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Ask Gregg Allman

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Here's your chance to question the Southern Rock icon... With his autobiography, My Cross To Bear, due for publication soon, Gregg Allman will answer your questions for our An Audience With... feature. So, is there anything you've ever wanted to ask Gregg? What are his memories of the Allman Brothers' legendary Fillmore East show in 1971? Who are his favourite Hammond organ players? What rock autobiographies would be recommend? Send us your questions by noon, Friday, March 2 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com The best questions, and Gregg's answers will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

Here’s your chance to question the Southern Rock icon…

With his autobiography, My Cross To Bear, due for publication soon, Gregg Allman will answer your questions for our An Audience With… feature.

So, is there anything you’ve ever wanted to ask Gregg?

What are his memories of the Allman Brothers’ legendary Fillmore East show in 1971?

Who are his favourite Hammond organ players?

What rock autobiographies would be recommend?

Send us your questions by noon, Friday, March 2 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com

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

Please include your name and location with your question.

The return of Cormac McCarthy

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The writer of No Country For Old Men and The Road is back, but not quite as you might expect... Cormac McCarthy has been in the news quite a lot lately. This is a pretty remarkable achievement in itself: McCarthy, the author of No Country For Old Men and The Road, is a fastidious defender of his privacy, while his work rate – 10 novels in nearly 50 years – is hardly prolific. All the same, a cursory Google News search today truffles out a number of recent stories involving McCarthy, including a couple of tantalising revelations. One was genuinely quite brilliant: he has copy edited heavyweight science books and thinks exclamation marks and semi-colons “have no place in literature”. One, meanwhile, was fun but throwaway: a Twitter account in McCarthy’s name was exposed as fake. “He doesn’t even own a computer,” rumbled his publisher. All the same, who could resist this sample Tweet: “An infant swimmer in the twitter ocean. Vigilant and raw and blithe.” But the news item carrying the most substance alerts us to fresh McCarthy writings. Not, sadly, a novel – his most recent is still 2006’s The Road – but in fact, an original screenplay. McCarthy has so far an intermittently successful relationship with movies. There was Billy Bob Thornton’s entirely dismal All The Pretty Horses – then far more successful adaptations of No Country For Old Men and The Road. There’s been some TV work, too, but I must admit I’ve not seen either 1977’s The Gardener’s Son, part of an American anthology series, or last year’s The Sunset Limited, directed by Tommy Lee Jones for HBO. This new project is called The Counsellor, and the turnaround seems remarkably speedy, considering the pace at which McCarthy usually operates. The screenplay was delivered in January (his publishers, it seems, were expecting a new novel), and Ridley Scott signed on as director a fortnight later. Scott has a history of sorts with McCarthy: about five years ago, he was linked to direct Blood Meridian, McCarthy’s novel about a gang of scalp hunters marauding through the American-Mexico borders in the mid-1800s. At the time, Scott walked away from the project – I’m pretty sure he said it was too violent. What little we know about The Counsellor suggests it’s in keeping with the No Country model – a successful lawyer gets involved with the drug wars in Mexico, with disastrous consequences. Producer Steven Schwartz claimed it “may be one of McCarthy’s most disturbing and powerful works.” An interesting thought, particularly if you’ve read Outer Dark or Child Of God, which are hardly for the faint-hearted. But then, a review of the script over here (spoilers!) identifies McCarthy’s characters as “morally depraved out of all human recognition”. All the same, I can’t get away from the nagging feeling that this is going to be a pretty slight genre piece – like No Country, which felt like a palette cleanser after the hefty Border Trilogy. I remember reading it in a couple of hours, thinking it great fun, all very Jim Thompson. What the Coens did with it for their adaptation was great, and along with There Will Be Blood and The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford, was very much part of a brace of high-end films about men doing things quite slowly. What can we expect from Scott’s The Counsellor, then? Hopefully, something leaner than Scott’s made in a long while. Anyone who’s seen the trailer for his Alien prequel, Prometheus, will have sensed the push-and-pull between trying to be faithful to the sweaty claustrophobia of his original film and the demands of the post-Avatar sci-fi blockbuster. Scott is capable of downsizing his movies – no planets were destroyed in either American Gangster or Matchstick Men, both of which I liked – but the model I hope he adopts for The Counsellor is Thelma And Louise. This might seem surprising, if you consider McCarthy favours exclusively male protagonists. But Thelma And Louise cleaves closest of all Scott’s films, I think, to the romantic idea of escaping from society – “to light out for the Territory”, as McCarthy’s idol Mark Twain describes it. Certainly, Thelma and Louise have something of the Huck and Tom about them. But, sure, we’ll have to see how this turns out. Scott’s already signed Michael Fassbender up as his counsellor, while various sources report a fairly predictable list of candidates for the movie’s villain – The Hurt Locker’s Jeremy Renner, the awful Bradley Cooper and, more intriguingly, Brad Pitt. I think Pitt is doing his best work at the moment – he was tremendous in Tree Of Life and Moneyball – and he has history with both Scott and McCarthy. Pitt got his break, of course, in Thelma And Louise – and if you can track it down on eBay, I can recommend his reading of the All The Pretty Horses audiobook. Whether whoever Scott casts will have the same presence/hairpiece as Javier Bardem in No Country, I really couldn't say.

The writer of No Country For Old Men and The Road is back, but not quite as you might expect…

Cormac McCarthy has been in the news quite a lot lately. This is a pretty remarkable achievement in itself: McCarthy, the author of No Country For Old Men and The Road, is a fastidious defender of his privacy, while his work rate – 10 novels in nearly 50 years – is hardly prolific. All the same, a cursory Google News search today truffles out a number of recent stories involving McCarthy, including a couple of tantalising revelations. One was genuinely quite brilliant: he has copy edited heavyweight science books and thinks exclamation marks and semi-colons “have no place in literature”. One, meanwhile, was fun but throwaway: a Twitter account in McCarthy’s name was exposed as fake. “He doesn’t even own a computer,” rumbled his publisher. All the same, who could resist this sample Tweet: “An infant swimmer in the twitter ocean. Vigilant and raw and blithe.”

But the news item carrying the most substance alerts us to fresh McCarthy writings. Not, sadly, a novel – his most recent is still 2006’s The Road – but in fact, an original screenplay. McCarthy has so far an intermittently successful relationship with movies. There was Billy Bob Thornton’s entirely dismal All The Pretty Horses – then far more successful adaptations of No Country For Old Men and The Road. There’s been some TV work, too, but I must admit I’ve not seen either 1977’s The Gardener’s Son, part of an American anthology series, or last year’s The Sunset Limited, directed by Tommy Lee Jones for HBO.

This new project is called The Counsellor, and the turnaround seems remarkably speedy, considering the pace at which McCarthy usually operates. The screenplay was delivered in January (his publishers, it seems, were expecting a new novel), and Ridley Scott signed on as director a fortnight later. Scott has a history of sorts with McCarthy: about five years ago, he was linked to direct Blood Meridian, McCarthy’s novel about a gang of scalp hunters marauding through the American-Mexico borders in the mid-1800s. At the time, Scott walked away from the project – I’m pretty sure he said it was too violent. What little we know about The Counsellor suggests it’s in keeping with the No Country model – a successful lawyer gets involved with the drug wars in Mexico, with disastrous consequences. Producer Steven Schwartz claimed it “may be one of McCarthy’s most disturbing and powerful works.” An interesting thought, particularly if you’ve read Outer Dark or Child Of God, which are hardly for the faint-hearted. But then, a review of the script over here (spoilers!) identifies McCarthy’s characters as “morally depraved out of all human recognition”.

All the same, I can’t get away from the nagging feeling that this is going to be a pretty slight genre piece – like No Country, which felt like a palette cleanser after the hefty Border Trilogy. I remember reading it in a couple of hours, thinking it great fun, all very Jim Thompson. What the Coens did with it for their adaptation was great, and along with There Will Be Blood and The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford, was very much part of a brace of high-end films about men doing things quite slowly.

What can we expect from Scott’s The Counsellor, then? Hopefully, something leaner than Scott’s made in a long while. Anyone who’s seen the trailer for his Alien prequel, Prometheus, will have sensed the push-and-pull between trying to be faithful to the sweaty claustrophobia of his original film and the demands of the post-Avatar sci-fi blockbuster. Scott is capable of downsizing his movies – no planets were destroyed in either American Gangster or Matchstick Men, both of which I liked – but the model I hope he adopts for The Counsellor is Thelma And Louise. This might seem surprising, if you consider McCarthy favours exclusively male protagonists. But Thelma And Louise cleaves closest of all Scott’s films, I think, to the romantic idea of escaping from society – “to light out for the Territory”, as McCarthy’s idol Mark Twain describes it. Certainly, Thelma and Louise have something of the Huck and Tom about them.

But, sure, we’ll have to see how this turns out. Scott’s already signed Michael Fassbender up as his counsellor, while various sources report a fairly predictable list of candidates for the movie’s villain – The Hurt Locker’s Jeremy Renner, the awful Bradley Cooper and, more intriguingly, Brad Pitt. I think Pitt is doing his best work at the moment – he was tremendous in Tree Of Life and Moneyball – and he has history with both Scott and McCarthy. Pitt got his break, of course, in Thelma And Louise – and if you can track it down on eBay, I can recommend his reading of the All The Pretty Horses audiobook. Whether whoever Scott casts will have the same presence/hairpiece as Javier Bardem in No Country, I really couldn’t say.

David Sylvian – A Victim Of Stars

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A visionary musician, revealed under the make-up... When David Sylvian first became a presence on the pop scene on the cusp of the '80s, it was obvious that, like many of that decade's performers, he was hugely influenced, to the point of being besotted, by Roxy Music. Not only did he and his fellow travellers in the band Japan brandish the outlandish and flamboyant fashions of glam-rock, but Sylvian's voice was clearly modelled on Bryan Ferry's tremulous croon. The combination of that erogenous baritone and his pop-star looks seemed to point inevitably to a mainstream pop position alongside the Duran Durans and Culture Clubs when, in 1982, Japan found themselves with a bona fide hit single in the shape of the winsome "Ghosts", from the previous year's Tin Drum album. But it speaks volumes about Sylvian's ambitions that by then he had already effectively turned his back on "pop" music, breaking up the band to pursue more exploratory musical directions. Ironically, while his singing style was sometimes characterised as an affected copy of Ferry's already affected lounge-lizard style, in time the aesthetic balance between the two would shift the other way, as Sylvian found far better uses for the louche croon than Ferry's endless repetitions of a static position. Musically, too, he became far more adventurous than both Roxy Music and the New Romantic legions who echoed the original glam-rock innovations, his work paralleling that of questing artists like Scott Walker and Talk Talk. Across a series of artful solo albums, Sylvian delved ever deeper into the worlds of jazz, avant-garde and improvised music, ultimately reaching the point where, with 2009's Manafon, he would be constructing songs completely from improvised recording sessions involving the likes of saxophonist Evan Parker, guitarist Keith Rowe, pianist John Tilbury and laptop schemer Christian Fennesz, albeit somehow managing to impose a sense of "song-ness" on the pieces simply by dint of his vocal tracks. It's as if he's constantly striven to find out how little structure is necessary for there to still be a song, as such - a journey that has taken him to a position where his music has become an almost elemental presence. The track which opens this two-and-a-half-hour anthology of Sylvian's work cleverly embodies the course that his career has followed. It's a version - either a remix or re-recording - of Japan's hit "Ghosts" made for his 2000 compilation Everything & Nothing, on which the presence of apparently random blips and smudges of sound overlaid upon the song creates a link to the most recent pieces from Manafon, as if it were always intended to be heard this way. It's followed by a couple of singles - "Forbidden Colours", the haunting theme from the film Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence, and the double A-side "Bamboo Houses"/"Bamboo Music" - made with Ryuichi Sakamoto, who would become a frequent collaborator over the ensuing decades. Their Oriental tone, gamelan percussion, wooden and metallic synth textures, and the latter's innovative bouncy electro beats that would prove influential on subsequent generations of hip-hop producers, now sound more or less commonplace, an indication of how culture adapts and absorbs the new and unusual. Other important collaborators have included Robert Fripp, whose Frippertronic guitar glows at the heart of "Silver Moon" alongside BJ Cole's pedal steel; and synthesist/producer Burnt Friedman, with whom Sylvian and his brother, drummer and longtime accomplice Steve Jansen, formed the group Nine Horses, a sort of avant-rock lounge-music ensemble. Sylvian's own first solo single was "Red Guitar", a slice of jazz-funk lite blending oozing fretless bass, skittish drums and cool piano within a dipping groove. Perhaps helped by the success of "Ghosts", it reached the UK Top 20, which enabled Sylvian to pull off the remarkable feat of getting his 1984 full-length solo debut Brilliant Trees, an album featuring musicians such as Mark Isham, Jon Hassell, Kenny Wheeler and Holger Czukay, into the Top 5. The latter's strangulated French horn fills are still a wonder to behold. Secrets Of The Beehive (1987), found Sylvian further entrenched in chamber-jazz terrain, with the brooding horn colouration and lowering strings of tracks like "Let The Happiness In", "Waterfront" and "Orpheus" reflecting what was clearly a brooding, introspective personal character. But despite his introvert tendencies, Sylvian still managed to dominate 1991's Japan reunion as Rain Tree Crow, on which Bill Nelson's glistening sheets of guitar seemed more decisive musical contributions to tracks like "Blackwater" than those of the singer's former bandmates. The reunion was short-lived. A couple of years later, he collaborated again with Robert Fripp on The First Day, from which comes "Jean The Birdman", a fable of aspiration whose line "Ambition is a bloody game" seemed to sum up Sylvian's disillusion with the music industry in general. He would release no new studio album for the next six years, a period of inactivity eventually broken by the release in 1999 of Dead Bees On A Cake. It was a further refinement of his increasingly austere chamber-jazz aesthetic: in "Darkest Dreaming", wisps of steel guitar and electric piano ebb and flow in quiet ripples, while Djivan Gasparyan's duduk flute settles like the dust on a moth's wing. But in the nine-minute-long "I Surrender", he somehow managed to blend Kenny Wheeler's flugelhorn, Lawrence Feldman's flute and Mark Ribot's subtle curlicues of wah-wah guitar into a compelling ambience of erotic languour, the perfect habitat for a vocal that seemed to open up an abyss of yearning. By 2009's Manafon, the music has all but eroded away to just a few hints and flecks of sound on tracks like "Snow White In Appalachia" and "Manafon" itself, whose lyric speaks of rustic isolation and deep-rooted reproach. Tinted with austere streaks of strings and gentle swells of noise, these tracks offer spooky envelopments for Sylvian's vocals, which somehow impose the sense of recurrent structure that the music seems to deny. It's a fascinating exercise in the kind of minimalism that doesn't involve repetition, but rather erosion - an intriguing position to reach, especially for a musician who started out looking like a cosmetics model. As the years have passed, the made-up face has been worn away to reveal a truly interesting, uncategorisable artistic countenance. Andy Gill 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 visionary musician, revealed under the make-up…

When David Sylvian first became a presence on the pop scene on the cusp of the ’80s, it was obvious that, like many of that decade’s performers, he was hugely influenced, to the point of being besotted, by Roxy Music. Not only did he and his fellow travellers in the band Japan brandish the outlandish and flamboyant fashions of glam-rock, but Sylvian’s voice was clearly modelled on Bryan Ferry’s tremulous croon.

The combination of that erogenous baritone and his pop-star looks seemed to point inevitably to a mainstream pop position alongside the Duran Durans and Culture Clubs when, in 1982, Japan found themselves with a bona fide hit single in the shape of the winsome “Ghosts”, from the previous year’s Tin Drum album. But it speaks volumes about Sylvian’s ambitions that by then he had already effectively turned his back on “pop” music, breaking up the band to pursue more exploratory musical directions. Ironically, while his singing style was sometimes characterised as an affected copy of Ferry’s already affected lounge-lizard style, in time the aesthetic balance between the two would shift the other way, as Sylvian found far better uses for the louche croon than Ferry’s endless repetitions of a static position.

Musically, too, he became far more adventurous than both Roxy Music and the New Romantic legions who echoed the original glam-rock innovations, his work paralleling that of questing artists like Scott Walker and Talk Talk. Across a series of artful solo albums, Sylvian delved ever deeper into the worlds of jazz, avant-garde and improvised music, ultimately reaching the point where, with 2009’s Manafon, he would be constructing songs completely from improvised recording sessions involving the likes of saxophonist Evan Parker, guitarist Keith Rowe, pianist John Tilbury and laptop schemer Christian Fennesz, albeit somehow managing to impose a sense of “song-ness” on the pieces simply by dint of his vocal tracks. It’s as if he’s constantly striven to find out how little structure is necessary for there to still be a song, as such – a journey that has taken him to a position where his music has become an almost elemental presence.

The track which opens this two-and-a-half-hour anthology of Sylvian’s work cleverly embodies the course that his career has followed. It’s a version – either a remix or re-recording – of Japan’s hit “Ghosts” made for his 2000 compilation Everything & Nothing, on which the presence of apparently random blips and smudges of sound overlaid upon the song creates a link to the most recent pieces from Manafon, as if it were always intended to be heard this way.

It’s followed by a couple of singles – “Forbidden Colours“, the haunting theme from the film Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence, and the double A-side “Bamboo Houses”/”Bamboo Music” – made with Ryuichi Sakamoto, who would become a frequent collaborator over the ensuing decades. Their Oriental tone, gamelan percussion, wooden and metallic synth textures, and the latter’s innovative bouncy electro beats that would prove influential on subsequent generations of hip-hop producers, now sound more or less commonplace, an indication of how culture adapts and absorbs the new and unusual. Other important collaborators have included Robert Fripp, whose Frippertronic guitar glows at the heart of “Silver Moon” alongside BJ Cole’s pedal steel; and synthesist/producer Burnt Friedman, with whom Sylvian and his brother, drummer and longtime accomplice Steve Jansen, formed the group Nine Horses, a sort of avant-rock lounge-music ensemble.

Sylvian’s own first solo single was “Red Guitar“, a slice of jazz-funk lite blending oozing fretless bass, skittish drums and cool piano within a dipping groove. Perhaps helped by the success of “Ghosts”, it reached the UK Top 20, which enabled Sylvian to pull off the remarkable feat of getting his 1984 full-length solo debut Brilliant Trees, an album featuring musicians such as Mark Isham, Jon Hassell, Kenny Wheeler and Holger Czukay, into the Top 5. The latter’s strangulated French horn fills are still a wonder to behold.

Secrets Of The Beehive (1987), found Sylvian further entrenched in chamber-jazz terrain, with the brooding horn colouration and lowering strings of tracks like “Let The Happiness In”, “Waterfront” and “Orpheus” reflecting what was clearly a brooding, introspective personal character. But despite his introvert tendencies, Sylvian still managed to dominate 1991’s Japan reunion as Rain Tree Crow, on which Bill Nelson’s glistening sheets of guitar seemed more decisive musical contributions to tracks like “Blackwater” than those of the singer’s former bandmates. The reunion was short-lived. A couple of years later, he collaborated again with Robert Fripp on The First Day, from which comes “Jean The Birdman”, a fable of aspiration whose line “Ambition is a bloody game” seemed to sum up Sylvian’s disillusion with the music industry in general.

He would release no new studio album for the next six years, a period of inactivity eventually broken by the release in 1999 of Dead Bees On A Cake. It was a further refinement of his increasingly austere chamber-jazz aesthetic: in “Darkest Dreaming”, wisps of steel guitar and electric piano ebb and flow in quiet ripples, while Djivan Gasparyan’s duduk flute settles like the dust on a moth’s wing. But in the nine-minute-long “I Surrender”, he somehow managed to blend Kenny Wheeler’s flugelhorn, Lawrence Feldman’s flute and Mark Ribot’s subtle curlicues of wah-wah guitar into a compelling ambience of erotic languour, the perfect habitat for a vocal that seemed to open up an abyss of yearning.

By 2009’s Manafon, the music has all but eroded away to just a few hints and flecks of sound on tracks like “Snow White In Appalachia” and “Manafon” itself, whose lyric speaks of rustic isolation and deep-rooted reproach. Tinted with austere streaks of strings and gentle swells of noise, these tracks offer spooky envelopments for Sylvian’s vocals, which somehow impose the sense of recurrent structure that the music seems to deny. It’s a fascinating exercise in the kind of minimalism that doesn’t involve repetition, but rather erosion – an intriguing position to reach, especially for a musician who started out looking like a cosmetics model. As the years have passed, the made-up face has been worn away to reveal a truly interesting, uncategorisable artistic countenance.

Andy Gill

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!

Jack White confirms a second summer festival appearance

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Jack White has confirmed his second European solo appearance of this summer. The former White Stripes man will play Belgium's Rock Werchter festival, which takes place in Rotselaar from June 28 – July 1. Also confirmed to play at the Belgium event are Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds, Pearl ...

Jack White has confirmed his second European solo appearance of this summer.

The former White Stripes man will play Belgium’s Rock Werchter festival, which takes place in Rotselaar from June 28 – July 1.

Also confirmed to play at the Belgium event are Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds, Pearl Jam, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Florence And The Machine, Justice, The Cure, Elbow and Snow Patrol.

For more information about the event and for full ticket details, visit Rockwerchter.be.

Jack White will release his debut solo album ‘Blunderbuss’ on April 23. The album contains a total of 13 tracks and will be released through Third Man Records/XL. White will be appearing on US comedy show Saturday Night Live on March 3 to play tracks off the record.

Prior to his appearance at Rock Werchter, White will play a series of live shows in March in the United States. He is also confirmed to appear at Radio 1’s Hackney Weekend on June 23-24, alongside Lana Del Rey and The Maccabees.

Bruce Springsteen to play ‘intimate’ show at SXSW

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Bruce Springsteen will be performing an 'intimate' show at South By Southwest in Austin, Texas next month. The rocker, who is 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. Tickets will be...

Bruce Springsteen will be performing an ‘intimate’ show at South By Southwest in Austin, Texas next month.

The rocker, who is 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. Tickets will be gained by a raffle, with South By Southwest badge holders being asked to enter a draw in order to win tickets for the show. Entries can be made for the draw from March 12-14 on site at SXSW and winners will be contacted on the day of the show.

For more information, visit: sxsw.com/springsteenticketdrawing

Bruce Springsteen recently revealed that his new album ‘Wrecking Ball’ – set for release on March 5 – is inspired by a “critical, questioning and often angry patriotism”. He explained that the songs were inspired by the economic troubles the US is facing and the issue that “no one has been held to account”.

Speaking to The Guardian, Springsteen said: “What was done to our country was wrong and unpatriotic and un-American and nobody has been held to account. There is a real patriotism underneath the best of my music but it is a critical, questioning and often angry patriotism.”

The album, which follows 2009’s ‘Working On A Dream’ and 2010’s outtakes collection ‘The Promise’, features an appearance from Rage Against The Machine‘s Tom Morello.

Springsteen will deliver the keynote speech at South By Southwest on March 15, before kicking off his US tour three days later in Atlanta. He will visit the UK in the summer, beginning at Sunderland Stadium of Light on June 21 before moving on to Manchester Etihad Stadium (22), Isle Of Wight Festival (24) and London Hard Rock Calling (July 14).

Elbow and Paul Weller to play Cheshire observatory

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Elbow and Paul Weller will headline this summer's Live From Jodrell Bank event. The event takes place at Cheshire's Jodrell Bank on June 23 and 24. Joddrell Bank is an observatory located 20 miles from Manchester which houses the third largest telescope in the world. Elbow will headline the eve...

Elbow and Paul Weller will headline this summer’s Live From Jodrell Bank event.

The event takes place at Cheshire’s Jodrell Bank on June 23 and 24. Joddrell Bank is an observatory located 20 miles from Manchester which houses the third largest telescope in the world.

Elbow will headline the event’s first night on June 23, with Weller following on June 24. As part of the event’s ticket price, punters will be able to attend hands-on science workshops, lectures and experiments.

Weller releases his new studio album ‘Sonik Kicks’ next month, while Elbow are currently working on new material for the follow-up to 2011’s ‘Build A Rocket Boys!’. You can watch a video interview with Weller discussing ‘Sonik Kicks’ by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

See Jodrellbanklive.co.uk for more details about the event.

Sex Pistols’ John Lydon: ‘I’d like to have a cake fight with the Queen’

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Sex Pistols' frontman John Lydon has claimed that he'd like to "have a cake fight" with the Queen. Speaking in the new issue of NME, which is on UK newsstands and available digitally from tomorrow (February 29), the singer spoke about the controversy surrounding the punk legends in 1977, when the...

Sex Pistols‘ frontman John Lydon has claimed that he’d like to “have a cake fight” with the Queen.

Speaking in the new issue of NME, which is on UK newsstands and available digitally from tomorrow (February 29), the singer spoke about the controversy surrounding the punk legends in 1977, when they released their single ‘God Save The Queen’ to coincide with the Silver Jubilee.

Responding to rumours that the Queen had personally banned the single from taking the top spot in the UK Singles Chart in favour of Rod Stewart’s ‘I Don’t Want To Talk About It’/’The First Cut Is The Deepest’, he said: “That’s a lie, isn’t it? Those poor people, they’re born into a hamster cage and they have no say on anything. In that respect the Queen and I are in agreement!”

However, Lydon joked that he still wouldn’t fancy getting together with the monarch to smooth over the controversy. When asked if he’d like to meet her to discuss the matter, he quipped: “Oh yes, but I well know what I’d do. I’d have a cake fight.”

The singer also spoke about the outrage caused by the band’s manager, Malcolm McLaren, when he hired a boat for them to play on as it sailed down the River Thames and past the Houses of Parliament over the Jubilee weekend. He claimed that, when asked by police “Which one’s Johnny Rotten?”, he had pointed at Richard Branson so he could avoid a beating.

Watch Radiohead debut new tracks ‘Identikit’ and ‘Cut A Hole’

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Radiohead debuted two new songs during the first show of their 2012 world tour in Miami last night (February 27). The band, who will be touring throughout 2012 in support of their new album 'The King Of Limbs', kicked off the tour at Miami's American Airlines arena and played new tracks 'Identiki...

Radiohead debuted two new songs during the first show of their 2012 world tour in Miami last night (February 27).

The band, who will be touring throughout 2012 in support of their new album ‘The King Of Limbs’, kicked off the tour at Miami’s American Airlines arena and played new tracks ‘Identikit’ and ‘Cut A Hole’ as part of their set. You can see live footage of both tracks by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

The tracks were part of a 24-song setlist that drew heavily from ‘The King Of Limbs’. It also featured the little aired ‘Meeting In The Aisle’ from the band’s ‘Airbag EP’, reports Consequence Of Sound.

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

The band are expected to confirm UK dates in the coming weeks, but are yet to say when this will be. Guitarist Ed O’Brien has previously hinted that the band will play arena shows in the UK rather than festival dates.

‘Identikit’

‘Cut A Hole’

Radiohead played:

‘Bloom’

‘The Daily Mail’

‘Magpie’

‘Staircase’

‘National Anthem’

‘Meeting in the Aisle’

‘Kid A’

‘The Gloaming’

‘Codex’

‘You and Whose Army?’

‘Nude’

‘Identikit’

‘Lotus Flower’

‘There There’

‘Feral’

‘Idioteque’

‘Separator’

‘Airbag’

‘Bodysnatchers’

‘Cut A Hole’

‘Arpeggi’

‘Give Up the Ghost’

‘Reckoner’

‘Karma Police’

Damon Albarn, Flea’s Rocketjuice And The Moon unveil first single ‘Hey Shooter’

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Rocketjuice And The Moon, the new project featuring Damon Albarn, Flea and Tony Allen, have unveiled their first single 'Hey Shooter'. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen to the track. The track features Erykah Badu and is the first to be revealed from the band's self-titled...

Rocketjuice And The Moon, the new project featuring Damon Albarn, Flea and Tony Allen, have unveiled their first single ‘Hey Shooter’. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen to the track.

The track features Erykah Badu and is the first to be revealed from the band’s self-titled debut album, which is due for release on March 26.

The Blur and Gorillaz man began working on the self-titled LP with the Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist and The Good, The Bad & The Queen drummer in 2008 when they met on a flight to Lagos, Nigeria.

The album, which was recorded in Albarn’s Studio 13 in London, also features contributions from Malian singer Fatoumata Diawara, Ghanian rapper M. anifest and the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble.

The record contains a total of 18 tracks, with ‘Hey Shooter’ the second tune on the album.

Rocketjuice And The Moon made their live debut with a show at the Barbican in London in October last year.

The tracklisting for ‘Rocketjuice And The Moon’ is as follows:

‘1-2-3-4-5-6’

‘Hey, Shooter’

‘Lolo’

‘Night Watch’

‘Forward Sweep’

‘Follow-Fashion’

‘Chop Up’

‘Poison’

‘Extinguished’

‘Rotary Connection’

‘Check Out’

‘There’

‘Worries’

‘Benko’

‘The Unfadable’

‘DAM(N)’

‘Fatherless’

‘Leave-Taking’

Some notes on the new Uncut

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Apologies for occupying yet more space on www.uncut.co.uk with another load of hype about our relaunched magazine, but I thought it worth pointing a couple of things out here, now that the issue has finally reached the shops in the UK. There was a small amount of disgruntlement when I mentioned a few weeks ago that my Wild Mercury Sound column in the print edition had been (mercifully, I think) sacrificed as part of Uncut’s makeover. The point I made at the time was that the more esoteric music I’d been covering in WMS would still be a significant part of the magazine. To that end, there’s a Louis Pattison piece in our new front section about Sun Araw’s adventures in Jamaica with The Congos, and another one by John Robinson on Real Estate. There’s also a Sun Araw/Congos track on the free CD, alongside stuff by Elephant Micah and Julia Holter, among many others. Orbital figure in the Album By Album slot, talking through their back catalogue. Holter, meanwhile, crops up again in the expanded reviews section, with a lengthy review and Q&A by Laura Snapes. As part of the extra features in there, we also have pieces on Ethan Miller/Howlin Rain, the Trunk label, something by Rob Young on Masaki Batoh, Louis Pattison on Johnny ‘Symmetry’ Jewel, John Robinson on Thelonius Monk, and Mick Houghton on Michael Chapman. Again, sorry if this is coming across like a rather hard sell, but there’s a lot that we’re proud of in the new mag, and I wanted to make sure that beside the headline stories – David Cavanagh’s feature on Danny Whitten is a personal favourite – we talked up the depths of the issue. Thanks to all of you who’ve been in touch about the relaunch thus far, and for all your disarmingly positive comments. The one thing that seems to be bothering a few of you is the shift from a five-point marking system to a ten-point one. We thought long and hard about this, but in the end decided that marks out of ten would be a more nuanced way of assessing an album – on the understanding, of course, that awarding marks to an album is a necessary expediency rather than a foolproof system. This way, we’ll hopefully avoid having so much of the section populated by somewhat ambivalent-looking three-star reviews: six out of ten now denoting a more or less average album, while seven out of ten signifies a distinctly decent one. Hope this all makes sense. Please get in touch to talk about the issue, as ever: either in the Facebook comments box below, or at my usual Twitter address - www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey. Thanks.

Apologies for occupying yet more space on www.uncut.co.uk with another load of hype about our relaunched magazine, but I thought it worth pointing a couple of things out here, now that the issue has finally reached the shops in the UK.

There was a small amount of disgruntlement when I mentioned a few weeks ago that my Wild Mercury Sound column in the print edition had been (mercifully, I think) sacrificed as part of Uncut’s makeover. The point I made at the time was that the more esoteric music I’d been covering in WMS would still be a significant part of the magazine.

To that end, there’s a Louis Pattison piece in our new front section about Sun Araw’s adventures in Jamaica with The Congos, and another one by John Robinson on Real Estate. There’s also a Sun Araw/Congos track on the free CD, alongside stuff by Elephant Micah and Julia Holter, among many others. Orbital figure in the Album By Album slot, talking through their back catalogue.

Holter, meanwhile, crops up again in the expanded reviews section, with a lengthy review and Q&A by Laura Snapes. As part of the extra features in there, we also have pieces on Ethan Miller/Howlin Rain, the Trunk label, something by Rob Young on Masaki Batoh, Louis Pattison on Johnny ‘Symmetry’ Jewel, John Robinson on Thelonius Monk, and Mick Houghton on Michael Chapman.

Again, sorry if this is coming across like a rather hard sell, but there’s a lot that we’re proud of in the new mag, and I wanted to make sure that beside the headline stories – David Cavanagh’s feature on Danny Whitten is a personal favourite – we talked up the depths of the issue. Thanks to all of you who’ve been in touch about the relaunch thus far, and for all your disarmingly positive comments. The one thing that seems to be bothering a few of you is the shift from a five-point marking system to a ten-point one.

We thought long and hard about this, but in the end decided that marks out of ten would be a more nuanced way of assessing an album – on the understanding, of course, that awarding marks to an album is a necessary expediency rather than a foolproof system. This way, we’ll hopefully avoid having so much of the section populated by somewhat ambivalent-looking three-star reviews: six out of ten now denoting a more or less average album, while seven out of ten signifies a distinctly decent one.

Hope this all makes sense. Please get in touch to talk about the issue, as ever: either in the Facebook comments box below, or at my usual Twitter address – www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey. Thanks.

EMA, Willy Mason, Toy to play Uncut Stage at The Great Escape

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EMA, Willy Mason and Toy will head up the line-up on the Uncut Stage at the The Great Escape this year. The Brighton festival takes place between May 10 and 12 at various venues in the city, with the Uncut Stage set to run on all three nights. Also confirmed for the Uncut Stage are Forest Swor...

EMA, Willy Mason and Toy will head up the line-up on the Uncut Stage at the The Great Escape this year.

The Brighton festival takes place between May 10 and 12 at various venues in the city, with the Uncut Stage set to run on all three nights.

Also confirmed for the Uncut Stage are Forest Swords and Beth Jeans Houghton & The Hooves Of Destiny. More acts for the Uncut Stage will be revealed in the coming weeks.

See Escapegreat.com for more information about the event.

Also joining the line-up today are Maximo Park, Mystery Jets and over 80 other new acts.

The line-up so far for The Great Escape is:

Dry The River

Spector

We Are the Ocean

Friends

Howler

Zulu Winter

Grimes

DZ Deathrays

Nils Frahm

A Winged Victory For The Sullen

Jamie N Commons

Django Django

Eagulls

Perfume Genius

Com Truise

Alt-J

When Saints Go Machine

Sonic Boom Six

François And The Atlas Mountains

Bos Angeles

Young Dreams

Doldrums

Weird Dreams

Young Magic

The British Expeditionary Force

Max Cooper

Jinja Safari

College, Graphics

Slow Down,

Molasses

Mojo Fury

Mallory Knox

Hawk Eyes

Peace

Yukon Blonde

Emma Louise

Juveniles

Binary Sing Tank

The Soft

Karlmarx

Inland Sea

Half Moon Run

Owlle

Princess Chelsea

Mesparrow

Stranded Horse

Avalanche City

Trust

The Darcys

Jordan Cook

Maximo Park

Mystery Jets

Booka Shade

Alabama Shakes

Natty

Lianne La Havas

Ema

Forest Swords

Madeon

Errors

Willy Mason

Rolo Tomassi

Foy Vance

Beth Jeans Houghton & The Hooves Of Destiny

Micachu & The Shapes

Maxxi Soundsystem

We Have Band

Loney, Dear

Tanlines

New Look

Koreless

Shabazz Palaces

Toy

Lower Than Atlantis

Kwes

Gross Magic

Disclosure

Duologue

Jonquil

Exitmusic

Spoek Mathambo

Haim

Pale Seas

Foxes

Swim Deep

The Computers

The Skints

Antlered Man

Chew Lips

Hooded Fang

Pets With Pets

Tall Ships

Holy State

Wim

Rich Aucoin

Vondelpark

Milagres

Mesparrow

Nzcalines

Dillon

Don Broco

Boy

Odonis Odonis

Eight And A Half

Wet Nuns

Mikill Pane

The Night

Cut Ribbons

Paws

Ben Caplan & The Casual Smokers

I Ching

Oliver Tank

Gold & Youth

Psychologist

Hot Panda

Fiction

Step-Panther

Pikachunes

Ben Salter

Boxes

Films Of Colour

Alunageorge

Flip Grater

Grass House

Husky

Jd Mcpherson

Josh Kumra

Lulu James

My Best Friend

Seasfire

Shields

22

Jaguar Shark

Violet

Last Dinosaurs

Jackson Firebird

Massmatiks

Martha Paton

Extended version of Gorillaz’s new single ‘DoYaThing’ appears online – audio

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An extended version of Gorillaz's new single 'DoYaThing' has surfaced online. The 13 minute version of the track, which also features Outkast's Andre 3000 and former LCD Soundsystem frontman James Murphy, can be heard by scrolling down and clicking below. The collaborative song is part of a number of recordings for Converse's 'Three Artists. One Song' campaign. which has previously brought together rapper Soulja Boy, Andrew WK and Matt And Kim to record a collaboration, and also saw Graham Coxon, Paloma Faith and ex-Coral guitarist Bill Ryder-Jones collaborate to record a track together in 2010. Singer Damon Albarn, recently commented that a 13-minute unedited version of the track would also be released in the future. Meanwhile, Blur performed together at the Brit Awards last week (February 21), where they were honoured with the Outstanding Contribution To Music Award. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O0x965Npzbs

An extended version of Gorillaz‘s new single ‘DoYaThing’ has surfaced online.

The 13 minute version of the track, which also features Outkast‘s Andre 3000 and former LCD Soundsystem frontman James Murphy, can be heard by scrolling down and clicking below.

The collaborative song is part of a number of recordings for Converse’s ‘Three Artists. One Song’ campaign. which has previously brought together rapper Soulja Boy, Andrew WK and Matt And Kim to record a collaboration, and also saw Graham Coxon, Paloma Faith and ex-Coral guitarist Bill Ryder-Jones collaborate to record a track together in 2010.

Singer Damon Albarn, recently commented that a 13-minute unedited version of the track would also be released in the future.

Meanwhile, Blur performed together at the Brit Awards last week (February 21), where they were honoured with the Outstanding Contribution To Music Award.

Hear The Black Keys’ collaboration with Michael Kiwanuka now

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The collaboration between The Black Keys' Dan Auerbach and Michael Kiwanuka has been posted online – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen. The track, which is titled 'Lasan', will be the B-side to Kiwanuka's new single 'I'm Getting Ready', which will feature on the singer's forthcoming debut album, 'Home Again', which is set for release on March 12. Speaking previously about the track, Auerbach said: "It was great – really quick. We went and did it really quick at Ray Davies' studio. It was nice. Obviously his voice is amazing the songs are cool. The production on that stuff is great too – I like what the guy is doing." The Black Keys released their seventh studio album 'El Camino' in December last year. Auerbach recently revealed that he and drummer Patrick Carney will be playing UK festivals this summer, but couldn't reveal which ones as they were "top secret", and also hinted that they had already begun planning the follow-up to their last LP. In January this year, Michael Kiwanuka was named as the winner of the BBC's Sound Of 2012 poll, fending off competition from Frank Ocean and Azealia Banks, who were named in second and third place respectively. He later claimed that winning the gong was a double-edged sword after admitting that although he was pleased with the accolade, it could "come with baggage". The Black Keys have just completed their largest UK tour to date.

The collaboration between The Black KeysDan Auerbach and Michael Kiwanuka has been posted online – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen.

The track, which is titled ‘Lasan’, will be the B-side to Kiwanuka’s new single ‘I’m Getting Ready’, which will feature on the singer’s forthcoming debut album, ‘Home Again’, which is set for release on March 12.

Speaking previously about the track, Auerbach said: “It was great – really quick. We went and did it really quick at Ray Davies’ studio. It was nice. Obviously his voice is amazing the songs are cool. The production on that stuff is great too – I like what the guy is doing.”

The Black Keys released their seventh studio album ‘El Camino’ in December last year. Auerbach recently revealed that he and drummer Patrick Carney will be playing UK festivals this summer, but couldn’t reveal which ones as they were “top secret”, and also hinted that they had already begun planning the follow-up to their last LP.

In January this year, Michael Kiwanuka was named as the winner of the BBC’s Sound Of 2012 poll, fending off competition from Frank Ocean and Azealia Banks, who were named in second and third place respectively. He later claimed that winning the gong was a double-edged sword after admitting that although he was pleased with the accolade, it could “come with baggage”.

The Black Keys have just completed their largest UK tour to date.

New Order and Tinie Tempah to remake ‘World In Motion’?

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New Order could team up with Tinie Tempah for a remake of their classic song 'World In Motion', according to reports - although Dizzee Rascal will not appear on the track. The recently-reformed Manchester legends first recorded and released the track for the 1990 World Cup and, according to The S...

New Order could team up with Tinie Tempah for a remake of their classic song ‘World In Motion’, according to reports – although Dizzee Rascal will not appear on the track.

The recently-reformed Manchester legends first recorded and released the track for the 1990 World Cup and, according to The Sun, were sizing up a potential collaboration with the two rappers as the soundtrack to England’s exploits at the European Football Championships this June.

“A couple of years ago New Order and the record label came within 24 hours of doing the song with Dizzee,” said a source. “It never happened but it’s different this year – New Order are back together and Dizzee’s free.”

They went on to add: “Tinie’s been approached, too, so Dizzee has some competition. There’s an idea to get them both on board – it could be massive.”

However, Dizzee’s representatives have now told NME that the reports are “untrue”. Representatives for New Order, meanwhile, were unable to confirm whether they would be re-releasing the track. The band are set to tour the UK in April and May of this year, and will also be one of the headliners for this year’s Bestival.

Ex-Frank Zappa bassist Roy Estrada is jailed for 25 years for child abuse

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Former Frank Zappa bassist Roy Estrada has been jailed for 25 years for child abuse. Estrada, 68, has been sent down for molesting a child younger than 14 over an extended period of time. A Texas court heard how he abused a female family member after he was released from a California prison for a separate felony offence of committing a lewd act with a child. "The victim's family was unaware that he was a convicted sex offender," Melody McDonald, spokeswoman for the Tarrant County, Texas district attorney's office, told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. "Estrada was sentenced to 25 years in a plea bargain agreement and is not eligible for parole. He will be 93 years old before he is released from prison." Estrada was a member of Frank Zappa's band, the Mothers of Invention, on and off between 1964 and 1975. He also played in some lineups of the reunited, Zappa-less Mothers in the past decade. Estrada was also a founding member of the band Little Feat in 1969 with Lowell George and performed on the band's first two albums.

Former Frank Zappa bassist Roy Estrada has been jailed for 25 years for child abuse.

Estrada, 68, has been sent down for molesting a child younger than 14 over an extended period of time.

A Texas court heard how he abused a female family member after he was released from a California prison for a separate felony offence of committing a lewd act with a child.

“The victim’s family was unaware that he was a convicted sex offender,” Melody McDonald, spokeswoman for the Tarrant County, Texas district attorney’s office, told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. “Estrada was sentenced to 25 years in a plea bargain agreement and is not eligible for parole. He will be 93 years old before he is released from prison.”

Estrada was a member of Frank Zappa’s band, the Mothers of Invention, on and off between 1964 and 1975. He also played in some lineups of the reunited, Zappa-less Mothers in the past decade. Estrada was also a founding member of the band Little Feat in 1969 with Lowell George and performed on the band’s first two albums.

Guns N’ Roses announce May UK arena tour

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Guns N' Roses have announced a UK arena tour for this May. 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. The dates begin at Nottingham's Capital FM Arena on May 19 and run until ...

Guns N’ Roses have announced a UK arena tour for this May.

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.

The dates begin at Nottingham’s Capital FM Arena on May 19 and run until May 31 when the rockers will headline London’s O2 Arena.

Speculation continues to mount over whether the classic line-up of Guns N’ Roses will perform together as part of their induction into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame.

The band will be inducted along with the Faces/Small Faces, Red Hot Chili Peppers and Beastie Boys at a ceremony in Cleveland, Ohio, on April 14 and it is already confirmed that the band’s classic line-up will all be attending the ceremony.

Guns N’ Roses 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)

Hear Arctic Monkeys’ brand new single ‘R U Mine?’ now

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Arctic Monkeys have debuted their brand new single 'R U Mine?' online, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to hear the track. The track, which does not feature on the band's 2011 fourth album 'Suck It And See', was posted online in the early hours of this morning (February 27). It wil...

Arctic Monkeys have debuted their brand new single ‘R U Mine?’ online, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to hear the track.

The track, which does not feature on the band’s 2011 fourth album ‘Suck It And See’, was posted online in the early hours of this morning (February 27). It will be released as a single on March 2.

The band had previously said that they were planning to release “a new tune” before they undertake a lengthy stint across the USA and Canada as support to The Black Keys on their US arena tour.

The Sheffield band have also released a video for ‘R U Mine?’, which features them driving through the streets while the track is given its radio debut on California station KROQ.

Radiohead extend their ‘The King Of Limbs’ world tour

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Radiohead have announced more dates for their world tour in support of their latest album 'The King Of Limbs'. The band, who are currently touring across North America, have added six shows in Australia and New Zealand for this November. These begin at Auckland's Vector Arena on November 6 and en...

Radiohead have announced more dates for their world tour in support of their latest album ‘The King Of Limbs’.

The band, who are currently touring across North America, have added six shows in Australia and New Zealand for this November. These begin at Auckland’s Vector Arena on November 6 and end on November 17 when the band will play the second of two shows at Melbourne’s Rod Laver Arena.

Radiohead will also play a show in Brisbane and two dates in Melbourne as part of the six-gig run.

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

The band are expected to confirm UK dates in the coming weeks, but are yet to say when this will be. Guitarist Ed O’Brien has previously hinted that the band will play arena shows in the UK rather than festival dates.

Sex Pistols sign new record deal ahead of ‘Never Mind The Bollocks’ re-release

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Sex Pistols have signed a new record deal ahead of releasing an expanded and repackaged version of 'Never Mind The Bollocks'. The punk legends have inked a deal with Universal Music Catalogue UK to put out a 35th anniversary edition of their classic 1977 album. Other events and releases, currentl...

Sex Pistols have signed a new record deal ahead of releasing an expanded and repackaged version of ‘Never Mind The Bollocks’.

The punk legends have inked a deal with Universal Music Catalogue UK to put out a 35th anniversary edition of their classic 1977 album. Other events and releases, currently under wraps, are being planned throughout the year.

Commenting, frontman Johnny Rotten said: “Music can be great, when done by the great. The Sex Pistols are the greatest. Universal now has a trophy room, music is the imitation of nature, the Sex Pistols are nature, so please give generously. Thank you.”

Karen Simmonds from the label added: “To be given the opportunity to re-evaluate the Sex Pistols catalogue is every music lover’s dream. We’re looking forward to working with the band and celebrating their impact on worldwide culture.”

April 2012

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David Bowie, as we are often reminded, is among many other things a master of reinvention. It seems more than a little appropriate then that he's on the cover of this month's issue. We have a new look, after all – nothing quite as gaudy, let's say, as Bowie in his high-glam period, decked out in ...

David Bowie, as we are often reminded, is among many other things a master of reinvention. It seems more than a little appropriate then that he’s on the cover of this month’s issue.

We have a new look, after all – nothing quite as gaudy, let’s say, as Bowie in his high-glam period, decked out in a sparkling Yamamoto leotard with only one trouser leg and a single sleeve.

How many Uncut readers, I wonder, were so smitten by the musical brilliance of Ziggy Stardust and the startling make-over Bowie affected for its launch 40 years ago that they were soon cutting an outlandish dash in surely quite comical attempts at sartorial emulation. For my own part, by the time I saw Bowie a week into the Ziggy tour, at Bristol’s Colston Hall, on June 13, 1972, I had thoroughly discarded what the typical teenage art student of the era was more than likely to wear. Out went the loon pants and granddad vests. In came the Mary Quant boots, blouses from Dorothy Perkins, an occasional hint of my girlfriend’s mascara, sundry pairs of what I thought were uniquely fetching polka-dot hipsters, tight enough to cut off the circulation below the waist, and velvet jackets with shoulder pads that wouldn’t be as fashionable again until Dynasty.

Anyway, back to our new look. The changes we’ve made to Uncut may feel initially a bit strange, like walking into a familiar room and finding the furniture’s been moved around, not everything where it was the last time you looked and one or two pieces missing, replaced by things you’ve never seen before. I don’t think you’re going to need a satnav system, however, to find your way around or discover, for instance, that My Life In Music has moved to the back, that other favourite regulars are in some cases further into the features section than they were previously and there’s a new front section, Instant Karma!. As promised last month, the biggest change to our content is a major overhaul and expansion of our reviews section, for many readers the reason you buy Uncut. Music reviews are now split into two sections, with more detail than ever, to guide you through the month’s new releases and to help you negotiate the sometimes mind-boggling multi-format reissues of classic albums – as is the case with Pink Floyd’s The Wall, reviewed in this month’s issue.

We’re looking forward to hearing what you think of the new Uncut – and also the revamped www.uncut.co.uk. You can email me at the usual address: allan_jones@ipcmedia.com

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