’s debut solo album Blunderbuss, which was released in April. The B-sides to the album’s three singles, including White’s cover of U2’s “Love Is Blindness”, were made available digitally for the first time on Tuesday (July 10).

Last month (June 26), White performed songs from Blunderbuss during a show at London’s Brixton Academy. He will continue his Blunderbuss tour in the US later this month, before returning to the UK for a one-off gig at Camden’s Roundhouse as part of London’s iTunes Festival on September 8.

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ypE0ZsijAII

Mick Jagger: ‘I don’t think The Rolling Stones were ‘stage ready’ for The Olympics’

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The Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger has said that the band didn't agree to play The Olympics opening ceremony because they weren't 'stage ready'. Speaking to ITN – via Rolling Stone - in a video which you can see below, Jagger said: "I didn't think, to be honest, we were quite stage ready. We...

The Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger has said that the band didn’t agree to play The Olympics opening ceremony because they weren’t ‘stage ready’.

Speaking to ITN – via Rolling Stone – in a video which you can see below, Jagger said: “I didn’t think, to be honest, we were quite stage ready. We haven’t played in a long time and we weren’t really stage-ready, and it’s a very big gig and it’s very risk-taking. I didn’t think the band themselves felt they were really ready to do it at this point.”

However, he added that the band do want to play some shows later this year. “We hope we’re going to do some gigs this year. We haven’t actually finalised them, but we hope we’re going to do some gigs. We’ve done rehearsing, hanging out together and all that discussing so you know, we’ve been seeing each other quite a lot.”

Keith Richards has also confirmed that The Rolling Stones are rehearsing together once again. The band celebrate the 50th anniversary of their first ever gig today (July 12) and Richards has said that they are now back playing together again after a lengthy break.

Speaking to BBC News, Richards said of the band’s current status: “There’s things in the works – I think it’s definitely happening. But when? I can’t say yet. We’re playing around with the idea and had a couple of rehearsals – we’ve got together and it feels so good.”

Richards was speaking as a new photography exhibition called The Rolling Stones: 50 opens at London’s Somerset House. The free exhibition will be held from July 13-August 27 in the landmark venue’s East Wing Galleries and will coincide with the release of a book of the same time. The book will feature 700 shots and words from the band on their history, and will hit UK bookshops today.

To read more about The Rolling Stones’ 50th anniversary, pick up the next issue of NME, which includes a celebration of the band’s amazing career. It is on newsstands next Wednesday (July 18) or available digitally.

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MS3capSwpVM

Bryan Ferry and Johnny Marr team up for GuilFest this weekend

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Former Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr will join Bryan Ferry for a complete set this Sunday [July 15] at GuilFest. The pair have a musical history together stretching back to 1987, when Marr played on Ferry's Bete Noir album. Ferry's set will include material from both his solo career and his Roxy Music catalogue. Ferry says: "Johnny has previously performed with us on TV and at some smaller events but I am thrilled that he will be playing a full show with us for the very first time at GuilFest." More details about GuilFest can he found 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!

Former Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr will join Bryan Ferry for a complete set this Sunday [July 15] at GuilFest.

The pair have a musical history together stretching back to 1987, when Marr played on Ferry’s Bete Noir album.

Ferry’s set will include material from both his solo career and his Roxy Music catalogue.

Ferry says: “Johnny has previously performed with us on TV and at some smaller events but I am thrilled that he will be playing a full show with us for the very first time at GuilFest.”

More details about GuilFest can he found here .

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Keith Richards: ‘The Rolling Stones are rehearsing again’

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Keith Richards has confirmed that The Rolling Stones are rehearsing together once again. The band celebrate the 50th anniversary of their first ever gig today (July 12) and Richards has said that they are now back playing together again after a lengthy break, but could not say when they would be ou...

Keith Richards has confirmed that The Rolling Stones are rehearsing together once again.

The band celebrate the 50th anniversary of their first ever gig today (July 12) and Richards has said that they are now back playing together again after a lengthy break, but could not say when they would be out playing live again.

Speaking to BBC News, Richards said of the band’s current status: “There’s things in the works – I think it’s definitely happening. But when? I can’t say yet. We’re playing around with the idea and had a couple of rehearsals – we’ve got together and it feels so good.”

Richards also spoke about his amazement that the group had lasted so long, responding to a question about whether he thought The Rolling Stones would ever achieve such longevity, he said: “Never, back then groups used to last about two or three years. You hoped to have a good time and that was that.”

He continued: “It’s a generation thing, that post-war thing, also technology, when we started we were making 45s and then when you could make albums, that gave us the chance to do more. I never expected to get here, so it’s all gravy.”

Richards also spoke about his legendary capacity for excess and said that his only real regrets were “taking certain things” and the death of guitarist Brian Jones.

Asked about this, Richards said: “I wouldn’t have taken certain things if I’d known what I’d have to do to get off of it. I can’t think of any other real regrets. I regret Brian dying, I remember thinking ‘Brian, how dare you leave the band’ because we were all very close. I can’t regret something, I’d go through the hard times again just to keep things as they are.”

Finally asked how he would describe The Rolling Stones’ career, 50 years after their first gig at London’s Marquee Club, Richards said: “Fascinating and raunchy. Let’s keep it that way.”

Richards was speaking as a new photography exhibition called The Rolling Stones: 50 opens at London’s Somerset House.

The free exhibition will be held from July 13-August 27 in the landmark venue’s East Wing Galleries and will coincide with the release of a book of the same time. The book will feature 700 shots and words from the band on their history, and will hit UK bookshops today.

The exhibition will show a host of unseen and rare photographs, including more than 70 prints, with live shots, studio images and reportage pictures on display as well as contact sheets and negative strips.

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Stevie Nicks confirms that Fleetwood Mac will tour in 2013

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Stevie Nicks has revealed that Fleetwood Mac will reform in 2013 for a live tour. The singer, who was speaking on US news channel CBS, confirmed that the band are planning to reunite once she and bandmate Lindsey Buckingham have finished touring their respective solo projects. Asked about the chan...

Stevie Nicks has revealed that Fleetwood Mac will reform in 2013 for a live tour.

The singer, who was speaking on US news channel CBS, confirmed that the band are planning to reunite once she and bandmate Lindsey Buckingham have finished touring their respective solo projects.

Asked about the chances of a new Fleetwood Mac tour, Nicks replied that it will happen “next year, so far”. She added: “It’s the plan. Because that’s what we do. I do my thing. And Lindsey (Buckingham) is out doing his thing now. Everybody’s on board.”

Nicks’ statement marks a turnaround from the band situation outlined by drummer Mick Fleetwood earlier this year. Talking to Playboy in March, he said: “I don’t believe Fleetwood Mac will ever tour again, but I really hope we do. We have rehearsed it and prepared for it since 2010. We were supposed to tour in 2011, but we delayed it for a year to allow Stevie Nicks to support her solo record and for Lindsey Buckingham to do the same with his.”

Nicks also spoke about the suicide of former Fleetwood Mac guitarist Bob Welch, who died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the chest last month (June). “I can’t even tell you what in the world would have pushed him to do something that crazy,” she said.

Nicks is currently touring the US in support of her seventh solo album, In Your Dreams, which was released in May 2011. Fleetwood Mac last toured as a four-piece – Nicks, Buckingham, Fleetwood and bassist John McVie – in 2009. The fifth member of the band’s classic Rumours-era lineup, Christine McVie, retired from band duties in 1998.

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Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore unveils another new track

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Thurston Moore has unveiled another track by his new band, Chelsea Light Moving. The song "Groovy & Linda" can be heard by scrolling down and clicking below. It draws lyrical inspiration from the late-'60s East Village hippie couple whose flower-power dreams ended in a double homicide. Folk sin...

Thurston Moore has unveiled another track by his new band, Chelsea Light Moving.

The song “Groovy & Linda” can be heard by scrolling down and clicking below. It draws lyrical inspiration from the late-’60s East Village hippie couple whose flower-power dreams ended in a double homicide. Folk singer Thom Parrott also named a song in 1968 after the same track.

It 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. They also have a series of US shows lined up at Alberta Sled Island on July 22, Missoula’s The Top Hat (24), Boulder Theatre (27) and Denver Larimer Lounge (29).

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Bob Dylan’s lost Newport Festival guitar found

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The guitar Bob Dylan played during his historic set at the Newport Folk Festival on July 25, 1965 has been found, according to a report in Rolling Stone. The guitar - a 1964 sunburst Fender Stratocaster - has apparently been missing for 47 years, until it was discovered by New Jersey resident Dawn Peterson - whose father, a private pilot who worked for Dylan's manager Albert Grossman. "After one flight, my father saw there were three guitars left on the plane," she says. "He contacted the company a few times about picking the guitars up, but nobody ever got back to him." Rolling Stones reports that the Stratocaster came with 13 pages of typed and handwritten song lyrics tucked inside its guitar case. The find has been disputed, however, by Dylan's lawyer, Orin Syder, who released a statement saying, "Bob has possession of the electric guitar he played at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965. He did own several other Stratocaster guitars that were stolen from him around that time, as were some handwritten lyrics." The story will be the subject of a forthcoming edition of the American TV series History Detectives, that will air on July 17. 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 guitar Bob Dylan played during his historic set at the Newport Folk Festival on July 25, 1965 has been found, according to a report in Rolling Stone.

The guitar – a 1964 sunburst Fender Stratocaster – has apparently been missing for 47 years, until it was discovered by New Jersey resident Dawn Peterson – whose father, a private pilot who worked for Dylan’s manager Albert Grossman.

“After one flight, my father saw there were three guitars left on the plane,” she says. “He contacted the company a few times about picking the guitars up, but nobody ever got back to him.”

Rolling Stones reports that the Stratocaster came with 13 pages of typed and handwritten song lyrics tucked inside its guitar case.

The find has been disputed, however, by Dylan’s lawyer, Orin Syder, who released a statement saying, “Bob has possession of the electric guitar he played at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965. He did own several other Stratocaster guitars that were stolen from him around that time, as were some handwritten lyrics.”

The story will be the subject of a forthcoming edition of the American TV series History Detectives, that will air on July 17.

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