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Poll names Bruce Springsteen as favourite to compose replacement US National Anthem

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A new poll has seen 22% of Americans go for Bruce Springsteen as their first choice if they had to name someone to compose a new National Anthem. Dolly Parton was second favourite to write a replacement track for The Star Spangled Banner as the country music superstar polled 19%, while Stevie Wonder came in third scoring 18% of the vote in the The 60 Minutes/Vanity Fair poll, via Politico. Bob Dylan was next up with 11%, followed by composer John Williams with 10%, Jay-Z with 8% and Madonna with 5%. Bruce Springsteen will visit the UK in later this month with his Wrecking Ball tour, beginning at Sunderland Stadium of Light on June 21 before moving on to Manchester Etihad Stadium (22) and Isle Of Wight Festival (24). He will then return to headline London Hard Rock Calling on July 14.

A new poll has seen 22% of Americans go for Bruce Springsteen as their first choice if they had to name someone to compose a new National Anthem.

Dolly Parton was second favourite to write a replacement track for The Star Spangled Banner as the country music superstar polled 19%, while Stevie Wonder came in third scoring 18% of the vote in the The 60 Minutes/Vanity Fair poll, via Politico.

Bob Dylan was next up with 11%, followed by composer John Williams with 10%, Jay-Z with 8% and Madonna with 5%.

Bruce Springsteen will visit the UK in later this month with his Wrecking Ball tour, beginning at Sunderland Stadium of Light on June 21 before moving on to Manchester Etihad Stadium (22) and Isle Of Wight Festival (24). He will then return to headline London Hard Rock Calling on July 14.

New album madness, David Cronenberg, Zep Ultimate Music Guide

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Hey there. I hope you all had a good Bank Holiday weekend. Allan’s off today – an extra day holiday, no less – so I’m filling in on newsletter duties. I’m only recently back from holidays myself, so much of the Jubilee weekend was spent trying to catch up with various bits of television and some movies I’ve missed while I’ve been away. My biggest shock was discovering that the last two episodes of The Bridge have been taken down off iPlayer. Uh. I did venture out through the rain to see Ridley Scott’s Alien prequel, Prometheus, which I’ve written about over on my blog, The View From Here. This week, I'll hopefully catch up with David Cronenberg’s Cosmopolis, which I’ve heard good reports about from the Cannes Film Festival. It's based on Don DeLillo's novella, and finds Robert Pattinson driving round New York. I remember the book being incredible - and here's hoping Cronenberg delivers something that does it justice. 'Stylised and borderline pretentious apocalyptic fun!', said one good friend of Uncut. Anyway, I'll get some words up on my blog about that soon. It’s a good – if potentially expensive – week for Uncut readers. Among the new releases in the shops there’s albums by the Beach Boys, Neil Young & Crazy Horse, Patti Smith and Dexys, as well as the arrival of The Beatles' Yellow Submarine on DVD. I can’t remember a week when so many of our core artists had releases out, but don't panic! If you need any steers as to which ones to spend your money on, then I’d recommend you check out the reviews pages in the current issue of Uncut. In other business, our latest Ultimate Music Guide goes on sale tomorrow. Following on from our previous editions dedicated to David Bowie, John Lennon, the Stones, REM and The Clash, this edition focuses on Led Zeppelin. We provide an in-depth overview of the band's entire career through a host of classic interviews, unseen for years, from the archives of NME and Melody Maker, plus new reviews of all of the studio albums. You can buy it in the shops, and it's also available to order online here: http://www.backstreet-merch.com/stores/nme/official_nme_magazine_uncut-led-zeppelin-ultimate-guide_nme128.html Anyway, I hope you all enjoy the rest of your week. Cheers for now.

Hey there. I hope you all had a good Bank Holiday weekend. Allan’s off today – an extra day holiday, no less – so I’m filling in on newsletter duties.

I’m only recently back from holidays myself, so much of the Jubilee weekend was spent trying to catch up with various bits of television and some movies I’ve missed while I’ve been away. My biggest shock was discovering that the last two episodes of The Bridge have been taken down off iPlayer. Uh. I did venture out through the rain to see Ridley Scott’s Alien prequel, Prometheus, which I’ve written about over on my blog, The View From Here. This week, I’ll hopefully catch up with David Cronenberg’s Cosmopolis, which I’ve heard good reports about from the Cannes Film Festival. It’s based on Don DeLillo’s novella, and finds Robert Pattinson driving round New York. I remember the book being incredible – and here’s hoping Cronenberg delivers something that does it justice. ‘Stylised and borderline pretentious apocalyptic fun!’, said one good friend of Uncut. Anyway, I’ll get some words up on my blog about that soon.

It’s a good – if potentially expensive – week for Uncut readers. Among the new releases in the shops there’s albums by the Beach Boys, Neil Young & Crazy Horse, Patti Smith and Dexys, as well as the arrival of The Beatles’ Yellow Submarine on DVD. I can’t remember a week when so many of our core artists had releases out, but don’t panic! If you need any steers as to which ones to spend your money on, then I’d recommend you check out the reviews pages in the current issue of Uncut.

In other business, our latest Ultimate Music Guide goes on sale tomorrow. Following on from our previous editions dedicated to David Bowie, John Lennon, the Stones, REM and The Clash, this edition focuses on Led Zeppelin. We provide an in-depth overview of the band’s entire career through a host of classic interviews, unseen for years, from the archives of NME and Melody Maker, plus new reviews of all of the studio albums.

You can buy it in the shops, and it’s also available to order online here:

http://www.backstreet-merch.com/stores/nme/official_nme_magazine_uncut-led-zeppelin-ultimate-guide_nme128.html

Anyway, I hope you all enjoy the rest of your week.

Cheers for now.

Prometheus

In 2005, I went to a talk Ridley Scott gave to ahead of the release of his Crusader epic, Kingdom Of Heaven. At one point, I remember Scott spoke fondly about childhood visits to his local cinema in Teeside, and his discovery of directors like John Ford, Howard Hawks and William Wyler – journeymen filmmakers in the truest sense, able to turn their hands to any genre from comedy to combat dramas. It’s a model that Scott himself has broadly followed in a career that’s taken in historical drama, gangster flick, sci-fi, war movie and fantasy and runs to nearly 30 films. But unusually for a contemporary filmmaker in his position, Scott has never made a sequel or prequel to any his own movies. Until, of course, now – when Scott has returned to not just one of his most successful movies, but two: Alien and, due in 2014, Blade Runner. You can’t help but wonder what’s prompted Scott to revisit two of his greatest achievements. Aged 74, you might assume Scott to be in a period of reflection, and perhaps finding symmetry and satisfaction in circling back to the two films that made his name. There are, perhaps, more pragmatic factors at work here. Scott’s last two films – Body Of Lies and Robin Hood – performed poorly at the box office, while the Alien franchise has been in the dumps since the woeful Alien Vs. Predator movies. While separately, neither a new Ridley Scott film nor a new Alien film are guaranteed successes, the combination of the two is a tantalising prospect: over its opening weekend in the UK, it took £9.92m - already more than the total gross of any of the Alien movies, and the biggest debut for any Ridley Scott film. Prometheus, though, feels confined by the tropes and ticks from previous films in the series it appears duty bound to repeat. A ruthless corporation with a secret agenda? Check. The crew of a space ship who get picked off one by one? Check. A strong-willed heroine who spends at least 10 minutes of the film running around in her underwear? Check. Something nasty in those strange pods on the floor over there? Yep. Scott and his screenwriters Jon Spaihts and Damon Lindelof bulk this out with some digressive Chariot Of The Gods-style musings on the origins of life on Earth. The starting point is the ‘Space Jockey’ from Scott’s original Alien film – the giant skeleton with its stomach blown outwards that the crew from the Nostromo found on a derelict alien spacecraft. What the Space Jockey is, where it came from, and how is it specifically connected to the Alien universe are all explored here in a fairly windy and convoluted fashion. Indeed, while Scott’s first film was lean, claustrophobic, dark and nasty, Prometheus is the opposite. This is grandiose, widescreen, airy and while we do get to rummage through the bowels of various characters in as grisly way as you’d hope, the overriding mood is a sense of wonderment at the whole big crazy cosmic vibes of it all, dude. Conversely for a film in which 97% of the cast are dead by the end of it, the film ends of a note of hope. The 3D is convincing – sweeping shots along the Isle of Skye at the film’s start and footage of alien landscapes are genuinely stunning. The journey to the other side of the universe is led by Dr Elizabeth Shaw, played by The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo's Noomi Rapace, who does intense and driven in a role that’s basically analogous to Sigourney Weaver’s Ripley. Shaw and her team of scientists and the crew of the Prometheus are following star maps laid out in ancient cave paintings in search of the ‘Engineers’ who created the human race. Along for the ride are a mostly forgettable supporting cast of cannon fodder/crew members, including Idris Elba as the Prometheus’ captain and Charlize Theron as an icy corporate exec. None of them are drawn as sharply as the crew members of the Nostromo (I always wonder how much input producer Walter Hill had on Dan O’Bannon’s original Alien script). They're all out-classed by Michael Fassbender, as David, an android who operates with increasingly independent motives. In one of the film’s best sequences, we see David on the Prometheus, keeping the ship running while the crew are in suspended animation. He spends his time watching Lawrence Of Arabia, dyeing his hair blonde in tribute and perfecting his impression of Peter O’Toole. Bowie in The Man Who Fell To Earth is another reference point. Scott shoots these scenes like Kubrick, and they have a strangely voyeuristic quality, as if we’re spying on the secret dreams of the android. I’d have loved more little moment like this. As it is, Scott is compelled by market forces to make Prometheus as big and loud as he can. It's by no means a disaster - it's easily Scott's best film since American Gangster - but I'd have liked something more muscular, more direct.

In 2005, I went to a talk Ridley Scott gave to ahead of the release of his Crusader epic, Kingdom Of Heaven.

At one point, I remember Scott spoke fondly about childhood visits to his local cinema in Teeside, and his discovery of directors like John Ford, Howard Hawks and William Wyler – journeymen filmmakers in the truest sense, able to turn their hands to any genre from comedy to combat dramas. It’s a model that Scott himself has broadly followed in a career that’s taken in historical drama, gangster flick, sci-fi, war movie and fantasy and runs to nearly 30 films. But unusually for a contemporary filmmaker in his position, Scott has never made a sequel or prequel to any his own movies. Until, of course, now – when Scott has returned to not just one of his most successful movies, but two: Alien and, due in 2014, Blade Runner.

You can’t help but wonder what’s prompted Scott to revisit two of his greatest achievements. Aged 74, you might assume Scott to be in a period of reflection, and perhaps finding symmetry and satisfaction in circling back to the two films that made his name. There are, perhaps, more pragmatic factors at work here. Scott’s last two films – Body Of Lies and Robin Hood – performed poorly at the box office, while the Alien franchise has been in the dumps since the woeful Alien Vs. Predator movies. While separately, neither a new Ridley Scott film nor a new Alien film are guaranteed successes, the combination of the two is a tantalising prospect: over its opening weekend in the UK, it took £9.92m – already more than the total gross of any of the Alien movies, and the biggest debut for any Ridley Scott film.

Prometheus, though, feels confined by the tropes and ticks from previous films in the series it appears duty bound to repeat. A ruthless corporation with a secret agenda? Check. The crew of a space ship who get picked off one by one? Check. A strong-willed heroine who spends at least 10 minutes of the film running around in her underwear? Check. Something nasty in those strange pods on the floor over there? Yep.

Scott and his screenwriters Jon Spaihts and Damon Lindelof bulk this out with some digressive Chariot Of The Gods-style musings on the origins of life on Earth. The starting point is the ‘Space Jockey’ from Scott’s original Alien film – the giant skeleton with its stomach blown outwards that the crew from the Nostromo found on a derelict alien spacecraft. What the Space Jockey is, where it came from, and how is it specifically connected to the Alien universe are all explored here in a fairly windy and convoluted fashion.

Indeed, while Scott’s first film was lean, claustrophobic, dark and nasty, Prometheus is the opposite. This is grandiose, widescreen, airy and while we do get to rummage through the bowels of various characters in as grisly way as you’d hope, the overriding mood is a sense of wonderment at the whole big crazy cosmic vibes of it all, dude. Conversely for a film in which 97% of the cast are dead by the end of it, the film ends of a note of hope. The 3D is convincing – sweeping shots along the Isle of Skye at the film’s start and footage of alien landscapes are genuinely stunning.

The journey to the other side of the universe is led by Dr Elizabeth Shaw, played by The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo‘s Noomi Rapace, who does intense and driven in a role that’s basically analogous to Sigourney Weaver’s Ripley. Shaw and her team of scientists and the crew of the Prometheus are following star maps laid out in ancient cave paintings in search of the ‘Engineers’ who created the human race. Along for the ride are a mostly forgettable supporting cast of cannon fodder/crew members, including Idris Elba as the Prometheus’ captain and Charlize Theron as an icy corporate exec. None of them are drawn as sharply as the crew members of the Nostromo (I always wonder how much input producer Walter Hill had on Dan O’Bannon’s original Alien script).

They’re all out-classed by Michael Fassbender, as David, an android who operates with increasingly independent motives. In one of the film’s best sequences, we see David on the Prometheus, keeping the ship running while the crew are in suspended animation. He spends his time watching Lawrence Of Arabia, dyeing his hair blonde in tribute and perfecting his impression of Peter O’Toole. Bowie in The Man Who Fell To Earth is another reference point. Scott shoots these scenes like Kubrick, and they have a strangely voyeuristic quality, as if we’re spying on the secret dreams of the android.

I’d have loved more little moment like this. As it is, Scott is compelled by market forces to make Prometheus as big and loud as he can. It’s by no means a disaster – it’s easily Scott’s best film since American Gangster – but I’d have liked something more muscular, more direct.

Julia Holter, London Cafe Oto, June 1, 2012

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A day or two before Julia Holter’s show at Café Oto, I tweeted something fairly dumb about not understanding why she hadn’t received anything like the same amount of hype as Grimes this year, based on my admittedly rather idiosyncratic idea that, amidst the reveries and abstractions, Holter has a knack for subtly accessible pop music. It doesn’t take long at this debut London show to understand that Holter’s music comes from, or at least currently exists in, a quite different place. The point is hammered home long before she actually takes the stage, as the two support acts are the two other members of her band, Chris Votek and Corey Fogel. Votek is a cellist, who has transcribed mesmerising Indian vocal ragas for his instrument: the effect is beautiful, not least because the results remind me of one of my favourite records, Terry Riley’s “Persian Surgery Dervishes”. Fogel is an inventive jazz drummer, who has assembled a pick-up band (composed of Votek on cello, plus a double bassist, electric bassist and pianist) to flesh out his semi-structured improvisations. Given Fogel’s sprung and rattling way around the parameters of a rhythm, and Votek’s meditative deep tones, it’s hard to imagine that a live show will privilege Julia Holter’s covert pop instincts. And so it turns out. I’d imagined before the show that her most immediate tunes, like “Goddess Eyes”, would turn out to be the substance of the gig. But in fact, it’s a show that is heavy on fragility and otherness; even these relatively robust hooks have their glassiness, their ethereal qualities pushed to the fore. The electronic sheen of “Ekstasis” (a definite favourite of 2012, which I wrote about here) might suggest that Holter’s live shows would sound something more like Broadcast, but it’s the airiness, the starkness, which is most striking here. Holter plays a keyboard but doesn’t use much in the way of effects or loops. Instead, even on “Marienbad”, the ghostly sense of dislocation seems to be generated by the spaces between notes rather than a layering, a density of sound. Corey Fogel’s occasional bursts of activity can sometimes feel like a disruption (I’m reminded of the way Neal Morgan works his way through some Joanna Newsom songs), but mostly it seems as if Holter has assembled a small and exploratory group of musicians to take her songs somewhere different. While the show’s highlights come when she moves away into a drifting interspace on the likes of “This Is Ekstasis”, “Try To Make Yourself A Work Of Art” and especially “Boy In The Moon”, it also feels like the songs are open-ended and silvery, but also more pliable and substantive than might have been expected; that they can change shape and thrive in radical treatments. Holter, one suspects, might turn out to be one of those artists who can reconfigure her band and her sound with each record and tour, while still retaining a very specific musical identity (it may be extrapolating too much, but the drapery of her top tonight seems subtly, suitably Greco-Roman in design). Another London show tonight with Peaking Lights, I think: leave me a message if you’ve seen the tour – I have no idea what she must have sounded like in a lunchtime slot at Field Day. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

A day or two before Julia Holter’s show at Café Oto, I tweeted something fairly dumb about not understanding why she hadn’t received anything like the same amount of hype as Grimes this year, based on my admittedly rather idiosyncratic idea that, amidst the reveries and abstractions, Holter has a knack for subtly accessible pop music.

It doesn’t take long at this debut London show to understand that Holter’s music comes from, or at least currently exists in, a quite different place. The point is hammered home long before she actually takes the stage, as the two support acts are the two other members of her band, Chris Votek and Corey Fogel. Votek is a cellist, who has transcribed mesmerising Indian vocal ragas for his instrument: the effect is beautiful, not least because the results remind me of one of my favourite records, Terry Riley’s “Persian Surgery Dervishes”. Fogel is an inventive jazz drummer, who has assembled a pick-up band (composed of Votek on cello, plus a double bassist, electric bassist and pianist) to flesh out his semi-structured improvisations.

Given Fogel’s sprung and rattling way around the parameters of a rhythm, and Votek’s meditative deep tones, it’s hard to imagine that a live show will privilege Julia Holter’s covert pop instincts. And so it turns out. I’d imagined before the show that her most immediate tunes, like “Goddess Eyes”, would turn out to be the substance of the gig. But in fact, it’s a show that is heavy on fragility and otherness; even these relatively robust hooks have their glassiness, their ethereal qualities pushed to the fore.

The electronic sheen of “Ekstasis” (a definite favourite of 2012, which I wrote about here) might suggest that Holter’s live shows would sound something more like Broadcast, but it’s the airiness, the starkness, which is most striking here. Holter plays a keyboard but doesn’t use much in the way of effects or loops. Instead, even on “Marienbad”, the ghostly sense of dislocation seems to be generated by the spaces between notes rather than a layering, a density of sound.

Corey Fogel’s occasional bursts of activity can sometimes feel like a disruption (I’m reminded of the way Neal Morgan works his way through some Joanna Newsom songs), but mostly it seems as if Holter has assembled a small and exploratory group of musicians to take her songs somewhere different. While the show’s highlights come when she moves away into a drifting interspace on the likes of “This Is Ekstasis”, “Try To Make Yourself A Work Of Art” and especially “Boy In The Moon”, it also feels like the songs are open-ended and silvery, but also more pliable and substantive than might have been expected; that they can change shape and thrive in radical treatments.

Holter, one suspects, might turn out to be one of those artists who can reconfigure her band and her sound with each record and tour, while still retaining a very specific musical identity (it may be extrapolating too much, but the drapery of her top tonight seems subtly, suitably Greco-Roman in design). Another London show tonight with Peaking Lights, I think: leave me a message if you’ve seen the tour – I have no idea what she must have sounded like in a lunchtime slot at Field Day.

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

Grizzly Bear unveil full details of their new album and announce UK tour

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Grizzly Bear have revealed that they will release their new album in September. The Brooklyn indie band will release the album, which doesn't have a title as yet, on Warp Recordings on September 17. It is the fourth record of their career to date. The band have also unveiled the album's opening tr...

Grizzly Bear have revealed that they will release their new album in September.

The Brooklyn indie band will release the album, which doesn’t have a title as yet, on Warp Recordings on September 17. It is the fourth record of their career to date.

The band have also unveiled the album’s opening track “Sleeping Ute“, which you can hear by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

The album is the follow-up to their 2009 effort Veckatimest and comes after a number of the band’s members took time out from to pursue solo projects.,

The tracklisting for the as yet untitled album is as follows:

‘Sleeping Ute’

‘Speak In Rounds’

‘Adelma’

‘Yet Again’

‘The Hunt’

‘A Simple Answer’

‘What’s Wrong’

‘Gun-shy’

‘Half Gate’

‘Sun In Your Eyes’

Grizzly Bear will tour the UK in support of the album in the autumn, with dates booked in both August and October.

They will first play shows in Cambridge and Nottingham in August ahead of their co-headline slot at this year’s End Of The Road Festival. They will then return to play gigs in Gateshead, Manchester, Glasgow, Warwick and London in October.

Grizzly Bear will play:

Cambridge Junction (August 28)

Nottingham Royal Concert Hall (29)

Gateshead Sage Theatre (October 17)

Manchester Academy (18)

Glasgow Barrowlands (20)

Warwick Arts Centre (21)

O2 Academy Brixton (22)

Last original member of The Platters dies

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Herb Reed, the last surviving original member of 1950s doo wop group The Platters, has died. Reed, who was 83, passed away in a hospice in the Boston area, reports AP. Reed (front left in the photograph) was the only member of the vocal group to appear on all 400 of their recordings and toured wit...

Herb Reed, the last surviving original member of 1950s doo wop group The Platters, has died.

Reed, who was 83, passed away in a hospice in the Boston area, reports AP.

Reed (front left in the photograph) was the only member of the vocal group to appear on all 400 of their recordings and toured with one of the numerous incarnations of the band until 2011.

Born in Kansas City, Reed founded The Platters in Los Angeles in 1952 and sang bass vocals on their hit singles, “The Great Pretender” and “Only You (And You Alone)”. Scroll down to watch a video of the group performing both songs in 1955. Reed is on the far left of the screen.

Though Reed quit the band in 1969, he went on to lead his own version of the influential group. In the 1990s, the exclusive right to tour as The Platters was awarded to Reed and his version of the group, but this was withdrawn in 2002 and Reed started touring as Herb Reed and His Platters.

The Platters were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990.

Pic credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins to play Iggy Pop in ‘CBGB’ film

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Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins has signed on to play Iggy Pop in CBGB, a new film about the legendary New York venue. Meanwhile, Rupert Grint will play Cheetah Chrome, the guitarist for Dead Boys, a punk band who played a prominent role during the club's rise, while Rock Of Ages actress Malin ...

Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins has signed on to play Iggy Pop in CBGB, a new film about the legendary New York venue.

Meanwhile, Rupert Grint will play Cheetah Chrome, the guitarist for Dead Boys, a punk band who played a prominent role during the club’s rise, while Rock Of Ages actress Malin Akerman is lined up to play Blondie’s Debbie Harry. Alan Rickman will appear as venue owner Hilly Kristal, Mickey Sumner will play Patti Smith and Johnny Galecki will take on the role of Television’s manager Terry Ork.

The movie will be directed by Randal Miller – who has co-written the script with Jody Savin – and is set to start shooting this month in Savannah, Georgia, before moving to New York, reports Billboard. The co-writing pair are also currently putting together a biopic about Dennis Wilson, the late solo musician and drummer with The Beach Boys.

It was recently reported that CBGB could be set to reopen in a new location in New York. The assets of the nightspot, which closed in 2006, have been bought by a group of investors who are planning to set up a new annual festival and have also been eyeing up potential new sites, reported The New York Times/.

The four-day festival is due to kick off on July 5 and take place at around 30 venues across the city, showcasing 300 bands. The rights to the club’s assets had been mired in legal disputes since the death of founder Kristal in 2007.

Paul McCartney confirms he’ll be closing the Olympics opening ceremony

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Paul McCartney has confirmed rumours stating that he would be playing this summer's Olympic Games opening ceremony in London. Speaking to BBC 5 Live, the former Beatle said: "I've been booked" and explained that he would be "closing the opening" of London 2012. The opening ceremony will take pla...

Paul McCartney has confirmed rumours stating that he would be playing this summer’s Olympic Games opening ceremony in London.

Speaking to BBC 5 Live, the former Beatle said: “I’ve been booked” and explained that he would be “closing the opening” of London 2012.

The opening ceremony will take place on July 27 in East London and has an Isles of Wonder theme. The ceremony is being staged by Trainspotting and Slumdog Millionaire director, Danny Boyle, who is the event’s artistic director.

On Monday, McCartney also closed the Queen’s Jubilee Concert in London with a five-song greatest hits set in front of the watching monarchy. Playing to a crowd of 12,000 on a stage in front of Buckingham Palace, the former Beatle topped a bill which featured artists from the past six decades of Elizabeth II’s time on the throne.

After kicking off with “Magical Mystery Tour“, McCartney went on to play “All My Loving”, “Let It Be” and “Live And Let Die” – complete with customary pyrotechnics. He then closed the show with a star-studded version of “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da“.

Neil Young & Crazy Horse Announce American Tour

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Neil Young and Crazy Horse have announced plans for a string of shows in the US and Canada later this year, including an appearance at the Austin City Limits festival in October. They will play two stand-alone shows at the Red Rocks Amphitheatre in Morrison, Colorado, on August 5-6, before a host o...

Neil Young and Crazy Horse have announced plans for a string of shows in the US and Canada later this year, including an appearance at the Austin City Limits festival in October.

They will play two stand-alone shows at the Red Rocks Amphitheatre in Morrison, Colorado, on August 5-6, before a host of US dates in October and Canadian shows in November. As of yet, no plans for a UK or European tour have been announced.

Neil Young and Crazy Horse released their brand new album, Americana, on June 4. The record is Young’s first with Crazy Horse since 2003 and the first album with the full Crazy Horse line-up of Billy Talbot, Ralph Molina and Frank Sampedro since 1996’s Broken Arrow.

Neil Young & Crazy Horse will play:

Morrison, CO – Red Rocks (August 5)

Morrison, CO – Red Rocks (6)

San Francisco, CA – Outside Lands (10-12)

Cleveland, OH – Wolstein Center (October 8)

Pittsburgh, PA – Petersen Center (9)

Chicago, IL – United Center (11)

Austin, TX – Austin City Limits (12-14)

Los Angeles, CA – Hollywood Bowl (17)

Dallas, TX – Verizon Theatre at Grand Prairie (25)

Seattle, WA – Key Arena (November 10)

Vancouver, British Columbia – Rogers Arena (11)

Calgary, Alberta – Scotiabank Saddledome (13)

Saskatoon, Saskatchewan – Credit Union Centre (14)

Winnipeg, Manitoba – MTS Centre (16)

Toronto, Ontario – Air Canada Centre (19)

Boston, MA – TD Garden (26)

New York, NY – Madison Square Garden (27)

Fairfax, VA – Patriot Center (30)

Bridgeport, CT – Webster Bank Arena (December 4)

Dexys – One Day I’m Going To Soar

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Even the longest journeys can end up taking you full circle... Back in 1980, when Kevin Rowland was just 27, he interrupted his first album to recite a poem. It was backed by a lone saxophone and you couldn’t quite tell whether this was utter pretension or a piss-take of beat poetry; another clue to the bumpy artistic road Rowland was set to travel. The poem was called “Love Part One” and, in a quietly defiant tone, it asked love outside for a scrap. “Am I the first to question you exist?” he sneered at his shadowy nemesis, before saying he vomits at the thought that “she gives herself only for you.” Thirty-two years and several broken relationships, bad career moves, addictions, depressions and public fuck-ups later and… nothing has happened to really change Kevin Rowland’s mind about love. He ends only his sixth album, not with an angry poem, but a calm, resigned monologue that breaks occasionally into a beautiful crooned chorus. “It’s not the end of the world”, sighs Kevin on the stunning “It’s O.K. John Joe”, “… but I think that I’m meant to be alone.” And, after the weight of the life-story he has sung out loud and clear over the previous eleven songs, it feels like a release and a relief, for Rowland, for the listener. You might even cry. One Day I’m Going To Soar is an album about manhood in all its predatory, childish glory. It’s also, of course, an album about Kevin Rowland and his enduring anti-love affair with an amorphous beast called Dexys Midnight Runners, now Dexys for short, who may always feature completely different members, but without whom he can’t make good records, as 1988’s bland The Wanderer and 1999’s bizarre covers album My Beauty readily attest. So one can’t help but hear One Day… as a belated sequel to the great lost Dexys masterpiece, 1985’s Don’t Stand Me Down, particularly because the music is based on the exact same fusion of sources – Van Morrison, Irish airs, the soul and MOR pop of the late ‘60s and early ‘70s – and because it revolves around the same lyrical themes – Irishness, Englishness, childhood reminiscence, lust, paranoia, betrayal and whether an inability to settle into a committed relationship is necessarily the same thing as an inability to love. A musical memoir in three acts, One Day… kicks off with “Now”, and ballad reminiscences about his parents’ hard-knock Irish upbringing, there’s the fractured boy’s search for roots and identity in “Lost” and the music-business horror story that is “Me”. It enters a triumphantly funny-‘cos-its-true, five-song gender war middle section, reaching both a peak of comic genius and the tale’s tipping-point when, on “I’m Always Going To Love You”, Kev suddenly decides that he won’t do after all, provoking co-vocalist Madeleine Hyland into comic howls of exasperation. It ends with three final poignant epics where Rowland attempts to reconcile his desperation for freedom with his guilt-ridden fear of isolation. How an album that includes the spoken lines, (again from “It’s O.K. John Joe”), “I’m ugly and tired and jaded inside… I can’t last much longer like this”, can possibly leave you feeling energized and optimistic is entirely down to the melodies and how they’re played and recorded, with bassist Pete Williams and co-producers Mick Talbot and Pete Schweir crafting a slick-yet-spontaneous and deliciously soulful sound that often does for Willie Mitchell and Al Green’s Hi studios sound what Winehouse and Ronson did for Motown and Spector on Back To Black. One Day I’m Going To Soar pulls off a rare trick: warts-and-all confession and revelation, utterly devoid of self-pity. And here’s the thing: It might be better than Don’t Stand Me Down. It might just be the best record of this year, and the best record of Rowland’s career. “Unlikely comeback” does not do this extraordinary record justice. GARRY MULHOLLAND

Even the longest journeys can end up taking you full circle…

Back in 1980, when Kevin Rowland was just 27, he interrupted his first album to recite a poem. It was backed by a lone saxophone and you couldn’t quite tell whether this was utter pretension or a piss-take of beat poetry; another clue to the bumpy artistic road Rowland was set to travel. The poem was called “Love Part One” and, in a quietly defiant tone, it asked love outside for a scrap. “Am I the first to question you exist?” he sneered at his shadowy nemesis, before saying he vomits at the thought that “she gives herself only for you.”

Thirty-two years and several broken relationships, bad career moves, addictions, depressions and public fuck-ups later and… nothing has happened to really change Kevin Rowland’s mind about love. He ends only his sixth album, not with an angry poem, but a calm, resigned monologue that breaks occasionally into a beautiful crooned chorus. “It’s not the end of the world”, sighs Kevin on the stunning “It’s O.K. John Joe”, “… but I think that I’m meant to be alone.” And, after the weight of the life-story he has sung out loud and clear over the previous eleven songs, it feels like a release and a relief, for Rowland, for the listener. You might even cry.

One Day I’m Going To Soar is an album about manhood in all its predatory, childish glory. It’s also, of course, an album about Kevin Rowland and his enduring anti-love affair with an amorphous beast called Dexys Midnight Runners, now Dexys for short, who may always feature completely different members, but without whom he can’t make good records, as 1988’s bland The Wanderer and 1999’s bizarre covers album My Beauty readily attest. So one can’t help but hear One Day… as a belated sequel to the great lost Dexys masterpiece, 1985’s Don’t Stand Me Down, particularly because the music is based on the exact same fusion of sources – Van Morrison, Irish airs, the soul and MOR pop of the late ‘60s and early ‘70s – and because it revolves around the same lyrical themes – Irishness, Englishness, childhood reminiscence, lust, paranoia, betrayal and whether an inability to settle into a committed relationship is necessarily the same thing as an inability to love.

A musical memoir in three acts, One Day… kicks off with “Now”, and ballad reminiscences about his parents’ hard-knock Irish upbringing, there’s the fractured boy’s search for roots and identity in “Lost” and the music-business horror story that is “Me”. It enters a triumphantly funny-‘cos-its-true, five-song gender war middle section, reaching both a peak of comic genius and the tale’s tipping-point when, on “I’m Always Going To Love You”, Kev suddenly decides that he won’t do after all, provoking co-vocalist Madeleine Hyland into comic howls of exasperation. It ends with three final poignant epics where Rowland attempts to reconcile his desperation for freedom with his guilt-ridden fear of isolation.

How an album that includes the spoken lines, (again from “It’s O.K. John Joe”), “I’m ugly and tired and jaded inside… I can’t last much longer like this”, can possibly leave you feeling energized and optimistic is entirely down to the melodies and how they’re played and recorded, with bassist Pete Williams and co-producers Mick Talbot and Pete Schweir crafting a slick-yet-spontaneous and deliciously soulful sound that often does for Willie Mitchell and Al Green’s Hi studios sound what Winehouse and Ronson did for Motown and Spector on Back To Black.

One Day I’m Going To Soar pulls off a rare trick: warts-and-all confession and revelation, utterly devoid of self-pity. And here’s the thing: It might be better than Don’t Stand Me Down. It might just be the best record of this year, and the best record of Rowland’s career. “Unlikely comeback” does not do this extraordinary record justice.

GARRY MULHOLLAND

Neil Young & Crazy Horse – Americana

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The loosest group in rock reunite with Young for this dark, raw and thrilling slice of electrified folk... There's always a certain shambolic, rough’n’ready flakiness about Neil Young’s intermittent exploits with Crazy Horse, the feeling that he’s re-establishing a natural equilibrium tilted too much towards the prim and proper on his more polite mainstream country-rock outings. (Not that there’s been too many of those recently, mind.) So it seems pretty much like business as usual when “Oh Susannah”, the lead-off track here, stumbles into action with the relaxed, extempore manner of an after-hours blues jam. His bandmates chant the title as Neil launches into the first verse, and it’s immediately noticeable how the outward jollity of Stephen Foster’s minstrel standard has been supplanted by an air of brooding menace, just as Young’s grimy electric guitar has replaced the “b-a-n-jay-o” lyrically set upon the protagonist’s knee. As ever, there’s a gnarled appeal to the band’s riffing, with high-register harmonies sweetening the chorus, and if you turn up the volume right at the end you can hear Neil commenting as the song grinds to a halt, “Sounds really funky, gets into a good groove.” This is the opening to Americana, Young’s nostalgic anthology of the kind of popular folk ballads that he might have sung when first learning to play folk guitar. Songs like “Travel On”, “Clementine” and “Tom Dooley” (here, “Tom Dula”) were staples of folk clubs during the first folk boom – not the ’60s one with Bob and Joan and Peter, Paul & Mary, but the late ’50s one when The Kingston Trio topped the US charts with rousing singalongs of ballads whose deeper meanings were lost amid the clean-cut bonhomie which, while suggesting an alternative to the suburban dreams of the Eisenhower era, was perfectly palatable to those suburban sensibilities. So when Neil and Crazy Horse here focus on exposing the darker sides to these folk standards, are they simply returning the songs to their roots, or making an oblique commentary on the violence and bloodlust that has always underscored American history? After all, if murder ballads were deemed acceptable fare for postwar suburbanites, what does that say about the assumptions of that society? And given that, who could cavil about the latterday popularity of gangsta-rap? Is it not just another set of fables about romanticised outlaws? Take “Tom Dula” here, stripped of its Kingston Trio charm and left exposed as a plodding murder ballad, grimly celebrating the killer’s just desserts. It chugs along gamely, with the band offering a ragged, drunken-sounding title-chant as counterpoint to Young’s lead vocal, like a bunch of soused barflies stumbling from a saloon to whoop it up around the gallows. Even with the more formal falsetto harmonies presumably added later, it’s a mean-spirited performance compared to the ebullient singalong of memory. Likewise, “Clementine” – cemented in ’60s memories by years of Huckleberry Hound cartoons – here has a vast lowering cloud of menace hovering over it, as a rolling thunder tattoo of tom-toms drives the song to its grim conclusion through a prickly bush of dirty fuzz-guitar arpeggios. And while I don’t recall Huck Hound ever reaching the grisly lamentation, “Though in life I used to hug her, in death I draw the line”, I can’t help wondering, what on earth were Hanna-Barbera feeding us kids? Given the way that Young is revealing the darker aspects of seemingly charming songs, and presenting them in a kind of gothick blues trudge, the upbeat, jaunty approach afforded the self-evidently gloomy “Gallows Pole” seems quixotic by comparison. It’s like a two-step country dance, in which the doomed man’s repetitive, rejected plaint seems mocked by the jauntiness and the clean, high-register sheen of the harmonies. The folk-club standard “Travel On” is taken in similarly chipper fashion, with some pleasingly astringent lead breaks for Neil taking the melody into virgin territory. Confirming suspicions that these tracks are all pretty much first or second takes, the song sags slightly after the last chorus, as if the band were caught preparing for the end, half a minute too soon, having to quickly pick up the slack and bring it on home properly. The appearance of “Get A Job” midway through Americana is welcome, but bewildering, a token blast of grease-monkey doowop blessed with more enthusiasm than accuracy, which lends it a certain déclassé charm. If, say, The Beach Boys had covered this, every “yipyipyip” and “shananana” would have been primped and preened to the point of pristine lifelessness, but here the air of amateurishness anchors it firmly on the street-corner. Neil’s simple guitar break is entirely appropriate, too – not quite the one-note marvel of “Cinnamon Girl”, but getting there. On the old Richie Havens staple “High Flyin’ Bird”, Crazy Horse’s resolutely earthbound plod helps cement the aspect from which the protagonist enviously watches the soaring bird, the ground seeming to set around him as he moans, “Look at me, Lord, I’m rooted like a tree”. “Jesus’ Chariot” (aka “She’ll Be Comin’ Round The Mountain”) is another standard subjected to a shadowy makeover, with a tom-tom tattoo and a brooding undertow of chords just like those used to signify the menacing presence of hidden Injuns in old cowboy movies, while Woody Guthrie’s “This Land Is Your Land” is taken dead straight as a community singalong, as befits its standing. As the album’s end approaches, “Wayfarin’ Stranger” offers an oasis of understated quietude: despite the hushed harmonies and acoustic guitars, it possesses a ghostly, haunted quality that lends depth and anxiety to what used to be a gospel singalong. Which would have been a perfect place to conclude the album; but with a typical piece of Neil Young perversity, he goes and sticks “God Save The Queen” on the end – and not the Sex Pistols one, either. It’s not an appetising prospect, to be honest: the song’s fundamental stodginess is redoubled when subjected to the characteristic Crazy Horse trudge, rather like deep-frying a dumpling in batter. Unless there’s an unforeseen element of Canuck royalism in Neil – after all, it is Jubilee year, and he probably deserves a gong of some sort – I’m surmising that it’s the anthem’s rousing assertions of self-determination that attract him. Though it’s not quite the anthem of freedom he might like it to be, of course. There’s nothing in his version about crushing rebellious Scots, for instance, which is a slight pity. It would have been fun watching him trying to smuggle that past an SECC audience. ANDY GILL

The loosest group in rock reunite with Young for this dark, raw and thrilling slice of electrified folk…

There’s always a certain shambolic, rough’n’ready flakiness about Neil Young’s intermittent exploits with Crazy Horse, the feeling that he’s re-establishing a natural equilibrium tilted too much towards the prim and proper on his more polite mainstream country-rock outings. (Not that there’s been too many of those recently, mind.)

So it seems pretty much like business as usual when “Oh Susannah”, the lead-off track here, stumbles into action with the relaxed, extempore manner of an after-hours blues jam. His bandmates chant the title as Neil launches into the first verse, and it’s immediately noticeable how the outward jollity of Stephen Foster’s minstrel standard has been supplanted by an air of brooding menace, just as Young’s grimy electric guitar has replaced the “b-a-n-jay-o” lyrically set upon the protagonist’s knee. As ever, there’s a gnarled appeal to the band’s riffing, with high-register harmonies sweetening the chorus, and if you turn up the volume right at the end you can hear Neil commenting as the song grinds to a halt, “Sounds really funky, gets into a good groove.”

This is the opening to Americana, Young’s nostalgic anthology of the kind of popular folk ballads that he might have sung when first learning to play folk guitar. Songs like “Travel On”, “Clementine” and “Tom Dooley” (here, “Tom Dula”) were staples of folk clubs during the first folk boom – not the ’60s one with Bob and Joan and Peter, Paul & Mary, but the late ’50s one when The Kingston Trio topped the US charts with rousing singalongs of ballads whose deeper meanings were lost amid the clean-cut bonhomie which, while suggesting an alternative to the suburban dreams of the Eisenhower era, was perfectly palatable to those suburban sensibilities.

So when Neil and Crazy Horse here focus on exposing the darker sides to these folk standards, are they simply returning the songs to their roots, or making an oblique commentary on the violence and bloodlust that has always underscored American history? After all, if murder ballads were deemed acceptable fare for postwar suburbanites, what does that say about the assumptions of that society? And given that, who could cavil about the latterday popularity of gangsta-rap? Is it not just another set of fables about romanticised outlaws?

Take “Tom Dula” here, stripped of its Kingston Trio charm and left exposed as a plodding murder ballad, grimly celebrating the killer’s just desserts. It chugs along gamely, with the band offering a ragged, drunken-sounding title-chant as counterpoint to Young’s lead vocal, like a bunch of soused barflies stumbling from a saloon to whoop it up around the gallows. Even with the more formal falsetto harmonies presumably added later, it’s a mean-spirited performance compared to the ebullient singalong of memory. Likewise, “Clementine” – cemented in ’60s memories by years of Huckleberry Hound cartoons – here has a vast lowering cloud of menace hovering over it, as a rolling thunder tattoo of tom-toms drives the song to its grim conclusion through a prickly bush of dirty fuzz-guitar arpeggios. And while I don’t recall Huck Hound ever reaching the grisly lamentation, “Though in life I used to hug her, in death I draw the line”, I can’t help wondering, what on earth were Hanna-Barbera feeding us kids?

Given the way that Young is revealing the darker aspects of seemingly charming songs, and presenting them in a kind of gothick blues trudge, the upbeat, jaunty approach afforded the self-evidently gloomy “Gallows Pole” seems quixotic by comparison. It’s like a two-step country dance, in which the doomed man’s repetitive, rejected plaint seems mocked by the jauntiness and the clean, high-register sheen of the harmonies. The folk-club standard “Travel On” is taken in similarly chipper fashion, with some pleasingly astringent lead breaks for Neil taking the melody into virgin territory. Confirming suspicions that these tracks are all pretty much first or second takes, the song sags slightly after the last chorus, as if the band were caught preparing for the end, half a minute too soon, having to quickly pick up the slack and bring it on home properly.

The appearance of “Get A Job” midway through Americana is welcome, but bewildering, a token blast of grease-monkey doowop blessed with more enthusiasm than accuracy, which lends it a certain déclassé charm. If, say, The Beach Boys had covered this, every “yipyipyip” and “shananana” would have been primped and preened to the point of pristine lifelessness, but here the air of amateurishness anchors it firmly on the street-corner. Neil’s simple guitar break is entirely appropriate, too – not quite the one-note marvel of “Cinnamon Girl”, but getting there.

On the old Richie Havens staple “High Flyin’ Bird”, Crazy Horse’s resolutely earthbound plod helps cement the aspect from which the protagonist enviously watches the soaring bird, the ground seeming to set around him as he moans, “Look at me, Lord, I’m rooted like a tree”. “Jesus’ Chariot” (aka “She’ll Be Comin’ Round The Mountain”) is another standard subjected to a shadowy makeover, with a tom-tom tattoo and a brooding undertow of chords just like those used to signify the menacing presence of hidden Injuns in old cowboy movies, while Woody Guthrie’s “This Land Is Your Land” is taken dead straight as a community singalong, as befits its standing. As the album’s end approaches, “Wayfarin’ Stranger” offers an oasis of understated quietude: despite the hushed harmonies and acoustic guitars, it possesses a ghostly, haunted quality that lends depth and anxiety to what used to be a gospel singalong.

Which would have been a perfect place to conclude the album; but with a typical piece of Neil Young perversity, he goes and sticks “God Save The Queen” on the end – and not the Sex Pistols one, either. It’s not an appetising prospect, to be honest: the song’s fundamental stodginess is redoubled when subjected to the characteristic Crazy Horse trudge, rather like deep-frying a dumpling in batter. Unless there’s an unforeseen element of Canuck royalism in Neil – after all, it is Jubilee year, and he probably deserves a gong of some sort – I’m surmising that it’s the anthem’s rousing assertions of self-determination that attract him. Though it’s not quite the anthem of freedom he might like it to be, of course. There’s nothing in his version about crushing rebellious Scots, for instance, which is a slight pity. It would have been fun watching him trying to smuggle that past an SECC audience.

ANDY GILL

The xx unveil details of second album Coexist

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The xx have announced that their second album, released on September 10, is to be titled Coexist. The London trio, who played six new songs at their live comeback in the capital last month, recorded the follow-up to their 2009 self-titled debut in their own London studio. The band's Jamie Smith on...

The xx have announced that their second album, released on September 10, is to be titled Coexist.

The London trio, who played six new songs at their live comeback in the capital last month, recorded the follow-up to their 2009 self-titled debut in their own London studio.

The band’s Jamie Smith once again took on production duties on the album, which they began work on in early November 2011 before completing the sessions last month.

Speaking to NME, singer and guitarist Romy Madley Croft said the new songs show the evolution of the band over the past few years.

“I’ve been thinking that I hope people enjoy it as a separate thing. The first album exists – we’re not trying to make it again,” she said, before adding: “We’ve just grown up, and although this isn’t a ‘grown up’ album, we’ve evolved. It’s just us growing a bit more. I hope people enjoy it as a continuation, rather than us trying to make the first album again.”

She added that although she’s “happy we’ve progressed” the new material is “not prog rock”.

The band have been largely silent during the making of the album, other than revealing it would be influenced by “club music” and posting regular YouTube embeds on their blog, xx-xx.co.uk.

To read a world exclusive in-the-studio interview with The xx, where they give the full inside story on the making of Coexist, pick up next week’s issue of NME, which is on newsstands and available digitally from next Wednesday (June 6).

The xx are due to play at Italy’s Traffic festival tonight (June 8), ahead of their slot at Primavera in Portugal tomorrow (9). They then play a number of global live dates before returning to the UK to play Bestival on September 7.

Picture credit: Owen Richards

Watch The Black Keys’ new Harmony Korine-directed video

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The Black Keys have released a new video, directed by Harmony Korine. The clip for "Gold On The Ceiling", taken from the group's 2011 album El Camino, sees the group joined by mini-doppelgangers. Korine is best known for directing the films Gummo and Mister Lonely, and for writing 1995's controver...

The Black Keys have released a new video, directed by Harmony Korine.

The clip for “Gold On The Ceiling”, taken from the group’s 2011 album El Camino, sees the group joined by mini-doppelgangers.

Korine is best known for directing the films Gummo and Mister Lonely, and for writing 1995’s controversial Kids.

Watch the video for “Gold On The Ceiling” below.

‘Spinal Tap’ star Michael McKean discharged from hospital following car accident

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Spinal Tap star Michael McKean has been released from hospital after being hit by a car last week. McKean, who played rock singer David St Hubbins in the classic 1984 spoof This is Spinal Tap, has been discharged from St. Luke's Hospital in New York, and will attend the Roosevelt Hospital for 'ext...

Spinal Tap star Michael McKean has been released from hospital after being hit by a car last week.

McKean, who played rock singer David St Hubbins in the classic 1984 spoof This is Spinal Tap, has been discharged from St. Luke’s Hospital in New York, and will attend the Roosevelt Hospital for ‘extensive rehab’, reports TMZ.

McKean was left in a critical condition in hospital after being hit by an out-of-control car on May 23. The actor, who is 64, suffered multiple injuries including a broken leg and facial lacerations when he was hit by a car while walking to a theatre in New York.

McKean was starring in Broadway play The Best Man and was en route to perform when he was hit. Two other people were also hurt in the accident.

Speaking to TMZ, the actor said: “I am heading into week two with renewed admiration for New York City’s Emergency Medical Service staff, the NYPD, the staff of St. Luke’s Hospital… and all those with problems much greater than my own.”

Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page ‘hurt’ by Olympics snub

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Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page has admitted that he's "rather hurt" that organisers of the London 2012 Olympics haven't included him in their plans. Page helped promote the London event at the closing ceremony of the Beijing Olympics, where he performed Led Zeppelin's classic 'Whole Lotta Love...

Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page has admitted that he’s “rather hurt” that organisers of the London 2012 Olympics haven’t included him in their plans.

Page helped promote the London event at the closing ceremony of the Beijing Olympics, where he performed Led Zeppelin’s classic ‘Whole Lotta Love’ next to a red double-decker bus with X Factor winner Leona Lewis accompanying him on vocals.

Speaking to the Daily Telegraph, Page said: “Of course, I’m feeling rather hurt. We put so much into Beijing, but weren’t helped by the Chinese giving us next-to-no practice time.”

The London 2012 Olympics will be bookended by two huge outdoor concerts in London’s Hyde Park. The first takes place on July 27, the same day as the Olympics opening ceremony, which will be broadcast live on huge screens in between the acts.

The bill has been put together to represent each part of the United Kingdom, with Duran Duran representing England, Paolo Nutini playing on behalf of Scotland, Stereophonics representing Wales and Snow Patrol playing on behalf of Northern Ireland.

While this show will act as an accompaniment to the opening ceremony, Blur will headline a show in Hyde Park to celebrate the end of the games. They will be joined by New Order and The Specials on August 12 for the gig.

Dirty Projectors announce mini UK tour for October

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Dirty Projectors are set to play a trio of UK dates this autumn. The band will play Manchester's Central Methodist Hall on October 14, following it up with shows at Glasgow's Arches (15) and London's Roundhouse (17). The dates make up part of a wider European tour. Dirty Projectors will release...

Dirty Projectors are set to play a trio of UK dates this autumn.

The band will play Manchester’s Central Methodist Hall on October 14, following it up with shows at Glasgow’s Arches (15) and London’s Roundhouse (17). The dates make up part of a wider European tour.

Dirty Projectors will release their sixth album, ‘Swing Lo Magellan’, on July 6. The LP follows 2009’s ‘Bitte Orca’ and was recorded in Delaware County in New York. The experimental indie act’s leader David Longstreth produced 70 new songs for the album, however, only 12 have made the final cut. “It’s an album of songs, an album of songwriting,” says Longstreth of the LP.

Longstreth, Amber Coffman (vocals/guitar), Nat Baldwin (bass), Brian McOmber (drums) and Haley Dekle (vocals) are streaming album track ‘Gun Has No Trigger’ at Dirtyprojectors.net.

Dirty Projectors play:

Manchester Central Methodist Hall (October 14)

Glasgow The Arches (15)

London The Roundhouse (17)

Patti Smith: “I don’t write lyrics for myself, I write lyrics for people”

In this special feature we delve back into the archives to February 2009's Uncut (Take 141), in which Patti Smith answers your questions (and those from famous fans) on channelling Rimbaud, smoking pot with the Rastafarians and My Bloody Valentine… Interview by John Lewis ________________________...

In this special feature we delve back into the archives to February 2009’s Uncut (Take 141), in which Patti Smith answers your questions (and those from famous fans) on channelling Rimbaud, smoking pot with the Rastafarians and My Bloody Valentine… Interview by John Lewis

__________________________

An hour-long conversation with Patti Smith will invariably become a wide-reaching and fascinating symposium on everything from Presidents to Popes and all points in between. You’ll learn about Walt Whitman and Arthur Rimbaud, about Bertolt Brecht and William Blake, about the Ark Of The Covenant and Russian literature; about the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Silver Mt Zion. We discover, for instance, that she is a huge admirer of the short-lived Pope John Paul I (“I feel that he was a true revolutionary, and someone who would have transformed the Catholic church”); that her touring regime in the 1970s was influenced by the memoirs of TE Lawrence (“the crew used to call me the Field Marshal!”); that she once read Peter Reich’s A Book Of Dreams and believed that she, too, might have been an alien; and her thoughts on Sinéad O’Connor’s lifestyle (“she should give up smoking!”). Now, after a year in which she has been inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame, exhibited her Polaroids at a Paris gallery, released an album with Kevin Shields and was the subject of a documentary, it seems as good a time as any for Uncut readers to quiz her about a few things…

What do you hope the world will be like in 50 years’ time?
Antony Hegarty, Antony & The Johnsons

I won’t be here, of course! But the things that I hope for, I’m not too certain will happen. I would have hoped that we’d be more attentive to history. That we wouldn’t have gone into Iraq because of the lessons of Vietnam. That didn’t happen. I just hope that, as a people, we will wake up and tend to our environment. I think that’s going to be the terrible battle in the next 100 years. I hope people become aware that the way to measure themselves is by their own deeds, by their own love for their fellow man, and not by material power and material things. My generation turned out to be the great betrayers. Not all of us, but George W Bush is my generation. He’s my age. It’s kinda frightening to think that a guy you might have seen on a dancefloor when you were a teenager was responsible for the invasion of Iraq.

What was it like raising two children as a single parent here in New York City?
Phillip Ward, New York

They’re pretty grown-up now – they’re 26 and 21 – but when they were young and their father [Fred “Sonic” Smith from the MC5] was alive, we gave up everything external to live simply and raise our children in Michigan. So my son and daughter had a real sense of both parents being there 24 hours a day. We did everything together – cooking, cleaning, nursing, teaching – whatever we could do for them, we were there. When my husband died at the end of 1994 it was very difficult. I had to not only be both their parents, but I had to make a living. So I had to move back to the East Coast, near my family who could act as a support system. Still, we all did okay. I was very open – my kids could talk about anything with me – but I was stricter than most other parents. My daughter didn’t have a cellphone until she was 16 – she was the only kid in the school who didn’t! But I don’t push them in any particular direction, you let them make decisions in their life. Now they’re both musicians, and their ambition is to be really good musicians, not famous ones. I think a good parent learns from their kids. I’m learning from mine all the time.

I got into your music after reading your journalism in Creem magazine – I loved the voice you wrote in. What do you remember of that time?
Thurston Moore, Sonic Youth

I did write for Creem, but I don’t know if you could call it journalism! I was a very impressionistic writer. I was writing at a time when writing about rock’n’roll was very idealistic and exploratory. People like Sandy Pearlman and Richard Meltzer were writing about rock’n’roll in the way that Apollinaire and Baudelaire wrote about poetry and art. Rock’n’roll journalism bordered on an art form among a certain circle. And I was sort of on the fringes of that. For me it was kind of a bridge between appreciating rock’n’roll and performing it. I wrote about my emotional responses to things I cared for. I never wrote negative pieces – I wasn’t a critic. I just wrote homages to things that I liked, like The Velvet Underground. I remember being asked to write about Carole King’s album, Tapestry. And, much as I liked it, I couldn’t. I said to them, get someone who can really do this album justice, who could talk about her history. That’s proper music journalism. For me to write about something, I had to valorise the heroic aspect. Much as I love Carole King and her songs, I couldn’t mythologise her in that way.

What’s the difference between writing poetry and song lyrics?
Carol Green, Paris

A lot of that difference is about process. When I’m writing poetry, I close myself off from the world. I need to isolate myself, and my goal is not necessarily communication. My goal is the poem itself, to discover something in the language of poetry. But if I’m writing lyrics, my whole motivation is to communicate something, even if it is also encoded in a poetic language. I don’t write lyrics for myself, I don’t write lyrics for the God of lyrics, I write lyrics for people. I’m directly expressing something, for people to hear or read or think about. When I’m writing poems, most of my poems aren’t even published. The only person who has read them is myself. Of course, there are certain formal elements that make something a poem or a lyric. But mainly it’s about process and intent.

I’d like to know more about Patti’s psychedelic influences and leanings. Does she see a relationship between the psychedelic and surrealist movements?
Chris Stein, Blondie

I wasn’t really part of psychedelic culture in the 1960s and never took psychedelics. I took them later in my life. But, yes, I was a fan of a lot of psychedelic music – the Airplane, 13th Floor Elevators, Hendrix, Big Brother & The Holding Company, and a lot of the psych stuff by The Beatles and the Stones. I liked that sort of music because I could write to it or daydream to it. It was almost like a heightening background. To me, My Bloody Valentine is the ultimate psychedelic music, because you don’t have to take drugs. You listen to it and you’re there!

Ill Manors

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Sweary "hip hop musical" from Plan B's Ben Drew... When Plan B’s single “Ill Manors” came out in March, the rapper grandly introduced it as the first step in his new strategy to affect social change in the UK. Released in the build-up to the London mayoral elections, and accompanied by a promo video that drew heavily on news footage from last summer’s riots, its message about social alienation felt provocative and timely, though unlikely to have encouraged policy shift at the highest level. Reverting to his real name, Ben Drew now drives his “Ill Manors” agenda up a gear. Shot on the south east London council estates where he grew up, Drew had made what he’s described as a “hip hop musical”, a series of interconnected stories populated by under-the-radar characters – drug dealers, addicts, prostitutes, teenage gangs. While a message might successfully be conveyed in a three-minute pop song, its not guaranteed that stretching it out to over two hours will be so effective. At times, certain plot points feel like they’ve come out of an EastEnders’ Christmas Day special. With added swearing. A pub fire, you say, with a newborn baby trapped in a smoky room? What would Peggy Mitchell do? In one of the film’s most gruelling sequences, a prostitute is taken from one late-night chicken joint to another to have sex with the staff, to make back the cost of a mobile phone she’s been accused of stealing. What this says about disenfranchised urban living, it’s difficult to tell; it’s too much, too far beyond the socio-realism of Ken Loach or Andrea Arnold. Humanism and optimism are not on display here. If there is anyone here who exhibits any redeeming qualities, it’s the well-meaning if slow-witted Aaron (played by Riz Ahmed). He, at least, provides some kind of moral centre. MICHAEL BONNER

Sweary “hip hop musical” from Plan B’s Ben Drew…

When Plan B’s single “Ill Manors” came out in March, the rapper grandly introduced it as the first step in his new strategy to affect social change in the UK. Released in the build-up to the London mayoral elections, and accompanied by a promo video that drew heavily on news footage from last summer’s riots, its message about social alienation felt provocative and timely, though unlikely to have encouraged policy shift at the highest level.

Reverting to his real name, Ben Drew now drives his “Ill Manors” agenda up a gear. Shot on the south east London council estates where he grew up, Drew had made what he’s described as a “hip hop musical”, a series of interconnected stories populated by under-the-radar characters – drug dealers, addicts, prostitutes, teenage gangs. While a message might successfully be conveyed in a three-minute pop song, its not guaranteed that stretching it out to over two hours will be so effective.

At times, certain plot points feel like they’ve come out of an EastEnders’ Christmas Day special. With added swearing. A pub fire, you say, with a newborn baby trapped in a smoky room? What would Peggy Mitchell do? In one of the film’s most gruelling sequences, a prostitute is taken from one late-night chicken joint to another to have sex with the staff, to make back the cost of a mobile phone she’s been accused of stealing. What this says about disenfranchised urban living, it’s difficult to tell; it’s too much, too far beyond the socio-realism of Ken Loach or Andrea Arnold. Humanism and optimism are not on display here. If there is anyone here who exhibits any redeeming qualities, it’s the well-meaning if slow-witted Aaron (played by Riz Ahmed). He, at least, provides some kind of moral centre.

MICHAEL BONNER

Beck raps on new Childish Gambino track ‘Silk Pillow’ – listen

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Beck has made a guest appearance on a new track from hip-hop artist Childish Gambino. The song, titled 'Silk Pillow' sees Beck rapping alongside Childish Gambino, aka actor and comedian Donald Glover. The pair co-produced the song together, according to Pitchfork. Scroll down to listen. It's bee...

Beck has made a guest appearance on a new track from hip-hop artist Childish Gambino.

The song, titled ‘Silk Pillow’ sees Beck rapping alongside Childish Gambino, aka actor and comedian Donald Glover. The pair co-produced the song together, according to Pitchfork. Scroll down to listen.

It’s been a busy week for Beck. Yesterday his new Jack White-produced track ‘I Just Started Hating Some People Today’ was unveiled online. The single was released on Monday (May 28) on White’s Third Man Records label along with a new B-Side ‘Blue Randy’.

The two tracks were recorded last year at the Third Man Studio in Nashville when Beck was in the Tennessee city recording the follow-up to 2008’s ‘Modern Guilt’. Beck joins the likes of Tom Jones, Laura Marling and Insane Clown Posse in recording and releasing one-off singles on White’s Third Man Records.

The singer has not released any details about the follow-up to ‘Modern Guilt’, with the only postings about the album coming from bass player Justin Meldal-Johnsen, who tweeted that Beck’s new material “would blow your mind”.

Digital music spending overtakes sales of CDs and records for the first time

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The amount of money made from digital music sales has overtaken the sale of CDs and records for the first time, according to figures from music industry trade body BPI. In the first three months of 2012, £155.8m was spent on music in the UK, a 2.7per cent year-on-year increase from 2011. Sales of digital music, including downloads, paid-for subscriptions and ad-funded services such as Spotify, Napster, We7 and eMusic has helped to offset the decline in CD sales – accounting for 55.5 per cent of that total, with sales increasing by 23.6 per cent. While revenue from physical formats, such as CDs and vinyl dropped by 15 per cent to just £69.3m, sales of digital albums were up 22.7 per cent to £35.9m, outstripping music industry revenues from downloads of single tracks for a second successive quarter. This is good news for the music industry after weekly UK Album chart sales fell to their lowest level since 1996 earlier this month. Total sales for the week ending May 20 were just under 1.35 million, which is 7.5 per cent down from last week and almost 250,000 lower than this time last year. It was the lowest seven-day sale tally recorded since week-ending 22 June 1996 when just 1,277,279 albums were sold. Singles sales are also down from last year's mark by almost 7 per cent to just over 3.15 million for 2012 so far.

The amount of money made from digital music sales has overtaken the sale of CDs and records for the first time, according to figures from music industry trade body BPI.

In the first three months of 2012, £155.8m was spent on music in the UK, a 2.7per cent year-on-year increase from 2011. Sales of digital music, including downloads, paid-for subscriptions and ad-funded services such as Spotify, Napster, We7 and eMusic has helped to offset the decline in CD sales – accounting for 55.5 per cent of that total, with sales increasing by 23.6 per cent.

While revenue from physical formats, such as CDs and vinyl dropped by 15 per cent to just £69.3m, sales of digital albums were up 22.7 per cent to £35.9m, outstripping music industry revenues from downloads of single tracks for a second successive quarter.

This is good news for the music industry after weekly UK Album chart sales fell to their lowest level since 1996 earlier this month. Total sales for the week ending May 20 were just under 1.35 million, which is 7.5 per cent down from last week and almost 250,000 lower than this time last year.

It was the lowest seven-day sale tally recorded since week-ending 22 June 1996 when just 1,277,279 albums were sold.

Singles sales are also down from last year’s mark by almost 7 per cent to just over 3.15 million for 2012 so far.