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Blur’s Damon Albarn invites Noel Gallagher to collaborate with him

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Blur and Gorillaz mainman Damon Albarn has invited Noel Gallagher to collaborate with him later this year. The singer, who was speaking to Shortlist, said that he'd like the High Flying Birds man to be a part of his Africa Express project, which reconvenes in September. Asked if he'd like to col...

Blur and Gorillaz mainman Damon Albarn has invited Noel Gallagher to collaborate with him later this year.

The singer, who was speaking to Shortlist, said that he’d like the High Flying Birds man to be a part of his Africa Express project, which reconvenes in September.

Asked if he’d like to collaborate with Gallagher, Albarn said: “Well, why not? He should come on the Africa Express train in September. That’d be a nice chance to collaborate.”

Albarn also admitted that Gallagher and his bandmates handled the fame they experienced at the height of Britpop “a lot better” than he and his colleagues in Blur did.

He said of this: “I never held anything against him, even right in the middle of it. I just kind of admired them in a way; that they were better at handling it all than me. They didn’t seem to get too affected by the bullshit.”

Earlier this year, Gallagher was quoted as saying he’d rather work on new material with Damon Albarn than Radiohead – but also described the Blur man as being “as mad as a box of frogs”.

Speaking to NME, Gallagher said: “If I was gonna make a record, it’d be Damon. For a start, he’s as mad as a box of frogs. Number two, he’d get loads of hip-hop dudes working on it, which itself would be fucking mental. And number three? It would be a better record.”

The Gaslight Anthem confirm new album release date

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The Gaslight Anthem will release their new album, Handwritten, on July 23. The album was produced by Brendan O'Brien. The band recorded the follow-up to 2010's American Slang in Nashville and have confirmed via their Twitter account Twitter.com/Gaslightanthem that they have also recently recorded ...

The Gaslight Anthem will release their new album, Handwritten, on July 23.

The album was produced by Brendan O’Brien. The band recorded the follow-up to 2010’s American Slang in Nashville and have confirmed via their Twitter account Twitter.com/Gaslightanthem that they have also recently recorded a number of covers and a selection of B-sides.

The Gaslight Anthem’s brand new single, “45”, received its world premiere last night [April 30] on BBC Radio 1 and was named DJ Zane Lowe’s Hottest Record in the World.

Speaking about the new album earlier this year, frontman Brian Fallon described the songs from ‘Handwritten’ as “pretty personal and pretty aggressive”.

The Gaslight Anthem will play a one-off UK headline show this summer. The New Jersey band will appear at London’s KOKO venue on June 11 and will also play at Reading and Leeds Festivals. In addition, The Gaslight Anthem will open up for reunited Soundgarden on some of their European summer tour dates.

Lawrence Of Belgravia

The world of Lawrence is, by all accounts, a strange one. A singer once told me that, while visiting Lawrence at home, he was taken urgently by the need to use the lavatory. As the story was presented me, Lawrence flatly refused and the singer was forced to go outside to relieve himself. No one, it seems, uses the toilet chez Lawrence, apart from Lawrence. Lawrence is the idiosyncratic creative presence behind Felt, Denim and Go Kart Mozart, and the focus of Paul Kelly’s excellent documentary. Kelly – whose previous credits include assorted film projects for Saint Etienne, the band managed by his brother Martin – spent eight years with Lawrence for this film. It begins with Lawrence’s eviction in 2006 from a flat in Belgravia and ends on a more positive note, as Lawrence prepares for the release of the latest Go Kart Mozart album, On The Hot Dog Streets. As it is sympathetically presented to us here, Lawrence’s great tragedy is the chasm between his ambition and his commercial achievements. “I’m completely obsessed with being famous,” he admits drolly early on. “I crave it more than anything. The day I don’t have to go on the tube anymore is the day I fucking celebrate.” He admits Felt achieved much critically, but “commercially, it was a disaster.” He was “bitterly disappointed” Denim never broke through. “If I could just meet Kate Moss,” he sighs wistfully at one point. There is a deeper tragedy, too, beyond lack of a hit record: his homelessness and brief shots of methadone bottles worryingly signal a personal life in downfall. If there wasn’t a film crew around, you could be forgiven for wondering whether a concerned operative from the social services would put Lawrence on some kind of ‘at risk’ register. But let’s not look at this as a film about expectations thwarted, but rather take it as a celebration of Lawrence’s singular vision. After all, such is his dedication to his music that he breezily admits he has chosen “the group” over personal friendships. Such is his firm grasp on aesthetics, you can perhaps forgive his lack of understanding of how the real world functions. Michael Bonner

The world of Lawrence is, by all accounts, a strange one. A singer once told me that, while visiting Lawrence at home, he was taken urgently by the need to use the lavatory. As the story was presented me, Lawrence flatly refused and the singer was forced to go outside to relieve himself. No one, it seems, uses the toilet chez Lawrence, apart from Lawrence.

Lawrence is the idiosyncratic creative presence behind Felt, Denim and Go Kart Mozart, and the focus of Paul Kelly’s excellent documentary. Kelly – whose previous credits include assorted film projects for Saint Etienne, the band managed by his brother Martin – spent eight years with Lawrence for this film. It begins with Lawrence’s eviction in 2006 from a flat in Belgravia and ends on a more positive note, as Lawrence prepares for the release of the latest Go Kart Mozart album, On The Hot Dog Streets. As it is sympathetically presented to us here, Lawrence’s great tragedy is the chasm between his ambition and his commercial achievements. “I’m completely obsessed with being famous,” he admits drolly early on. “I crave it more than anything. The day I don’t have to go on the tube anymore is the day I fucking celebrate.” He admits Felt achieved much critically, but “commercially, it was a disaster.” He was “bitterly disappointed” Denim never broke through. “If I could just meet Kate Moss,” he sighs wistfully at one point.

There is a deeper tragedy, too, beyond lack of a hit record: his homelessness and brief shots of methadone bottles worryingly signal a personal life in downfall. If there wasn’t a film crew around, you could be forgiven for wondering whether a concerned operative from the social services would put Lawrence on some kind of ‘at risk’ register. But let’s not look at this as a film about expectations thwarted, but rather take it as a celebration of Lawrence’s singular vision. After all, such is his dedication to his music that he breezily admits he has chosen “the group” over personal friendships. Such is his firm grasp on aesthetics, you can perhaps forgive his lack of understanding of how the real world functions.

Michael Bonner

Graham Coxon in hotel fire drama

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Graham Coxon was forced to evacuate a hotel Falmouth earlier today (April 30) after it caught fire. The Blur guitarist, who is staying at the Beach Hotel ahead of his gig in the Cornish town tonight, spoke about the drama in a series of tweets. He wrote: "We have rooms at the Beach Hotel and had t...

Graham Coxon was forced to evacuate a hotel Falmouth earlier today (April 30) after it caught fire.

The Blur guitarist, who is staying at the Beach Hotel ahead of his gig in the Cornish town tonight, spoke about the drama in a series of tweets.

He wrote: “We have rooms at the Beach Hotel and had to leave when the smell the smell of smoke for [sic] a little much.”

Coxon then tweeted pictures of the burning hotel, before adding: “We watched it… We had to leave the foyer and then watch it get worse and worse…rather sad.”

According to BBC News, the fire broke out at around 12:00 (BST). Fire crews are still at the scene, although there are currently no reports of any injuries.

A statement issued by the hotel’s owner Best Western said: “All guests have been evacuated and the emergency services are battling to get the blaze under control. We are currently trying to speak with the owner of the property to find out further information.”

Coxon is due to play at the town’s Princess Pavilions tonight to round off his current UK solo tour, before joining up with Blur again to play the Olympic closing ceremony concert on August 12.

New ‘Prometheus’ trailer unveiled – watch

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The film, which stars Michael Fassbender, Charlize Theron, Noomi Rapace and Idris Elba, has been previewed by several trailers already, but none as lengthy as this one. The trailer was unveiled last night (April 29) and features a number of previously unseen clips, including a more detailed introduction to Theron's character Meredith Vickers, who has been billed as the film's villain. Reaction online has been almost universally positive, but a number of new sites including The Guardian complained that the film's producers are giving too much in the build-up to the film. The film is set in the same universe as Scott's seminal 1979 film Alien and was originally conceived as a prequel to the extremely successful franchise. However, although the plots are linked, producers have said that Prometheus is not a prequel to Alien. Prometheus is due for release in the UK on June 1. You can watch a previous trailer for the film by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1byZkbNB3Jw

The film, which stars Michael Fassbender, Charlize Theron, Noomi Rapace and Idris Elba, has been previewed by several trailers already, but none as lengthy as this one.

The trailer was unveiled last night (April 29) and features a number of previously unseen clips, including a more detailed introduction to Theron’s character Meredith Vickers, who has been billed as the film’s villain.

Reaction online has been almost universally positive, but a number of new sites including The Guardian complained that the film’s producers are giving too much in the build-up to the film.

The film is set in the same universe as Scott’s seminal 1979 film Alien and was originally conceived as a prequel to the extremely successful franchise. However, although the plots are linked, producers have said that Prometheus is not a prequel to Alien.

Prometheus is due for release in the UK on June 1. You can watch a previous trailer for the film by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

Beach Boys and Bruce Springsteen headline New Orleans Jazz Festival

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The Beach Boys, Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty and Bon Iver headlined the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival this weekend [April 27 - 29]. The Beach Boys, whose 50th anniversary tour kicked off in Tuscon, Arizona on Tuesday, April 24, played a 29 song-set on Friday night [April 27]. Bruce Spring...

The Beach Boys, Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty and Bon Iver headlined the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival this weekend [April 27 – 29].

The Beach Boys, whose 50th anniversary tour kicked off in Tuscon, Arizona on Tuesday, April 24, played a 29 song-set on Friday night [April 27].

Bruce Springsteen, meanwhile, played a two and a half hour set on Sunday [April 29], and was joined on piano by Dr John for two songs, “Something You Got” and “Oh Mary Don’t You Weep”.

Tom Petty and Bon Iver also played at the festival this weekend.

The New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival continues next weekend, with headliners including The Eagles.

The Beach Boys played:

Do It Again

Catch A Wave

Don’t Back Down

Surfin’ Safari

Surfer Girl

Then I Kissed Her

You’re So Good to Me

Why Do Fools Fall in Love (Frankie Lymon & The Teenagers cover)

When I Grow Up (to Be a Man)

Cottonfields

Be True To Your School

Don’t Worry Baby

Little Deuce Coupe

409

Shut Down

I Get Around

Sloop John B

Wouldn’t It Be Nice

Sail on, Sailor

Heroes And Villains

God Only Knows

That’s Why God Made The Radio

California Girls

Help Me Rhonda

Barbara Ann

Surfin’ USA

Kokomo

Good Vibrations

Fun Fun Fun

Simone Felice Band, London Bush Hall, April 27, 2012

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Simi Stone was a member of the now apparently retired The Duke & The King, alongside Simone Felice. Tonight she’s opening for Simone at the Bush Hall, a solo turn that starts with Simi on fiddle, playing a lament that sounds like it may have been first heard a century ago, a keening in the Appalachians or somewhere similarly remote and steeped in mystery and drizzle. This turns out to be a version of Neil Young’s “Birds” that can be fairly described as spellbinding. It’s a stunning opening and what follows in her brief set is just as good and includes a wonderful take on “No Easy Way Out”, familiar as one of the stand-out tracks on the Love Live The Duke & The King album, a great showcase for her lustrous voice. There’s also a very touching song about the death of her father, called “Take Me With You”, and the teasingly wry “Good Girl”. After a short break, Simi’s back onstage as a member of Simone’s new band, put together for this tour to showcase the songs from his eponymous recent solo album and featuring Simone on guitar and drums, Simi on violin, Matthew Bolter, seconded from Southend’s excellent Lucky Strikes, on lap steel and mandolin, Arthur House on piano and organ and Aurora Bangrath on drums, xylophone and guitar. They all sing, too, their harmonies a match on most occasions for the vocal interplay that was a spectacular signature of TD&TK. They start on a high, with a dramatic reading of “New York Times”, that grave litany of headline horrors that ranges from tragedy in South Dakota to mass murder in New York via the bloody fray in Iraq. The song’s drama is almost formal, rolling drums and explosive handclaps punctuating its spine-tingling unravelling. Simi’s violin is a mournful thing and Simone, with a severe new haircut that makes him look like a prince of the underworld or someone you might see being interviewed by Werner Herzog in a documentary about prisoners on Death Row, is typically on fabulously charismatic form. The new album provides a third of tonight’s set. “You And I”, written just after the birth his daughter and dedicated to her, is wholly uplifting. “Gimme All You Got”, the sad and disturbing “Dawn Brady’s Son” and “Charade” are markedly more sombre and introspective and come from a much darker place in his past. “Hey Bobby Ray”, meanwhile, reminds us what a hell of a drummer Simone also is. Elsewhere, there’s a by-now formidable repertoire of songs originally recorded for either The Felice Brothers or The Duke & The King that he draws from brilliantly. At various points he features from the latter’s albums tremendous versions of “Summer Morning Rain”, “If You Ever Get Famous”, a much-requested “Union Street”, and in quick succession, “One More American Song” and a stripped-down “Shaky”, two brilliant songs about fucked-up veterans of the occupation of Iraq, in which anger and compassion are equally voiced. There are two numbers from the Felice Brothers songbook, ecstatically-received – a spooky “Don’t Wake The Scarecrow” and a rousing “Radio Song”, dedicated to Levon Helm, which ends the set, if not the show. Simone eventually reappears for about 20 minutes of encores, starting with a lovely solo appropriation of Pink Floyd’s “Wish You Were Here”, which is followed by another of his Felice Brothers classic, “Your Belly In My Arms” and is joined by the rest of the band and the whole of the audience for a communal version of Neil Young’s “Helpless” that merges seamlessly into a raw and noisy rendition of “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door”, the audience still abuzz long after the band have disappeared. Simone Felice pic: Carl Warren

Simi Stone was a member of the now apparently retired The Duke & The King, alongside Simone Felice. Tonight she’s opening for Simone at the Bush Hall, a solo turn that starts with Simi on fiddle, playing a lament that sounds like it may have been first heard a century ago, a keening in the Appalachians or somewhere similarly remote and steeped in mystery and drizzle.

This turns out to be a version of Neil Young’s “Birds” that can be fairly described as spellbinding. It’s a stunning opening and what follows in her brief set is just as good and includes a wonderful take on “No Easy Way Out”, familiar as one of the stand-out tracks on the Love Live The Duke & The King album, a great showcase for her lustrous voice. There’s also a very touching song about the death of her father, called “Take Me With You”, and the teasingly wry “Good Girl”.

After a short break, Simi’s back onstage as a member of Simone’s new band, put together for this tour to showcase the songs from his eponymous recent solo album and featuring Simone on guitar and drums, Simi on violin, Matthew Bolter, seconded from Southend’s excellent Lucky Strikes, on lap steel and mandolin, Arthur House on piano and organ and Aurora Bangrath on drums, xylophone and guitar. They all sing, too, their harmonies a match on most occasions for the vocal interplay that was a spectacular signature of TD&TK.

They start on a high, with a dramatic reading of “New York Times”, that grave litany of headline horrors that ranges from tragedy in South Dakota to mass murder in New York via the bloody fray in Iraq. The song’s drama is almost formal, rolling drums and explosive handclaps punctuating its spine-tingling unravelling. Simi’s violin is a mournful thing and Simone, with a severe new haircut that makes him look like a prince of the underworld or someone you might see being interviewed by Werner Herzog in a documentary about prisoners on Death Row, is typically on fabulously charismatic form.

The new album provides a third of tonight’s set. “You And I”, written just after the birth his daughter and dedicated to her, is wholly uplifting. “Gimme All You Got”, the sad and disturbing “Dawn Brady’s Son” and “Charade” are markedly more sombre and introspective and come from a much darker place in his past. “Hey Bobby Ray”, meanwhile, reminds us what a hell of a drummer Simone also is. Elsewhere, there’s a by-now formidable repertoire of songs originally recorded for either The Felice Brothers or The Duke & The King that he draws from brilliantly.

At various points he features from the latter’s albums tremendous versions of “Summer Morning Rain”, “If You Ever Get Famous”, a much-requested “Union Street”, and in quick succession, “One More American Song” and a stripped-down “Shaky”, two brilliant songs about fucked-up veterans of the occupation of Iraq, in which anger and compassion are equally voiced.

There are two numbers from the Felice Brothers songbook, ecstatically-received – a spooky “Don’t Wake The Scarecrow” and a rousing “Radio Song”, dedicated to Levon Helm, which ends the set, if not the show. Simone eventually reappears for about 20 minutes of encores, starting with a lovely solo appropriation of Pink Floyd’s “Wish You Were Here”, which is followed by another of his Felice Brothers classic, “Your Belly In My Arms” and is joined by the rest of the band and the whole of the audience for a communal version of Neil Young’s “Helpless” that merges seamlessly into a raw and noisy rendition of “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door”, the audience still abuzz long after the band have disappeared.

Simone Felice pic: Carl Warren

Damon Albarn: “Dr Dee”

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In 1570, a few years before he became preoccupied with alchemical quests, heretical visions and attempts to divine the language of angels, Dr John Dee was commissioned to write a government report on the state of England. According to Dee’s 2001 biographer, Benjamin Woolley, Brytannicae Reipublicae Synposis (“A Synopsis Of The British Republic”) identified “A variety of problems… that continued to beset the economy, which Dee attributed to urban decay… the debasement of currency and unemployment.” Four-hundred-and-forty years later, it seems as if Damon Albarn sat down to research his first “English opera” and came to a similar conclusion about his homeland. “From great austerity reigning down from above,” he sings in “Apple Carts”, “Distant is love in our disdain.” With Blur, Albarn was mostly portrayed as a satirical chronicler of England, drawing on a library of Martin Amis novels and Kinks records for reference. But like Ray Davies before him, Albarn’s relationship with England has always been more affectionate and complicated than a superficial reading of “Park Life” might suggest. Magical even, after a fashion: on that album’s “This Is A Low”, he notably turned the shipping forecast into a mystical incantation Last summer, Albarn’s “Dr Dee” premiered as a work-in-progress at the Manchester International Festival. The story was a terrific one, even though it could be a struggle to follow Albarn’s libretto. It told of Dee, a questing Renaissance multi-tasker whose blend of science, faith, mathematics, politics and magic made him an outré Elizabethan superstar: he astrologically set the date for the Queen’s coronation. There were spies, devious European noblemen and a maverick skryer (crystal ball-reader) called Edward Kelley, who summoned up angels to instruct Dee, and who eventually coerced him into wife-swapping as a means of spiritual revelation. One year on, “Dr Dee” has evolved into an album, featuring a cast of classical singers, scholars of medieval instruments and the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra accompanying Albarn. On the surface, “Dr Dee” may look like another dilettante-ish Albarn project in the tradition of “Monkey: Journey To The West” (a kind of contemporary Chinese opera) or this spring’s “Rocket Juice And The Moon” (an Afrobeat jam session with Flea and Tony Allen). It would not be uncharacteristic of Albarn, still pointedly ambitious, to try and prove that his credentials as a polymath – or as a musical polymath, at least – were a match for those of John Dee. But once the overture of birdsong, hurdy-gurdy, church organ and orchestra have passed, it becomes evident that “Dr Dee” is a different thing entirely: the most compelling record that Albarn has made since Blur’s “13”; his first proper solo record, with all the emotional engagement that implies. For some, of course, the Elizabethan schtick may be tough to penetrate. Albarn sings on eight of the 18 tracks, and employs a host of classical singers, who provide choral passages indebted to early church music composers like Thomas Tallis and William Byrd, or who play the roles of Dee’s associates. Dee himself never sings, though he will in this summer’s production by the English National Opera, which Albarn has extensively redeveloped with, he says, “a lot more narrative”. It would be easy for Albarn to misjudge these passages, to turn them into “a rhapsody of whimsies” (as one critic adjudged Dee’s magical writing). But only the pair of “Temptation Comes In The Afternoon” and “Watching The Fire That Waltzed Away” feel remotely like a student workshop’s response to the Threepenny Opera, and even then Albarn redeems himself on the latter, with a looping orchestral flurry in the style of Philip Glass to close. Albarn’s arrangements are beautifully judged throughout, especially the harmonious blending of a particular medieval lute, the theorbo, with a harpsichord and the West African kora (played by Toumani Diabaté’s brother Madou) – a plausibly angelic combination that feels anything but incongruous on “The Moon Exalted”, the most ravishing song here. Notwithstanding the odd settings, a clutch of these delicately conceived songs - notably “Apple Carts” and “The Marvelous Dream” – would just about fit, with minor instrumental tweaks, into Blur’s forthcoming Hyde Park setlist. On the latter, Albarn’s multi-tracked backing vocals sound uncannily as if Graham Coxon has wandered in from those recent Blur sessions. For all his cartoon capers and globetrotting exploits, and his increasing reliance on keyboards rather than guitar, Albarn’s default songwriting mode since “Out Of Time” (2003) has been wistful, understated, impressionistic; most obviously on his last England elegy, “The Good, The Bad And The Queen” (2007). “The Marvelous Dream” strips that model down to the basics, with Albarn and his guitar tracing the passage of a royal flypass for the 2011 wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton. Like much of the album, it finds Albarn meditatively picking out the recurring themes of English life, pondering how to reconcile republican sensibilities with an abiding fascination for pageantry and historic ritual. “A time for revival or maybe just a marvellous dream?” he wonders, rejecting the certainties that might have come more easily in his twenties. “Dr Dee” is full of these patterns and allusions, some more crass than others. “Coronation” weaves in a sample from Queen Elizabeth II’s 1953 shindig, while the unearthly song of the scryer Edward Kelley, performed by Christopher Robson, features a sample of Aleister Crowley, who claimed to be a reincarnation of Kelley. Manipulative occultists with a taste for free love are not, evidently, a uniquely Tudor phenomenon. And neither, of course, is a climate of national uncertainty. The late 1570s and early 1580s was a period of dramatic astral activity, leading many of Dee’s astrological contemporaries to forecast a dire future for Elizabeth and England. Dee, though, thought otherwise. He believed the 1577 comet was “a portent not of Elizabeth’s destruction but of her elevation”, Benjamin Woolley writes in “The Queen’s Conjuror”, “and the fulfilment of a destiny greater than even she might have imagined.” Among the many valuable and entertaining lessons to be learned from “Dr Dee”, there is the possibility that, as history shows us, the good times might just come round again. Dee and Kelley would pray before they tried to contact the angels, and “Oh Spirit Animate Us” has the tone of a religious entreaty. Damon Albarn is too cautious to make bold predictions, or put all his faith in a higher power that probably doesn’t exist. Nevertheless he gives it a go, with a mournful refrain that he almost edited out of the song: “Give us something of a righteous revival.” In troubled times, surely one request thrown into the void can’t do any harm? Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

In 1570, a few years before he became preoccupied with alchemical quests, heretical visions and attempts to divine the language of angels, Dr John Dee was commissioned to write a government report on the state of England.

According to Dee’s 2001 biographer, Benjamin Woolley, Brytannicae Reipublicae Synposis (“A Synopsis Of The British Republic”) identified “A variety of problems… that continued to beset the economy, which Dee attributed to urban decay… the debasement of currency and unemployment.”

Four-hundred-and-forty years later, it seems as if Damon Albarn sat down to research his first “English opera” and came to a similar conclusion about his homeland. “From great austerity reigning down from above,” he sings in “Apple Carts”, “Distant is love in our disdain.” With Blur, Albarn was mostly portrayed as a satirical chronicler of England, drawing on a library of Martin Amis novels and Kinks records for reference. But like Ray Davies before him, Albarn’s relationship with England has always been more affectionate and complicated than a superficial reading of “Park Life” might suggest. Magical even, after a fashion: on that album’s “This Is A Low”, he notably turned the shipping forecast into a mystical incantation

Last summer, Albarn’s “Dr Dee” premiered as a work-in-progress at the Manchester International Festival. The story was a terrific one, even though it could be a struggle to follow Albarn’s libretto. It told of Dee, a questing Renaissance multi-tasker whose blend of science, faith, mathematics, politics and magic made him an outré Elizabethan superstar: he astrologically set the date for the Queen’s coronation. There were spies, devious European noblemen and a maverick skryer (crystal ball-reader) called Edward Kelley, who summoned up angels to instruct Dee, and who eventually coerced him into wife-swapping as a means of spiritual revelation.

One year on, “Dr Dee” has evolved into an album, featuring a cast of classical singers, scholars of medieval instruments and the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra accompanying Albarn. On the surface, “Dr Dee” may look like another dilettante-ish Albarn project in the tradition of “Monkey: Journey To The West” (a kind of contemporary Chinese opera) or this spring’s “Rocket Juice And The Moon” (an Afrobeat jam session with Flea and Tony Allen). It would not be uncharacteristic of Albarn, still pointedly ambitious, to try and prove that his credentials as a polymath – or as a musical polymath, at least – were a match for those of John Dee.

But once the overture of birdsong, hurdy-gurdy, church organ and orchestra have passed, it becomes evident that “Dr Dee” is a different thing entirely: the most compelling record that Albarn has made since Blur’s “13”; his first proper solo record, with all the emotional engagement that implies.

For some, of course, the Elizabethan schtick may be tough to penetrate. Albarn sings on eight of the 18 tracks, and employs a host of classical singers, who provide choral passages indebted to early church music composers like Thomas Tallis and William Byrd, or who play the roles of Dee’s associates.

Dee himself never sings, though he will in this summer’s production by the English National Opera, which Albarn has extensively redeveloped with, he says, “a lot more narrative”. It would be easy for Albarn to misjudge these passages, to turn them into “a rhapsody of whimsies” (as one critic adjudged Dee’s magical writing). But only the pair of “Temptation Comes In The Afternoon” and “Watching The Fire That Waltzed Away” feel remotely like a student workshop’s response to the Threepenny Opera, and even then Albarn redeems himself on the latter, with a looping orchestral flurry in the style of Philip Glass to close.

Albarn’s arrangements are beautifully judged throughout, especially the harmonious blending of a particular medieval lute, the theorbo, with a harpsichord and the West African kora (played by Toumani Diabaté’s brother Madou) – a plausibly angelic combination that feels anything but incongruous on “The Moon Exalted”, the most ravishing song here. Notwithstanding the odd settings, a clutch of these delicately conceived songs – notably “Apple Carts” and “The Marvelous Dream” – would just about fit, with minor instrumental tweaks, into Blur’s forthcoming Hyde Park setlist. On the latter, Albarn’s multi-tracked backing vocals sound uncannily as if Graham Coxon has wandered in from those recent Blur sessions.

For all his cartoon capers and globetrotting exploits, and his increasing reliance on keyboards rather than guitar, Albarn’s default songwriting mode since “Out Of Time” (2003) has been wistful, understated, impressionistic; most obviously on his last England elegy, “The Good, The Bad And The Queen” (2007). “The Marvelous Dream” strips that model down to the basics, with Albarn and his guitar tracing the passage of a royal flypass for the 2011 wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton. Like much of the album, it finds Albarn meditatively picking out the recurring themes of English life, pondering how to reconcile republican sensibilities with an abiding fascination for pageantry and historic ritual. “A time for revival or maybe just a marvellous dream?” he wonders, rejecting the certainties that might have come more easily in his twenties.

“Dr Dee” is full of these patterns and allusions, some more crass than others. “Coronation” weaves in a sample from Queen Elizabeth II’s 1953 shindig, while the unearthly song of the scryer Edward Kelley, performed by Christopher Robson, features a sample of Aleister Crowley, who claimed to be a reincarnation of Kelley. Manipulative occultists with a taste for free love are not, evidently, a uniquely Tudor phenomenon.

And neither, of course, is a climate of national uncertainty. The late 1570s and early 1580s was a period of dramatic astral activity, leading many of Dee’s astrological contemporaries to forecast a dire future for Elizabeth and England. Dee, though, thought otherwise. He believed the 1577 comet was “a portent not of Elizabeth’s destruction but of her elevation”, Benjamin Woolley writes in “The Queen’s Conjuror”, “and the fulfilment of a destiny greater than even she might have imagined.”

Among the many valuable and entertaining lessons to be learned from “Dr Dee”, there is the possibility that, as history shows us, the good times might just come round again. Dee and Kelley would pray before they tried to contact the angels, and “Oh Spirit Animate Us” has the tone of a religious entreaty. Damon Albarn is too cautious to make bold predictions, or put all his faith in a higher power that probably doesn’t exist. Nevertheless he gives it a go, with a mournful refrain that he almost edited out of the song: “Give us something of a righteous revival.” In troubled times, surely one request thrown into the void can’t do any harm?

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

Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold to write film soundtrack

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Fleet Foxes' frontman Robin Pecknold is to score a new film, titled The Internet – A Blog Cats WTF Universe. The film, which will be directed by Pecknold's brother Sean and Matt Daniels, will tell the story of a character named Matt who has made a successful living as a "LOLcat caption writer", b...

Fleet Foxes‘ frontman Robin Pecknold is to score a new film, titled The Internet – A Blog Cats WTF Universe.

The film, which will be directed by Pecknold’s brother Sean and Matt Daniels, will tell the story of a character named Matt who has made a successful living as a “LOLcat caption writer”, but who suffers an existential crisis and decides to decamp to Berlin in search of a life that provides more than “just viral internet cat humor.”

The film will mix live-action shots with animations, including one of “an epic animated God creature.” Pecknold will provide all the music, apart from one “techno song”.

The producers of The Internet – A Blog Cats WTF Universe are currently trying to secure funding to finish the film and have started a page on funding website Kickstarter.com to try and raise $15,000 ((£9,300).

As part of their fundraising drive, the producers are offering a series of bizarre pledges, with $10 getting you named as a producer, $250 getting you a hand written document explaining the meaning of life, $500 getting you the filmmakers throwing you a dance party and $5,000 scoring you a part in their next film.

Fleet Foxes released their second album Helplessness Blues in 2011.

Alabama Shakes’ Brittany Howard: “Our life is surreal”

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Alabama Shakes' frontwoman Brittany Howard has spoken about how her life has changed since her band have become more well known. The "Hold On" singer says her life has taken a "surreal" turn since her band began to get noticed, and she explains that she finds it a bit strange having celebrity fans....

Alabama Shakes‘ frontwoman Brittany Howard has spoken about how her life has changed since her band have become more well known.

The “Hold On” singer says her life has taken a “surreal” turn since her band began to get noticed, and she explains that she finds it a bit strange having celebrity fans.

Howard told The Scotsman: I’d like to be able to tell you that life for the Shakes is no different from what it was a little while back, that the only change is people know the words to our songs now and so can sing along. But I’m not going to pretend it’s not a whole lot more surreal.Howard goes on to talk about her various celebrity fans and even reveals an odd encounter with Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant, who left their gig early to go home to his bed.

She added: “We still do [Zeppelin’s] ‘How Many More Times’, but we were like: ‘We can’t play his own song to him – that’s so cheesy!’ But he went home to bed before the end so we managed to fit it in.”

Her connection with the Led Zeppelin singer even went as far to being invited to stay in his house in Austin during this year’s SXSW festival – but it turned out to be an unexpectedly, frightening experience.

Howard explained: “It’s a lovely place but we’re pretty sure it’s haunted. I wouldn’t just say that, but sinks would turn on by themselves and there would be a knock at the door but no one was there.”

Jack White tops the UK album chart

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Jack White has entered the Official UK Album Chart at Number 1 with his debut solo album, Blunderbuss. The White Stripes/The Raconteurs/The Dead Weather man has toppled Adele's 21 to take the Number One spot, outselling the "Rolling In The Deep" singer two copies to one, according to the Official C...

Jack White has entered the Official UK Album Chart at Number 1 with his debut solo album, Blunderbuss.

The White Stripes/The Raconteurs/The Dead Weather man has toppled Adele‘s 21 to take the Number One spot, outselling the “Rolling In The Deep” singer two copies to one, according to the Official Charts Company.

Adele slips to Number Two in the Official UK Album Chart, Lana Del Rey moves up one place from last week to take Number Three with Born To Die, Nicki Minaj drops one place to Number Four and Rufus Wainwright enters the chart at Number Five with Out Of The Game. Wainwright is this week’s second highest new entry.

Black Sabbath announce intimate UK show

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Black Sabbath have announced an intimate show for next month. The band, who will headline this summer's Download Festival along with The Prodigy and Metallica over the weekend of June 8-10, will play a small show at Birmingham's O2 Academy on May 19 to warm up for the festival. The show will be t...

Black Sabbath have announced an intimate show for next month.

The band, who will headline this summer’s Download Festival along with The Prodigy and Metallica over the weekend of June 8-10, will play a small show at Birmingham’s O2 Academy on May 19 to warm up for the festival.

The show will be the metal legends’ first since they reunited with their original line-up late last year and may see them preview some of the new material they have spent the last nine months working on.

Black Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi is currently undergoing treatment for lymphoma and, as a result, will not take part in a large chunk of the band’s summer tour dates. Shows across Europe, which were scheduled to be Black Sabbath shows have been replaced by ‘Ozzy & Friends’ gigs.

The shows will see frontman Ozzy Osbourne joined by special guests including former Guns N’ Roses guitarist Slash, Geezer Butler and Zakk Wylde. Iommi will, however, play at Download and at next month’s Birmingham gig.

Although Iommi will play, there is still no word on whether the band’s estranged drummer Bill Ward will be part of the line-up for the show. The drummer had previously revealed he was unhappy with the contract for the band’s new album and world tour and claimed he would not take part in the new album sessions and shows if a ‘fair agreement’ was not met.

As a result of this, the remaining members of the band vowed to carry on without him. They have yet, however, to announce a replacement for Ward.

Public Image Limited – This Is PiL

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“I am John, and I was born in London!” The Lydon corporation re-opens for business... If John Lydon were playing by the now well-established rules of reunion, 2012 would conceivably have been the year that a reconvened PiL hit the larger venues of the United Kingdom to play through 1981’s seminal Metal Box in its entirety, Lydon’s artistic partnership with guitarist Keith Levene and bassist Jah Wobble rekindled over a large pile of bank notes. The reality, as you might expect, is rather more challenging. In March, Levene and Wobble embarked on a UK tour playing “Metal Box In Dub”, with added trumpet and one “Johnny Rotter” of tribute band The Sex Pistols Experience occupying the vocal role. Lydon, meanwhile, stands at the helm of a new line-up of PiL – one comprised of guitarist Lu Edmonds and drummer Bruce Smith, both of whom worked on PiL’s rather less celebrated late ‘80s albums Happy? and 9, plus bassist Scott Firth – and has funded a brand new PiL album, the group’s first in two decades not through an advance from a record label, but by a busy schedule of live concerts. This is no fan’s dream scenario – yet, in this respect, at least, it remains pretty much in the spirit of PiL. This is what you want. This is what you get. For all this, there is something rather enervating about This Is PiL. Without question, this is The John Lydon Show; there are no egos here to grate against one another, the band toiling at long, fairly functional suites of squalling dub-disco atop which Lydon can grouse and gripe, rap in curious cod-patois and declaim society, authority, conformity in his high, whinnying cry. It can often be a bit of a silly business: “We are PiL – and we are quite a-pillling,” he Dad-jokes, on the opening “This Is PiL”. Still, it appears there remain reserves of rage to be tapped here. The following “One Drop” is a piece of gloom-wreathed 2-Tone with lyrics that assert a sort of cosmic anarchy: “We come from chaos/You cannot change us!” The excellent “Deeper Waters” rings with heavy portent, Lydon a castaway lashed by biting salt-water guitars and pushed along on tidal swells of bass, paddling away from the shore lest he be dashed to pieces on the rocks. And on the loping, funky “Human” we find Lydon showing off the extent of his scabrous diction, spitting acid about “ed-you-cay-sheunnnn!” and “po-li-tish-e-unnns!” and lamenting for a lost England with the same forensic eye he once described the aftermath of a murder scene in “Poptones”: “I miss the roses/Those English roses/Of salad, beer and summer’s here/And many mannered ways/Of cotton dresses skipping across the lawn/Of happy faces, when football was not a yawn…” Cynics will, perhaps rightly, be moved to point out here that Lydon, a Los Angeles dweller for the last two decades, has no real business pontificating on what is good and what is bad about modern Great Britain. Yet This Is PiL seems very much concerned with questions of Englishness, and of heritage. “One Drop” opens with a bellowed “I am John, and I was born in London!” Elsewhere, Lydon’s place of birth, Finsbury Park, is mentioned numerous times (on the zany, “Antmusic”-like “Lollipop Opera” and the driving, Krautrocky “Reggie’s Song”, a rather fantastic flight of fancy concerning a man called Reginald and the garden of Eden). Lydon’s soul-baring is not always so effective – the spoken-word “The Room I Am In” has the feel of a amateur poetry slam, the lumbering “Fool” stretches out to an unwelcome six minutes. Still, though, he seems driven by bile, anger, bitterness and most of all, the need to come to terms with, and to understand his past. Altogether, one feels, this is what makes This Is PiL a compelling listen. It wrestles with contradictions, sets off on seas of despair, spits like a camel and kicks like a mule. It may not be of the calibre of Metal Box, but it finds its maker firmly in 2012, not 1979, and with plenty still to grouse about. Louis Pattison Pic credit: Dave Wainright/© Public Image Ltd

“I am John, and I was born in London!” The Lydon corporation re-opens for business…

If John Lydon were playing by the now well-established rules of reunion, 2012 would conceivably have been the year that a reconvened PiL hit the larger venues of the United Kingdom to play through 1981’s seminal Metal Box in its entirety, Lydon’s artistic partnership with guitarist Keith Levene and bassist Jah Wobble rekindled over a large pile of bank notes.

The reality, as you might expect, is rather more challenging. In March, Levene and Wobble embarked on a UK tour playing “Metal Box In Dub”, with added trumpet and one “Johnny Rotter” of tribute band The Sex Pistols Experience occupying the vocal role. Lydon, meanwhile, stands at the helm of a new line-up of PiL – one comprised of guitarist Lu Edmonds and drummer Bruce Smith, both of whom worked on PiL’s rather less celebrated late ‘80s albums Happy? and 9, plus bassist Scott Firth – and has funded a brand new PiL album, the group’s first in two decades not through an advance from a record label, but by a busy schedule of live concerts. This is no fan’s dream scenario – yet, in this respect, at least, it remains pretty much in the spirit of PiL. This is what you want. This is what you get.

For all this, there is something rather enervating about This Is PiL. Without question, this is The John Lydon Show; there are no egos here to grate against one another, the band toiling at long, fairly functional suites of squalling dub-disco atop which Lydon can grouse and gripe, rap in curious cod-patois and declaim society, authority, conformity in his high, whinnying cry. It can often be a bit of a silly business: “We are PiL – and we are quite a-pillling,” he Dad-jokes, on the opening “This Is PiL”. Still, it appears there remain reserves of rage to be tapped here. The following “One Drop” is a piece of gloom-wreathed 2-Tone with lyrics that assert a sort of cosmic anarchy: “We come from chaos/You cannot change us!” The excellent “Deeper Waters” rings with heavy portent, Lydon a castaway lashed by biting salt-water guitars and pushed along on tidal swells of bass, paddling away from the shore lest he be dashed to pieces on the rocks. And on the loping, funky “Human” we find Lydon showing off the extent of his scabrous diction, spitting acid about “ed-you-cay-sheunnnn!” and “po-li-tish-e-unnns!” and lamenting for a lost England with the same forensic eye he once described the aftermath of a murder scene in “Poptones”: “I miss the roses/Those English roses/Of salad, beer and summer’s here/And many mannered ways/Of cotton dresses skipping across the lawn/Of happy faces, when football was not a yawn…”

Cynics will, perhaps rightly, be moved to point out here that Lydon, a Los Angeles dweller for the last two decades, has no real business pontificating on what is good and what is bad about modern Great Britain. Yet This Is PiL seems very much concerned with questions of Englishness, and of heritage. “One Drop” opens with a bellowed “I am John, and I was born in London!” Elsewhere, Lydon’s place of birth, Finsbury Park, is mentioned numerous times (on the zany, “Antmusic”-like “Lollipop Opera” and the driving, Krautrocky “Reggie’s Song”, a rather fantastic flight of fancy concerning a man called Reginald and the garden of Eden). Lydon’s soul-baring is not always so effective – the spoken-word “The Room I Am In” has the feel of a amateur poetry slam, the lumbering “Fool” stretches out to an unwelcome six minutes. Still, though, he seems driven by bile, anger, bitterness and most of all, the need to come to terms with, and to understand his past. Altogether, one feels, this is what makes This Is PiL a compelling listen. It wrestles with contradictions, sets off on seas of despair, spits like a camel and kicks like a mule. It may not be of the calibre of Metal Box, but it finds its maker firmly in 2012, not 1979, and with plenty still to grouse about.

Louis Pattison

Pic credit: Dave Wainright/© Public Image Ltd

Primal Scream name My Bloody Valentine’s Debbie Googe as new bassist

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Primal Scream have announced My Bloody Valentine's Debbie Googe as their new touring bass player. Googe, who was a founding member of My Bloody Valentine and also a member of Showpony and the Bikini Mutants, will join the band's live line-up for the foreseeable future. She replaces Gary 'Mani' M...

Primal Scream have announced My Bloody Valentine’s Debbie Googe as their new touring bass player.

Googe, who was a founding member of My Bloody Valentine and also a member of Showpony and the Bikini Mutants, will join the band’s live line-up for the foreseeable future.

She replaces Gary ‘Mani’ Mountfield in the band’s line-up. Mountfield left to rejoin The Stone Roses for their reunion tour late last year.

Googe’s first shows with Primal Scream will be three dates in Scotland this summer. The gigs kick off at Inverness Ironworks on June 14, before moving on to Aberdeen Music Hall on June 15. The band wrap things up with a headline show at Dunoon’s Queens Hall on June 16.

The band will then play a series of festivals appearances, including Isle Of Wight Festival, Hop Farm Festival and the newly created Festival Number 6.

Googe isn’t the first member of My Bloody Valentine to play with Primal Scream: Kevin Shields joined the band both live and in the studio from 1997 – 2006.

Bob Dylan to receive Presidential Medal of Freedom

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Bob Dylan will be rewarded with a Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honor given by the United States, according to a report in the New York Times. The White House said in a statement that President Obama had named 13 recipients of the medal, which is granted to “individuals who ...

Bob Dylan will be rewarded with a Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honor given by the United States, according to a report in the New York Times.

The White House said in a statement that President Obama had named 13 recipients of the medal, which is granted to “individuals who have made especially meritorious contributions to the security or national interests of the United States, to world peace, or to cultural or other significant public or private endeavors.”

Dylan was praised by the White House as being among “the most influential American musicians of the 20th century,” for “his rich and poetic lyrics” and for work that has “had considerable influence on the civil rights movement of the 1960s and has had significant impact on American culture over the past five decade.”

The ceremony will take place later this spring. Other recipients include astronaut John Glenn, former American Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and novelist Toni Morrison.

Dylan will play Hop Farm on June 30. A new album is also rumoured to be due this year.

Thom Yorke debuts new Atoms For Peace songs

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Radiohead's Thom Yorke and producer Nigel Godrich debuted new songs from their Atoms For Peace supergroup during their DJ set at an LA club on Friday [April 27]. The duo, who play in the band alongside Red Hot Chili Peppers' Flea, Joey Waronker and Mauro Refosco, played the new songs during their s...

Radiohead‘s Thom Yorke and producer Nigel Godrich debuted new songs from their Atoms For Peace supergroup during their DJ set at an LA club on Friday [April 27].

The duo, who play in the band alongside Red Hot Chili Peppers’ Flea, Joey Waronker and Mauro Refosco, played the new songs during their set at Transmission LA: AV Club, a free 17-day music and visual arts festival series at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, curated by the Beastie Boys’ Mike D.

The new songs may be from the group’s forthcoming debut LP, which is rumoured to be released in 2012 – although no official confirmation as been issued.

Last year, Red Hot Chili Peppers’ bassist Flea revealed details of an album and said they started working on a record after touring together under the Atoms For Peace name.

“At the end of the tour we went into a studio for three days and just jammed – totally improvising,” he told Rolling Stone. “Thom and Nigel [Godrich] have taken that stuff and done shit with it. I’ve heard little bits and pieces. I have no idea when it’s going to come out. Not real soon though.”

Blackthorn

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Sam Shepard himself takes a rare lead in Blackthorn, which expands on the theories that Butch Cassidy somehow survived the shoot out at San Vicente, Bolivia in 1908. “I woke up and found myself alone,” he explains. “Seemed like everybody I knew was either dead or in jail. And they thought I wa...

Sam Shepard himself takes a rare lead in Blackthorn, which expands on the theories that Butch Cassidy somehow survived the shoot out at San Vicente, Bolivia in 1908. “I woke up and found myself alone,” he explains. “Seemed like everybody I knew was either dead or in jail. And they thought I was dead, too. So I did what any good dead person would do. I went off and raised me some horses. 20 years. That’s a big change. Quiet times.” Cassidy, in his twilight years, decides to return to America, to be reunited with family. Falling in with Eduardo (Eduardo Noriega), a young Spanish mining engineer on the run from a posse, he catches the scent of his old desperado ways.

The directorial debut of Mateo Gil, a scriptwriter perhaps best known for Abre Les Ojos, the film Cameron Crowe remade as Vanilla Sky, Blackthorn exhibits a number of elegiac qualities befitting a Western about a man reaching a certain age in his life. Shepard summons up a mythic image of one of America’s great outlaws – dusty and craggy, with a splendid Kristofferson-style beard (he had a great cameo as another famous robber, Frank James, in 2007’s The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford). In one scene where Butch and Eduardo billet overnight in an abandoned building in the Bolivian salt flats, Shepard delivers several reveries on the heyday of his gang, the Wild Bunch – “we covered more than six states, some of them bigger than this whole country.” The writing here is of a high standard and – as you’d expect – impeccably delivered. Frankly, you wish there’d be more scenes like this.

Flashbacks to an imagined history with Game Of Thrones’ Nicolaj Coster-Waldau as a younger Cassidy, Padraic Delaney as Sundance and Dominique McElligott as Etta Place, feel a little like distractions from the main event of watching Shepard squint ruminatively into the far distance. I wish more had been made of Stephen Rea’s former Pinkerton agent, a drunk and dissipated figure living in sorrowful retirement in the Bolivian boondocks. His scenes with Shepard capture exactly the right tone of regret, betrayal and broken honour the film strives for but often fails to catch.

Michael Bonner

Paul Simon has “no regrets” over Graceland controversy

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Paul Simon has insisted that he was no regrets over the recording of his album Graceland in South Africa. Simon was widely criticised for travelling to the country and making the 1986 with South African musicians, for effectively breaking the cultural boycott of the country due to its racist Aparth...

Paul Simon has insisted that he was no regrets over the recording of his album Graceland in South Africa.

Simon was widely criticised for travelling to the country and making the 1986 with South African musicians, for effectively breaking the cultural boycott of the country due to its racist Apartheid regime.

Although the album was a smash hit and is now credited with bringing local music to the a global audience, he was also censured at the time by the African National Congress, who implied that he was supporting the regime. The controversy is documented in new film Under African Skies, which marks the 25th anniversary of the album.

Speaking at a screening as part of the Sundance Festival in London yesterday (April 26), Simon was asked whether he has any regrets of his actions. He replied: “As for regrets, no I don’t have any regrets because it’s a happy ending. Would I have done things differently? Perhaps. If anybody had come to me and said, during the recording or in the 16 months between the recording and the release of the record anybody from the ANC had come and said ‘we don’t want you to do this’, or ‘we wish you would make some sort of statement supporting us’ I would have been very happy to do so.

“But nobody did come to me so I was basically unaware of what was going on, I think perhaps people in the UK were more aware of the cultural boycott, we were not aware. I was aware enough not to play in Sun City with Simon And Garfunkel, but, let me point out the difference. Going to South Africa to perform in front of a segregated audience is to support the Apartheid regime. Going to perform, I mean you could go to perform with South African musicians and if the audience were integrated I think that would have been fine, but that was not the case. Going to record is not the same thing. And it was never specifically declared to be something that shouldn’t be done.

“Besides that, my point in the film I think is this. You supported the cultural boycott, and that’s fine. There’s no reason why athletes should go over and play a team that’s all white in a country that’s mostly black, when the blacks are oppressed there’s no reason for somebody to go and perform and be paid when blacks are not permitted by law to attend, didn’t have the money to attend even if they could. Both of those things are wrong. They didn’t want to have political discussions, I agree. Certainly arms shipments, of course not. But that’s not the analogy, music isn’t tanks, we weren’t there to kill people.”

Simon added that the musicians on Graceland, which included Ladysmith Black Mambazo, were happy to co-operate. He said: “[They] invited me to come. They wanted it, and they had good reason to want it because they wanted their music to get out into the world. I went over there in a way without a lot of that information.”

He was also critical of the ANC’s handling of the situation, saying: “The fact that the musicians thought that it was really important to get that music out, that fact shouldn’t have been ignored by a political party, which is what the ANC is. A political party, no different from Conservatives, Labour, Democrats, Republicans. It happened to be a political party that was fighting for a supremely righteous cause and it was led by a leader who was one of the great teachers of the 20th century, Nelson Mandela. But they are a political party and they have an agenda, and part of their agenda was, ‘you have to ask us’. And I say and I said then, ‘well is that the kind of government that you’re going to be? Why don’t you ask the musicians what they think about this aspect of the cultural boycott, at least hear what somebody has to say, rather than saying ‘you can’t do that and if you do do act that way then you are morally in the wrong’.

“There really wasn’t a discussion, so no I have no regrets about it whatsoever. If you didn’t want your music to go back to South Africa, I could argue both ways on that. I think what you wanted was for the South African Apartheid regime to be overthrown and you want to contribute to the battle. So did I. We offered to perform for the African National Congress after the record came out and was a big hit, we offered to perform, they didn’t want it, they spurned the offer.”

However, Simon admitted that if he had ever been advised not to go and record in South Africa, he would likely not have done it. “Had somebody said to me ‘look we really don’t want you to go there’ I doubt that I would have gone. The only thing I can say in all honesty is that I did not vigorously pursue somebody telling me not to go. I went with the answer that I was hoping to hear which was ‘yes come, yes come and play with us’. I think that that answer and that thought process was never accessed by the ANC. They didn’t confer with their own musicians. And when they went to play in Europe they said ‘go home’.”

Under African Skies is released on June 5. Paul Simon will also be taking Graceland out on the road this year. He plays London’s Hyde Park on July 15.

Strange Fruit: The Beatles Apple Records

Unearthing the rotten core of the Fab Four's infamous label... “Western communism,” Paul McCartney called it. Was there ever a better example of what happens when hippie ideals meet capitalism and it all goes wrong (apart, possibly, from Virgin Trains)? Apple began life as a clothes shop and ended it as a lawsuit – we’re not counting whatever global entity it is that sanctions remix albums, Las Vegas musicals and playalong video games – and along the way it encompassed farce, tragedy and a lot of music. This DVD begins unpromisingly with library music, a clichéd voiceover (“1967 was the year of the summer of love” and all that), and an unsurprising lack of Beatle input but suddenly leaps into excellence. There are interviews with everyone from Apple recording artist Jackie Lomax (whose “Sour Milk Sea” remains a great lost single) to staffer Tony Bramwell (excellently sniffy about the pissed and stoned Apple press office). David Peel is here, an unexpected counterculture survivor. More poignantly, so are two of Badfinger, the band whose career deserves (and has) its own documentary. Talking heads are relevant and informed, there is decent archive – and even some Beatle and related music. Best of all this is a really long DVD. While it avoids some of the more anecdotal moments – we don’t get tales of Hell’s Angel incursions or visits from Jesus – we do get all the ins and outs of the label, the gen on which Beatle was up for working which act (brilliantly, while George signs the Krishnas and Paul brings Mary Hopkin, it’s Ringo who’s responsible for acquiring classical one-off John Tavener) and why they later couldn’t be arsed. There’s a wealth of detail here. Badfinger’s Joey Molland still chuckling over the time George got narky when Molland laughed at him messing up a guitar part. Elephant’s Memory still fed up with John Lennon’s second-rate production of their Apple album. Paul’s keenness to make Mary Hopkin into an all round family entertainer when she wanted to be a proper folkie. There’s sharp analysis – Lennon may have called Apple a drain on Beatle money, but it’s suggested that much of the label’s expenditure was on his and Yoko Ono’s side projects. There are slabs of music from Yoko’s amazing Fly LP, Jackie Lomax’s Is This What You Want? Rada Krishna Temple’s Govinda, and a host of excellent product; they may have failed some of their artists chartwise, but Apple’s A and R was often superb (although there is also some early James Taylor, all tank top and Toblerone-thick vocals, getting ready to ruin the 1970s for someone). Best of all, it’s fairly objective. If you want to watch a litany of idealism-bashing stories about rich pop stars being ripped off, The Rutles did that brilliantly. But if you want to see people who were there – and, for once, not the usual suspects, but people who knew what it was like to not want to go into an increasingly bad environment, people who experienced first hand the mixed blessing of hands-on intervention by a Beatles – then this is the place to go. What you leave this DVD with is an understanding of the sheer Catch 22-ness of it all – the greatest band of all time think your music is great, but signing to their label may end your career. (Badfinger’s Ron Griffiths notes both the threat and the promise in McCartney’s title for the song he gave them, “Come And Get It”). Strange Fruit may be a documentary about a record label, but it’s fitting, sad and beautiful that it ends with the only song about a record label that can make you cry, Badfinger’s gorgeous “Apple Of My Eye”. EXTRAS: Biographies. Extended interview with Brute Force! 5/10 David Quantick

Unearthing the rotten core of the Fab Four’s infamous label…

“Western communism,” Paul McCartney called it. Was there ever a better example of what happens when hippie ideals meet capitalism and it all goes wrong (apart, possibly, from Virgin Trains)? Apple began life as a clothes shop and ended it as a lawsuit – we’re not counting whatever global entity it is that sanctions remix albums, Las Vegas musicals and playalong video games – and along the way it encompassed farce, tragedy and a lot of music. This DVD begins unpromisingly with library music, a clichéd voiceover (“1967 was the year of the summer of love” and all that), and an unsurprising lack of Beatle input but suddenly leaps into excellence.

There are interviews with everyone from Apple recording artist Jackie Lomax (whose “Sour Milk Sea” remains a great lost single) to staffer Tony Bramwell (excellently sniffy about the pissed and stoned Apple press office). David Peel is here, an unexpected counterculture survivor. More poignantly, so are two of Badfinger, the band whose career deserves (and has) its own documentary. Talking heads are relevant and informed, there is decent archive – and even some Beatle and related music. Best of all this is a really long DVD. While it avoids some of the more anecdotal moments – we don’t get tales of Hell’s Angel incursions or visits from Jesus – we do get all the ins and outs of the label, the gen on which Beatle was up for working which act (brilliantly, while George signs the Krishnas and Paul brings Mary Hopkin, it’s Ringo who’s responsible for acquiring classical one-off John Tavener) and why they later couldn’t be arsed.

There’s a wealth of detail here. Badfinger’s Joey Molland still chuckling over the time George got narky when Molland laughed at him messing up a guitar part. Elephant’s Memory still fed up with John Lennon’s second-rate production of their Apple album. Paul’s keenness to make Mary Hopkin into an all round family entertainer when she wanted to be a proper folkie. There’s sharp analysis – Lennon may have called Apple a drain on Beatle money, but it’s suggested that much of the label’s expenditure was on his and Yoko Ono’s side projects. There are slabs of music from Yoko’s amazing Fly LP, Jackie Lomax’s Is This What You Want? Rada Krishna Temple’s Govinda, and a host of excellent product; they may have failed some of their artists chartwise, but Apple’s A and R was often superb (although there is also some early James Taylor, all tank top and Toblerone-thick vocals, getting ready to ruin the 1970s for someone).

Best of all, it’s fairly objective. If you want to watch a litany of idealism-bashing stories about rich pop stars being ripped off, The Rutles did that brilliantly. But if you want to see people who were there – and, for once, not the usual suspects, but people who knew what it was like to not want to go into an increasingly bad environment, people who experienced first hand the mixed blessing of hands-on intervention by a Beatles – then this is the place to go. What you leave this DVD with is an understanding of the sheer Catch 22-ness of it all – the greatest band of all time think your music is great, but signing to their label may end your career. (Badfinger’s Ron Griffiths notes both the threat and the promise in McCartney’s title for the song he gave them, “Come And Get It”). Strange Fruit may be a documentary about a record label, but it’s fitting, sad and beautiful that it ends with the only song about a record label that can make you cry, Badfinger’s gorgeous “Apple Of My Eye”.

EXTRAS: Biographies. Extended interview with Brute Force!

5/10

David Quantick

Trailer unveiled for Nick Cave-scripted film ‘Lawless’ – video

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The trailer for Nick Cave's new project Lawless has emerged online - scroll down and click below to watch it. The film, directed by John Hillcoat and based on the novel The Wettest County in the World by Matt Bondurant, was adapted for screen by Nick Cave and also features music written by the Bad Seeds frontman. Lawlesss, which follows the story of three brothers who find their bootlegging business under threat in prohibition-era Virginia, starts Tom Hardy, Guy Pearce, Gary Oldman and Jessica Chastain. The film will make its debut at the Cannes Film Festival next month and features a soundtrack written by Cave and his Grinderman/Dirty Three/Bad Seeds collaborator Warren Ellis. It is the third time Cave and Ellis have joined forces with Hillcoat, working together on the 2005 film The proposition, which was also written by Cave, as well as the 2009 screen adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's novel The Road. Back in December, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds and Grinderman drummer Jim Sclavunos hinted said that he and his bandmates had "neglected" the Bad Seeds but that it was "high time" they started to make music again, hinting that a follow up to 2008's 'Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!' could be underway. Nick Cave had previously said that the album would be ready for release in 2011.

The trailer for Nick Cave’s new project Lawless has emerged online – scroll down and click below to watch it.

The film, directed by John Hillcoat and based on the novel The Wettest County in the World by Matt Bondurant, was adapted for screen by Nick Cave and also features music written by the Bad Seeds frontman.

Lawlesss, which follows the story of three brothers who find their bootlegging business under threat in prohibition-era Virginia, starts Tom Hardy, Guy Pearce, Gary Oldman and Jessica Chastain.

The film will make its debut at the Cannes Film Festival next month and features a soundtrack written by Cave and his Grinderman/Dirty Three/Bad Seeds collaborator Warren Ellis.

It is the third time Cave and Ellis have joined forces with Hillcoat, working together on the 2005 film The proposition, which was also written by Cave, as well as the 2009 screen adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s novel The Road.

Back in December, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds and Grinderman drummer Jim Sclavunos hinted said that he and his bandmates had “neglected” the Bad Seeds but that it was “high time” they started to make music again, hinting that a follow up to 2008’s ‘Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!’ could be underway. Nick Cave had previously said that the album would be ready for release in 2011.