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Blur make live comeback and pick up Outstanding Contribution To Music gong at Brit Awards

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Blur closed the Brit Awards with a triumphant five-song set at London's O2 Arena last night (February 21). The Britpop legends picked up this year's Outstanding Contribution To Music award before kicking off their set - the longest show-closer in the history of the awards - with 'Girls & Boys...

Blur closed the Brit Awards with a triumphant five-song set at London’s O2 Arena last night (February 21).

The Britpop legends picked up this year’s Outstanding Contribution To Music award before kicking off their set – the longest show-closer in the history of the awards – with ‘Girls & Boys’.

After moving on to an energetic ‘Song 2’, they were then joined by comic Phil Daniels for ‘Parklife’, played ‘Tender’ with a 32-piece gospel choir and closed their set with ‘This Is A Low’

“The last time we were here was 17 years ago and what happened on that night had a very profound effect on our lives,” frontman Damon Albarn told the crowd after collecting their gong, before going on to thank a lengthy list of people from their label and management team. “Right that’s it. Thanks very much for putting up with this.”

Yesterday, the band announced they headline a special Olympic closing ceremony gig at Hyde Park on August 12.

Earlier in the evening, Adele proved the biggest winner, scooping the British Female Solo Artist and Mastercard Album Of The Year prizes, along with making her UK live return with a performance of ‘Rolling In The Deep’. “I’m so proud to be British,” she told the crowd after being presented with the latter award by George Michael. However, her acceptance speech was cut short by James Corden in to allow Blur to kick-off their show-closing set.

Ed Sheeran also bagged a brace of awards, walking away with British Male Solo Artist and British Breakthrough Act and also performed his track ‘Lego House’.

Lana Del Rey later made an emotional speech after accepting the International Breakthrough Act gong. “This award means much more to me than you know, without the support of everyone in this room and everyone in the UK I’d be lost, so thank you,” she said.

Elsewhere, One Direction won British Single for ‘What Makes You Beautiful’, while Rihanna (International Female Solo Artist), Foo Fighters (International Band) and Emeli Sande (Critics’ Choice Award) were also victorious.

Coldplay opened the show with a performance of ‘Charlie Brown’, before walking away with the British Group gong, their seventh career Brit. Their frontman Chris Martin later joined Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds as they performed ‘AKA… What A Life!’.

Other performers on the night included Florence And The Machine, who played ‘No Light, No Light’, Rihanna and Bruno Mars – recipient of the International Male Solo Artist award.

Meanwhile, there were also video tributes to Amy Winehouse and Whitney Houston.

The full list of winners was as follows:

British Female Solo Artist

Adele

International Male Solo Artist

Bruno Mars

British Single

One Direction – ‘What Makes You Beautiful’

International Female Solo Artist

Rihanna

British Male Solo Artist

Ed Sheeran

British Group

Coldplay

International Group

Foo Fighters

British Breakthrough Act

Ed Sheeran

International Breakthrough Act

Lana Del Rey

Mastercard British Album Of The Year

Adele – ’21’

Critics’ Choice Award

Emeli Sande

British Producer

Paul Epworth

Outstanding Contribution To Music

Blur

Phil Spector’s murder conviction appeal rejected by US Supreme Court

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The US Supreme Court have rejected Phil Spector's appeal against his 2009 murder conviction. The legendary producer, who was convicted of killing actress Lana Clarkson three years ago, wanted the court to review his sentence because he not initially given a fair trial, as Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Larry Paul Fidler had offered his opinion on an expert witness' testimony. However, Rolling Stone reports that the court declined to review the conviction and have upheld the original verdict. Previously, the producer had been told last August by the California Supreme Court that could not launch another appeal against the conviction. He originally appealed against the decision in 2010, when his legal team argued that the testimonies of five women who said that he had threatened them in the past were improperly used during the trial, but these claims were also rejected. Earlier this month (February 6), meanwhile, it was reported that Spector had settled a wrongful death lawsuit filed by the victim's mother, Donna Clarkson. He had originally tried to mount a defence against the legal action, but both he and Clarkson have since signed the settlement. Spector was sentenced to 19 years in prison after being found guilty of Clarkson's murder in 2009.

The US Supreme Court have rejected Phil Spector‘s appeal against his 2009 murder conviction.

The legendary producer, who was convicted of killing actress Lana Clarkson three years ago, wanted the court to review his sentence because he not initially given a fair trial, as Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Larry Paul Fidler had offered his opinion on an expert witness’ testimony.

However, Rolling Stone reports that the court declined to review the conviction and have upheld the original verdict.

Previously, the producer had been told last August by the California Supreme Court that could not launch another appeal against the conviction.

He originally appealed against the decision in 2010, when his legal team argued that the testimonies of five women who said that he had threatened them in the past were improperly used during the trial, but these claims were also rejected.

Earlier this month (February 6), meanwhile, it was reported that Spector had settled a wrongful death lawsuit filed by the victim’s mother, Donna Clarkson. He had originally tried to mount a defence against the legal action, but both he and Clarkson have since signed the settlement.

Spector was sentenced to 19 years in prison after being found guilty of Clarkson’s murder in 2009.

Unreleased demos collection from The Ramones’ Joey Ramone to come out in May

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A new collection of demos by the late Joey Ramone, written for seminal punk band the Ramones and also for his solo project are set to be released later this year. 'Ya Know?' will feature 17 tracks, including 'Rock & Roll Is the Answer', 'New York City' and 'Waiting for That Railroad', reports Rolling Stone. The album will be released on May 17 in the US and follows 2002's 'Don't Worry About Me, Joey', Joey Ramone's first posthumous collection of material. Ramone passed away in 2001 from lymphoma. The songs that make up the new album were recorded by Ramone as demos for the Ramones – who split in 1996 – and well as for solo material. New overdubs on the album have been provided by Joan Jett, Steven Van Zandt from Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band, Richie Ramone, and members of Cheap Trick. "We got friends who were really friends of Joey," says album producer Ed Stasium of the overdubs, which were recorded in New York in 2010.

A new collection of demos by the late Joey Ramone, written for seminal punk band the Ramones and also for his solo project are set to be released later this year.

‘Ya Know?’ will feature 17 tracks, including ‘Rock & Roll Is the Answer’, ‘New York City’ and ‘Waiting for That Railroad’, reports Rolling Stone.

The album will be released on May 17 in the US and follows 2002’s ‘Don’t Worry About Me, Joey’, Joey Ramone’s first posthumous collection of material. Ramone passed away in 2001 from lymphoma. The songs that make up the new album were recorded by Ramone as demos for the Ramones – who split in 1996 – and well as for solo material.

New overdubs on the album have been provided by Joan Jett, Steven Van Zandt from Bruce Springsteen‘s E Street Band, Richie Ramone, and members of Cheap Trick. “We got friends who were really friends of Joey,” says album producer Ed Stasium of the overdubs, which were recorded in New York in 2010.

Simone Felice, Richmond Fontaine and Alejandro Escovedo Headline ‘The Uncut Sessions’

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We've just finished work on the first issue of the new-look Uncut, which among other things new to the magazine features a widely re-worked reviews section, which without wanting to sound too smug, we're rather pleased with. I mentioned this in a recent newsletter and have had quite a number of emails from readers wondering what was in the works. A few of them sounded as if they were worried that we'd tampered for no reason with the look and content of Uncut in ways they might not be entirely happy with. Be assured, there's no need to fret. The changes we've made to Uncut have all been entirely to improve what was already there, rather than sweep away the stuff we know you like, so none of our popular regular features have been lost or unduly mucked about with, including An Audience With. . ., The Making Of, Album By Album and My Life In Music. Again, as previously reported, the main thing we've looked at is reviews, which has had a major re-vamp and is much expanded, with lots of extra layers of information, detail and data that are intended to add more reader value to an already hugely popular section, which for many of you is the reason you buy Uncut. Anyway, early next week you'll be able to see for yourselves what we've done and I'll be looking forward to hearing what you have to say about it. You can write to me at the usual address, as it appears at the end of this newsletter. In other news, regular readers of these missives may recall a couple of years ago I wrote about accepting an invitation to go down to Winchester for the day to see Richmond Fontaine at a funky little venue called The Railway, where promoter Oliver Grey regularly puts on terrific shows. Oliver had booked Richmond Fontaine basically on the strength of the Uncut review of the band's landmark album, Post To Wire, and they'd been back several times since. The Saturday I went down to Winchester to see them, they played two sets. The first, in the afternoon, featured Post To Wire in its entirety. The second turned into a four hour epic, during which the band, who'd had a few by then, played virtually every song they knew, and a few they didn't. They were back at the Railway last September, when Oliver launched the SXSEC festival at the venue, supported by Uncut. Willy Vlautin from Richmond Fontaine will be appearing there again on May 1, with RF guitarist Dan Eccles, playing a special acoustic set as part of a series of shows called the Uncut Sessions, the first of which, featuring the excellent Lucky Strikes, is tomorrow. The Lucky Strikes are followed by Peter Bruntnell (March 8) and Simone Felice (pictured) and band, with special guest Simi Stone from the Duke & The King (April 6), Chuck Prophet And The Mission Express (who'll be following Richmond Fontaine's earlier example and playing two sets, at 3.00pn and 8pm, on April 14) and Alejandro Escovedo And The Sensitive Boys (July 1). For more details you can go to www.sxsc.org and for general enquiries email info@railwaylive.co.uk. Tickets are also available at the venue or call 01962 867795. Have a good week. Allan allan_jones@ipcmedia.com

We’ve just finished work on the first issue of the new-look Uncut, which among other things new to the magazine features a widely re-worked reviews section, which without wanting to sound too smug, we’re rather pleased with.

I mentioned this in a recent newsletter and have had quite a number of emails from readers wondering what was in the works. A few of them sounded as if they were worried that we’d tampered for no reason with the look and content of Uncut in ways they might not be entirely happy with. Be assured, there’s no need to fret. The changes we’ve made to Uncut have all been entirely to improve what was already there, rather than sweep away the stuff we know you like, so none of our popular regular features have been lost or unduly mucked about with, including An Audience With. . ., The Making Of, Album By Album and My Life In Music.

Again, as previously reported, the main thing we’ve looked at is reviews, which has had a major re-vamp and is much expanded, with lots of extra layers of information, detail and data that are intended to add more reader value to an already hugely popular section, which for many of you is the reason you buy Uncut.

Anyway, early next week you’ll be able to see for yourselves what we’ve done and I’ll be looking forward to hearing what you have to say about it. You can write to me at the usual address, as it appears at the end of this newsletter.

In other news, regular readers of these missives may recall a couple of years ago I wrote about accepting an invitation to go down to Winchester for the day to see Richmond Fontaine at a funky little venue called The Railway, where promoter Oliver Grey regularly puts on terrific shows. Oliver had booked Richmond Fontaine basically on the strength of the Uncut review of the band’s landmark album, Post To Wire, and they’d been back several times since.

The Saturday I went down to Winchester to see them, they played two sets. The first, in the afternoon, featured Post To Wire in its entirety. The second turned into a four hour epic, during which the band, who’d had a few by then, played virtually every song they knew, and a few they didn’t. They were back at the Railway last September, when Oliver launched the SXSEC festival at the venue, supported by Uncut.

Willy Vlautin from Richmond Fontaine will be appearing there again on May 1, with RF guitarist Dan Eccles, playing a special acoustic set as part of a series of shows called the Uncut Sessions, the first of which, featuring the excellent Lucky Strikes, is tomorrow. The Lucky Strikes are followed by Peter Bruntnell (March 8) and Simone Felice (pictured) and band, with special guest Simi Stone from the Duke & The King (April 6), Chuck Prophet And The Mission Express (who’ll be following Richmond Fontaine’s earlier example and playing two sets, at 3.00pn and 8pm, on April 14) and Alejandro Escovedo And The Sensitive Boys (July 1).

For more details you can go to www.sxsc.org and for general enquiries email info@railwaylive.co.uk. Tickets are also available at the venue or call 01962 867795.

Have a good week.

Allan

allan_jones@ipcmedia.com

Motorhead say that their new boxset is too expensive

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Motorhead have told fans not to buy their new box set because it is too expensive. The limited edition version of the band's new compilation, 'The Complete Early Years', includes eight of the band's early albums and a collection of singles. It also comes housed in a fake skull with red light-up e...

Motorhead have told fans not to buy their new box set because it is too expensive.

The limited edition version of the band’s new compilation, ‘The Complete Early Years’, includes eight of the band’s early albums and a collection of singles. It also comes housed in a fake skull with red light-up eyes and also boasts extras including posters and a photo book, but is retailing at a princely $600 (£375).

The band have now released a statement distancing themselves from the collection and insisted it was released without their consent as they no longer own the recordings. They said: “Motorhead have no control over what’s done with these early songs, and don’t want fans to think that the band is involved in putting out such a costly boxset.”

Singer Lemmy, meanwhile, added: “Unfortunately greed once again rears its yapping head. I would advise against it even for the most rabid completists.”

In November last year, Elvis Costello was involved in a similar row when he told fans not to purchase his boxset ‘The Return of the Spectacular Spinning Songbook’ because of its £212.99 price tag. He suggested that the price of the boxset, which included a CD, DVD, vinyl EP and book and was a limited edition of 1,500 copies, was “either a misprint or a satire”.

Motorhead released their 20th studio album ‘The World Is Yours’ in January last year, while Lemmy also released an LP titled ‘Walk The Walk… Talk The Talk’ with his side-project The Head Cat in June.

The Eighth Uncut Playlist Of 2012

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One of those mornings walking to work when, in spite of 18,000 or whatever songs on my iPod, I couldn’t figure out what to play. It’s at that point I realised Joni Mitchell’s “Hejira” had become my last resort record; not my favourite, exactly (although I could make a stern case for it, for sure), but the one I can always rely on, whatever my mood or the circumstances. Over on my Twitter feed - www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey - I asked for other #lastresortrecords (though I only remembered to use a hashtag second time; still learning, I guess) and got a load of great answers: someone reminded me to import “Either/Or” onto iTunes, for a start Please have a look and join in. Enough of that, anyhow. Here’s this week’s office playlist… 1 Steve Gunn & The Black Twig Pickers – Natch 1 (Natch) 2 Ty Segall & White Fence – Hair (Drag City) 3 The Pre New – Music For People Who Hate Themselves (Pre War Black Ghetto) 4 Nicolas Jaar Etc – Prism (Clown & Sunset) 5 The Men - Open Your Heart (Sacred Bones) 6 Trembling Bells & Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – The Marble Downs (Honest Jon’s) 7 White Manna – White Manna (Holy Mountain) 8 Various Artists – Eight Trails, One Path (Three-Lobed) 9 Time & Space Machine – Taste The Lazer (Tirk) 10 Sandy Bull & The Rhythm Ace – Live 1976 (Drag City) 11 Bruce Langhorne – The Hired Hand (Richmoor) 12 Tom Jones – Evil/Jezebel (Third Man) 13 Dr John – Locked Down (Nonesuch) 14 Gravenhurst – The Ghost In Daylight (Warp) 15 Warm Digits – Keep Warm With The Warm Digits (Distraction) 16 Roxy Music – Avalon (Lindstrom & Prins Thomas Remix) (?) 17 William Tyler – Ohaspe (Nashville Must Die) 18 Dexys – Lost/Nowhere Is Home (?) 19 Joni Mitchell – Hejira (Asylum) Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

One of those mornings walking to work when, in spite of 18,000 or whatever songs on my iPod, I couldn’t figure out what to play. It’s at that point I realised Joni Mitchell’s “Hejira” had become my last resort record; not my favourite, exactly (although I could make a stern case for it, for sure), but the one I can always rely on, whatever my mood or the circumstances.

Over on my Twitter feed – www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey – I asked for other #lastresortrecords (though I only remembered to use a hashtag second time; still learning, I guess) and got a load of great answers: someone reminded me to import “Either/Or” onto iTunes, for a start Please have a look and join in.

Enough of that, anyhow. Here’s this week’s office playlist…

1 Steve Gunn & The Black Twig Pickers – Natch 1 (Natch)

2 Ty Segall & White Fence – Hair (Drag City)

3 The Pre New – Music For People Who Hate Themselves (Pre War Black Ghetto)

4 Nicolas Jaar Etc – Prism (Clown & Sunset)

5 The Men – Open Your Heart (Sacred Bones)

6 Trembling Bells & Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – The Marble Downs (Honest Jon’s)

7 White Manna – White Manna (Holy Mountain)

8 Various Artists – Eight Trails, One Path (Three-Lobed)

9 Time & Space Machine – Taste The Lazer (Tirk)

10 Sandy Bull & The Rhythm Ace – Live 1976 (Drag City)

11 Bruce Langhorne – The Hired Hand (Richmoor)

12 Tom Jones – Evil/Jezebel (Third Man)

13 Dr John – Locked Down (Nonesuch)

14 Gravenhurst – The Ghost In Daylight (Warp)

15 Warm Digits – Keep Warm With The Warm Digits (Distraction)

16 Roxy Music – Avalon (Lindstrom & Prins Thomas Remix) (?)

17 William Tyler – Ohaspe (Nashville Must Die)

18 Dexys – Lost/Nowhere Is Home (?)

19 Joni Mitchell – Hejira (Asylum)

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

Jack White reveals ‘Blunderbuss’ tracklisting

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Jack White has revealed the tracklisting for his debut solo album 'Blunderbuss'. Comprising 13 tracks, the album will be released on April 23 through Third Man Records/XL. The former White Stripes man will be appearing on US comedy show Saturday Night Live on March 3 to play tracks off the record. ...

Jack White has revealed the tracklisting for his debut solo album ‘Blunderbuss’.

Comprising 13 tracks, the album will be released on April 23 through Third Man Records/XL. The former White Stripes man will be appearing on US comedy show Saturday Night Live on March 3 to play tracks off the record.

Earlier this month Jack White revealed the video for his debut solo single ‘Love Interruption’ – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to watch. White released the video, which he also directed, on St Valentine’s Day. The track sees him working with singer Ruby Amanfu, who provides backing vocals, and Emily Bowland on bass clarinet and Brooke Wagonner on Wurlitzer electric piano.

White has also announced plans for his debut solo live shows, which will take place in March in the United States. Prior to his show at Radio 1’s Hackney Weekend on June 23-24, alongside Lana Del Rey and The Maccabees, White will play a number of Stateside shows, appearing in Chattanooga, Birmingham, Memphis and Tulsa.

The ‘Blunderbuss’ tracklisting is:

‘Missing Pieces’

‘Sixteen Saltines’

‘Freedom At 21’

‘Love Interruption’

‘Blunderbuss’

‘Hypocritical Kiss’

‘Weep Themselves To Sleep’

‘I’m Shakin”

‘Trash Tongue Talker’

‘Hip (Eponymous) Poor Boy’

‘I Guess I Should Go To Sleep’

‘On And On And On’

‘Take Me With You When You Go’

Saint Etienne reveal ‘Words And Music By Saint Etienne’ tracklisting

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Saint Etienne are to release their first studio album in seven years in May. 'Words And Music By Saint Etienne' is the band's first album since 2005's 'Tales From Turnpike House'. The album release will be preceded by the single 'Tonight', which is out on March 5, backed with remixes from Richard...

Saint Etienne are to release their first studio album in seven years in May.

‘Words And Music By Saint Etienne’ is the band’s first album since 2005’s ‘Tales From Turnpike House’. The album release will be preceded by the single ‘Tonight’, which is out on March 5, backed with remixes from Richard X and The 2 Bears. Scroll down to watch the video.

Bob Stanley of the band says the new album is about “how music affects your life. How it defines the way you see the world as a child, how it can get you through bad times in unexpected ways, and how songs you’ve known all your life can suddenly develop a new attachment, and hurt every time you hear them. More than how it affects and reflects your life though, the album is about believing in music, living your life by its rules.”

Saint Etienne will head out on tour this May. The band will begin their short UK run at Sheffield Leadmill on May 22 and will end it on May 28 with a show at London’s Palladium theatre. They will also play dates in Liverpool, Cardiff and Leamington Spa.

The ‘Words And Music By Saint Etienne’ tracklisting is:

‘Over the Border’

‘I’ve Got Your Music’

‘Heading For the Fair’

‘Last Days of Disco’

‘Tonight’

‘Answer Song’

‘Record Doctor’

‘Popular’

’25 Years’

‘DJ’

‘When I Was Seventeen’

‘I Threw it All Away’

‘Haunted Jukebox’

Saint Etienne play:

Sheffield Leadmill (May 22)

Liverpool Kazimier (24)

Cardiff Gate (25)

Leamington Spa Assembly (26)

London Palladium (28)

The Rolling Stones’ Ronnie Wood: ‘We’re on the verge of touring’

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The Rolling Stones' Ronnie Wood has hinted that the band are "on the verge" of touring this year. Rumours have long circulated that the legendary rock'n'roll band will play shows this year to mark their 50th anniversary, with drummer Charlie Watts the most recent member of the group to talk up t...

The Rolling StonesRonnie Wood has hinted that the band are “on the verge” of touring this year.

Rumours have long circulated that the legendary rock’n’roll band will play shows this year to mark their 50th anniversary, with drummer Charlie Watts the most recent member of the group to talk up the possibility of a half-centenary celebration.

Now, in an interview with the Radio Times, Wood has also said he wants the band to play together and, when asked if he and his bandmates would be hitting the road, he replied: “Be lovely, wouldn’t it? That’s what we’re on the verge of. I dunno what the hell is gonna happen yet but we all feel we owe it to ourselves and to the people to do something.”

He went on to add: “Basically, get the boys feeling comfortable with each other, ’cause we’re all ready to go individually. It’s just a matter of tying up loose ends and coming together as a unit.”

It was reported last November that singer Mick Jagger and guitarist Keith Richards would meet to discuss how they should celebrate the band’s 50th anniversary. They are said to have fallen out when Richards mocked the size of the singer’s manhood in his million-selling autobiography Life.

The Rolling Stones played their first ever gig in London on July 12, 1962. They reissued their seminal 1978 album ‘Some Girls’ late last year.

Carnage

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Roman Polanski's latest Roman Polanski is an expert in confinement. Whether Adrien Brody hiding in a bombed out house in The Piano or Catherine Deneuve confronting her demons in Repulsion, his films are full of people in cooped up spaces. (In his own life, he recently spent months under house arrest while fighting extradition to the US.) His new film Carnage, based on a play by Yasmina Reza, takes place almost entirely in a New York apartment where two couples are discussing an incident involving their young children at school. This is one of the few comedies that Polanski has made. It is very well performed by the leads – Jodie Foster as the mousey, well-meaning Penelope, John C. Reilly as her boorish husband, Christoph Walz as the businessman who clearly cherishes his Blackberry as much as he does his child and Kate Winslet as a career woman with a weak stomach. Polanski’s project here is akin to those carried out by Luis Bunuel in his searing dissections of bourgeois mores. Just occasionally, the pace drags but the film is only 80 minutes long and has a barbed and very vicious undertow. Geoffrey Macnab

Roman Polanski’s latest

Roman Polanski is an expert in confinement. Whether Adrien Brody hiding in a bombed out house in The Piano or Catherine Deneuve confronting her demons in Repulsion, his films are full of people in cooped up spaces. (In his own life, he recently spent months under house arrest while fighting extradition to the US.)

His new film Carnage, based on a play by Yasmina Reza, takes place almost entirely in a New York apartment where two couples are discussing an incident involving their young children at school.

This is one of the few comedies that Polanski has made. It is very well performed by the leads – Jodie Foster as the mousey, well-meaning Penelope, John C. Reilly as her boorish husband, Christoph Walz as the businessman who clearly cherishes his Blackberry as much as he does his child and Kate Winslet as a career woman with a weak stomach.

Polanski’s project here is akin to those carried out by Luis Bunuel in his searing dissections of bourgeois mores. Just occasionally, the pace drags but the film is only 80 minutes long and has a barbed and very vicious undertow.

Geoffrey Macnab

Paul McCartney announces Teenage Cancer Trust show

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Paul McCartney has been added to the line-up for this year's Concerts for Teenage Cancer Trust gigs. The 'Kisses On The Bottom' singer, who will play a show at London's Royal Albert Hall on March 29, joins other confirmed acts including Pulp, Florence And The Machine and Example for the charity g...

Paul McCartney has been added to the line-up for this year’s Concerts for Teenage Cancer Trust gigs.

The ‘Kisses On The Bottom’ singer, who will play a show at London’s Royal Albert Hall on March 29, joins other confirmed acts including Pulp, Florence And The Machine and Example for the charity gigs, which are now in their 12th year. This year’s other headliners are Jessie J and a comedy evening with Jason Manford.

Paul McCartney will kick the shows off on March 29, with Example following on March 30.

Pulp will then play the London venue on March 31, with Jessie J’s performance set to take place on April 1 and a comedy evening hosted by 8 Out Of 10 Cats man Jason Manford on April 2. Florence And The Machine will then play the run’s final show on April 3. Support acts for the gigs will be announced soon.

See Teenagecancertrust.org for more information about the shows.

The line up for the Teenage Cancer Trust gigs is as follows:

Paul McCartney (March 29)

Example (30)

Pulp (31)

Jessie J (April 1)

Comedy evening with Jason Manford and special guests (2)

Florence And The Machine (3)

Justin Timberlake spoofs Bon Iver on Saturday Night Live

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Justin Timberlake dressed up as Bon Iver frontman Justin Vernon on Saturday Night Live over the weekend, to do an impression of the double Grammy-winning US indie rocker. In the skit – which saw host Maya Rudolph playing Beyonce and Jay Pharoah playing her husband Jay-Z – Justin Timberlake di...

Justin Timberlake dressed up as Bon Iver frontman Justin Vernon on Saturday Night Live over the weekend, to do an impression of the double Grammy-winning US indie rocker.

In the skit – which saw host Maya Rudolph playing Beyonce and Jay Pharoah playing her husband Jay-Z – Justin Timberlake did an impression of Vernon being welcomed into the hip-hop couple’s home to greet their newborn child Blue Ivy Carter.

The sketch saw Timberlake’s Vernon arrive after visits from cast members playing Prince, Taylor Swift and Nicki Minaj, reports CNN, and then proceed to serenade the baby. Timberlake said his character was late because he had been “wandering barefoot through the woods of Wisconsin” and making a “guitar out of a canoe”. He then put himself to sleep with his own performance.

After the skit, Vernon tweeted: “Holy shit, i was just watching SNL and JT did a Bon Iver hilarious thing! Also, Maya Rudolph saying “bon iver” is enough. I can die now!!!”

Queen’s Brian May: ‘Freddie Mercury would approve of Adam Lambert’

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Queen guitarist Brian May has said he is sure that the band's live plans with American Idol runner-up Adam Lambert would get Freddie Mercury's seal of approval. The band will headline this summer's Sonisphere festival with Lambert, topping a bill that includes Kiss, Faith No More, Evanescence, In...

Queen guitarist Brian May has said he is sure that the band’s live plans with American Idol runner-up Adam Lambert would get Freddie Mercury‘s seal of approval.

The band will headline this summer’s Sonisphere festival with Lambert, topping a bill that includes Kiss, Faith No More, Evanescence, Incubus, The Darkness, Mastodon and Refused.

Speaking about the band’s plan for the set and how he felt it would be received by the group’s fans, May said: “Judging by my incoming mail, this decision will make a lot of people very happy. It’s a worthy challenge for us, and I’m sure Adam would meet with Freddie’s approval! And what better place to revisit, and walk those emotional paths than Knebworth? It will be a rush.”

Lambert himself also spoke about the show and said he hoped to “pay respects to Freddie’s memory” as well as achieving a huge personal milestone.

He said of this: “I’m completely in awe of the Queen phenomenon. The thought of sharing the stage for a full set is so beautifully surreal. I’m honoured to be able to pay my respects to Freddie’s memory. He’s a personal hero of mine and I am deeply grateful for the chance to sing such powerful music for fans of this legendary band. I know the evening will be a huge milestone for me, and with the support of Brian, Roger and the rest of the band I know magic will be on display.”

Sonisphere takes place at Knebworth Park on July 6-8. See Sonispherefestivals.com for more information about the event.

Public Image Ltd announce new EP and album details

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Public Image Ltd have announced details about their forthcoming new EP and studio album. John Lydon and co will release the four-track offering 'One Drop' on April 21 to coincide with this year's Record Store Day, with the LP 'This Is PiL' set to drop on May 28. Both releases are being put out by...

Public Image Ltd have announced details about their forthcoming new EP and studio album.

John Lydon and co will release the four-track offering ‘One Drop’ on April 21 to coincide with this year’s Record Store Day, with the LP ‘This Is PiL’ set to drop on May 28. Both releases are being put out by the band’s own label ‘Pil Official’.

Speaking about the track ‘One Drop’, Lydon said: “‘One Drop’ is a reflection of where I grew up in Finsbury Park, London. The area that shaped me, and influenced my culturally and musically, a place I will forever feel connected to.

“But within this I am also saying it doesn’t matter where you come from, we all go through the same emotions especially the disenchanted youth of today, yesterday and the future. Bearing in mind the Olympics are in London this year and who knows what that could bring for London and our country…”

In an interview with NME, meanwhile, Lydon likened the new LP as a whole to “folk music”, adding: “It comes from the heart and the soul. Whether that be electric, acoustic, digital or analogue, that’s still heart and soul. It’s not pop fodder and finely crafted pieces of fluff.”

Last month (January 4), the singer said that the reason the band had struggled to find a record label they wanted to work with was because of the popularity of shows such as The X Factor and the music industry’s unwillingness to take risks. Last week (February 13), meanwhile, Public Image Ltd announced plans for a one-off show at London’s Southbank Centre on March 16, to celebrate the 10th anniversary of BBC Radio 6 Music.

The tracklisting for ‘One Drop’ is:

‘One Drop’

‘I Must Be Dreaming’

‘The Room I Am In’

‘Lollipop Opera’

Blur to headline Olympics 2012 show in London’s Hyde Park this August

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Blur will headline a special one-off show in London's Hyde Park to celebrate the end of the Olympic Games this summer. The band, who will be honoured with the Outstanding Contribution To Music Award at tonight's Brit Awards (February 21), will play the outdoor show on August 12 to coincide with t...

Blur will headline a special one-off show in London’s Hyde Park to celebrate the end of the Olympic Games this summer.

The band, who will be honoured with the Outstanding Contribution To Music Award at tonight’s Brit Awards (February 21), will play the outdoor show on August 12 to coincide with the games’ closing ceremony.

The band wrote on their official Facebook page in announcing the show: “We’re rowing in, going for gold, grabbing the baton, for the high jump. No, hang on, is that right? Fact is, Blur have accepted the invite to headline the Olympics’ Closing Ceremony Celebration Concert in Hyde Park on 12th August.”

Blur will be joined by New Order and The Specials at the show, which is being billed as a ‘Best Of British’ event.

The show has been organised by BT London Live as part of a series of events to mark the Olympics. To pre-register for further ticket information, you need to register at BTLondonlive.com/tickets. Tickets will be made available on Friday (February 24) at 9am (GMT).

The Story Of Lovers Rock

Smart documentary unzips a hidden chapter of British reggae... The history of British reggae is customarily told through 1970s bands like Aswad and Steel Pulse, acts modelled on Marley’s Wailers but who gave Jamaica’s pulse an Anglo twist. Alongside them came the punky cross-pollinations of The Clash, The Police and The Slits, followed by the ska-pop of The Specials and Madness. Yet for the teens and twenties of black Britain in the late seventies and early eighties, the era’s defining sounds were found mostly in the sound system and blues dance. Here, cavernous dub and militancy had to share space with the more immediate demands of young love and the desire to be wrapped in a warm embrace. The crowded, darkened dancefloor was the spawning ground of Lovers Rock, whose slow, stickily sweet tunes became a genre as distinctly British as 2-Tone, albeit one less celebrated. Beginning with Louisa Mark’s 1975 hit “Caught You In A Lie”, homegrown romantic reggae grew into a mini-industry, with female singers (and fans) to the fore. The Lovers Rock label (the name came from an Augustus Pablo tune) sealed the generic title and with Matumbi’s Dennis Bovell masterminding, turned out a stream of hits. The singers’ youth was a characteristic; Brown Sugar’s Kofi recalls going to sixth form to be told by a friend that the trio’s “I’m In Love With The Dreadlocks” had topped the reggae charts. While such hits sold by the crate load, few Lover’s singles crossed over to the national charts, Janet Kay’s 1979 “Silly Games”, another Bovell production, being the exception. Mostly the music stayed within the black community, as important a part of its identity as the era’s more feted bands. “Lover’s gave a new generation a voice and an escape,” says author Neferatiti Ife, adding that the music’s sentimentality and obsession with two-timing and break-up had “a healing element – we could go through anger.” Meneleik Shabazz tells the Lovers story with pizazz, mixing archive footage with numerous interviews and footage from a recent revival concert. It’s an affectionate, insightful portrait of an era. Using an array of black comedians to comment on the genre’s conventions (amid recreations of the dancefloor and its fashions) proves inspired. The slow, grinding dance that accompanied Lover’s tunes is a source of special glee and send-up. As the 1980s progressed, sound systems specialising in Lovers Rock, notably Saxon, produced solo stars, among them Maxi Priest (still the only Brit reggae singer to top the US charts, with “Close To You”) and Levi Roots. The latter, now a noted foody, decribes Lover’s as “Britain’s special contribution to the recipe of reggae”. EXTRAS: Trailer. Neil Spencer

Smart documentary unzips a hidden chapter of British reggae…

The history of British reggae is customarily told through 1970s bands like Aswad and Steel Pulse, acts modelled on Marley’s Wailers but who gave Jamaica’s pulse an Anglo twist. Alongside them came the punky cross-pollinations of The Clash, The Police and The Slits, followed by the ska-pop of The Specials and Madness.

Yet for the teens and twenties of black Britain in the late seventies and early eighties, the era’s defining sounds were found mostly in the sound system and blues dance. Here, cavernous dub and militancy had to share space with the more immediate demands of young love and the desire to be wrapped in a warm embrace. The crowded, darkened dancefloor was the spawning ground of Lovers Rock, whose slow, stickily sweet tunes became a genre as distinctly British as 2-Tone, albeit one less celebrated.

Beginning with Louisa Mark’s 1975 hit “Caught You In A Lie”, homegrown romantic reggae grew into a mini-industry, with female singers (and fans) to the fore. The Lovers Rock label (the name came from an Augustus Pablo tune) sealed the generic title and with Matumbi’s Dennis Bovell masterminding, turned out a stream of hits. The singers’ youth was a characteristic; Brown Sugar’s Kofi recalls going to sixth form to be told by a friend that the trio’s “I’m In Love With The Dreadlocks” had topped the reggae charts.

While such hits sold by the crate load, few Lover’s singles crossed over to the national charts, Janet Kay’s 1979 “Silly Games”, another Bovell production, being the exception. Mostly the music stayed within the black community, as important a part of its identity as the era’s more feted bands. “Lover’s gave a new generation a voice and an escape,” says author Neferatiti Ife, adding that the music’s sentimentality and obsession with two-timing and break-up had “a healing element – we could go through anger.”

Meneleik Shabazz tells the Lovers story with pizazz, mixing archive footage with numerous interviews and footage from a recent revival concert. It’s an affectionate, insightful portrait of an era. Using an array of black comedians to comment on the genre’s conventions (amid recreations of the dancefloor and its fashions) proves inspired. The slow, grinding dance that accompanied Lover’s tunes is a source of special glee and send-up.

As the 1980s progressed, sound systems specialising in Lovers Rock, notably Saxon, produced solo stars, among them Maxi Priest (still the only Brit reggae singer to top the US charts, with “Close To You”) and Levi Roots. The latter, now a noted foody, decribes Lover’s as “Britain’s special contribution to the recipe of reggae”.

EXTRAS: Trailer.

Neil Spencer

Bruce Springsteen: ”Wrecking Ball’ is an angrily patriotic album’

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Bruce Springsteen has revealed that his new album 'Wrecking Ball' is inspired by a "critical, questioning and often angry patriotism". The veteran singer held a press conference at Theatre Marigny in Paris earlier this week to unveil material from the album, which is set for release on March 5. ...

Bruce Springsteen has revealed that his new album ‘Wrecking Ball’ is inspired by a “critical, questioning and often angry patriotism”.

The veteran singer held a press conference at Theatre Marigny in Paris earlier this week to unveil material from the album, which is set for release on March 5.

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.”

He told the conference: “I have spent my life judging the distance between American reality and the American dream.”

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 is scheduled to deliver the keynote speech at South By Southwest in Austin, Texas on March 15, before kicking off his US tour three days later in Atlanta.

The jaunt 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).

Field Music’s Peter Brewis: ‘I only earn five grand a year’

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Field Music have admitted that they only make five thousand pounds a year from being in a band. Talking to the Guardian, Peter Brewis said that his old friends were shocked to discover that although he and his brother and bandmate David were about to release their fourth studio album 'Plumb', the...

Field Music have admitted that they only make five thousand pounds a year from being in a band.

Talking to the Guardian, Peter Brewis said that his old friends were shocked to discover that although he and his brother and bandmate David were about to release their fourth studio album ‘Plumb’, they still didn’t lead a lavish rock’n’roll lifestyle.

Discussing a school reunion he’d recently attended, he said: “I hadn’t seen some of these people in 17 years, and in that time they’ve worked hard, nine to five, worked their balls off, you know? And in my job I swan around getting my picture taken for the paper. I was kind of embarrassed.”

He went on to add: “[People said] ‘Eee! You’re in a band! You must be a millionaire!’ I told them: ‘Yeah, look, I sometimes earn five grand a year.”

Brewis also said that he would rather quit the band to make money than adopt a more commercial approach, adding: “It’s part of the Field Music project. Being responsible. It doesn’t mean we can’t have fun, but we want to behave like adults.”

Field Music released ‘Plumb’, which is the follow-up to their 2010 double LP ‘Field Music (Measure)’, earlier this month (February 13).

Field Music have also announced a run of UK tour shows to coincide with the release of the album.

Field Music will play:

Leeds The Brudenell Social Club (20)

Nottingham The Bodega Social Club (22)

Bristol The Fleece (23)

London King’s College (24)

Depeche Mode start work on new album

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Depeche Mode will start work on a new album this year. In an interview with The Quietus, founding member Martin Gore revealed that the band would be hitting the studio this March and hoped to have finished the new LP, which will be their first studio effort since 2009's 'Sounds Of The Universe', ...

Depeche Mode will start work on a new album this year.

In an interview with The Quietus, founding member Martin Gore revealed that the band would be hitting the studio this March and hoped to have finished the new LP, which will be their first studio effort since 2009’s ‘Sounds Of The Universe’, by the end of this year.

Gore also said that working with former Depeche Mode member Vince Clarke on their forthcoming LP ‘Ssss’ under their VCMG moniker had rejuvenated his creativity. “It was a nice break for me to be able to go and do something completely different that doesn’t involve poring over lyrics and having to think about vocal melodies,” he said, before adding: ” I think I went back to actually writing for the band with much more vigour afterwards, because I had taken such a break. It gave me a real creative impetus.”

‘Ssss’, which is set for release on March 12, sees Gore and Clarke working together for the first time in over 30 years. The ‘Ssss’ tracklisting is:

‘Lowly’

‘Zaat’

‘Spock’

‘Windup Robot’

‘Bendy Bass’

‘Single Blip’

‘Skip This Track’

‘Aftermaths’

‘Recycle’

‘Flux’

Mark Lanegan Band – Blues Funeral

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The grunge-blues giant returns, now digging deeper grooves and - shock! - nu disco... To say that Mark Lanegan’s reputation precedes him is a monumental understatement. Over a 25-year career, he’s carved himself a profile as resolutely rock as any on Mount Rushmore – one that includes spells of homelessness and imprisonment and frequent rehab. He’s also been extraordinarily prolific and a tirelessly enthusiastic collaborator, fronting volatile psychedelic grunge exponents Screaming Trees, joining Josh Homme in Queens Of The Stone Age and Greg Dulli in both The Twilight Singers and The Gutter Twins, fronting grunge-blues soundscapers Soulsavers and across three albums playing Lee Hazlewood to Isobel Campbell’s Nancy Sinatra. None of which has done much to shift the perception of Lanegan as a troubled and notoriously taciturn, heavily tattooed titan of brooding alternative rock. His seventh album as the captain of his own ship may not overturn that reputation, but it is Lanegan’s most accessible to date and boasts two tracks that are such a departure from his familiar, self-described “death dirges” that they might well see him cross over from cultish acclaim to commercial success. All things are relative, however and Blues Funeral – the title almost comic in its playing to expectation – features the man’s trademark blend of slow-burning menace, lowering, blues-stained melancholy and gnarly alt.rock. It’s hardly a cheerful listen and Lanegan’s voice – a ravaged, bottom-of-the-well growl– is as compelling as it ever was, but the experimentation of 2004’s Bubblegum has now bedded in, flourishing alongside a textured heaviosity and easy-swinging grooves that source classic rock and country, electronic punk and krautrock, as well as Lanegan’s own history. QOTSA mates Homme and guitarist Alain Johannes (also at the recording desk) are again on board, along with Dulli and former Pearl Jam drummer, Jack Irons. “Gravedigger’s Song” opens, its throbbing, Neu!-like pulse establishing the album’s motorik framework much as the title does its gloomy lyrical concerns, which inform both the sulphurous “Bleeding Muddy Water” and “St Louis Elegy”, a terrific, Morricone/Orbison hybrid full of cavernous echo, where an electronic whine whips around Lanegan’s voice like the cruellest Arctic wind. The pace picks up with “Gray Goes Black”, its insistent swing as much that of hips on a club floor as a hangman’s rope and for “There’s a Riot in My House”, whose needling riffs bear Homme’s unmistakeable hallmark. Elsewhere, there are nods to Johnny Cash (“Phantasmagoria Blues”), Alice Coltrane (“Leviathan”) and Fairport Convention (“Deep Black Vanishing Train”). Lanegan’s is a seductive, highly personal and distinctive take on blues rock, his expression one of few that renders archetypes – the addict, the doubter, the drifter, the damned soul – as flesh and blood, rather than clichés. All of which makes the album’s wild cards appear doubly odd. Both strikingly atypical of a Mark Lanegan record, if not radical in their actual sound, “Quiver Syndrome” and “Ode to Sad Disco” show just how much he’s changed since the bare-boned, confessional alt.country/folk of his 1990 debut, The Winding Sheet. The former is an unapologetically heads-down, party-starting nod to “Sympathy for the Devil” that suggests Screaming Trees jamming with Primal Scream and was born to be blasted out of a car stereo on the open road, while “Ode to Sad Disco” sounds – impossibly, brilliantly – as if Lanegan has been bending an ear to Goldfrapp. Intended as an homage to “Sad Disco”, a piece of instrumental music by Keli Hlodversson from the second film in Danish director Nicolas Winding Refn’s Pusher trilogy, it marks the album’s halfway point. The nouveau disco/hi-NRG-house thump is tempered by notes of Killing Joke and lyrics that seem to underline the dark side of chemical euphoria, but its sweet, pumped-up hit potential still comes as a shock. Lanegan recently joked that should the cultish acclaim he’s enjoyed for years ever translate to commercial success, he’d move to a beach in Tahiti and stay there for the rest of his life. On the evidence of “Quiver Syndrome” and “Ode to Sad Disco” alone, he might want to start packing his floral shirts. Sharon O'Connell Q&A Mark Lanegan How did it feel to take the wheel again, after years of collaboration? It felt so good. I enjoyed all the other stuff I’ve done in between the last album and this one, but I look at these records as an opportunity to do whatever I’m into at the time, whereas with the other stuff I’m either helping support someone else’s vision or I’m in a partnership with somebody else. What were you into at the time? During the writing and recording I was listening to a lot of krautrock; it’s not new for me, but it was a particularly heavy phase. Bands like Kraftwerk, Kluster, Neu! and Harmonia – I used some of that electronic stuff on (i)Bubblegum(i) but in a noisier and harsher way. This time around, I wanted to use it in a way that was a little more…beautiful. Why did you choose to write some of the new songs on electronic gear? I ended up buying a couple of drum machines and Casios and a synthesizer and was messing around on them, so the album came out of that – although half the songs were written on guitar. That forced me to write a different kind of song, and also ended up influencing the way they sounded. I was trying to make something representative of a record I’d personally like to listen to, I guess. INTERVIEW: SHARON O’CONNELL

The grunge-blues giant returns, now digging deeper grooves and – shock! – nu disco…

To say that Mark Lanegan’s reputation precedes him is a monumental understatement. Over a 25-year career, he’s carved himself a profile as resolutely rock as any on Mount Rushmore – one that includes spells of homelessness and imprisonment and frequent rehab. He’s also been extraordinarily prolific and a tirelessly enthusiastic collaborator, fronting volatile psychedelic grunge exponents Screaming Trees, joining Josh Homme in Queens Of The Stone Age and Greg Dulli in both The Twilight Singers and The Gutter Twins, fronting grunge-blues soundscapers Soulsavers and across three albums playing Lee Hazlewood to Isobel Campbell’s Nancy Sinatra. None of which has done much to shift the perception of Lanegan as a troubled and notoriously taciturn, heavily tattooed titan of brooding alternative rock.

His seventh album as the captain of his own ship may not overturn that reputation, but it is Lanegan’s most accessible to date and boasts two tracks that are such a departure from his familiar, self-described “death dirges” that they might well see him cross over from cultish acclaim to commercial success. All things are relative, however and Blues Funeral – the title almost comic in its playing to expectation – features the man’s trademark blend of slow-burning menace, lowering, blues-stained melancholy and gnarly alt.rock. It’s hardly a cheerful listen and Lanegan’s voice – a ravaged, bottom-of-the-well growl– is as compelling as it ever was, but the experimentation of 2004’s Bubblegum has now bedded in, flourishing alongside a textured heaviosity and easy-swinging grooves that source classic rock and country, electronic punk and krautrock, as well as Lanegan’s own history. QOTSA mates Homme and guitarist Alain Johannes (also at the recording desk) are again on board, along with Dulli and former Pearl Jam drummer, Jack Irons.

“Gravedigger’s Song” opens, its throbbing, Neu!-like pulse establishing the album’s motorik framework much as the title does its gloomy lyrical concerns, which inform both the sulphurous “Bleeding Muddy Water” and “St Louis Elegy”, a terrific, Morricone/Orbison hybrid full of cavernous echo, where an electronic whine whips around Lanegan’s voice like the cruellest Arctic wind. The pace picks up with “Gray Goes Black”, its insistent swing as much that of hips on a club floor as a hangman’s rope and for “There’s a Riot in My House”, whose needling riffs bear Homme’s unmistakeable hallmark. Elsewhere, there are nods to Johnny Cash (“Phantasmagoria Blues”), Alice Coltrane (“Leviathan”) and Fairport Convention (“Deep Black Vanishing Train”).

Lanegan’s is a seductive, highly personal and distinctive take on blues rock, his expression one of few that renders archetypes – the addict, the doubter, the drifter, the damned soul – as flesh and blood, rather than clichés. All of which makes the album’s wild cards appear doubly odd. Both strikingly atypical of a Mark Lanegan record, if not radical in their actual sound, “Quiver Syndrome” and “Ode to Sad Disco” show just how much he’s changed since the bare-boned, confessional alt.country/folk of his 1990 debut, The Winding Sheet. The former is an unapologetically heads-down, party-starting nod to “Sympathy for the Devil” that suggests Screaming Trees jamming with Primal Scream and was born to be blasted out of a car stereo on the open road, while “Ode to Sad Disco” sounds – impossibly, brilliantly – as if Lanegan has been bending an ear to Goldfrapp. Intended as an homage to “Sad Disco”, a piece of instrumental music by Keli Hlodversson from the second film in Danish director Nicolas Winding Refn’s Pusher trilogy, it marks the album’s halfway point. The nouveau disco/hi-NRG-house thump is tempered by notes of Killing Joke and lyrics that seem to underline the dark side of chemical euphoria, but its sweet, pumped-up hit potential still comes as a shock.

Lanegan recently joked that should the cultish acclaim he’s enjoyed for years ever translate to commercial success, he’d move to a beach in Tahiti and stay there for the rest of his life. On the evidence of “Quiver Syndrome” and “Ode to Sad Disco” alone, he might want to start packing his floral shirts.

Sharon O’Connell

Q&A

Mark Lanegan

How did it feel to take the wheel again, after years of collaboration?

It felt so good. I enjoyed all the other stuff I’ve done in between the last album and this one, but I look at these records as an opportunity to do whatever I’m into at the time, whereas with the other stuff I’m either helping support someone else’s vision or I’m in a partnership with somebody else.

What were you into at the time?

During the writing and recording I was listening to a lot of krautrock; it’s not new for me, but it was a particularly heavy phase. Bands like Kraftwerk, Kluster, Neu! and Harmonia – I used some of that electronic stuff on (i)Bubblegum(i) but in a noisier and harsher way. This time around, I wanted to use it in a way that was a little more…beautiful.

Why did you choose to write some of the new songs on electronic gear?

I ended up buying a couple of drum machines and Casios and a synthesizer and was messing around on them, so the album came out of that – although half the songs were written on guitar. That forced me to write a different kind of song, and also ended up influencing the way they sounded. I was trying to make something representative of a record I’d personally like to listen to, I guess.

INTERVIEW: SHARON O’CONNELL