Home Blog Page 630

Is There Anybody Out There?: On Tour With Roger Waters’ The Wall

0
The more-than-extensive ‘Immersion’ edition of Pink Floyd’s opus The Wall (the box includes a scarf and marbles!) is reviewed in our latest issue, out now – so we thought we’d revisit John Lewis’ excellent feature from June 2011 (Take 169). As the extravaganza arrives in Europe, Uncut me...

The more-than-extensive ‘Immersion’ edition of Pink Floyd’s opus The Wall (the box includes a scarf and marbles!) is reviewed in our latest issue, out now – so we thought we’d revisit John Lewis’ excellent feature from June 2011 (Take 169). As the extravaganza arrives in Europe, Uncut meets the obsessive fans, stoners, bloggers and military advisors who’ll follow Waters and his lavish production to the ends of the globe…

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Kevin, 59, from Norfolk, is a Pink Floyd fan who has, as he puts it, “been mad for years. Fucking years”. In 1994, Kevin separated from his wife and children, the construction firm he owned went bust and he suffered a minor breakdown. “I lost everything,” he explains. “All I had left was Pink Floyd.” With £500 in his pocket, he decided to fly out to Portugal to see the band start their Division Bell tour. “I didn’t have any gig tickets or anywhere to stay,” he continues. “The idea was to find a tout, maybe see a couple of shows and come home. I ended up spending the next four months watching all 52 dates on that tour.” Kevin scrimped on budget flights and hotels. He’d inter-rail, cadge lifts, sleep in airports and on friends’ couches. He has seen almost every Pink Floyd, Roger Waters or Dave Gilmour show since, following his idols from Lisbon to Moscow, acquiring an encyclopaedic knowledge of Europe’s budget hotels and public transport links – not to mention each city’s touts, bootleggers and drug dealers.

We’re in a Milan bar on April 1, just hours before Roger Waters takes the stage at the 12,000-capacity Mediolanum Forum to perform The Wall in its entirety. Waters began touring The Wall in Toronto last September, playing a further 55 shows in North America; tonight is the seventh of 60 European dates, that include five nights at London’s O2 Arena this month. In total, Waters will play to nearly two and a half million people. And Kevin? He’s going to every single concert.

In his Wall-themed baseball hat, Kevin has become a cult figure on the Pink Floyd circuit. Other Floyd fans talk of him in hushed tones. They queue up to have their picture taken with him. Outside gigs, they shout his name, giving the ‘crossed arm’ salute from The Wall. Kevin grins and salutes them back.
“I don’t have a house, a car or a job,” says Kevin, now a grandfather of three. “I stay with friends around the world who are Floyd fans. They’re my extended family. I basically make money as a bootlegger – I sell posters and T-shirts at gigs and make just enough money to keep going. I’ll always turn up to every show with 30 Euros in my pocket.

“I have a thing about never meeting Roger,” Kevin continues. “I know he knows who I am. I know he looks out for me at every gig. But I don’t think I’d want to meet him. I used to be mad keen on Mike Oldfield. Then one day I met him, said ‘hello’ and he replied: ‘Who the fuck are you?’ No, don’t laugh! It was heartbreaking. Put me right off him. I’d rather keep my distance.”

He is by no means alone in his Floyd obsession. I meet Simon, a 43-year-old from Huddersfield, who has been to 171 Roger Waters and David Gilmour gigs since 2000. I meet Anders and Johan, two 49-year-old public transport employees from Sweden, who’ll visit Chicago, Toronto, Milan, Rome, Copenhagen and Stockholm on this tour. There is Jens, a 44-year-old from Copenhagen, who took out a 20,000 Euro loan for a new kitchen in 2002, before deciding to blow it all to follow Waters on tour.

Of course, Pink Floyd aren’t the only band to attract super fans (“you should meet the Status Quo ones – now they really are mental,” grins Kevin). But there’s a spiritual intensity that marks them out from the rest, as they talk about a Damascene conversion from “pop pap” to the true cause of the Floyd.

For Mark, a 60-year-old from Vermont, it was hearing Meddle at a student party in 1972. For Henrik, a 36-year-old from Cologne, it was finding a VHS copy of The Wall film in a charity shop; for Marti, a Catalan Alexei Sayle lookalike, aged 40, it was watching Live In Pompeii on late-night TV. Although we’re talking about a band who’ve sold 250 million records, each regard Pink Floyd as their own discovery, their own secret.

Talking to some of the 50,000 people at Barcelona’s Palau Sant Jordi on March 30 and in Milan two nights later, I meet a smattering of studious soixante-huitards and ageing stoners. But the audience appear much younger, and less overwhelmingly male, than you’d think. Indeed, it’s probable that Waters, 68 this year, is at least double the median age of his audience.

“In North America the audience is noticeably older,” notes blogger Simon Wimpenny, who’s seen every American and Canadian date on this tour, and will follow it around Europe. “Stateside Floyd fans are mainly Dark Side Of The Moon-loving stoners in their fifties. In continental Europe, it’s the exact opposite.”

Given that this tour will play 115 sold-out dates in 20,000-to-25,000-seater arenas, what’s the appeal? It’s a gloomy album, designed for teenage misanthropes, isn’t it? “We toured our version of The Wall for more than a year,” says Jason Sawford from the Australian Pink Floyd Show, the world’s biggest Floyd tribute band. “Bloody depressing it was, too. Couldn’t wait to finish that tour.”

But even a lapsed Wall fan like me will concede that this production is a staggering live event, more like a Wagner opera or a military tattoo than a rock gig. The set – a 35-feet-tall, 240-feet-wide wall of cardboard bricks erected in front of the band during the show, then collapsed at the end – remains from the original 1980-81 tour and the 1990 revival. But there’s been a quantum leap in stagecraft since then. Now there are pyrotechnics, stormtroopers, a choir of schoolchildren, a cast of giant Gerald Scarfe puppets and a rolling barrage of sound effects. Most impressive of all are the complex, detailed and constantly mutating animated projections. Some are based on Scarfe’s iconic animations – but there’s also Banksy-style graffiti art, Wikileaks footage, allusions to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and agitprop anti-war sloganeering. Some have objected to the way Waters has continued to retool his psycho-drama as a parable for the Berlin Wall, the West Bank barrier, and the fight against global totalitarianism. “I don’t have a problem with that,” explains Jakub, 33, a Czech student at the Milan show. “This is a show and a message that resonates around Eastern Europe.”

“It makes more sense now, post 9/11, post-Iraq, than it did when I first saw it in Germany, 1981,” adds Thomas from Denmark. “He has taken this adolescent howl of despair and made it universal.” Near the start of the show, the opening bars of “The Thin Ice” are accompanied by the projection of a single photo of Waters’ father, alongside the details: “Lieutenant Eric Waters, born 1913, Co. Durham, England; died 1944, Anzio, Italy”. There follows a list of those killed in conflicts since World War II. While it receives applause in Europe, such political grandstanding attracted boos and walkouts during the American dates. I wonder what Mark Gunzinger, a US military advisor and Republican who has travelled from Washington DC to see the show, makes of it.

“You know what? I’ve fought in wars. I’m good at war. But I hate war. I share that with Roger. I think a lot of people on the American right are pretty anti-interventionist. We’d rather not be in Iraq or Afghanistan or Libya. We have more in common with Roger and the anti-war brigade than you might think.”

The elephant in the arena is David Gilmour. Waters has announced that his old sparring-partner will join the tour as a guest at one show, which only emphasises his absence from the proceedings. Waters requires not one but three musicians (singer Robbie Wyckoff and guitarists Snowy White and Dave Kilminster) to replace him, while Gilmour’s co-writes “Run Like Hell”, “Young Lust” and mobiles-in-the-air anthem “Comfortably Numb” attract the most ecstatic responses.

Trawl the Pink Floyd message boards and blogs, and it’s clear that Gilmour is the more popular Floyd man. During a Gilmour show at the Royal Festival Hall a few years ago, an audience member shouted, “Where’s Roger?” Gilmour’s response – “Who gives a fuck?” – got the biggest cheer of the night.

“Roger is a bit of a – how you say? – prick,” says Marco from Barcelona. “In the same way that Mick Jagger is a prick. Dave, like Keith Richards, is the cool guy. We love Dave unconditionally. We love Roger more reluctantly. But you cannot deny that it is his show.”

After the disintegration of the band in the early ’80s, Waters was regarded by some hardcore fans with the same vitriol that Labour Party activists once reserved for David Owen. This situation was only amplified when the post-Waters Floyd albums (The Division Bell, A Momentary Lapse Of Reason) conspicuously outsold their old leader’s efforts, Radio KAOS and Amused To Death. However, among many obsessives, this has changed. Following his 2006-8 Dark Side Of The Moon tour, and this recreation of The Wall, Waters appears to have clawed the Pink Floyd brand back from his former band mates in all but name.

“Gilmour might be a nice guy but he’s a miserable sod on stage,” says blogger Simon. “You don’t get anything back from him, there’s no charisma, just a guy staring at his guitar strings. Whatever you think of Roger, he knows how to put on a show.”

That wasn’t always the case. During the performance of “Mother”, where Waters duets with a 1980 film of himself playing the song, he tells the audience “to have some sympathy for the younger, sadder, fucked-up Roger from 30 years ago”. The gloomy frontman who’d spit on hecklers, slag off arena rock tours and chastise his fans for having the audacity to enjoy themselves is no more. Nowadays, despite multi-tasking as a paranoid rock star, fascist dictator and judge throughout the course of the show, Waters frequently jumps out of character to wave and smile and salute the audience, as if suddenly aware of a rock star’s responsibilities.

None of this explains why these superfans want to see the show twice, let alone 50 times. Is it an obsessive compulsive disorder? A desire to relive their youth? To recapture the spiritual awakening when they first heard the band? “I think a lot of people would like to do what I’m doing,” says Kevin, slightly baffled. “I’m just lucky that I’ve found a way of doing it. It’s a great show. The moment it’s finished I want to see it all over again. I can’t wait.”

I watch Kevin as the show reaches its climax. He is punching the air and singing along to every word. He has already seen this production half a dozen times, and watched the movie “more than a thousand times”. But, as he warns me before the gig, he still gets emotional every time he hears this music.

During “In The Flesh” he is dutifully doing fascist salutes; on “Run Like Hell” he plays air drums, by “Bring The Boys Back Home” he has tears rolling down his cheeks.

By the time the wall collapses and the band emerge from the rubble, in civvies – with accordions, banjos, mandolins and a trumpet – to perform an unplugged “Outside The Wall”, Kevin has his head in his hands, his big shoulders heaving up and down. Tomorrow, he’ll be doing exactly the same thing again.

Ask Will Oldham

0

Palace Brother, Bonnie Prince, actor … Now Will Oldham is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With... feature. So is there anything you've always wanted to ask Will..? You’ve appeared in arthouse films and a Kanye West video. Which has been the most rewarding experience? You’re a big Sinatra fan. What’s your favourite Frank song? Johnny Cash covered your song, “I See A Darkness”. How did that come about? Send your questions to us by noon, Friday March 30 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com The best questions, and Will’s answers will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

Palace Brother, Bonnie Prince, actor … Now Will Oldham is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask Will..?

You’ve appeared in arthouse films and a Kanye West video. Which has been the most rewarding experience?

You’re a big Sinatra fan. What’s your favourite Frank song?

Johnny Cash covered your song, “I See A Darkness”. How did that come about?

Send your questions to us by noon, Friday March 30 to

uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com

The best questions, and Will’s answers will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine.

Please include your name and location with your question.

Jack White: ‘I would only reform the White Stripes if we were bankrupt’

0
Jack White has said there is "absolutely no chance" he will ever reform The White Stripes and said he would only consider it if he "went bankrupt". The singer, with whom you can read a world exclusive interview in the new issue of NME, has said that he can't imagine ever feeling the need to recon...

Jack White has said there is “absolutely no chance” he will ever reform The White Stripes and said he would only consider it if he “went bankrupt”.

The singer, with whom you can read a world exclusive interview in the new issue of NME, has said that he can’t imagine ever feeling the need to reconnect with former bandmate Meg White and it “would be a really sad thing” if the duo actually reformed.

Asked if there was any chance he and Meg would reform The White Stripes, White replied: “I would probably say absolutely not. Absolutely no chance. I couldn’t see any reason to ever do that. I’m not the kind of person that would retire from baseball and come out of retirement the next year. I mean, if we went to all the trouble of telling people we’re done, we meant it you know?”

He continued: “If we were forced to change our mind about that, I can only imagine the reason being if we went bankrupt or really needed the cash, which would be a really sad thing. I would probably be issuing an apology along with the announcement of the show dates.”

White, who will release his debut solo album ‘Blunderbuss’ next month, added that he had wanted to make sure he had ended his former band before he began performing and recording under the name Jack White.

He said of announcing The White Stripes’ demise: “I wanted Meg to come to a decision with me and officially put an end to it. I said eventually – I had no plans at the time – but eventually I’m going to record by myself under my name, and I don’t really feel like going through the dumb perception battle of people who couldn’t be broad minded enough to understand the difference between Jack White and The White Stripes.”

‘Blunderbuss’ is scheduled to be released on White’s Third Man label on April 23. He’s due to play his debut UK solo show at London’s HMV Hammersmith Apollo on June 22, ahead of his slot at Radio 1’s Hackney Weekend (23-24). Prior to coming to the UK, White will be touring extensively across the US.

My Bloody Valentine to release new compilation album ‘EP’s 1988-1991’

0
My Bloody Valentine will release a new compilation album called 'EP's 1988-1991' on May 7. The band will also be re-releasing their two studio albums, 'Isn't Anything' and 'Loveless', on the same day. The compilation record draws together their 4 EP releases, 'Feed Me With Your Kiss', 'You Made M...

My Bloody Valentine will release a new compilation album called ‘EP’s 1988-1991’ on May 7.

The band will also be re-releasing their two studio albums, ‘Isn’t Anything’ and ‘Loveless’, on the same day. The compilation record draws together their 4 EP releases, ‘Feed Me With Your Kiss’, ‘You Made Me Realise’, ‘Glider’ and ‘Tremolo’ alongside 7 additional rare and previously un-released tracks.

The original two albums have been re-mastered by My Bloody Valentine main man Kevin Shields at Metropolis studios in London and ‘Loveless’ will come out as a 2-disc special edition featuring a previously unreleased re-mastering from original analogue tapes.

Formed in Dublin in 1983, the legendary band’s debut album was originally released on Creations Records in 1988 and ‘Loveless’, their seminal album, was released in November 1991.

Prior to their debut album, the band recorded a series of EP’s and mini-albums, which have been collated for the first time and appear on the new album.

The tracklistings for the new releases are as follows:

‘Isn’t Anything’:

‘Soft As Snow (But Warm Inside)’

‘Lose My Breath’

‘Cupid Come’

‘(When You Wake) You’re Still In A Dream’

‘No More Sorry’

‘All I Need’

‘Feed Me With Your Kiss’

‘Sueisfine’

‘Several Girls Galore’

‘You Never Should’

‘Nothing Much To Lose’

‘I Can See It (But I Can’t Feel It)’

‘Loveless’:

Disc 1 – Re-master from original tape

‘Only Shallow’

‘Loomer’

‘Touched’

‘To here Knows When’

‘When You Sleep’

‘I Only Said’

‘Come In Alone’

‘Sometimes’

‘Blown A Wish’

‘What You Know’

‘Soon’

Disc 2 – Mastered from original ½ inch analogue tapes

‘Only Shallow’

‘Loomer’

‘Touched’

‘To here Knows When’

‘When You Sleep’

‘I Only Said’

‘Come In Alone’

‘Sometimes’

‘Blown A Wish’

‘What You Know’

‘Soon’

EP’s 1988-1991:

Disc 1

‘You Made Me Realise’ (from You Made Me Realise EP)

‘Slow’ (from You Made Me Realise EP)

‘Thorn’ (from You Made Me Realise EP)

‘Cigarette In Your Bed’ (from You Made Me Realise EP)

‘Drive It All Over Me’ (from You Made Me Realise EP)

‘Feed Me With Your Kiss’ (from Feed Me With Your Kiss EP)

‘I Believe’ (from Feed Me With Your Kiss EP)

‘Emptiness Inside’ (from Feed Me With Your Kiss EP)

‘I Need No Trust’ (from Feed Me With Your Kiss EP)

‘Soon’ (from Glider EP)

‘Don’t Ask Why’ (from Glider EP)

‘Off Your Face’ (from Glider EP)

Disc 2

‘To Here Knows When’ (from Tremolo EP)

‘Swallow’ (from Tremolo EP)

‘Honey Power’ (from Tremolo EP)

‘Moon Song’ (from Tremolo EP)

‘Instrumental no. 2’ (distributed on a free 7” with the first 5000 Isn’t Anything LPs)

‘Instrumental no.1’ (distributed on a free 7” with the first 5000 Isn’t Anything LPs)

‘Glider’ (full length version) (B-side on the ‘Soon (The Andrew Weatherall Mix)’ 12”)

‘Sugar’ (promo only B-Side on Only Shallow LP, France only)

‘Angel’ (previously unreleased)

‘Good For You’ (previously unreleased)

‘How Do You Do It’ (previously unreleased)

The Beatles’ ‘Yellow Submarine’ remastered for re-release

0
The Beatles' 1968 animated move and accompanying album, Yellow Submarine, has been restored to be re-released on May 28. The team behind the new release decided against the usual practice of using automated software to digitally clean up the film. Instead, due to the "delicate nature of the hand-...

The Beatles‘ 1968 animated move and accompanying album, Yellow Submarine, has been restored to be re-released on May 28.

The team behind the new release decided against the usual practice of using automated software to digitally clean up the film. Instead, due to the “delicate nature of the hand-drawn original artwork”, the team up-dated the film frame-by-frame.

Yellow Submarine, based on the song by John Lennon and Paul McCartney, follows the Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, as they travel to a city under the sea to confront the music hating Blue Meanies.

The re-packaged film will also feature a short making-of documentary, audio commentaries, behind-the-scene photographs and a 16-page booklet that includes an essay by Pixar and Walt Disney chief, John Lasseter.

In the sleeve-notes, Lasseter writes: “As a fan of animation and as a filmmaker, I tip my hat to the artists of Yellow Submarine, whose revolutionary work helped pave the way for the fantastically diverse world of animation that we all enjoy today.”

Ahead of the Yellow Submarine DVD and Blu-Ray and the repackaged soundtrack, Candlewick Press will publish a book of the screenplay from the movie on April 26. The publishers promise the book will showcase “the light-hearted wit of the film’s script”.

The Jazz Baroness

Mini-bio of the great Thelonius Monk... Even in the mid-20th century, a genius still needed a patron. For Thelonious Sphere Monk, the “high priest of bebop”, that patron was Panonica De Koenigswarter, born into the über-rich Rothschild family. On a trip to NYC, a friend played her Monk’s “Round Midnight” and, on hearing the tune, ‘Nica’ experienced a damascene conversion to jazz. The interchange between high society and perceived low-life is a defining feature of bohemian life, but even in this context, the relationship between Monk and Nica was unusual. The pair were not lovers (Monk remained devoted to his wife Nellie) but kindred spirits, floating around NY’s vibrant jazz scene, encountering kindly bemusement on the way. Cats, in short, dug her; she was hip. Some folks who didn’t dig the Baroness’ downward mobility, however, were her family. Nica’s redefinition of her life vexed the Rothschilds, who will still not discuss it. And this is where The Jazz Baroness comes unstuck. Made by Hannah Rothschild, Nica’s niece, and someone you would think literally born to tell this story, the film never gets over one hurdle – the fact that family members who might lift the veil on Nica’s enigma refuse to talk, even to another family member. “What are you doing this for?” one unseen relative asks, crushingly. “Is it just for the publicity?” Compared to Clint Eastwood and Charlotte Zwerin’s Thelonious Monk: Straight No Chaser, The Jazz Baroness isn’t flattering. There’s simply not enough Nica to go around, so this becomes a mini-Monk bio, handicapped by Rothschild’s lack of empathy with jazz and its players (an interview with Sonny Rollins is particularly painful), and her fatuous attempts to draw parallels between the lives of someone of unimaginable wealth and someone whose father was born a slave. Unwittingly, the film’s about access (something that, as Withnail & I had it, is “free to those who can afford it, very expensive to those who can’t”). Where doors flew open for her aunt, for Rothschild, alas, they remain stubbornly closed. EXTRAS: Over 100 minutes of extended interviews. John Robinson

Mini-bio of the great Thelonius Monk…

Even in the mid-20th century, a genius still needed a patron. For Thelonious Sphere Monk, the “high priest of bebop”, that patron was Panonica De Koenigswarter, born into the über-rich Rothschild family. On a trip to NYC, a friend played her Monk’s “Round Midnight” and, on hearing the tune, ‘Nica’ experienced a damascene conversion to jazz.

The interchange between high society and perceived low-life is a defining feature of bohemian life, but even in this context, the relationship between Monk and Nica was unusual. The pair were not lovers (Monk remained devoted to his wife Nellie) but kindred spirits, floating around NY’s vibrant jazz scene, encountering kindly bemusement on the way. Cats, in short, dug her; she was hip.

Some folks who didn’t dig the Baroness’ downward mobility, however, were her family. Nica’s redefinition of her life vexed the Rothschilds, who will still not discuss it. And this is where The Jazz Baroness comes unstuck. Made by Hannah Rothschild, Nica’s niece, and someone you would think literally born to tell this story, the film never gets over one hurdle – the fact that family members who might lift the veil on Nica’s enigma refuse to talk, even to another family member. “What are you doing this for?” one unseen relative asks, crushingly. “Is it just for the publicity?”

Compared to Clint Eastwood and Charlotte Zwerin’s Thelonious Monk: Straight No Chaser, The Jazz Baroness isn’t flattering. There’s simply not enough Nica to go around, so this becomes a mini-Monk bio, handicapped by Rothschild’s lack of empathy with jazz and its players (an interview with Sonny Rollins is particularly painful), and her fatuous attempts to draw parallels between the lives of someone of unimaginable wealth and someone whose father was born a slave.

Unwittingly, the film’s about access (something that, as Withnail & I had it, is “free to those who can afford it, very expensive to those who can’t”). Where doors flew open for her aunt, for Rothschild, alas, they remain stubbornly closed.

EXTRAS: Over 100 minutes of extended interviews.

John Robinson

Neil Young On His New Album, ‘Americana’

0
Neil Young has penned brief historical details about each of the songs on Americana, his forthcoming album with Crazy Horse. Comprised on classic American folk songs including “Clementine”, “She’ll Be Coming Round The Mountain” and “Gallow’s Pole”, it features some arrangements orig...

Neil Young has penned brief historical details about each of the songs on Americana, his forthcoming album with Crazy Horse.

Comprised on classic American folk songs including “Clementine”, “She’ll Be Coming Round The Mountain” and “Gallow’s Pole”, it features some arrangements originally made by The Squires, the band Neil Young formed in 1963 while at High School in Winnepeg.

The album, which also includes guest vocals from Young’s Buffalo Springfield and CSNY band mate Stephen Stills, is released on June 4 on Reprise Records. Stills provides vocals on “This Land Is Your Land”, along with Young’s wife, Pegi.

Here are Young’s liner notes for the album.

Oh, Susannah

This song written by Stephen Foster was originally performed on September 11, 1847. The Americana version was arranged with a new melody by Tim Rose and was originally performed by The Big Three in 1963, and updated by Tim Rose and the Thorns in 1964. This band did a lot of arrangements of folk songs that were changed to be rock and roll songs and called folk-rock. Tim Rose was one of the pioneers of folk- rock. Much of the music of Americana is based on this idea.

Clementine

This American folk ballad is believed to be based on “Down By The River Liv’d a Maiden” by H.S. Thompson 1863. However, it is usually credited to Percy Montrose, 1884 or Barker Bradford from about the same period. The Americana arrangement extends the folk process, using many of the original words and a new melody. The song tells the story of either a bereaved lover recalling his lost sweetheart, or a father missing his lost daughter. In both cases the daughter has drowned in an accident. The song is now famous as an American children’s song. The verse about Clementine’s sister has been omitted from most children’s versions. This verse has different meanings depending on whether the point of view of the singer is taken as the lover or the father.

Tom Dula

This folk song, writer unknown, is based on the 1866 murder of a woman named Laura Foster, who was stabbed to death with a knife in Wilkes County, North Carolina. Tom Dula, a confederate soldier returned from the war and Laura Foster’s lover, was convicted of her murder and hanged May 1, 1868. Grayson, mentioned in the song, was instrumental in supplying information to the posse that eventually found Dula. Dula had another lover, prior to his leaving for the war, named Anne Melton. It was her comments that led to the discovery of Foster’s body. She was charged with murder but was acquitted based on Dula’s word. Dula’s last statement on the gallows was “Gentlemen, do you see this hand? I didn’t harm a hair on the girl’s head.” Anne Melton died insane a few years later. The Americana arrangement is from The Squires with a new melody and the original lyrics.

Gallows Pole

This centuries-old folk song, writer unknown, probably originates in Finland. It is about a woman condemned to die and telling the hangman to wait because someone was coming to rescue her with either money (gold) or information proving her innocence. The folk process enhanced this over the years and it has had many interpretations. The Americana arrangement, which assumes the condemned is a man, is based on Odetta’s interpretation, now an enduring American folk classic.

Get A Job

A song about a man who has not been able to find work, and is assumed lazy and a liar by his woman, “Get A Job” is included in Americana because it is a genuine folk song with all of the true characteristics. This song was written by Richard Lewis of the Silhouettes, although credit is shared with the whole group because they did the vocal arrangement. The hit recording performed by The Silhouettes was released in 1957. The Americana version follows the original arrangement.

Travel On

“Gotta Travel On”, adapted by Paul Clayton and others from a British folk tune, was recorded by Billy Grammer in 1958. His version is an American classic. The song tells of a man who has to keep moving for a variety of reasons, all common with American life. The Americana arrangement is based on Billy Grammer’s version with some lyric changes.

High Flyin’ Bird

Written by Billy Edd Wheeler, this is a folk song performed by The Company in 1964. Stephen Stills was the lead singer. The song is about freedom, life and death. The Americana arrangement is based on The Squires’ 1964 version.

Jesus’ Chariot (She’ll Be Coming Round The Mountain)

Written in the 1800s based on an old Negro spiritual, this song refers to the second coming of Jesus and “she” is the chariot Jesus is coming on. Some interpret this as the end of the world. Others have said that “she” refers to union organizer Mary Harris “Mother” Jones going to promote formation of labor unions in the Appalachian coal mining camps. The Americana arrangement continues the folk process with a new melody, a new title and a combination of lyric sources.

This Land Is Your Land

This folk song was written by Woody Guthrie in the 1940s to a pre-existing melody as a response to “God Bless America” which Guthrie was tired of hearing. The lyrics Guthrie sang varied over time, but the lyrics sung in the Americana version were in the original manuscript of the song.

Wayfarin’ Stranger

This 19th century folk song is about a soul traveling through life, perhaps envisioning the end approaching. The Americana arrangement is influenced by the Burl Ives 1944 recording, with the same words and melody.

God Save The Queen

Written in the 18th century with possible melodic roots in the 17th century, this anthem has been sung throughout the British Commonwealth and may have been sung in North America before the American Revolution and Declaration of Independence in 1776, which rejected British sovereignty. The Americana arrangement draws from the original melody and changes some melody and lyrics in the folk process, also adding lyrics of the same melody taken from “My Country ’Tis Of Thee”, in recognition of the war of Independence and America’s transition to freedom.

Slash confirms Guns N’ Roses will not perform at Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame induction

0

Former Guns N' Roses guitarist Slash has confirmed that the band's original line-up will not perform together at their Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame induction next month. Last month (February 15), it was reported that all the members who had contributed to the band's seminal album 'Appetite For Destruction' would be attending the ceremony, which takes place in Cleveland, Ohio on April 14, but Slash has now confirmed that they will all be simply attending and not performing. Speaking to QMI, the guitarist said he had been caught unaware by all the furore that has been caused by their appearance at the induction as he had been away from the band for so long. He said: "Either it hasn't hit me yet or maybe it’s been so long since I had anything to do with Guns N’ Roses that I just don't really get it. And we're not playing. I would imagine that they asked us to play but I know that we're not playing." The guitarist also confirmed that the band's former drummer Stephen Adler would be attending, but said he couldn't confirm for the attendance of any of his other former bandmates. Slash releases his second solo album 'Apocalyptic Love' on May 21 and will play a one-off UK show at London's HMV Hammersmith Apollo on June 6. The show is two days before Slash headlines the second stage at this summer's Download Festival. The current line-up of Guns N' Roses, meanwhile, are set to tour the UK later this year. The band, who are currently working on new material for the follow-up to 'Chinese Democracy', will play seven shows across the UK as part of a full European tour this May. They will play: Nottingham Capital FM Arena (May 19) Liverpool Echo Arena (20) Newcastle Metro Radio Arena (23) Glasgow SECC (25) Birmingham LG Arena (26) Manchester Evening News Arena (29) London O2 Arena (31)

Former Guns N’ Roses guitarist Slash has confirmed that the band’s original line-up will not perform together at their Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame induction next month.

Last month (February 15), it was reported that all the members who had contributed to the band’s seminal album ‘Appetite For Destruction’ would be attending the ceremony, which takes place in Cleveland, Ohio on April 14, but Slash has now confirmed that they will all be simply attending and not performing.

Speaking to QMI, the guitarist said he had been caught unaware by all the furore that has been caused by their appearance at the induction as he had been away from the band for so long.

He said: “Either it hasn’t hit me yet or maybe it’s been so long since I had anything to do with Guns N’ Roses that I just don’t really get it. And we’re not playing. I would imagine that they asked us to play but I know that we’re not playing.”

The guitarist also confirmed that the band’s former drummer Stephen Adler would be attending, but said he couldn’t confirm for the attendance of any of his other former bandmates.

Slash releases his second solo album ‘Apocalyptic Love’ on May 21 and will play a one-off UK show at London’s HMV Hammersmith Apollo on June 6. The show is two days before Slash headlines the second stage at this summer’s Download Festival.

The current line-up of Guns N’ Roses, meanwhile, are set to tour the UK later this year. The band, who are currently working on new material for the follow-up to ‘Chinese Democracy’, will play seven shows across the UK as part of a full European tour this May.

They will play:

Nottingham Capital FM Arena (May 19)

Liverpool Echo Arena (20)

Newcastle Metro Radio Arena (23)

Glasgow SECC (25)

Birmingham LG Arena (26)

Manchester Evening News Arena (29)

London O2 Arena (31)

Kiss’ Gene Simmons brands Rihanna ‘fake’

0
Kiss' Gene Simmons has branded pop artists such as Rihanna 'fake' in an interview promoting his band's forthcoming US tour. The bassist was referring to pop singers who now play the stadiums once usually only filled by rock acts like his band Kiss, and called their music "bullshit". In the interv...

Kiss‘ Gene Simmons has branded pop artists such as Rihanna ‘fake’ in an interview promoting his band’s forthcoming US tour.

The bassist was referring to pop singers who now play the stadiums once usually only filled by rock acts like his band Kiss, and called their music “bullshit”. In the interview with Billboard, Simmons said: “We’re sick and tired of girls getting up there with dancers and karaoke tapes in back of them.”

He added: “No fake bullshit. Leave that to the Rihanna, Shimiana and anyone else who ends their name with an ‘a’.”

Simmons was speaking as Kiss announced that they will be touring across the US this summer with co-headliners Motley Crue. The two bands will each play 90-minute sets on the 40-date trek across the country.

Kiss will headline this summer’s Sonisphere festival, along with Faith No More and Queen with Adam Lambert.

The band, who are adding the finishing touches to their 20th studio album, will headline the opening night (July 9), with comedian Tim Minchin playing before them.

The Black Keys apologise to Nickleback for calling them ‘shit’ – video

0
The Black Keys have apologised to Nickleback for calling them shit in an interview with Rolling Stone earlier this year. The band were speaking to MTV Canada when Patrick Carney made his apology. Although it remains to be seen whether Nickleback will accept his admission of guilt, as the duo burs...

The Black Keys have apologised to Nickleback for calling them shit in an interview with Rolling Stone earlier this year.

The band were speaking to MTV Canada when Patrick Carney made his apology. Although it remains to be seen whether Nickleback will accept his admission of guilt, as the duo burst out into fits of giggles while saying sorry.

Drummer Patrick carney said: “I didn’t mean to single them out, it just came out. There’s much worse bands that Nickleback…maybe. That was the worst apology.”

In his initial comments, Carney told Rolling Stone that he disliked the Canadian rockers as “rock & roll is dying because people became OK with Nickleback being the biggest band in the world”.

He added: “So they became OK with the idea that the biggest rock band in the world is always going to be shit – therefore you should never try to be the biggest rock band in the world. Fuck that. Rock & roll is the music I feel the most passionately about, and I don’t like to see it fucking ruined and spoon-fed down our throats in this watered-down, post-grunge crap, horrendous shit. When people start lumping us into that kind of shit, it’s like, ‘Fuck you’, honestly.”

Carney’s original statement was met with a humorous response from Nickleback, who thanked the drummer on their Twitter page for saying they were the “biggest rock band in the world”. Carney admits he is still wary of Nickleback’s Chad Kroeger, and says he’ll avoid him if he sees him, as he reckons the singer will most likely “punch us in the face”.

Scroll down and click to view The Black Keys apologise to Nickleback in an interview with MTV.

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

John Lydon’s Public Image Ltd announce new UK dates

0
Public Image Ltd have added more dates to their summer UK tour in support of their new album 'This Is PiL'. The band will kick off their tour at Bournemouth's O2 Academy on July 31, and will finish up at Brighton's Concorde 2 on August 16. The tour will stop off at Reading, Wolverhampton, Blackpo...

Public Image Ltd have added more dates to their summer UK tour in support of their new album ‘This Is PiL’.

The band will kick off their tour at Bournemouth’s O2 Academy on July 31, and will finish up at Brighton’s Concorde 2 on August 16. The tour will stop off at Reading, Wolverhampton, Blackpool and Newcastle, among other cities, along the way.

PiL, who release their new album on May 28, currently finish up their touring schedule with two festival appearances at the Beautiful Days festival in Devon on August 18 and Summer Sundae in Leicester on the weekend of August 17-19.

They will also play two shows at London’s Heaven on April 1-2, prior to the release of their ‘One Drop’ EP on April 21, to coincide with this year’s Record Store Day.

PiL helped kick off the countdown to Record Store Day 2012 last night (March 19), with a tiny show at the Hoxton Gallery.

After the show, Lydon took part in a Q&A session where he launched into an extended rant encompassing his views on record labels, PiL’s recent London gig as part of BBC 6 Music’s 10th birthday celebrations and a bizarre comment about Cliff Richard.

Lydon said: “I live in LA, I can download everything. I downloaded Cliff Richard’s colostomy bag.”

Public Image Ltd will play:

O2 Academy Bournemouth (July 31)

Wolverhampton Wulfurn Hall (August 3)

Blackpool Empress Ballroom (4)

O2 Academy Newcastle (6)

Hatfield University Forum (12)

O2 Academy Bristol (13)

Brighton Concorde 2 (15, 16)

The Charlatans to headline Lounge On The Farm Festival

0
The Charlatans will headline this year's Lounge On The Farm Festival. The band, who are set to tour the UK later this year playing their 1997 album 'Tellin' Stories' from start to finish, will headline the event's closing night (July 8). The event takes place on July 6-8 at Merton Farm near Can...

The Charlatans will headline this year’s Lounge On The Farm Festival.

The band, who are set to tour the UK later this year playing their 1997 album ‘Tellin’ Stories’ from start to finish, will headline the event’s closing night (July 8).

The event takes place on July 6-8 at Merton Farm near Canterbury and will also be headlined by The Wombats and Emeli Sande.

Also confirmed to play the event are Toddla T, Niki & The Dove, Mystery Jets, Stay+, Spector, Roots Manuva and over 30 other acts.

See Loungeonthefarm.co.uk for more details.

The Lounge On The Farm Festival line-up so far is:

The Charlatans

The Wombats

Emeli Sande

Roots Manuva

Chic feat. Nile Rodgers

Goldie

Mystery Jets

Jess Mills

Man Like Me

Niki & The Dove

Pale Seas

Peace

Roni Size

Roska & Jamie George

Rudimental

Scratch Perverts

Seye

Sound Of Guns

Spector

Stay +

Swiss Lips

The Good Natured

The Heatwave

The Milk

The Other Tribe

Toddla T

Troumaca

Various Cruelties

Zinc

Aluna George

Bastille

Caspa

Cave Painting

Charli XCX

Clean Bandit

Disclosure

Dismantle

Dub Pistols

Escapists

Fake Blood

Gemini

Herve

Jagga

Jake Bugg

Jaymo & Andy George

Reading And Leeds Festivals boss: ‘If The Smiths reformed, it would destroy their legacy’

0

The organiser of the Reading And Leeds Festivals has said he hopes The Smiths never reform as it would "destroy their legacy". The beloved indie band split in 1987 and have batted away suggestions about a reformation ever since, with guitarist Johnny Marr recently joking to NME that he will only reform The Smiths if the current UK government steps down. Melvin Benn, chief executive of organisers Festival Republic, has said that he would not be excited at the prospect of a reunion of the band and would be against it happening at all. Asked about this, Benn told NME: "I think if The Smiths reformed it would destroy their legacy personally. I’m sure grown men would cry if it happened but I wouldn’t want to see them reforming." Then asked if he had any qualms about Oasis reuniting, Benn said that he did not and he would happily book them again. Speaking about this, he replied: "Hopefully there will come a day when Oasis do the same [reunite] but I hope it doesn’t come too soon. Oasis were just one of those bands where you walked away feeling happy. It was very rare you could go and watch Oasis and not have a great time. Whether we wait until 2015, 2020 or 2040 I don’t know, but it'd be nice if it happened at some point."

The organiser of the Reading And Leeds Festivals has said he hopes The Smiths never reform as it would “destroy their legacy”.

The beloved indie band split in 1987 and have batted away suggestions about a reformation ever since, with guitarist Johnny Marr recently joking to NME that he will only reform The Smiths if the current UK government steps down.

Melvin Benn, chief executive of organisers Festival Republic, has said that he would not be excited at the prospect of a reunion of the band and would be against it happening at all.

Asked about this, Benn told NME: “I think if The Smiths reformed it would destroy their legacy personally. I’m sure grown men would cry if it happened but I wouldn’t want to see them reforming.”

Then asked if he had any qualms about Oasis reuniting, Benn said that he did not and he would happily book them again.

Speaking about this, he replied: “Hopefully there will come a day when Oasis do the same [reunite] but I hope it doesn’t come too soon. Oasis were just one of those bands where you walked away feeling happy. It was very rare you could go and watch Oasis and not have a great time. Whether we wait until 2015, 2020 or 2040 I don’t know, but it’d be nice if it happened at some point.”

Lauryn Hill announces first UK show for five years

0
Lauryn Hill has announced her first UK show for over five years. The former Fugees singer, who is set to release her long-awaited second studio album 'The Return' later this year, will headline London's IndigO2 on April 14. The show is Hill's first in the UK since the summer of 2007 and will se...

Lauryn Hill has announced her first UK show for over five years.

The former Fugees singer, who is set to release her long-awaited second studio album ‘The Return’ later this year, will headline London’s IndigO2 on April 14.

The show is Hill’s first in the UK since the summer of 2007 and will see her debut new material from her second album. Her second LP will be released a full 14 years after her multi-million selling debut record ‘The Miseducation Of Lauryn Hill’ came out.

The singer most recently made headlines in the summer of last year, when she was sued for harassment and unpaid wages by her former guitarist Jay Gore for over $20,000 (£12,250).

In the lawsuit, Gore accused Hill of regularly dishing out public dress down members of her band in front of groups of people and of not paying him correctly. The case has not yet been settled.

The Flaming Lips include Coldplay, Ke$ha, Bon Iver on Record Store Day LP ‘Fwends…’

0
The Flaming Lips have reached out to some of their "fwends", including 'Tik Tok' singer Ke$ha, to release a limited edition double album. The band will release the record on April 21, to coincide with Record Store Day. Wayne Coyne's band have teamed up with a variety of artists including Bon Iver...

The Flaming Lips have reached out to some of their “fwends”, including ‘Tik Tok’ singer Ke$ha, to release a limited edition double album.

The band will release the record on April 21, to coincide with Record Store Day. Wayne Coyne’s band have teamed up with a variety of artists including Bon Iver, Yoko Ono, Nick Cave, My Morning Jacket and Coldplay’s Chris Martin for the record.

‘The Flaming Lips And Heady Fwends’, which will be released on a double multi-coloured vinyl set, contains new recordings and songs that have appeared on the band’s recent EPs.

There will only be one, limited pressing of the album as the band have said they will not be making any more copies of the rare release. According to the press release, the album documents “a series of unique and experimental sessions”.

Georgia metallers Mastodon that they were releasing a cover of The Flaming Lips ‘A Spoonful Weighs A Ton’, to celebrate this year’s Record Store Day.

‘The Flaming Lips And Heady Fwends’ tracklisting is:

Side 1:

‘2012 (featuring Ke$ha and Biz Markie)’

‘Ashes in the Air (featuring Bon Iver)’

‘Helping the Retarded to Know God (featuring Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros)’

Side 2:

‘Supermoon Made Me Want To Pee (featuring Prefuse 73)’

‘Children of the Moon (featuring Tame Impala)’

‘That Ain’t My Trip (featuring My Morning Jacket’s Jim James)’

‘You, Man? Human? (featuring Nick Cave)’

Side 3:

‘I’m Working at NASA On Acid (featuring Lightning Bolt)’

‘Do It! (featuring Yoko Ono)’

‘Is David Bowie Dying? (featuring Neon Indian)’

Side 4:

‘The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face (featuring Erykah Badu)’

‘Thunder Drops (featuring New Fumes)’

‘I Don’t Want You to Die (featuring Coldplay’s Chris Martin)’

Regina Spektor announces two UK live shows

0
Regina Spektor has announced a pair of UK live dates for later this year. The singer, who releases her new album 'What We Saw From The Cheap Seats' on May 12, will play shows in London and Manchester in July. She will first play London's Royal Albert Hall on July 2, before moving onto Manchester...

Regina Spektor has announced a pair of UK live dates for later this year.

The singer, who releases her new album ‘What We Saw From The Cheap Seats’ on May 12, will play shows in London and Manchester in July.

She will first play London’s Royal Albert Hall on July 2, before moving onto Manchester’s O2 Apollo on July 4. The dates are her first in the UK for over a year.

‘What We Saw From The Cheap Seats’ has been produced by Avenged Sevenfold/Maroon 5 man Mike Elizondo and is the follow-up to her 2009 fifth album ‘Far’. Spektor has already debuted the album’s lead off single ‘All The Rowboats’ online, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen.

The singer will also a seven-inch single on Record Store Day featuring two Russian cover songs ‘The Prayer Of François Villon’ and ‘Old Jacket’.

All The Rowboats by reginaspektor

Jack White makes surprise appearance at ‘Blunderbuss’ playback in London

0
Jack White made a surprise appearance in London last night (March 20) to launch his solo album 'Blunderbuss'. The ex-White Stripes man turned up at a playback of the album at the Debating Chamber at London's County Hall. After the album was played on vinyl from the rafters of the room, the Mayor...

Jack White made a surprise appearance in London last night (March 20) to launch his solo album ‘Blunderbuss’.

The ex-White Stripes man turned up at a playback of the album at the Debating Chamber at London’s County Hall.

After the album was played on vinyl from the rafters of the room, the Mayor Of Lambeth, Councillor Christiana Valcarcel appeared in full robes.

She then delighted the audience by introducing White himself to the front of the chamber. While he did not perform, he was quizzed by the Mayor and the audience in a rare interview. “You should be proud of yourself!” she told him, before commanding, “We’re talking about you tonight, it’s my turn to take you to task!”

Of ‘Blunderbuss’, White said: “It just happened one song at a time, like it always does, let the song be in charge and let the song tell you what you’re doing and you’re just a servant of the music at that point. When you think you’re in control of the song then that’s when you’re making a mistake I think.”

Picking up on the single ‘Love Interruption’, he added: “It’s hard to put love in a song because it’s been used for so long, thousands of times in plays, paintings, poems and if you’re going to say that word I think you have to really put a twist on it for yourself. If you’re going to use the word ‘love’, I wanted to provoke some kind of thought that’s what I wanted it to do for me.”

On the challenge of going solo, White explained: “I’m still in a couple of bands so I’m not missing anything by doing this. But I didn’t know I was doing it until I was doing it, four of five songs in I thought I guess this is turning into something.”

‘Blunderbuss’ is scheduled to be released on White’s Third Man label on April 23. He’s due to play his debut UK solo show at London’s HMV Hammersmith Apollo on June 22, ahead of his slot at Radio 1’s Hackney Weekend (23-24). Prior to coming to the UK, White will be touring extensively across the US.

Jack White, “Blunderbuss”

0

Three weeks ago, I was fortunate enough to be in New York interviewing Jack White for what will be Uncut’s next cover story. The trip took in White’s unveiling of his two new bands on Saturday Night Live (you can watch the performances here) and a couple of pretty intense one-on-ones, the first of which became a fairly epic grapple of sorts. The reason for all this, of course, is the reasonably imminent arrival of White’s first solo album, “Blunderbuss”; a record which, I think, fulfils most of our highest expectations for this next step in the story. It marks something of a bridgehead in his career, where the focus inevitably shifts onto White, rather than onto the concepts and confidence tricks with which he has habitually packaged his projects. Still, though, “Blunderbuss” is laden with brilliant topspin, signposted by a new colour code – pale blue – and those two exceptional all-male and all-female bands with which he is playing this new music. As “Love Interruption” and “Sixteen Saltines” may have hinted, plenty of “Blunderbuss” reads at least superficially like a document on battles and misunderstandings between the sexes: even the sole cover version, a roistering vamp through Rudolph Toomb’s “I’m Shakin’”, is consistent to the theme, with its jump-jive era retelling of the story of Samson and Delilah. The first three songs – “Missing Pieces”, “Sixteen Saltines” and “Freedom At 21” (the album’s biggest stylistic departure: a grid of sliding beats and spat lyrics that betrays an inventive recycling of hip-hop dynamics) –in isolation look suspiciously like invective against womankind. But “Blunderbuss” is a more complex and many-sided piece of work, with shifting narratives and perspectives, White voicing male and female parts in at least one song (the outstanding “Hypocritical Kiss”) and a male protagonist on his knees begging for absolution in the valedictory “Take Me With You When You Go”. White is predictably proud and defensive about his various work since the White Stripes’ “Icky Thump”, but there’s no doubt that “Blunderbuss” is the record that most of that band’s fans have been wanting him to make for the past few years: “Sixteen Saltines”, in particular, sounds more or less like a fleshed-out take on the “Elephant”-era sound, particularly “The Hardest Button To Button” (In case you hadn’t heard, White’s live bands are playing songs from throughout his career: no Year Zero absolutism here, pleasingly). Interestingly, though, if there’s one White Stripes album that “Blunderbuss” reminds me of, it’s “Get Behind Me Satan”, with its tricksy R&B piano songs, its playfulness and viciousness. Flourishing piano lines (often played by Brooke Waggoner rather than White. Keyboardists are central to the new live bands- hence the recruitment of Ikey Owens from The Mars Volta as her opposite number in the boy band) anchor a bunch of the best songs here, especially in a run through the middle of “Blunderbuss” that ranks as one of the best sequences White has ever recorded. It begins with the title track, a country-tinged story song that feels very much like a sequel to “Carolina Drama” (the best track, I think, on the Raconteurs’ underrated “Consolers Of The Lonely”), rich with the imagery and swagger of mid-‘70s Dylan. Then there are two extraordinary piano numbers, around which the whole album hinges: “Hypocritical Kiss” and “Weep Themselves To Sleep”, the latter a wonderfully bombastic examination/indictment of male vanity (“And men who fight the world and love the girls the girls that try to hold their hand behind them”) that’s also blessed with the album’s best and most indignant guitar solo. The piano that runs through these two is as much like that of Mike Garson as Nicky Hopkins, which made me think a fair bit of certain neglected congruencies between White and David Bowie. Those are moved on, anyhow, by the sensational “I’m Shakin’” cover and another piano shitkicker, “Trash Tongue Talker”, which features the guitarist from Jeff The Brotherhood among other excellent musicians, but recalls, variously, Jerry Lee Lewis, Chuck Berry’s “You Never Can Tell” and, as White himself is happy to point out, James Booker. After that, there’s “Hip (Eponymous) Poor Boy”, a rackety New Orleans piano nursery rhyme that might just be the catchiest song on “Blunderbuss”, as well as a rant against hipster posturing and roleplay that reads more self-knowingly than White would probably admit; and a downhome old-time waltz, “I Guess I Should Go To Sleep”, assisted this time by Pokey Lafarge and his band. Waltzes recur throughout “Blunderbuss”, not least on the closing “Take Me With You When You Go”; a song which, along with the shimmering “On And On And On” which precedes it, provide a kind of dreamlike resolution. Among all its other pleasures, “Blunderbuss” has a neat narrative arc, which seems to leave White – or, let’s be scrupulous about this, his protagonist – possessed of a new, contemplative level of self-knowledge. A mature piece of work, you could say, and a terrific album. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

Three weeks ago, I was fortunate enough to be in New York interviewing Jack White for what will be Uncut’s next cover story. The trip took in White’s unveiling of his two new bands on Saturday Night Live (you can watch the performances here) and a couple of pretty intense one-on-ones, the first of which became a fairly epic grapple of sorts.

The reason for all this, of course, is the reasonably imminent arrival of White’s first solo album, “Blunderbuss”; a record which, I think, fulfils most of our highest expectations for this next step in the story. It marks something of a bridgehead in his career, where the focus inevitably shifts onto White, rather than onto the concepts and confidence tricks with which he has habitually packaged his projects. Still, though, “Blunderbuss” is laden with brilliant topspin, signposted by a new colour code – pale blue – and those two exceptional all-male and all-female bands with which he is playing this new music.

As “Love Interruption” and “Sixteen Saltines” may have hinted, plenty of “Blunderbuss” reads at least superficially like a document on battles and misunderstandings between the sexes: even the sole cover version, a roistering vamp through Rudolph Toomb’s “I’m Shakin’”, is consistent to the theme, with its jump-jive era retelling of the story of Samson and Delilah.

The first three songs – “Missing Pieces”, “Sixteen Saltines” and “Freedom At 21” (the album’s biggest stylistic departure: a grid of sliding beats and spat lyrics that betrays an inventive recycling of hip-hop dynamics) –in isolation look suspiciously like invective against womankind. But “Blunderbuss” is a more complex and many-sided piece of work, with shifting narratives and perspectives, White voicing male and female parts in at least one song (the outstanding “Hypocritical Kiss”) and a male protagonist on his knees begging for absolution in the valedictory “Take Me With You When You Go”.

White is predictably proud and defensive about his various work since the White Stripes’ “Icky Thump”, but there’s no doubt that “Blunderbuss” is the record that most of that band’s fans have been wanting him to make for the past few years: “Sixteen Saltines”, in particular, sounds more or less like a fleshed-out take on the “Elephant”-era sound, particularly “The Hardest Button To Button” (In case you hadn’t heard, White’s live bands are playing songs from throughout his career: no Year Zero absolutism here, pleasingly).

Interestingly, though, if there’s one White Stripes album that “Blunderbuss” reminds me of, it’s “Get Behind Me Satan”, with its tricksy R&B piano songs, its playfulness and viciousness. Flourishing piano lines (often played by Brooke Waggoner rather than White. Keyboardists are central to the new live bands- hence the recruitment of Ikey Owens from The Mars Volta as her opposite number in the boy band) anchor a bunch of the best songs here, especially in a run through the middle of “Blunderbuss” that ranks as one of the best sequences White has ever recorded.

It begins with the title track, a country-tinged story song that feels very much like a sequel to “Carolina Drama” (the best track, I think, on the Raconteurs’ underrated “Consolers Of The Lonely”), rich with the imagery and swagger of mid-‘70s Dylan. Then there are two extraordinary piano numbers, around which the whole album hinges: “Hypocritical Kiss” and “Weep Themselves To Sleep”, the latter a wonderfully bombastic examination/indictment of male vanity (“And men who fight the world and love the girls the girls that try to hold their hand behind them”) that’s also blessed with the album’s best and most indignant guitar solo.

The piano that runs through these two is as much like that of Mike Garson as Nicky Hopkins, which made me think a fair bit of certain neglected congruencies between White and David Bowie. Those are moved on, anyhow, by the sensational “I’m Shakin’” cover and another piano shitkicker, “Trash Tongue Talker”, which features the guitarist from Jeff The Brotherhood among other excellent musicians, but recalls, variously, Jerry Lee Lewis, Chuck Berry’s “You Never Can Tell” and, as White himself is happy to point out, James Booker.

After that, there’s “Hip (Eponymous) Poor Boy”, a rackety New Orleans piano nursery rhyme that might just be the catchiest song on “Blunderbuss”, as well as a rant against hipster posturing and roleplay that reads more self-knowingly than White would probably admit; and a downhome old-time waltz, “I Guess I Should Go To Sleep”, assisted this time by Pokey Lafarge and his band.

Waltzes recur throughout “Blunderbuss”, not least on the closing “Take Me With You When You Go”; a song which, along with the shimmering “On And On And On” which precedes it, provide a kind of dreamlike resolution. Among all its other pleasures, “Blunderbuss” has a neat narrative arc, which seems to leave White – or, let’s be scrupulous about this, his protagonist – possessed of a new, contemplative level of self-knowledge. A mature piece of work, you could say, and a terrific album.

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

Soulwax remix Arcade Fire’s ‘Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)’ – listen

0
Soulwax have remixed Arcade Fire's 'Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)'. The Belgian dance-rock pioneers have reworked the track, taken from Arcade Fire's third album, 'The Suburbs'. You can listen to the track, which premiered on Zane Lowe's BBC Radio 1 show last night (March 19), by scrolling...

Soulwax have remixed Arcade Fire’s ‘Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)’.

The Belgian dance-rock pioneers have reworked the track, taken from Arcade Fire‘s third album, ‘The Suburbs’. You can listen to the track, which premiered on Zane Lowe’s BBC Radio 1 show last night (March 19), by scrolling down the page and clicking on the video.

Earlier this month, the Canadian band announced that they were releasing remixes by Damian Taylor of ‘Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)’ and ‘Ready To Start’ for this year’s Record Store Day. The band will release remixes of both tracks on 12-inch vinyl on April 21, with copies limited to 1,000.

Arcade Fire recently released their track from the soundtrack to the new fantasy film The Hunger Games.

The track plays over the dystopian thriller’s closing credits and was recorded by the Canadian band last month. The film itself features a track titled ‘Horn Of Plenty’, which has been written and recorded by Win Butler and Regine Chassagne.

Arcade Fire are currently working on the follow-up to 2010’s ‘The Suburbs’.

Arctic Monkeys, Arcade Fire, The Clash to put out new releases for Record Store Day

0
Arctic Monkeys, Arcade Fire and The Clash are among the artists releasing new records as part of this year's Record Store Day. The event, which happens on April 21, will see over 300 artists offer up new vinyl releases, with new material, cover versions, rare tracks and studio outtakes all set to...

Arctic Monkeys, Arcade Fire and The Clash are among the artists releasing new records as part of this year’s Record Store Day.

The event, which happens on April 21, will see over 300 artists offer up new vinyl releases, with new material, cover versions, rare tracks and studio outtakes all set to be released. To read the complete list of releases, scroll down to the bottom of the page.

Arctic Monkeys will release their new single ‘R U Mine?’ on special purple vinyl, with a brand new B-side ‘Electricity’ accompanying the release, while The Clash will release a newly digitally remastered version of ‘London Calling’ on vinyl.

Arcade Fire will put out remixes of their track ‘Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)’, while Noel Gallagher will drop a new EP titled ‘Songs From The Great White North’ featuring four recent B-sides.

Laura Marling will release an exclusive double A-side with tracks ‘Flicker To Fail’ and ‘To Be A Woman’, with Miles Kane also unveiling his new four track EP, which features his new single ‘First Of My Kind’.

Bloc Party are also set to reissue debut single ‘She’s Hearing Voices’ as are the Sex Pistols, who will put out a new special edition single of ‘Anarchy In The UK’. The Vaccines will also release a split new 7” single with R.Stevie Moore.

As well as this, Two Door Cinema Club, Marilyn Manson, Bombay Bicycle Club, Garbage, Noah And The Whale, A$AP Rocky, Bat For Lashes, Belle & Sebastian, The Cure, Twin Atlantic and whole 200 others are set to put out new releases to mark the day.

Public Image Ltd officially kicked off the build-up to this year’s Record Store Day last night (March 19), playing a basement gig in London to mark the announcement of the special releases for this year’s event.

The full list of releases for Record Store Day 2012 are as follows:

2Many DJs – ‘As Heard On Radio Soulwax’

Abba – ‘Voulez-Vous’ (Extended Dance Remix)/’If It Wasn’t For The Night’

Admiral Fallow – ‘Boots Met My Face’

All The Young – ‘The Horizon’

Amanda Palmer – ‘Polly/Idioteque’

Andrew Bird – ‘The Crown Salesman/So Music Wine’

Animal Collective – ‘4 track E.P’

Arcade Fire – ‘Sprawl II Remix’

Arctic Monkeys – ‘R U Mine?’

ASAP Rocky – Exclusive Mixtape

Babe – ‘Terror Knights’

Battles – Remix 12″

BBC Radiophonic Workshop – ‘Dr Who Sound Effects’

BBC Radiophonic Workshop – ‘Out Of This World’

Beach House – ‘Lazuli’

Beth Jeans Houghton & The Hooves Of Destiny – ‘Atlas’

Bevis Frond – ‘Hard Meat At The Midnight Court’ (7″)

Billy Brag & Wilco – ‘Mermaid Avenue’

Bitchin’ – ‘Bajas Vibraquatic’

Bloc Party – ‘She’s Hearing Voices’

Blood For Blood – ‘Enemy’

Bo Ningen – ‘Live At St Leonards’

Bob Dylan –’ Can You Please Crawl Out Of Your Window’

Bob Marley – ‘Marley OST’

Botch – ‘An Anthology Of Dead Ends’

Brendan Benson – ‘What Kind Of World’

Bruce Springsteen – ‘Rocky Ground’/The Promise’ (Live)’

Bruno Mars – ‘The Grenade Sessions

Camille – ‘Mars Is No Fun’

Candy Flip – ‘Strawberry Fields Forever’/’Love Is Life’

Carolina Chocolate Drops/Run-DMC – ‘You Be Illin”

Carter – ‘Tutti Void’

Cedric Bixler Zavala & Christian Eric Beaulieu – ‘Anywhere’

Childish Gambino – ‘Heartbeat’

Chuck Persons – ‘A.D.D. Complete’

Chuck Prophet – ‘The Left Hand And The Right Hand’

Circle – ‘Manner’

Civil Wars – ‘Billie Jean/Sour Times’

Clutch – ‘Pigtown Blues’

Cold Specks – ‘Holland’

Common – ‘The Dreamer, The Believer’

Consort Audite Nova – ‘Plays Metronomy’

Crosses – ‘Option/Telepathy’

Cymbals – ‘Sideways, Sometimes’

Dale Earnheart Jr – ‘We Almost Lost Detroit’

Daniel Johnston – ‘Welcome To My World’

Daniel Land & The Modern Painters – ‘Eyes Wide Shut’

Danny Brown – ‘XXX’

David Bowie – ‘Starman’

Dead Boys – ‘Sonic Reducer’, ‘Hey Little Girl’, ‘Down In Flames’

Dead Fingers/Nik Freitas – ‘Dead Fingers’/’Nik Freitas’

Devo – ‘Live In Seattle 1981’

Disturbed – ‘The Collection’

Diva Dompe – ‘Cyborg Sweetie’

Django Django – ‘Storm’

Donald Fagen – ‘The Night Fly’

Dr John – ‘Locked Down’

Dry The River – ‘New Ceremony’

Duke Garwood & Wooden Wand – ‘Duke Wand’

Duke Spirit – ‘Live’

Elbow ‘McGreggor’

Electric Guest – ‘This Head I Hold’/’Jenny’

Emeli Sande – ‘Heaven’

Eric Bibb – ‘Deeper In The Well’

ESG/Las Kellies – ‘Erase You’

Fanfarlo – ‘Romms’

Faust – ‘Like A Stuntman’

Field Music – ‘Heart/Rent’

Fleetwood Mac – ‘Fleetwood Mac’

Footprintz – ‘Rush To The Capsule’

Foster The People – ‘Broken Jaw/Ruby’

Frank Turner – ‘I Still Believe’/’Somebody To Love’

Freakwater – ‘Feels Like the Third Time’

Futurebirds – ‘Seney-Stoval’

Gangrene – ‘The Alchemist + Oh N – Odditorium’

Gary Clark Jr Presents HWUL Cuts Vol. 1

Genesis – ‘Spot The Pigeon’

Geoff Barrow & Ben Salisbury – ‘Drokk – Music Inspired By Mega-City One’

Gilles Peterson – ‘Brazilica’

Go Kart Mozart – ‘New World In The Morning’

Gojira – ‘End Of Time’/’Bleeding’

Grateful Dead – ‘Dark Star – Olympia Theatre – Paris, France 5/4/72’

Gregory Porter – ‘1960 What?’

Grouplove – ‘Don’t Fly Too Close To The Sun’/’Tongue Tie’ remix

Guided By Voices – ‘Jon The Croc’

Hello Bear – ‘Fan Club EP’

Iggy Pop – ‘I’m Bored’/’African Man’

Inca Babies – ‘My Sick Suburb’

Inspiral Carpets – ‘You’re So Good For Me’

Jake Morley – ‘Ghostess EP’

James Brown – ‘Live At The Apollo’

Janis Joplin – ‘Selections from Pearl Sessions’

Jean Michel Jarre – ‘Concert In China’

John Cale – ‘Remixes’ 12″

John Martyn – ‘Transatlantic Sessions Recordings’

Johnny Flynn – ‘A Bag Of Hammers’

Jonathan Wilson – ‘Pity Trials And Tomorrow’s Child’

Karen Elson – ‘Milk & Honey’/’Winter Going’

Kasabian – ‘Video Games’/’Sweet Escape’

Kate Nash – ‘The Thin Kids Theme’

Keith Hudson – ‘Bloody Eyes EP’

Kimbra – ‘Settle Down’

Kreidler/Tarwater – ‘Team’/’Big Eden’/’Voyage To Arcturus Hush/Tanni’

Lanterns On The Lake – ‘Low Tide’

Laura Marling – ‘Flicker And Fail’/’To Be A Woman’

Lee Hazelwood – ‘The LHI Years: Singles, Nudes & Backsides’

Lee Scratch Perry – ‘Blackboard Jungle Dub’

Leonard Cohen – ‘Live in Frederiction EP’

Lianne Le Havas – ‘Lost & Found’

Lissie – ‘Covered Up With Flowers’

Loose Tapestries ‘Soundtrack to new Noel Fielding Show – music by Serge Pizzorno’

Louis And Bebe Barron – ‘Forbidden Planet – Original Soundtrack’

M Ward – ‘Primitive Girl’

Machinedrum – ‘Room(s)’

Madonna – ‘Immaculate Collection’

Marilyn Manson – ‘No Reflection’

Mastadon/Feist – ‘Black Tongue’

MC5/Afrika Bambaataa – ‘Kick Out The Jams’

Mclusky – ‘Mclusky Do Dallas’

Metallica ‘Beyond Magnetic’

Metronomy – ‘Black Eye Burnt Thumb’/’You Could Easily Have Me (Woodwind version)’

Mika Vainio – ‘Rasputin 3000’

Miike Snow – ‘Devils Work’

Miles Davis – ‘Forever Miles’

Miles Kane – ‘First Of My Kind’

Morrissey –’Suedehead’, ‘We’ll Let You Know (live)’, ‘Now My Heart Is Full’ (live)

Mory Kante – ‘La Guineenne’

My Brightest Diamond – ‘I Have Never Loved Someone’

Neon Indian – ‘Hex Girlfriend’ (Twin Shadow remix)

New Build – ‘Medication (Pill Shaped Package)’

Nlf3 – ‘Beast Me’

Nomads – ‘Miles Away’/’American Beat’

Nomads – ‘Solna’

Nurse With Wound/Graham Bowers – ‘Rupture’

Odd Future – ‘The Of Tape Vol. 2’

of Montreal/Deerhoof Split 7″

Orbital – ‘Wonky’

Oscar Cash – ‘Plays Metronomy’

Otis Reading/Aretha Franklin – ‘Respect’

Otis Shuggie – ‘Inspiration Information’

Patti Smith – ‘Hey Joe’, ‘Piss Factory’

Paul Thomas Saunders – ‘Descartes Highlands’

Pelican – ‘Australasia’

Pete Townsend – ‘The Quadrophenia Demos ‘

Peter Tosh – ‘Legalize It (Dub Club & Secret Circuit remixes)’

Preteen Zenith – ‘Preteen Zenith’

Producers – ‘Freeway’/’Garden Of Flowers’

Professor Green – ‘How Many Moons Remix’

Public Image Ltd – ‘One Drop’

Quantic & Alice Russell With T – ‘Look Around The Corner ‘

Ramones – ‘Blitzkrieg Bop’/’Havana Affair’ 7″

Red Horses Of The Snow – ‘The Bright New City’/’Bridges’

Refused – ‘The Shape Of Punk To Come’/’Songs To Fan The Flames Of Discontent’/’Rather Be Dead’/’The New Noise Theology’

Regina Spektor – ‘The Prayer Of Francois Villon’/’Old Jacket’

Richard Hell & The Voidiods – ‘Blank Generation’, ‘Liars Beware’, ‘Who Says’

Rizzle Kicks – ‘Stereo Typical’

Rockabye Baby! – ‘Rockabye Baby! Lullaby Renditions Of The Smiths’

Rory Gallagher – ‘Stompin’ Ground’

Rosie Thomas & Sufjan Stevens – ‘Hit & Run Vol’

Ryan Adams – ‘Heartbreak A Stranger’/’Black Sheets Of Rain’

Santigold – ‘Master Of My Make-Believe’

Sara Watkins/The Everly Brothers – ‘You’re The One I Love’

Scum/Big Deal – Split 7″ single

Sebastian – ‘The EP Collection’

Sex Pistols – ‘Anarchy In The UK’

She & Him – ‘Vol 1’

Social Distortion – ‘Hard Times & Nursery Rhymes’

Sonnymoon – ‘Wild Rumpus’

Squackett – ‘Chris Squire’/’Stev’

Straylight Run – ‘Straylight Run’

Switchfoot – ‘Remix EP’/Vice RE Verses’

T Rex – ‘Electric Warrior’

Taffy – ‘So Long’

Talibam! – ‘#No School’/’Step Into The Marna’

Tangerine Dream – ‘Electronic Meditation’/’Ultima Thule Part One/ Ultima Thule Part Two’

Tegan & Sara – ‘Get Along’

The Black Angels – ‘Watch Out Bo’y/’I’d Rather Be Lonely’

The Black Keys – ‘El Camino’

The Black Twig Pickers – ‘Yellow Cat b/w You’ll Never Miss Your Mama’

The Civil Wars – ‘Live At Amoeba’

The Clash – ‘London Calling’

The Cult – ‘Lucifer’/’For The Animals’

The Cure – ‘Three Imaginary Boys’, ‘Seventeen Seconds’, ‘Faith’, ‘Pornography’, ‘The Top’

The Czars – ‘Sorry I Made You Cry’

The Fall – ‘Night Of The Humerons’

The Flamin Groovies – ‘Shake Some Action, Teenage Confidential ‘

The Flaming Lips/Mastadon – ‘A Spoonful Weighs A Ton’

The Future Sound Of London – ‘Papua New Guinea’/’Murmurations’

The Heartbreaks – ‘Funtimes’

The Jezabels – ‘Rosebud’

The Kinks – ‘Arthur’, ‘Something Else’, ‘Face To Face’

The Megaphonic Thrift – ‘Moonstruck’

The Misfits – ‘Walk Amoung Us’

The Pains of Being Pure at Heart – ‘Belong (Remixes)’

The Pharcyde Bizarre Ride II – ‘The Pharcyde – The Singles Collection Music Box’

The Pop Group – ‘LP’

The Raveonettes – ‘Into The Night’

The Right Now – ‘He Used To Be’/’Good Man’

The Sound – ‘Jeopardy’

The Subways – ‘Kiss Kiss Bang Bang’

The Supremes – ‘Baby Love’

The Treatment – ‘Then And Again’

The Velvet Underground – ‘Sweet Jane’/’Rock & Roll’, ‘Loaded’

The Wedding Present – ‘4 Chansons EP’

The White Stripes – ‘Handsprings/Red Death At 6.14’

The Wombats – ‘The Wombats Proudly Present..’

To Kill A King – ‘Video Games’/’Bloody Shirt’

Tortoise – ‘Lonesome Sound’/’Mosquito’

Trentemoeller – ‘My Dreams’ (Gun Club Cover)

Ulrich Schnauss & Mark Peters/Pyrolator – ‘Balcony Sunset’/’Sonnenaufgang’

Variety Lights – ‘Silent Too Long’

Vivian Stanshall – ‘Men Opening Umbrellas Ahead’

Xiu Xiu/Dirty Beaches – ‘Always/Tu Ne Dis Rien’

Yma Sumac – ‘Mambo (And More)’

Zomby – ‘Where Were U In 92?’