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Bruce Springsteen: ‘I cried when I heard Clarence Clemons on ‘Wrecking Ball”

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Bruce Springsteen has spoken about the death of his longtime saxophone player Clarence Clemons and revealed that he cried when he first heard Clemons' saxophone parts on his new album 'Wrecking Ball'. Clemons passed away in June last year after suffering a stroke and did not record any parts for ...

Bruce Springsteen has spoken about the death of his longtime saxophone player Clarence Clemons and revealed that he cried when he first heard Clemons’ saxophone parts on his new album ‘Wrecking Ball’.

Clemons passed away in June last year after suffering a stroke and did not record any parts for Springsteen’s new album ‘Wrecking Ball’.

However, after Clemons’ death, the album’s producer Ron Aniello used a live recording of the album’s track ‘Land Of Hopes And Dreams’ and used Clemons’ part and put it into a studio version.

Speaking to Rolling Stone, Springsteen spoke about the first time he heard the studio version of ‘Land Of Hope And Dreams’, saying: “When the solo section hit, Clarence’s sax filled the room. I cried.”

Earlier this year, it was confirmed that Clarence Clemons’ nephew Jake will be taking over from his uncle as the touring saxophonist in Bruce Springsteen‘s E Street Band, sharing sax duties with long-time member Eddie Manion on the band’s new tour.

Bruce Springsteen will perform an intimate show tomorrow night (March 15) at this year’s SXSW festival. The singer, who is also the keynote speaker at the music industry conference and festival, will be performing on the evening of March 15 at a small, undisclosed venue in the city.

Springsteen will also tour the UK this summer, playing shows at Sunderland’s Stadium of Light, Manchester’s Etihad Stadium, Isle Of Wight Festival in June and London Hard Rock Calling in July.

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Rolling Stones’ 50th anniversary tour delayed until 2013

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The Rolling Stones have delayed their 50th anniversary tour until 2013, according to reports. The legendary rock'n'roll band played their first ever gig in London on July 12, 1962, and had been expected to celebrate the half-a-century landmark by embarking on a world tour later this year. Last ...

The Rolling Stones have delayed their 50th anniversary tour until 2013, according to reports.

The legendary rock’n’roll band played their first ever gig in London on July 12, 1962, and had been expected to celebrate the half-a-century landmark by embarking on a world tour later this year.

Last month guitarist Ronnie Wood had said that he and his bandmates owed it to their fans to hit the road and play shows together and suggested that the group were on the verge of touring, but according to Rolling Stone, the proposed jaunt has been put back until 2013.

Keith Richards revealed: “Basically, we’re just not ready. I have a feeling that’s [2013] more realistic.”

It is also reported that health concerns regarding Richards are the reason for the delay, as there are doubts that he would be able to commit to a full world tour, but the guitarist insisted that playing in 2013 would be a more fitting half-centenary anniversary. “The Stones always considered ’63 to be 50 years, because Charlie [Watts, drummer] didn’t actually join until January,” he said. “We look upon 2012 as sort of the year of conception, but the birth is next year.”

Richards also confirmed that the band were about to enter the studio together and refused to rule out the possibility of former bassist Bill Wyman for the tour, claiming that he was “up for it” and they had discussed him teaming up again with his former bandmates.

The Rolling Stones will release a new photo album to mark 50 years since their first ever gig this year. The tome – which is titled The Rolling Stones: 50 – will feature 700 shots and words from the band on their history, and will UK bookshelves on July 12.

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Jim White – Where It Hits You

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Rousing fifth solo LP from peripatetic US maverick... Jim White’s extraordinary first two records, 1997’s Wrong-Eyed Jesus! and No Such Place (2001), were modern signifiers of a new kind of Southern gothic, drawing deep from tradition yet riven with the existential dread of a fallen punk. Since then White has immersed himself in all manner of creative endeavours, often with like-minded souls. There have been art projects, gallery exhibitions, books, theatre scores and musical collaborations with Johnny Dowd and Tucker Martine in bands with names like Hellwood and Mama Lucky. The results have never been less than interesting, sometimes inspiring, but at times you still hanker for the intense mindtrips of those early solo albums. Now along comes Where It Hits You. It’s tempting to read more into the back story of this record than is perhaps pertinent, but its often ominous, heart-ravaged tone may have something to do with the recent upheavals in White’s life. Cut loose by longtime home Luaka Bop, he suddenly found himself label-less and with very little budget. Then halfway through recording, his wife left him for another man. There’s a genuine sense of loss, and certainly anguish, in the resigned feel of “That Wintered Blue Sky”, while the gentle country shuffle of “Epilogue To A Marriage” bemoans the fact that even “on the best of days, still there’s hell to pay”. Which isn’t to say that this is some maudlin break-up record. Its overriding sentiment is instead one of temperate defiance and musical uplift. The addition of various back-up singers and musicians, including Centromatic’s Will Johnson and a strong contingent from Olabelle, bring a lovely Southern gospel vibe to “State Of Grace” and a skinny groove to “Here We Go”. At other times White’s delicate incantations are seasoned by banjo and crying steel (“The Way Of Alone”) or, as on the baleful “Sunday’s Refrain”, tiny squeals of electric guitar and jazz trumpets. White has not only fashioned a terrific album from less than ideal circumstances, but one that finally feels like a worthy successor to No Such Place. Rob Hughes

Rousing fifth solo LP from peripatetic US maverick…

Jim White’s extraordinary first two records, 1997’s Wrong-Eyed Jesus! and No Such Place (2001), were modern signifiers of a new kind of Southern gothic, drawing deep from tradition yet riven with the existential dread of a fallen punk. Since then White has immersed himself in all manner of creative endeavours, often with like-minded souls. There have been art projects, gallery exhibitions, books, theatre scores and musical collaborations with Johnny Dowd and Tucker Martine in bands with names like Hellwood and Mama Lucky. The results have never been less than interesting, sometimes inspiring, but at times you still hanker for the intense mindtrips of those early solo albums.

Now along comes Where It Hits You. It’s tempting to read more into the back story of this record than is perhaps pertinent, but its often ominous, heart-ravaged tone may have something to do with the recent upheavals in White’s life. Cut loose by longtime home Luaka Bop, he suddenly found himself label-less and with very little budget. Then halfway through recording, his wife left him for another man. There’s a genuine sense of loss, and certainly anguish, in the resigned feel of “That Wintered Blue Sky”, while the gentle country shuffle of “Epilogue To A Marriage” bemoans the fact that even “on the best of days, still there’s hell to pay”.

Which isn’t to say that this is some maudlin break-up record. Its overriding sentiment is instead one of temperate defiance and musical uplift. The addition of various back-up singers and musicians, including Centromatic’s Will Johnson and a strong contingent from Olabelle, bring a lovely Southern gospel vibe to “State Of Grace” and a skinny groove to “Here We Go”. At other times White’s delicate incantations are seasoned by banjo and crying steel (“The Way Of Alone”) or, as on the baleful “Sunday’s Refrain”, tiny squeals of electric guitar and jazz trumpets.

White has not only fashioned a terrific album from less than ideal circumstances, but one that finally feels like a worthy successor to No Such Place.

Rob Hughes

The Shins stream new album ‘Port Of Morrow’ online – listen

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The Shins are streaming their new album 'Port Of Morrow' online in full, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen to the album. The album, which is the band's fourth, will be formally released on Monday (March 19), but can be heard in full now. The record will be released on The...

The Shins are streaming their new album ‘Port Of Morrow’ online in full, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen to the album.

The album, which is the band’s fourth, will be formally released on Monday (March 19), but can be heard in full now.

The record will be released on The Shins’ frontman James Mercer’s Aural Apothecary label via Columbia Records, it contains a total of 10 tracks and has been produced by Greg Kurstin. The new album is the band’s first since 2007’s ‘Wincing The Night Away’.

The Shins are due to play two concerts at London’s HMV Forum next week, headlining the venue on March 22 and 23. The shows will be the band’s first in the UK for four years.

The tracklisting for ‘Port Of Morrow’ is as follows:

‘The Rifle’s Spiral’

‘Simple Song’

‘It’s Only Life’

‘Bait and Switch’

‘September’

‘No Way Down’

‘For A Fool’

‘Fall of ’82’

’40 Mark Strasse’

‘Port of Morrow’

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Jack White debuts second solo single ‘Sixteen Saltines’ online – listen

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Jack White has debuted his second solo single 'Sixteen Saltines' online, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen to the track. 'Sixteen Saltines' is the second track to be revealed from White's debut solo record 'Blunderbuss', which is due for on April 23 via White's own Third M...

Jack White has debuted his second solo single ‘Sixteen Saltines’ online, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen to the track.

‘Sixteen Saltines’ is the second track to be revealed from White’s debut solo record ‘Blunderbuss’, which is due for on April 23 via White’s own Third Man Records.

The guitarist, who made his solo live debut last week (March 8) in Nashville, will headline the Third Man Records showcase event at SXSW in Austin, Texas this Friday (March 16).

White will head up his own label’s bill at The Stage On 6th on Friday. Also performing will be Third Man artist Karen Elson and John Reilly & Friends (featuring Becky Stark & Tom Brosseau), The Black Belles, Pujol and Lanie Lane.

White is set to make his UK solo live debut later this summer when he plays Radio 1’s Hackney Weekend on June 23-24, alongside Jay-Z, Florence And The Machine, Lana Del Rey and The Maccabees.

To learn more about Jack White’s career, head to iTunes.com.apple.com/nme-icons, where you can purchase a special NME iPad app detailing the celebrated singer/guitarist/producer’s past 15 years in rock’n’roll.

A one-off NME Icons special issue magazine dedicated to White is also available – see Backstreet-merch.com for details of how to purchase.

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The Doobie Brothers drummer Michael Hossack dies aged 65

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Michael Hossack, drummer with the 1970s stadium rockers The Doobie Brothers, has died at the age of 65. The drummer passed away on Monday (March 12) at his home in Dubois, Wyoming. He died after a lengthy battle with cancer, reports the Los Angeles Times. Hossack's manager Bruce Cohn has issued...

Michael Hossack, drummer with the 1970s stadium rockers The Doobie Brothers, has died at the age of 65.

The drummer passed away on Monday (March 12) at his home in Dubois, Wyoming. He died after a lengthy battle with cancer, reports the Los Angeles Times.

Hossack’s manager Bruce Cohn has issued a statement about the drummer, which reads as follows: “Mike was a one-of-a-kind guy and a longtime member of the Doobie Brothers. He was a fighter and fought the big battle with cancer and I speak for Mike’s family and the entire band when I say he will be greatly missed.”

Hossack joined The Doobie Brothers in 1971 and became the band’s second drummer, contributing to hits such as ‘Blackwater’, ‘Listen To The Music’ and ‘China Grove’. He left the band in 1973 to form the band Bonaroo and subsequently opened his own recording studio.

He rejoined The Doobie Brothers in 1987 for a series of benefit concerts for Vietnam war veterans and remained a part of the group when they reformed, contributing to their recent albums ‘Cycles’, ‘Brotherhood’ and 2010’s ‘World Gone Crazy’.

Doobie Brothers members Tom Johnson and Pat Simmons have also paid tribute to Hassock, with Simmons adding: “We shared some wonderful adventures together, times I will never forget. Thanks for all those wonderful memories, Mike, and all the great music. We love you.”

The 11th Uncut Playlist Of 2012

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Thanks for all your kind words over the past couple of weeks about the relaunched mag. I know this will undoubtedly read like self-justifying hype on our part, but we have been genuinely thrilled and overwhelmed by how positive the response has been. I mention this again, anyway, since we’re just putting the finishing touches to the next issue, which includes my first ever Uncut cover story. This is my excuse for not having posted much in the last couple of weeks here: hopefully I can get moving again now. To kick things off, here are the records we’ve played in the last couple of days in the Uncut office – not all, it’s worth stating once again, come recommended by me personally. If you didn’t spot it on last week’s playlist, the astonishingly diligent Nick Watt has been building Spotify playlists based on these blogs if and when the records become available. Check it out: http://spoti.fi/wnYs8A. - and thanks again. 1 Greg Haines – Digressions (Preservation) 2 The Beachwood Sparks – The Tarnished Gold (Sub Pop) 3 Hans Chew – Mercy (hanschew.com) 4 Fela Kuti – Live In Detroit 1986 (Strut) 5 Dexys – One Day I’m Going To Soar (BMG Rights Management) 6 Bill Callahan/Mickey Newbury – Heaven Help The Child (Drag City) 7 The Young – Dub Egg (Matador) 8 St Etienne – Words And Music (Heavenly) 9 Garland Jeffreys – The King Of In Between (Luna Park) 10 Dave Shuford/Margot Bianca/Pigeons – Natch 2 (http://natchmusic.tumblr.com/) 11 Howlin Rain – Aquarium Drunkard Presents: Winter Tour Companion 2012 (http://www.aquariumdrunkard.com/2012/03/12/howlin-rain-winter-tour-companion-a-compilation/#more-28144) 12 Gallon Drunk – The Road Gets Darker From Here (Clouds Hill) 13 Jack White – Blunderbuss (Third Man/XL) 14 Jon Porras – Black Mesa (Thrill Jockey) 15 Bo Diddley – The Black Gladiator (Future Days Recordings) 16 Richard Hawley – Standing At The Sky’s Edge (Parlophone) 17 James Yorkston & The Athletes – Moving Up Country: 10th Anniversary Edition (Domino) Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey Please fill in our quick survey about the relaunched Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

Thanks for all your kind words over the past couple of weeks about the relaunched mag. I know this will undoubtedly read like self-justifying hype on our part, but we have been genuinely thrilled and overwhelmed by how positive the response has been.

I mention this again, anyway, since we’re just putting the finishing touches to the next issue, which includes my first ever Uncut cover story. This is my excuse for not having posted much in the last couple of weeks here: hopefully I can get moving again now.

To kick things off, here are the records we’ve played in the last couple of days in the Uncut office – not all, it’s worth stating once again, come recommended by me personally. If you didn’t spot it on last week’s playlist, the astonishingly diligent Nick Watt has been building Spotify playlists based on these blogs if and when the records become available. Check it out: http://spoti.fi/wnYs8A. – and thanks again.

1 Greg Haines – Digressions (Preservation)

2 The Beachwood Sparks – The Tarnished Gold (Sub Pop)

3 Hans Chew – Mercy (hanschew.com)

4 Fela Kuti – Live In Detroit 1986 (Strut)

5 Dexys – One Day I’m Going To Soar (BMG Rights Management)

6 Bill Callahan/Mickey Newbury – Heaven Help The Child (Drag City)

7 The Young – Dub Egg (Matador)

8 St Etienne – Words And Music (Heavenly)

9 Garland Jeffreys – The King Of In Between (Luna Park)

10 Dave Shuford/Margot Bianca/Pigeons – Natch 2 (http://natchmusic.tumblr.com/)

11 Howlin Rain – Aquarium Drunkard Presents: Winter Tour Companion 2012 (http://www.aquariumdrunkard.com/2012/03/12/howlin-rain-winter-tour-companion-a-compilation/#more-28144)

12 Gallon Drunk – The Road Gets Darker From Here (Clouds Hill)

13 Jack White – Blunderbuss (Third Man/XL)

14 Jon Porras – Black Mesa (Thrill Jockey)

15 Bo Diddley – The Black Gladiator (Future Days Recordings)

16 Richard Hawley – Standing At The Sky’s Edge (Parlophone)

17 James Yorkston & The Athletes – Moving Up Country: 10th Anniversary Edition (Domino)

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

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

Radiohead add more dates to ‘The King Of Limbs’ European tour

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Radiohead have added three more shows to their autumn European tour. The Oxford band, who are currently touring North America in support of their new album 'The King Of Limbs', will follow their three-date UK tour with three further shows in France in October. The band will play two shows in Pa...

Radiohead have added three more shows to their autumn European tour.

The Oxford band, who are currently touring North America in support of their new album ‘The King Of Limbs’, will follow their three-date UK tour with three further shows in France in October.

The band will play two shows in Paris at the Bercy Arena on October 11 and 12 and a date in Strasbourg at the Zenith Arena on October 16. Tickets for the shows go onsale next Monday (March 19).

The dates follow the band’s shows in the UK, which take place at Manchester’s Evening News Arena on October 6 and at London’s O2 Arena on October 8 and 9.

The band have also booked other assorted European shows and festival appearances throughout the summer, including slots at Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, Optimus Alive Festival, Fuji Rock Festival and Bilbao BBK Live festival.

It was also revealed yesterday (March 12) that the band’s show in Kansas City on Sunday (March 11) was picketed by fundamentalist Christian group Westboro Baptist Church, with the controversial religious organisation describing Thom Yorke and co as “freak monkeys with mediocre tunes”.

Paul Weller streams new album ‘Sonik Kicks’ online – listen

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Paul Weller is streaming his new album 'Sonik Kicks' online in full, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen to the album. The record, which is Weller's 11th solo studio album, will be formally released on Monday (March 19), but can be heard in its entirety now. The album cont...

Paul Weller is streaming his new album ‘Sonik Kicks’ online in full, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen to the album.

The record, which is Weller’s 11th solo studio album, will be formally released on Monday (March 19), but can be heard in its entirety now.

The album contains a total of 14 tracks and also includes guest appearances from Noel Gallagher and Blur‘s Graham Coxon.

According to Weller, the LP apparently includes “pop art punch with soulful communication, jazzy explorations into psychedelia and dub with razor-sharp melodies, abstract soundscapes with clear-eyed forest-folk”.

Weller will play five new London shows to promote the album’s release. He will headline the UK capital’s Roundhouse venue on March 18, 19, 20, 21 and 22. Weller will perform ‘Sonik Kicks’ in full at the shows.

You can watch a new video interview with Paul Weller where he discusses ‘Sonik Kicks’ by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

The tracklisting for ‘Sonik Kicks’ is as follows:

‘Green’

‘The Attic’

‘Kling I Klang’

‘Sleep Of The Serene’

‘By The Waters’

‘That Dangerous Age’

‘Study In Blue’

‘Dragonfly’

‘When Your Garden’s Overgrown’

‘Around The Lake’

‘Twilight’

‘Drifters’

‘Paperchase’

‘Be Happy Children’

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

The Cure, Black Keys, Gaslight Anthem to play Reading And Leeds Festivals 2012

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The Cure, The Black Keys and The Gaslight Anthem are among the bands confirmed for this summer's Reading And Leeds Festivals. The event, which runs from August 24 – 26, will also feature The Horrors, Metronomy, Foster The People, Justice, The Cribs, Foo Fighters, The Shins and a number of other...

The Cure, The Black Keys and The Gaslight Anthem are among the bands confirmed for this summer’s Reading And Leeds Festivals.

The event, which runs from August 24 – 26, will also feature The Horrors, Metronomy, Foster The People, Justice, The Cribs, Foo Fighters, The Shins and a number of others playing sets. See below for the line-up so far.

See Readingfestival.com and Leedsfestival.com for more information about this summer’s events.

The for Reading And Leeds Festivals line-ups so far are:

Reading: August 24 (Fri), Leeds: August 25 (Sat)

Main Stage

The Cure

Paramore

Bombay Bicycle Club

You Me At Six

Crystal Castles

Angels and Airwaves

Coheed and Cambria

Cancer Bats

Deaf Havana

NME/Radio 1 Stage

The Maccabees

Foster The People

The Courteeners

Reading: August 25 (Sat), Leeds: August 26 (Sun)

Main Stage

Kasabian

Florence And The Machine

The Vaccines

Enter Shikari

The Shins

Odd Future

Mystery Jets

Special Guests

Blood Red Shoes

NME/Radio 1 Stage

At The Drive-In

The Cribs

Billy Talent

Miike Snow

Dance Stage

Metronomy

Katy B

Azealia Banks

Jaguar Skills

Reading: August 26 (Sun), Leeds: August 24 (Fri)

Main Stage

Foo Fighters

The Black Keys

Kaiser Chiefs

Bullet For My Valentine

All Time Low

The Gaslight Anthem

Eagles Of Death Metal

Band Of Skulls

Pulled Apart By Horses

NME/Radio 1 Stage

Justice

Two Door Cinema Club

The Horrors

SBTRKT

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

Eddie Vedder announces first-ever UK solo shows

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Eddie Vedder has announced that he will play his first-ever solo UK shows this July. The Pearl Jam frontman, who released his second studio LP 'Ukelele Songs' in May last year, will play two UK shows as part of his wider European tour this summer. The album - which was the follow-up to his debut ...

Eddie Vedder has announced that he will play his first-ever solo UK shows this July.

The Pearl Jam frontman, who released his second studio LP ‘Ukelele Songs’ in May last year, will play two UK shows as part of his wider European tour this summer. The album – which was the follow-up to his debut solo record, the soundtrack to the 2007 film Into The Wild – featured original and cover songs played on the ukulele with Cat Power, aka Chan Marshall, guesting on the song ‘Tonight You Belong To Me’, as well as versions of the Mamas & The Papas’ ‘Dream A Little Dream Of Me’ and Pearl Jam’s own ‘Can’t Keep’.

Eddie Vedder will play:

Manchester O2 Apollo (July 28)

London HMV Hammersmith Apollo (30)

Last week (March 9), Pearl Jam guitarist Stone Gossard revealed that the band were working on their 10th studio album. Speaking about the sessions, he said: “I think the main thing is that we’re not in a rush and there’s no urgency to it.

“The most important thing is that we put something out that continues to expand our boundaries rather than trying to follow what we’ve done in the past. I think it’s a good time to hopefully continue to experiment, and continue to shake it up.”

Pearl Jam will headline this year’s Isle Of Wight Festival alongside Tom Petty and Bruce Springsteen. The festival takes place from June 22–24 next summer.

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Arctic Monkeys to release new track ‘Electricity’ for Record Store Day

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Arctic Monkeys have announced that they will be releasing a brand new track titled 'Electricity' later this month. The track will be released as the B-side to the band's new single 'R U Mine?', which is to be re-released on limited edition purple vinyl as part of this year's Record Store Day on A...

Arctic Monkeys have announced that they will be releasing a brand new track titled ‘Electricity’ later this month.

The track will be released as the B-side to the band’s new single ‘R U Mine?’, which is to be re-released on limited edition purple vinyl as part of this year’s Record Store Day on April 21.

You can watch the video for ‘R U Mine?’, which came out earlier this month on digital download, by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

Recently, the band’s frontman Alex Turner has said that he wants to start writing the band’s new album.

The band are currently in the middle of a lengthy stint across the USA and Canada as support to The Black Keys on their US arena tour, but Turner told Rolling Stone that he was eager to start penning tunes on the follow-up to last year’s ‘Suck It And See’ so he could get a “head start” on the new record.

He said of this: “I don’t try to write on the road. I might try to this time, just for a change. Usually, I get home and I realize it’s bad, so I’ve not done it in the past. We’ve messed around in sound checks, but I’m not gonna meet a deadline, and it’s not like I need to write, though I want a head start for the next time around.”

Arctic Monkeys have previously confirmed that they will not be playing any European festivals this summer.

Westboro Baptist Church: ‘Radiohead are freak monkeys with mediocre tunes’

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A Radiohead show in Kansas City, USA was picketed yesterday (March 11) by the Westboro Baptist Church. The fundamentalist Christian group gathered outside the Sprint Centre in Missouri to protest the show from the Oxford rockers, with the band's long-time cohort Nigel Godrich posting a picture from the demonstration on his Twitter page and claiming it was the "highlight of the tour". In a statement posted on their website, the controversial religious organization described Thom Yorke and co as "freak monkeys with mediocre tunes", going on to add: "You try to get the people to look at the nonsense and not the Wrath of God that abides upon them. 'Look at the circus monkey over there and the fluffy setting, blah blah…'. " They added: "Meanwhile, God is undoing this nation and effecting all of your lives, with the moth that quietly eats the very fabric of your national garment. Radiohead is just such an event." This protest isn't the first time the Wesboro Baptist Church have engaged in a spat with rock musicians. In September last year, they picketed a Foo Fighters show in Kansas, but the band responded by surprising the protestors with a comedy song. Donning redneck beards, wigs and trucker hats, Foo Fighters took to the back of a pick-up truck to sing the specially penned 'Keep It Clean', their ode to same-sex loving. Meanwhile, tickets for Radiohead's UK arena tour went onsale last week (March 9). The band will play three shows on the UK tour, with tickets costing £65 (plus £6.50 in booking fees) or £47.50 (plus £4.75 in booking fees). Radiohead will play: Manchester Evening News Arena (October 6) London O2 Arena (8,9) Please fill in our quick survey about the relaunched Uncut – and you could win a 12 month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

A Radiohead show in Kansas City, USA was picketed yesterday (March 11) by the Westboro Baptist Church.

The fundamentalist Christian group gathered outside the Sprint Centre in Missouri to protest the show from the Oxford rockers, with the band’s long-time cohort Nigel Godrich posting a picture from the demonstration on his Twitter page and claiming it was the “highlight of the tour”.

In a statement posted on their website, the controversial religious organization described Thom Yorke and co as “freak monkeys with mediocre tunes”, going on to add: “You try to get the people to look at the nonsense and not the Wrath of God that abides upon them. ‘Look at the circus monkey over there and the fluffy setting, blah blah…’. ”

They added: “Meanwhile, God is undoing this nation and effecting all of your lives, with the moth that quietly eats the very fabric of your national garment. Radiohead is just such an event.”

This protest isn’t the first time the Wesboro Baptist Church have engaged in a spat with rock musicians. In September last year, they picketed a Foo Fighters show in Kansas, but the band responded by surprising the protestors with a comedy song. Donning redneck beards, wigs and trucker hats, Foo Fighters took to the back of a pick-up truck to sing the specially penned ‘Keep It Clean’, their ode to same-sex loving.

Meanwhile, tickets for Radiohead’s UK arena tour went onsale last week (March 9). The band will play three shows on the UK tour, with tickets costing £65 (plus £6.50 in booking fees) or £47.50 (plus £4.75 in booking fees).

Radiohead will play:

Manchester Evening News Arena (October 6)

London O2 Arena (8,9)

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

Kiss to open their own mini-golf course in Las Vegas

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Kiss are set to open their own mini-golf course in Las Vegas this week. The rock band, who are currently recording their 20th studio album 'Monster', which is due for release in the summer, will open the 'Kiss By Monster Mini Golf Site' on Thursday (March 15). The course will feature glow-in-th...

Kiss are set to open their own mini-golf course in Las Vegas this week.

The rock band, who are currently recording their 20th studio album ‘Monster’, which is due for release in the summer, will open the ‘Kiss By Monster Mini Golf Site’ on Thursday (March 15).

The course will feature glow-in-the-dark mini golf course, as well as an arcade, party rooms and wedding chapel.

Speaking about the course, bassist Gene Simmons said: “This venue is perfect for Las Vegas. Where else can you go play a round of Kiss By Monster Mini Golf, and then renew your wedding vows in an official Kiss Hotter Than Hell Wedding Chapel? Only in Vegas.”

To find out more information about the course, visit Monsterminigolf.com/Kiss

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

Kiss, who are currently putting the finishing touches to their 20th studio album, will headline the opening night (July 6) with comedian Tim Minchin playing underneath them.

See Sonispherefestivals.com for more information.

Bob Dylan recording new album

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Bob Dylan is recording a new studio album. According to the Aspen Times, the folk legend has been working on new material at a studio in Los Angeles owned by US singer-songwriter Jackson Browne. In an interview with the newspaper, musician David Hidalgo – who contributed to Dylan's last studi...

Bob Dylan is recording a new studio album.

According to the Aspen Times, the folk legend has been working on new material at a studio in Los Angeles owned by US singer-songwriter Jackson Browne.

In an interview with the newspaper, musician David Hidalgo – who contributed to Dylan’s last studio album, the festive-themed ‘Christmas In The Heart’ in 2009 – said that he had been working with the singer on a new record.

Speaking about the material, Hidalgo, who is also a member of the band Los Lobos, said: “It was a great experience. And different. Each one has been different, all completely different approaches. It’s an amazing thing, how he keeps creativity. I don’t see how he does it.”

Although it is not known when the album is released or what its title will be, Hidalgo did reveal that it could have a Mexican-influenced sound as he had played an accordion and a Tres – which is a guitar-like instrument – during the sessions. “He’d [Dylan] would say, ‘Wow, what’s that?” said Hidalgo. “He liked the sound. So we’d get it in there.”

Bob Dylan has released 34 studio albums in his recording career. Earlier this year, a charity album ‘Chimes Of Freedom: Songs Of Bob Dylan Honouring 50 Years Of Amnesty International’ was released featuring artists covering some of their favourite Dylan songs including Adele, My Chemical Romance and Queens Of The Stone Age. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to watch Ke$ha’s rendition of his track ‘Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright’.

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

Dexys unveil new track ‘Nowhere Is Home’ – listen

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Dexys Midnight Runners have posted the first track from their forthcoming new album 'One Day I'm Going To Soar' online – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen to 'Nowhere Is Home'. The song is the first single to be taken from the band's June 4-slated new record, their first...

Dexys Midnight Runners have posted the first track from their forthcoming new album ‘One Day I’m Going To Soar’ online – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen to ‘Nowhere Is Home’.

The song is the first single to be taken from the band’s June 4-slated new record, their first since 1985’s ‘Don’t Stand Me Down’. It will be released under the name Dexys and features the band’s members Kevin Rowland, Mick Talbot, Pete Williams and Jim Paterson as well as new recruits Neil Hubbard, Tim Cansfield, Madeleine Hyland, Lucy Morgan and Ben Trigg.

Speaking about the album, the band’s frontman Kevin Rowland said: “I couldn’t have made this record five years ago. Or 10 years ago. Everything seemed to fall into place. I already had many of the songs around for a while written with Jim Paterson and others but was struggling to take them forward. Then I realised I needed heavyweight help and ran into Mick Talbot. Soon it became obvious that Pete Williams should play the bass.”

He continued: “It seems like the stars were aligned. Everything seemed to work, whereas previously, it hadn’t. It seemed there were so many people willing this to happen and keen to put in as much time and effort as was needed to make it live up to its potential. This is a Dexys record, not a Kevin Rowland record.”

The tracklisting for ‘One Day I’m Going To Soar’ is as follows:

‘Now’

‘Lost’

‘Me’

‘She Got A Wiggle’

‘You’

‘I’m Always Thinking Of You’

‘I’m Always Going To Love You’

‘Incapable Of Love’

‘Nowhere Is Home’

‘Free’

‘It’s OK John Joe’

The band have also added two extra dates to their UK tour to celebrate the album’s release. They will now play Wales’ Treorchy Parc and Dare Theatre on May 4 and Whitely Bay Play House on May 7.

Dexys will play:

Treorchy Parc and Dare Theatre (May 4)

Glasgow Cottiers Theatre (6)

Whitely Bay Play House (7)

London Shepherd’s Bush Empire (8)

Bruce Springsteen’s ‘Wrecking Ball’ hits the top spot in the UK Album Chart

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Bruce Springsteen has bagged his ninth Official Number 1 album in the UK with the critically acclaimed 'Wrecking Ball'. The Boss saw off stiff competition from the Military Wives, who could only reach Number 2 with their new album 'In My Dreams'. Springsteen pipped The Wives to the post by a sma...

Bruce Springsteen has bagged his ninth Official Number 1 album in the UK with the critically acclaimed ‘Wrecking Ball’.

The Boss saw off stiff competition from the Military Wives, who could only reach Number 2 with their new album ‘In My Dreams’.

Springsteen pipped The Wives to the post by a small margin of just 18,000 sales, reports the Official Charts Company.

With little movement in the middle of the Top 10 list, it’s Lionel Richie’s new release ‘Tuskegee’ that leads the next section of new album entries at Number 7; climbing up one place since Wednesday’s Official Chart update.

Dry The River‘s debut album ‘Shallow Bed’ failed to break into the Top 20, but has reached a respectable Number 28.

In the singles chart, Gotye held on to the top spot to for his fourth, non-consecutive Number 1. The Aussie singer has now reached half a million sales for his single ‘Somebody That I Used To Know’.

Elsewhere, all-new girl band StooShe have notched their first Top 5 single with ‘Love Me’, while 2011 X Factor finalist Marcus Collins is at Number 9 with his cover of The White Stripes‘ ‘Seven Nation Army’.

Hans Chew, free download, live in Williamsburg etc

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For various reasons. I found myself in New York the other week, and in a resiliently unhip part of Williamsburg at a bar called Don Pedro. The opportunity had come up to see one of my favourite artists of the past couple of years, a firebrand piano man called Hans Chew, whose debut solo album, “Tennessee And Other Stories”, was a surprise entry at the sharp end of Uncut’s 2010 Top 50 (Lots more on that here). To recap very briefly, Chew emerged from the fertile roots/avant scene that clustered around the late Jack Rose, and has subsequently hooked up in various ways with the likes of D Charles Speer & The Helix, Hiss Golden Messenger and Arbouretum, and consequently been mentioned ad nauseam on this blog. For all his leftfield chops, however, Chew is a pretty conventional player when left to his own devices, a barrelhouse honky-tonk figure with heavy debts to Nicky Hopkins, Leon Russell, James Booker and many more players at that historically resonant interface between R&B, country and straight-up rock’n’roll that’s not visited so much these days (though there are some definite correlatives with parts of Jack White’s “Blunderbuss”, more of which soon).. Anyhow, Chew and his current band The Boys (featuring drummer Jesse Wallace, son of the producer/mixer Andy Wallace) were playing Don Pedro at the bottom of a bill a couple of Friday nights ago, and immediately revealed themselves to be pretty much the bar band of my dreams. I can think of few songs I’ve played so much in the past few years as “The Heart Is Deceitful” (Chew’s contribution to the Jack Rose tribute project, “Honest Strings”), and the shitkicking version that opened the show identified that – along with the terrific guitarist Dave Cavallo – Chew is currently skewing more towards the blasted kind of rock’n’roll the Stones favoured in the early ‘70s, albeit with that roistering, dissolute piano to the fore. A clutch of new songs confirmed as much, along with a yowling version of Booker’s “Junco Partner”; to get a taste of where he’s moved in the wake of “Tennessee”, I recommend hunting down the “Live At The Earl” download EP, with Cavallo well to the fore. Or maybe you could grab the free download of “Mercy” first taste of what will end up as Chew’s second album proper, from http://www.hanschew.com/mercy/. “Mercy” starts off with one of those patented “Werewolves Of London” rolls, but soon enough reveals itself to be more or less an impassioned homage to “Sweet Home Alabama”. The rhyming of “tutti frutti” and “cutie” makes me flich occasionally, but Chew is so marinated in rock tradition, so evidently transported by the exuberant possibilities of this sacred old music, it’s hard to know how much he’s noticed what he’s doing. The beauty is, of course, that it doesn’t really matter. Good times. Oh yeah, UK dates imminent. Please try and check him out; I think he’s at SXSW this week… Wednesday, May 2nd- The Greystones, Sheffield Thursday, May 3rd- Chapel Arts Centre, Bath Friday, May 4th- Eden Project Café, St. Austell Saturday, May 5th- Miss Peapod's, Penryn Sunday, May 6th- Crane Lane Theatre, Cork, IRL Tuesday, May 8th- The Windmill, Brixton Wednesday, May 9th- The Palmeira, Brighton Thursday, May 10th- The Bicycle Shop, Norwich Friday, May 11th- Korks, Otley Sunday, May 13th- King Tut's Wah Wah Hut, Glasgow Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

For various reasons. I found myself in New York the other week, and in a resiliently unhip part of Williamsburg at a bar called Don Pedro. The opportunity had come up to see one of my favourite artists of the past couple of years, a firebrand piano man called Hans Chew, whose debut solo album, “Tennessee And Other Stories”, was a surprise entry at the sharp end of Uncut’s 2010 Top 50 (Lots more on that here).

To recap very briefly, Chew emerged from the fertile roots/avant scene that clustered around the late Jack Rose, and has subsequently hooked up in various ways with the likes of D Charles Speer & The Helix, Hiss Golden Messenger and Arbouretum, and consequently been mentioned ad nauseam on this blog.

For all his leftfield chops, however, Chew is a pretty conventional player when left to his own devices, a barrelhouse honky-tonk figure with heavy debts to Nicky Hopkins, Leon Russell, James Booker and many more players at that historically resonant interface between R&B, country and straight-up rock’n’roll that’s not visited so much these days (though there are some definite correlatives with parts of Jack White’s “Blunderbuss”, more of which soon)..

Anyhow, Chew and his current band The Boys (featuring drummer Jesse Wallace, son of the producer/mixer Andy Wallace) were playing Don Pedro at the bottom of a bill a couple of Friday nights ago, and immediately revealed themselves to be pretty much the bar band of my dreams. I can think of few songs I’ve played so much in the past few years as “The Heart Is Deceitful” (Chew’s contribution to the Jack Rose tribute project, “Honest Strings”), and the shitkicking version that opened the show identified that – along with the terrific guitarist Dave Cavallo – Chew is currently skewing more towards the blasted kind of rock’n’roll the Stones favoured in the early ‘70s, albeit with that roistering, dissolute piano to the fore.

A clutch of new songs confirmed as much, along with a yowling version of Booker’s “Junco Partner”; to get a taste of where he’s moved in the wake of “Tennessee”, I recommend hunting down the “Live At The Earl” download EP, with Cavallo well to the fore. Or maybe you could grab the free download of “Mercy” first taste of what will end up as Chew’s second album proper, from http://www.hanschew.com/mercy/.

“Mercy” starts off with one of those patented “Werewolves Of London” rolls, but soon enough reveals itself to be more or less an impassioned homage to “Sweet Home Alabama”. The rhyming of “tutti frutti” and “cutie” makes me flich occasionally, but Chew is so marinated in rock tradition, so evidently transported by the exuberant possibilities of this sacred old music, it’s hard to know how much he’s noticed what he’s doing. The beauty is, of course, that it doesn’t really matter. Good times.

Oh yeah, UK dates imminent. Please try and check him out; I think he’s at SXSW this week…

Wednesday, May 2nd- The Greystones, Sheffield

Thursday, May 3rd- Chapel Arts Centre, Bath

Friday, May 4th- Eden Project Café, St. Austell

Saturday, May 5th- Miss Peapod’s, Penryn

Sunday, May 6th- Crane Lane Theatre, Cork, IRL

Tuesday, May 8th- The Windmill, Brixton

Wednesday, May 9th- The Palmeira, Brighton

Thursday, May 10th- The Bicycle Shop, Norwich

Friday, May 11th- Korks, Otley

Sunday, May 13th- King Tut’s Wah Wah Hut, Glasgow

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

Shearwater – Animal Joy

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Okkervil River lifeboat sails into rockier waters... Since Jonathan Meiburg and Will Sheff splintered off from Okkervil River in 2001, the reason was ostensibly to create a backwater in which they could explore for quieter material. With Sheff now departed, Shearwater – based in Austin, Texas – has coalesced around the songwriting of Meiburg alone, and with a fluid line-up he has completed a string of albums in the interim, of which Animal Joy is the eighth. Over the past few releases, including Rook and The Golden Archipelago he has taken the group – now a trio including ex-wife Kimberly Burke (bass) and Thor Harris (drums), into rockier waters. Last year’s live improvised joint, Shearwater Is Enron, introduced Andy Stack of Wye Oak and various members of tour buddies Hospital Ships. If Animal Joy were a movie, its cinematography would resemble the bleak white skies of Winter’s Bone, or the muddy waters of River’s Edge – it emanates from the last remaining rural corners of America which are still, nevertheless, never all that far away from a factory chimney or outlet mall. Meiburg, a renowned twitcher with a Geography MA, drops images from the natural world all over his lyrics, from the “watching the flood stage rise” of “Breaking The Yearlings” to the “You were the flashing wings of the swallow, you were the light in a lion’s eye” of “You As You Were”. Musically, I’m continually put in mind of the kind of sincere 1980s alternative groups that you often heard on the radio but who never broke the charts – The Icicle Works, Let’s Active, The Wild Swans. Meiburg’s troubled tenor is abetted by sinewy arrangements full of the disquiet of that decade, as on “Breaking The Yearlings”, with its taut guitars reminiscent of early Pixies, or the malevolent presence that hovers over “Dread Sovereign”. “Pushing The River”, a disgruntled two-step that ends in a searing guitar feedback whine that burrows deep inside your sinuses. But I’m betting my last plaid shirt that Meiburg and co have been caning Talk Talk tapes in the tour van, because that’s the group that looms largest over Animal Joy. “Insolence”, the album highlight, lurches and soughs like a Spirit Of Eden outtake recorded in an underground cistern. Burke’s Danny Thompson-like contrabass is mixed to the fore, while Harris bounces brushes on a hollow snare like a beetle trapped in a matchbox, leaving wide open lacunas for Meiburg to slam down great plunging petulant piano chords. “Sometimes I think of welcoming what you are frightened of”, he mutters, before the chorus washes across it like a flash flood. “Open Your Houses” would have sat comfortably on The Colour Of Spring (as would the title of track ten, “Believing Makes It Easy”), with Meiburg paying homage to Mark Hollis’s dying-swan vocal timbre. Harp (Elaine Barber) and clarinet (Sam Lipman) beautifully ornament “Run The Banner Down”, where Meiburg waxes melancholic about the disconnect between the moment-to-moment beauty of living in America and the nation’s predatory, warlike outward face. In this refined company, in which Shearwater “Immaculate”, a jittery new wave thrash – perhaps an answer to the fans who keep worrying the Shearwater don’t rock out enough – feels misplaced. Like Bon Iver’s last album, Animal Joy is the sound of Americana meshing its cogs with the machinery of the world outside its grimed window. “Star Of The Age”, the closing track, achieves the simultaneous effect of cynicism (for the flags and heraldry of nationhood) and hope. “Trade the darkness of your mind for the star of the age”: it sounds a clause that dropped off the manuscript of the Constitution; some lost jotting clipped from Benjamin Franklin’s ledgers. But the way Meiburg sings it, you believe such sentiments can unclog rivers and make them flow clean again. Rob Young

Okkervil River lifeboat sails into rockier waters…

Since Jonathan Meiburg and Will Sheff splintered off from Okkervil River in 2001, the reason was ostensibly to create a backwater in which they could explore for quieter material. With Sheff now departed, Shearwater – based in Austin, Texas – has coalesced around the songwriting of Meiburg alone, and with a fluid line-up he has completed a string of albums in the interim, of which Animal Joy is the eighth. Over the past few releases, including Rook and The Golden Archipelago he has taken the group – now a trio including ex-wife Kimberly Burke (bass) and Thor Harris (drums), into rockier waters. Last year’s live improvised joint, Shearwater Is Enron, introduced Andy Stack of Wye Oak and various members of tour buddies Hospital Ships.

If Animal Joy were a movie, its cinematography would resemble the bleak white skies of Winter’s Bone, or the muddy waters of River’s Edge – it emanates from the last remaining rural corners of America which are still, nevertheless, never all that far away from a factory chimney or outlet mall. Meiburg, a renowned twitcher with a Geography MA, drops images from the natural world all over his lyrics, from the “watching the flood stage rise” of “Breaking The Yearlings” to the “You were the flashing wings of the swallow, you were the light in a lion’s eye” of “You As You Were”. Musically, I’m continually put in mind of the kind of sincere 1980s alternative groups that you often heard on the radio but who never broke the charts – The Icicle Works, Let’s Active, The Wild Swans. Meiburg’s troubled tenor is abetted by sinewy arrangements full of the disquiet of that decade, as on “Breaking The Yearlings”, with its taut guitars reminiscent of early Pixies, or the malevolent presence that hovers over “Dread Sovereign”. “Pushing The River”, a disgruntled two-step that ends in a searing guitar feedback whine that burrows deep inside your sinuses.

But I’m betting my last plaid shirt that Meiburg and co have been caning Talk Talk tapes in the tour van, because that’s the group that looms largest over Animal Joy. “Insolence”, the album highlight, lurches and soughs like a Spirit Of Eden outtake recorded in an underground cistern. Burke’s Danny Thompson-like contrabass is mixed to the fore, while Harris bounces brushes on a hollow snare like a beetle trapped in a matchbox, leaving wide open lacunas for Meiburg to slam down great plunging petulant piano chords. “Sometimes I think of welcoming what you are frightened of”, he mutters, before the chorus washes across it like a flash flood. “Open Your Houses” would have sat comfortably on The Colour Of Spring (as would the title of track ten, “Believing Makes It Easy”), with Meiburg paying homage to Mark Hollis’s dying-swan vocal timbre. Harp (Elaine Barber) and clarinet (Sam Lipman) beautifully ornament “Run The Banner Down”, where Meiburg waxes melancholic about the disconnect between the moment-to-moment beauty of living in America and the nation’s predatory, warlike outward face. In this refined company, in which Shearwater “Immaculate”, a jittery new wave thrash – perhaps an answer to the fans who keep worrying the Shearwater don’t rock out enough – feels misplaced.

Like Bon Iver’s last album, Animal Joy is the sound of Americana meshing its cogs with the machinery of the world outside its grimed window. “Star Of The Age”, the closing track, achieves the simultaneous effect of cynicism (for the flags and heraldry of nationhood) and hope. “Trade the darkness of your mind for the star of the age”: it sounds a clause that dropped off the manuscript of the Constitution; some lost jotting clipped from Benjamin Franklin’s ledgers. But the way Meiburg sings it, you believe such sentiments can unclog rivers and make them flow clean again.

Rob Young

Rolling Thunder

Paul Schrader’s long unavailable ‘70s Viet vet revenge thriller now on DVD... In 1971, while still a young film critic, Paul Schrader published his essay Notes On Film Noir. Short, to the point, slightly crazy, it’s one of the seminal pieces on the subject, a perfect introduction to the black stuff. But Schrader’s essay is equally fascinating as a manifesto for the kind of movies he was about to start making himself. A key condition, he writes, is “War and post-war disillusionment... a service man returns to find his sweetheart unfaithful or dead, or his business partner cheating on him, the whole society something less than worth fighting for.” Most revelatory is Schrader’s declaration that “the cream” of noir was its “third and final phase, the period of psychotic action and suicidal impulse. The noir hero… started to go bananas.” Here you have the blueprint for the neo-noir triptych with which Schrader launched his screenwriting career. First came The Yakuza (1974), with Robert Mitchum iconic as a WWII veteran called to modern Japan to fight shadows of his past, before chopping off his own finger. Next, Taxi Driver (1976). And then, this, the most bananas of the bunch: 1977’s Rolling Thunder, featuring a dead-soul protagonist whose prime weapon is the specially-sharpened prosthetic hook he wears after the bad guys liquidise his hand in a garbage disposal. As in Taxi Driver, our anti-hero is an alienated Vietvet, Major Charles Rane, played by the shark-toothed, routinely undervalued William Devane. After seven years of torture in a Hanoi POW camp, he’s returned to his San Antonio hometown and given a hero’s welcome –flags, parades, and gifts including a lipstick red Cadillac convertible and a box containing one silver dollar for every day of his captivity, over $2,500 in all. Beneath the surface, however, all is not well. In his absence, Rane’s wife has taken up with another man. His young son has long since forgotten him. He drifts around town like a dead man until, one afternoon, he comes home to discover a gang of lowlifes waiting in his lounge, demanding that box of money. By the time they’ve left, Rane has lost his wife, his son and his hand. But he’s gained something he’s been missing: finally, a grim new sense of mission. When he gets out of hospital, he loads his car with every weapon he can find, looks up an equally disturbed ex-comrade (a ghostly Tommy Lee Jones), and heads after the gang, down into Mexico, toward the kind of apocalyptic whorehouse showdown rarely seen this side of a Sam Peckinpah movie. Rolling Thunder’s ultra-violence and ultra-weirdness saw it shabbily treated. Producers 20th Century Fox demanded Schrader’s original script toned down, then dumped the movie anyway, selling it to exploitation specialists AIP for the grindhouse circuit. Since its original release, it has become difficult to see, a victim of legal tangles over ownership, but has attracted a cult that includes Quentin Tarantino, who named his production company after it. He’s fussy about it now, but Rolling Thunder is a key Schrader work. It’s very much Taxi Driver’s flat, hard echo, but, rolling out across a shabby backdrop of smalltowns and backroads, it’s smaller, trashier, stranger. The director is John Flynn, a workman whose brutally efficient style was honed to perfection with this and The Outfit (1974), another key entry in the ‘70s noir revival. Flynn’s movie is blunt, shorn of Scorsese’s dazzling expressionistic flourishes, but this TV-movie like aspect makes it all the more unsettling. Beyond fragmentary flashbacks, we’re given none of the glimpses we get into Travis Bickle’s interior state. Stiff and hidden behind aviator shades, Rane is a hard, blank surface, impossible to read. Devane is an actor who often tears into roles with grinning lust, but he’s brilliantly minimal here. Few of his reactions make much emotional sense, until you realise: he has no emotions left. It takes a while to understand just how crazy he is. When Rane does finally go into action, there’s a terrible sense he’s motivated not by any love for his family or even desire for revenge. He just wants to get back into war, back to torture. It’s war he misses, torture he loves. Strange stuff, indeed. Schrader has been a little off the boil recently, but it’s worth noting his new movie, The Jesuit, coming later this year, is about a man whose wife is killed, heading into Mexico for revenge... No sign of a hook, but fingers crossed. EXTRAS: Interview with co-star Linda Haynes, original trailers, comments from celebrity fan Eli Roth. Damien Love

Paul Schrader’s long unavailable ‘70s Viet vet revenge thriller now on DVD…

In 1971, while still a young film critic, Paul Schrader published his essay Notes On Film Noir. Short, to the point, slightly crazy, it’s one of the seminal pieces on the subject, a perfect introduction to the black stuff. But Schrader’s essay is equally fascinating as a manifesto for the kind of movies he was about to start making himself. A key condition, he writes, is “War and post-war disillusionment… a service man returns to find his sweetheart unfaithful or dead, or his business partner cheating on him, the whole society something less than worth fighting for.” Most revelatory is Schrader’s declaration that “the cream” of noir was its “third and final phase, the period of psychotic action and suicidal impulse. The noir hero… started to go bananas.”

Here you have the blueprint for the neo-noir triptych with which Schrader launched his screenwriting career. First came The Yakuza (1974), with Robert Mitchum iconic as a WWII veteran called to modern Japan to fight shadows of his past, before chopping off his own finger. Next, Taxi Driver (1976). And then, this, the most bananas of the bunch: 1977’s Rolling Thunder, featuring a dead-soul protagonist whose prime weapon is the specially-sharpened prosthetic hook he wears after the bad guys liquidise his hand in a garbage disposal.

As in Taxi Driver, our anti-hero is an alienated Vietvet, Major Charles Rane, played by the shark-toothed, routinely undervalued William Devane. After seven years of torture in a Hanoi POW camp, he’s returned to his San Antonio hometown and given a hero’s welcome –flags, parades, and gifts including a lipstick red Cadillac convertible and a box containing one silver dollar for every day of his captivity, over $2,500 in all.

Beneath the surface, however, all is not well. In his absence, Rane’s wife has taken up with another man. His young son has long since forgotten him. He drifts around town like a dead man until, one afternoon, he comes home to discover a gang of lowlifes waiting in his lounge, demanding that box of money. By the time they’ve left, Rane has lost his wife, his son and his hand. But he’s gained something he’s been missing: finally, a grim new sense of mission. When he gets out of hospital, he loads his car with every weapon he can find, looks up an equally disturbed ex-comrade (a ghostly Tommy Lee Jones), and heads after the gang, down into Mexico, toward the kind of apocalyptic whorehouse showdown rarely seen this side of a Sam Peckinpah movie.

Rolling Thunder’s ultra-violence and ultra-weirdness saw it shabbily treated. Producers 20th Century Fox demanded Schrader’s original script toned down, then dumped the movie anyway, selling it to exploitation specialists AIP for the grindhouse circuit. Since its original release, it has become difficult to see, a victim of legal tangles over ownership, but has attracted a cult that includes Quentin Tarantino, who named his production company after it.

He’s fussy about it now, but Rolling Thunder is a key Schrader work. It’s very much Taxi Driver’s flat, hard echo, but, rolling out across a shabby backdrop of smalltowns and backroads, it’s smaller, trashier, stranger. The director is John Flynn, a workman whose brutally efficient style was honed to perfection with this and The Outfit (1974), another key entry in the ‘70s noir revival.

Flynn’s movie is blunt, shorn of Scorsese’s dazzling expressionistic flourishes, but this TV-movie like aspect makes it all the more unsettling. Beyond fragmentary flashbacks, we’re given none of the glimpses we get into Travis Bickle’s interior state. Stiff and hidden behind aviator shades, Rane is a hard, blank surface, impossible to read. Devane is an actor who often tears into roles with grinning lust, but he’s brilliantly minimal here. Few of his reactions make much emotional sense, until you realise: he has no emotions left. It takes a while to understand just how crazy he is.

When Rane does finally go into action, there’s a terrible sense he’s motivated not by any love for his family or even desire for revenge. He just wants to get back into war, back to torture. It’s war he misses, torture he loves. Strange stuff, indeed. Schrader has been a little off the boil recently, but it’s worth noting his new movie, The Jesuit, coming later this year, is about a man whose wife is killed, heading into Mexico for revenge… No sign of a hook, but fingers crossed.

EXTRAS: Interview with co-star Linda Haynes, original trailers, comments from celebrity fan Eli Roth.

Damien Love