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Black Sabbath replace numerous summer reunion gigs with Ozzy & Friends shows

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Black Sabbath have reworked their summer reunion gig schedule as guitarist Tony Iommi continues to battle lymphoma. The metal legends, who announced they were reuniting with their original line-up last year, will still headline Download festival on June 10 but have replaced many of their previously...

Black Sabbath have reworked their summer reunion gig schedule as guitarist Tony Iommi continues to battle lymphoma.

The metal legends, who announced they were reuniting with their original line-up last year, will still headline Download festival on June 10 but have replaced many of their previously announced European festival dates with Ozzy & Friends gigs.

The shows will see frontman Ozzy Osbourne joined by special guests including Guns ‘N Roses guitarist Slash, Geezer Butler and Zakk Wylde.

In a statement on their official website, BlackSabbath.com, the band said Iommi was making “excellent progress” and said he was “looking forward to getting back on the road”.

It added the group had reworked their plans to avoid “[letting] the promoters and fans down” and confirmed they were continuing to work on new material for a forthcoming album.

Black Sabbath are currently in a dispute with original drummer Bill Ward over their reunion plans. Earlier this month, Ward released a statement revealing he was unhappy with the contract for the band’s new album and world tour and claimed he would not take part in the new album sessions and shows if a ‘fair agreement’ was not met.

A subsequent statement from Osbourne, Iommi and Butler indicated they would carry on regardless of Ward’s involvement.

In another Facebook post, Ward yesterday (February 17) denied he had pulled out of the reunion, but said he was waiting to receive a “signable contract”. He added: “Last week, we sent further communication to the attorney handling the negotiations to reach an agreement”.

Ozzy & Friends/Black Sabbath will play the following dates:

Helsinki Hartwall Arena (May 23)

Stockholm Stadium (25)

Denmark Jelling Festival (27)

Norway Bergen Calling Festival (29)

Oslo Spektrum (31)

Malmo Stadium (June 2)

Dortmund Westhalenhalle (4)

O2 Arena Prague (6)

Download festival (10 – Black Sabbath show)

Spain Azkena Rock Festival (15)

France Clisson Hellfest (17)

Belgium Graspop Metal Meeting (22)

Italy Gods Of Metal Festival (24)

Vienna Stadthalle (26)

Belgrade USCE Park (28)

Greece Rockwave Festival-Terra (July 1)

MC5 bassist Michael Davis dies aged 68

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Michael Davis, bass player with seminal garage rockers MC5, has died at the age of 68. Davis died on Friday (February 17) at the Enloe Medical Center in Chico, California after a month-long battle with liver disease, reports The Associated Press. Born in 1943, Davis joined MC5 in 1964, replacing...

Michael Davis, bass player with seminal garage rockers MC5, has died at the age of 68.

Davis died on Friday (February 17) at the Enloe Medical Center in Chico, California after a month-long battle with liver disease, reports The Associated Press.

Born in 1943, Davis joined MC5 in 1964, replacing the band’s original bass player Pat Burrows and he remained with the group until 1972. He played on each of the band’s three classic albums, including the extremely influential ‘Kick Out The Jams’. He also took part in two short-lived reunions with MC5, first in 2003 and then again in 2005.

The bassist also worked as a producer and was behind the controls for records by the likes of Lords of Altamont, Dollhouse, Tokyo Sex Destruction, and OJM.

In his later years, Davis co-founded the Music Is Revolution Foundation, a non-profit organisation dedicated to supporting music education in schools.

Davis is survived by his wife, their three sons, and a daughter from a previous marriage.

Steve Gunn/Black Twig Pickers: “Natch 1”

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First things first: you can grab this one for free right now, by heading over to http://natchmusic.tumblr.com. As you’ll see there from the Tumblr’s subtitle, this marvellous Steve Gunn/Black Twig Pickers session is the first in a series of “collaborative recordings from Black Dirt Studio”; Black Dirt being a facility in upstate New York that’s birthed a bunch of superb records in the past few years. Looking through the list of Jason Meagher’s clients at Black Dirt, the place seems to have become a kind of operations base for a certain exploratory, intuitive music that sits somewhere between the cosmic and the downhome: the “ Blues Control and Laraaji jam that’s been my default listening for the last few months was made here, as were albums by the whole NNCK/D Charles Speer/Hans Chew family, and plenty by Jack Rose and his affiliates – among them, of course, Steve Gunn and the Black Twig Pickers I wrote about the “ Gunn-Truscinki Duo album, “Ocean Parkway” , recently, but “Natch 1” is quite a different beast. There are three tracks, perhaps the most predictable being the opener, “Sally In The Garden Shifting Sand”, which has all the giddy, mystical roots energy of a typical Black Twig Pickers jam (here’s “ something I wrote about a live show a while back). Similarities, too, with the record they did with Jack Rose. “Old Strange”, though, takes the session someplace else, with vocals by - I’m reasonably sure – Steve Gunn (There seems the very faint possibility I actually saw him play it solo when he visited London supporting Purling Hiss last year). This one’s a weathered, dreamlike, moaning blues-raga that my wife last night suggested had something of West Africa about it. Amazing piece of music, and my favourite thing of the last week or so. The last track is brilliant, too, though, being a thoughtful, engrossing 20-odd minute improvisation called “Salted Caramel” that, among other things, exposes the Black Twig Pickers’ roots in the mighty folk psychedelicists, Pelt. Finding it kind of extraordinary that music of this richness and calibre is available for free, and plenty more seems to be on the way: “Natch 2” with Dave Shuford, Margot Bianca and Pigeons is apparently coming soon, too. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

First things first: you can grab this one for free right now, by heading over to http://natchmusic.tumblr.com. As you’ll see there from the Tumblr’s subtitle, this marvellous Steve Gunn/Black Twig Pickers session is the first in a series of “collaborative recordings from Black Dirt Studio”; Black Dirt being a facility in upstate New York that’s birthed a bunch of superb records in the past few years.

Looking through the list of Jason Meagher’s clients at Black Dirt, the place seems to have become a kind of operations base for a certain exploratory, intuitive music that sits somewhere between the cosmic and the downhome: the “ Blues Control and Laraaji jam that’s been my default listening for the last few months was made here, as were albums by the whole NNCK/D Charles Speer/Hans Chew family, and plenty by Jack Rose and his affiliates – among them, of course, Steve Gunn and the Black Twig Pickers

I wrote about the “ Gunn-Truscinki Duo album, “Ocean Parkway” , recently, but “Natch 1” is quite a different beast. There are three tracks, perhaps the most predictable being the opener, “Sally In The Garden Shifting Sand”, which has all the giddy, mystical roots energy of a typical Black Twig Pickers jam (here’s “ something I wrote about a live show a while back). Similarities, too, with the record they did with Jack Rose.

“Old Strange”, though, takes the session someplace else, with vocals by – I’m reasonably sure – Steve Gunn (There seems the very faint possibility I actually saw him play it solo when he visited London supporting Purling Hiss last year). This one’s a weathered, dreamlike, moaning blues-raga that my wife last night suggested had something of West Africa about it. Amazing piece of music, and my favourite thing of the last week or so.

The last track is brilliant, too, though, being a thoughtful, engrossing 20-odd minute improvisation called “Salted Caramel” that, among other things, exposes the Black Twig Pickers’ roots in the mighty folk psychedelicists, Pelt. Finding it kind of extraordinary that music of this richness and calibre is available for free, and plenty more seems to be on the way: “Natch 2” with Dave Shuford, Margot Bianca and Pigeons is apparently coming soon, too.

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

Saint Etienne announce May UK tour

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Saint Etienne have announced a UK tour for May. The trio, made up of Sarah Cracknell, Bob Stanley and Pete Wiggs, release their new single 'I've Got Music' this month and will drop their eighth studio album 'Words And Music By Saint Etienne' later this year. The band will begin their short UK r...

Saint Etienne have announced a UK tour for May.

The trio, made up of Sarah Cracknell, Bob Stanley and Pete Wiggs, release their new single ‘I’ve Got Music’ this month and will drop their eighth studio album ‘Words And Music By Saint Etienne’ later this year.

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.

‘Words And Music By Saint Etienne’ is the band’s first album since 2005’s ‘Tales From Turnpike House’ and will feature a contribution from famed pop producer Richard X.

Saint Etienne will play:

Sheffield Leadmill (May 22)

Liverpool Kazimier (24)

Cardiff Gate (25)

Leamington Spa Assembly (26)

London Palladium (28)

Jack White to make solo live debut on ‘Saturday Night Live’

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Jack White is set to launch his live solo career next month, performing on the long-running US sketch show Saturday Night Live. The former White Stripes man will appear as the comedy show's musical act on March 3. The programme will be hosted by actress and tabloid fixture Lindsay Lohan. The ap...

Jack White is set to launch his live solo career next month, performing on the long-running US sketch show Saturday Night Live.

The former White Stripes man will appear as the comedy show’s musical act on March 3. The programme will be hosted by actress and tabloid fixture Lindsay Lohan.

The appearance on Saturday Night Live will precede White’s debut solo live shows, which will take place at the end of 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.

White’s debut solo album ‘Blunderbuss’, produced by the man himself and recorded at his Third Man Studio in Nashville, will be released on April 23. Of the album, he said it was a record he “couldn’t have released until now”.

He said: “I’ve put off making records under my own name for a long time but these songs feel like they could only be presented under my name. These songs were written from scratch, had nothing to do with anyone or anything else but my own expression, my own colours on my own canvas.”

Pulp to play one-off London gig as part of the Teenage Cancer Trust shows

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Pulp will play a one-off London show as part of this year's Concerts for Teenage Cancer Trust gigs. Taking place at London's Royal Albert Hall from March 30 - April 3, the annual shows are now in their 12th year. Florence And The Machine, Example, Jessie J and a comedy evening with Jason Manford ...

Pulp will play a one-off London show as part of this year’s Concerts for Teenage Cancer Trust gigs.

Taking place at London‘s Royal Albert Hall from March 30 – April 3, the annual shows are now in their 12th year. Florence And The Machine, Example, Jessie J and a comedy evening with Jason Manford are the other headliners for this year’s run of shows.

Example will kick the shows off on March 30, with Pulp following on March 31. Jessie J will then play the London venue on April 1, with a comedy evening hosted by 8 Out Of 10 Cats man Jason Manford on April 2. Florence And The Machine will 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:

Example (March 30)

Pulp (31)

Jessie J (April 1)

Comedy evening with Jason Manford and special guests (2)

Florence And The Machine (3)

Damon Albarn and Graham Coxon unveil new Blur song ‘Under The Westway’ at London gig

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Damon Albarn and Graham Coxon unveiled a brand new Blur song during a short gig in London last night (February 19). Titled 'Under The Westway', the piano-led track brought the duo's three-song set to a close at War Child's pre-Brit Awards fundraiser at O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire. The song is the first new material to be aired by the band since 'Fool's Day', which was released as a limited edition vinyl and download as part of Record Store Day in 2010. Introducing the song, Albarn revealed it had been "written up the road from here a few weeks ago" before joking about the gig's headliner Ed Sheeran. He said: "It's got a lot of words - for me anyway - but not as many as Ed Sheeran has." After being introduced by BBC Radio 1 DJ Edith Bowman, the pair kicked off with 'He Thought Of Cars', taken from Blur's 1995 album 'The Great Escape', before playing 'Strange News From Another Star', which appeared on the Britpop band's 1997 self-titled album. Earlier in the evening, Dry The River and Malian musician Fatoumata Diawara played short sets, while Sheeran' headline set featured guest spots from Wretch 32, Example and Labrinth. Blur are set to perform at the Brit Awards tomorrow night (21) where they're due to pick up this year's Outstanding Contribution To Music gong. It'll be the first time all four of the band will have played together onstage since T In The Park in July 2009.

Damon Albarn and Graham Coxon unveiled a brand new Blur song during a short gig in London last night (February 19).

Titled ‘Under The Westway’, the piano-led track brought the duo’s three-song set to a close at War Child’s pre-Brit Awards fundraiser at O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire.

The song is the first new material to be aired by the band since ‘Fool’s Day’, which was released as a limited edition vinyl and download as part of Record Store Day in 2010.

Introducing the song, Albarn revealed it had been “written up the road from here a few weeks ago” before joking about the gig’s headliner Ed Sheeran. He said: “It’s got a lot of words – for me anyway – but not as many as Ed Sheeran has.”

After being introduced by BBC Radio 1 DJ Edith Bowman, the pair kicked off with ‘He Thought Of Cars’, taken from Blur’s 1995 album ‘The Great Escape’, before playing ‘Strange News From Another Star’, which appeared on the Britpop band’s 1997 self-titled album.

Earlier in the evening, Dry The River and Malian musician Fatoumata Diawara played short sets, while Sheeran’ headline set featured guest spots from Wretch 32, Example and Labrinth.

Blur are set to perform at the Brit Awards tomorrow night (21) where they’re due to pick up this year’s Outstanding Contribution To Music gong. It’ll be the first time all four of the band will have played together onstage since T In The Park in July 2009.

Pete Doherty: ‘I’ve stopped injecting drugs’

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Pete Doherty has claimed that he has stopped injecting drugs. The former Libertines rocker told The Independent that he had been inspired to clean up his act by his new girlfriend. He said: "I've stopped injecting. The only way I can see myself in a serious relationship is if I am toning it dow...

Pete Doherty has claimed that he has stopped injecting drugs.

The former Libertines rocker told The Independent that he had been inspired to clean up his act by his new girlfriend.

He said: “I’ve stopped injecting. The only way I can see myself in a serious relationship is if I am toning it down a bit. When you’re banging up all day you can’t really have someone else in your life, especially if she’s an English rose. I wouldn’t let her touch anything. I just wouldn’t.”

The singer also confirmed rumours that he was the father of South African model Lindi Hingston’s baby. Doherty, who already fathered a son, Astile, with Kill City singer Lisa Moorish in 2003, said he had been upset that Hingston had sold her story to a newspaper and also joked that he would use the blood of his daughter in a painting for his new UK art exhibition, which will run at London’s Cob Gallery from February 26 to March 4.

“I’m really surprised she’s done that [talked to a newspaper]. The little girl was two months premature. I said I’d try to be there for the birth,” he said, before confirming: “Yeah, she’s mine. We’re using the baby’s blood in one of the pictures.”

Pete Doherty recently returned to live action in London, playing two solo acoustic shows at Brixton Jamm last month and a gig at Nambucca earlier this month (February 5).

The shows saw him play a number of new songs, including ‘Siberian Fur’, a collaboration with long-time cohort Wolfman and ‘Bird Cage’, which featured the vocals of singer Suzi Martin.

Paul McCartney: ‘I’ve given up smoking weed for my daughter’

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Paul McCartney has revealed that he's given up smoking marijuana for his daughter. The Beatles legend, who released his new studio LP 'Kisses On The Bottom' earlier this month (February 6), told Rolling Stone that he'd quit the drug because of his parental duties to his daughter Beatrice. He sa...

Paul McCartney has revealed that he’s given up smoking marijuana for his daughter.

The Beatles legend, who released his new studio LP ‘Kisses On The Bottom’ earlier this month (February 6), told Rolling Stone that he’d quit the drug because of his parental duties to his daughter Beatrice.

He said: “I smoked my share. When you’re bringing up a youngster, your sense of responsibility does kick in, if you’re lucky, at some point. Enough’s enough – you just don’t seem to think it’s necessary.”

The singer was famously arrested in Japan in 1980 when touring the country with his band Wings and spent 10 nights in a prison after customs officials discovered half a pound of marijuana in his luggage, although he was eventually released and deported.

‘Kisses On The Bottom’ is made up of songs McCartney listened to as a child as well as two new songs, ‘My Valentine’ and ‘Only Our Hearts’. It was recorded with producer Tommy LiPuma, Diana Krall and her band and also features appearances from Eric Clapton and Stevie Wonder.

Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon calls Grammys ‘self-important’ after his double award win

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Justin Vernon of Bon Iver has spoken out after winning two Grammy Awards on Sunday (February 12), something he said he was 'uncomfortable' about during his acceptance speech for Best New Artist. Speaking to Spin, Vernon admitted that he didn't think the Grammy's were 'evil', saying: "It's not that the Grammys are evil, they've just been around the longest." Vernon, who also won the award for Best Alternative Music Album for the self-titled 'Bon Iver', went on to add that even though he still has reservations about the awards, he "enjoyed" himself at the ceremony and said: "Ed Droste (Grizzly Bear) wrote me a note that said, 'Hey man, go win one for the indies.' I may not know what he means by 'the indies.' We could sit down and make a ten-point definition of what the indies are; we may not agree on every one on of them. But he's a friend and he's saying, 'We're with you.' You can't deny the fact that the Grammys have a historical significance as far as the industry staying above water. But that doesn't budge some of my personal concerns about it being too self-important." Vernon said he nixed part of his speech because he thought it would be "confusing and too self-referential." The cut part apparently read: "It's hard to accept this award because of all the talent out there, but also because Bon Iver is an entity and something that I gave myself to. A lot of people give themselves to it, so it's hard to think of Bon Iver as an artist. Bon Iver is not an artist. Bon Iver is an idea." US children's cartoon character Bonnie Bear has invited Bon Iver to collaborate with her after Grammy viewers misheard Bon Iver's name as Bonnie Bear after his wins and it started trending on Twitter, reports the Washington Post. A representative from BabyFirstTV said: "Bonnie Bear and all her friends at BabyFirstTV congratulate you, Bon Iver, on your Grammy win! We would be delighted to invite the band to sing along with Bonnie Bear and her best friend, Mr. Gramophone, on BabyFirstTV where she paints beautiful pictures and teaches young children about the world around them."

Justin Vernon of Bon Iver has spoken out after winning two Grammy Awards on Sunday (February 12), something he said he was ‘uncomfortable’ about during his acceptance speech for Best New Artist.

Speaking to Spin, Vernon admitted that he didn’t think the Grammy’s were ‘evil’, saying: “It’s not that the Grammys are evil, they’ve just been around the longest.”

Vernon, who also won the award for Best Alternative Music Album for the self-titled ‘Bon Iver’, went on to add that even though he still has reservations about the awards, he “enjoyed” himself at the ceremony and said: “Ed Droste (Grizzly Bear) wrote me a note that said, ‘Hey man, go win one for the indies.’ I may not know what he means by ‘the indies.’ We could sit down and make a ten-point definition of what the indies are; we may not agree on every one on of them. But he’s a friend and he’s saying, ‘We’re with you.’ You can’t deny the fact that the Grammys have a historical significance as far as the industry staying above water. But that doesn’t budge some of my personal concerns about it being too self-important.”

Vernon said he nixed part of his speech because he thought it would be “confusing and too self-referential.” The cut part apparently read: “It’s hard to accept this award because of all the talent out there, but also because Bon Iver is an entity and something that I gave myself to. A lot of people give themselves to it, so it’s hard to think of Bon Iver as an artist. Bon Iver is not an artist. Bon Iver is an idea.”

US children’s cartoon character Bonnie Bear has invited Bon Iver to collaborate with her after Grammy viewers misheard Bon Iver‘s name as Bonnie Bear after his wins and it started trending on Twitter, reports the Washington Post.

A representative from BabyFirstTV said: “Bonnie Bear and all her friends at BabyFirstTV congratulate you, Bon Iver, on your Grammy win! We would be delighted to invite the band to sing along with Bonnie Bear and her best friend, Mr. Gramophone, on BabyFirstTV where she paints beautiful pictures and teaches young children about the world around them.”

The Beach Boys announce reunion tour dates

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The Beach Boys have announced a mammoth run of US dates for their reunion tour this April. The legendary '60s band will play 37 shows across the States as part of their 50th anniversary celebrations and, with the band revealing their plans to play a 50-date international tour in December last yea...

The Beach Boys have announced a mammoth run of US dates for their reunion tour this April.

The legendary ’60s band will play 37 shows across the States as part of their 50th anniversary celebrations and, with the band revealing their plans to play a 50-date international tour in December last year, more shows are expected to be announced in the future.

Founding members Brian Wilson, Mike Love and Al Jardine played together for the first time in over 20 years at the Grammy Awards in Los Angeles last Sunday (February 12). They played with touring members Bruce Johnston and David Marks and teamed up with Maroon 5 and Foster The People for a rendition of their classic hit ‘Good Vibrations’.

The tour will kick off with a show at Arizona’s Anselmo Valencia Amphitheatre and finish with a gig at Harvey’s Lake Tahoe Amphitheatre in Nevada on July 15.

The Beach Boys first formed in 1961 and enjoyed huge success throughout the following decade.

Brian Wilson last performed with The Beach Boys during the making of their 1996 album ‘Stars And Stripes Vol 1’, and has toured as a solo artist since.

Mumford And Sons say they are in the ‘final stages’ of recording their second album

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Mumford And Sons have said that they are in the "final stages" of recording the follow-up to their debut album 'Sigh No More'. The band are set to release the album later this year and their multi-instrumentalist Ben Lovett has said that they are almost finished with it. Speaking to MTV News, h...

Mumford And Sons have said that they are in the “final stages” of recording the follow-up to their debut album ‘Sigh No More’.

The band are set to release the album later this year and their multi-instrumentalist Ben Lovett has said that they are almost finished with it.

Speaking to MTV News, he said of the album’s progress: “We are in the final stages, we’re not finished, we don’t quite know the exact tracklisting. We have kind of road-tested some songs, and we have picked up some new songs and dropped some ones that people might have thought we were going to be putting on the record. We just want to make a record that’s cohesive and one that we feel represents us best right now.”

Lovett added that the band had not worked out which of their new songs would make the cut for the album yet and that he couldn’t give any details on when the record would come out.

He said of this: “There just isn’t [a release date yet]. We can’t even say that any particular song is definitely on the record, because we just don’t know. But we’re being urgent with it, we’re trying very hard.”

The band are scheduled to play as part of this year’s Amnesty International’s Secret Policeman’s Ball fundraiser in New York next month.

They’re also penciled in to perform at this year’s RockNess festival in Inverness in June, alongside the likes of Biffy Clyro and Justice.

Kathleen Edwards – Voyageur

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The Canadian went looking for a new producer. What she found, on her fourth album, was love. The story of Voyageur is the very definition of bittersweet. Newly divorced after five years of marriage to Colin Cripps, her guitarist and bandleader, Kathleen Edwards was writing up a storm and itching to break out of the alt-country/singer-songwriter cul-de-sac. Edwards’ search for a new producer led her to the doorstep of Justin Vernon’s Wisconsin studio. Vernon took a break from his labours on this year’s Bon Iver to cut a quick track with Edwards, in order to determine whether the two had any chemistry. She chose the autumnal ballad “Wapusk”, which she’d recently written and recorded for Canada’s National Parks Project (the new version was released last September as a non-LP single). To say that the impromptu session broke the ice would be an understatement; not only did Edwards locate a simpatico co-producer in Vernon, she also found her soul mate. Vernon acknowledged their shared experience in an ardent dedication found in the Bon Iver booklet: “To Kathleen for… bringing the most peace I’ve ever felt in my life”. The album opens on a doggedly hopeful note, as, amid the exuberant, acoustic guitar-driven onrush of “Empty Threat”, Edwards anticipates a fresh start: “I hit my head ’til it bled/I pressed reset, goddammit!/I’m moving to America… It’s not an empty threat”. She’d written the song right after spending several weeks in Seattle and Portland, where she’d done some co-writing with John Roderick of the Long Winters, and though the lyric relates to that experience, it dramatically foreshadows what would subsequently go down in Wisconsin. Two songs later, on the hushed ballad “A Soft Place To Land”, she’s practically crushed under the weight of unfinished business, desperately clawing her way out of the wreckage. “Calling it quits/You think this is easy”, she asks at the top of the song, over her own mournful violin. From these thematic scene-setters, the album erupts into sustained grandeur. The blend of Edwards’ beguiling voice, sticky handcrafted melodies and sing-along refrains with Vernon’s heady arrangements is consistently intoxicating, as the moods and images continually shift between lacerating heartbreak (“A House Full Of Empty Rooms”, “Pink Champagne”) and open-hearted anticipation (the chunky, Tom Petty-style rocker “Mint”, the percolating “Sidecars”). These juxtapositions continue through the course of Voyageur, forming its psychological and its musical dynamic, posed by continual shifts between the visceral and the ethereal. The most striking moments occur when the two extremes collide on “Change The Sheets” and “Going To Hell”, with Edwards’ wounded vocals enclosed in Vernon’s pillowy sonic tapestries like a lover’s embrace. “Change The Sheets” boasts the album’s biggest hook in Edwards’ urgent chanting of “Go ahead, run, run, run, run”, as if she can’t wait for the past to recede and the future to flood over her. Though Voyageur can legitimately be seen as a companion piece to Bon Iver, Edwards’ defining characteristics have never been more dramatically present. Her alternating personas (vulnerable ingénue; ballsy chick).The Neil Young-like elliptical resonance of her lyrics. The homespun elegance of her melodies. As a divorce record, Voyageur is as brutally honest as Richard and Linda Thompson’s Shoot Out The Lights, but this is a song cycle that documents a journey from darkness toward a light at the end of the tunnel. Throughout, Vernon’s arrangements and performances come off not as an overlay to Edwards’ songs but rather as an ecstatic outgrowth of them, a literal labour of love. It’s hard to conceive of a more thrillingly romantic record than this one. Bud Scoppa Q&A Kathleen Edwards Were you consciously trying to escape the Americana/singer-songwriter pigeonhole in making this record? I look at my body of work and everything is a snapshot of who I am and where I’ve been, and I don’t think any of it’s dishonest, but at the same time I have all of these musical influences laying under the surface that I’ve never had the opportunity to get on a record: Randy Newman, John Prine, and Richard Buckner. And Wilco has been able to progress as a musical entity without having to reinvent themselves. That’s what you’ve done with Voyageur... I finally got the opportunity to work with somebody who was really committed to the idea of helping me see that through. Someone who could step in and wasn’t just gonna finish the tracks but was actually gonna work on the ideas until they were where they needed to be – for him as a producer and for me as the person, going, “I need something to be different this time, not because I’m desperate but because I haven’t done it yet”. “Empty Threat”, with its “Coming to America...” chorus, seems to anticipate what was about to happen to you. [Laughs] Yeah, it’s pretty fucked up. The going joke with my friends and family is, “Not such an empty threat, is it”? And I’m like, “Well, I couldn’t see that comin’”. INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

The Canadian went looking for a new producer. What she found, on her fourth album, was love.

The story of Voyageur is the very definition of bittersweet. Newly divorced after five years of marriage to Colin Cripps, her guitarist and bandleader, Kathleen Edwards was writing up a storm and itching to break out of the alt-country/singer-songwriter cul-de-sac. Edwards’ search for a new producer led her to the doorstep of Justin Vernon’s Wisconsin studio. Vernon took a break from his labours on this year’s Bon Iver to cut a quick track with Edwards, in order to determine whether the two had any chemistry.

She chose the autumnal ballad “Wapusk”, which she’d recently written and recorded for Canada’s National Parks Project (the new version was released last September as a non-LP single). To say that the impromptu session broke the ice would be an understatement; not only did Edwards locate a simpatico co-producer in Vernon, she also found her soul mate. Vernon acknowledged their shared experience in an ardent dedication found in the Bon Iver booklet: “To Kathleen for… bringing the most peace I’ve ever felt in my life”.

The album opens on a doggedly hopeful note, as, amid the exuberant, acoustic guitar-driven onrush of “Empty Threat”, Edwards anticipates a fresh start: “I hit my head ’til it bled/I pressed reset, goddammit!/I’m moving to America… It’s not an empty threat”. She’d written the song right after spending several weeks in Seattle and Portland, where she’d done some co-writing with John Roderick of the Long Winters, and though the lyric relates to that experience, it dramatically foreshadows what would subsequently go down in Wisconsin. Two songs later, on the hushed ballad “A Soft Place To Land”, she’s practically crushed under the weight of unfinished business, desperately clawing her way out of the wreckage. “Calling it quits/You think this is easy”, she asks at the top of the song, over her own mournful violin.

From these thematic scene-setters, the album erupts into sustained grandeur. The blend of Edwards’ beguiling voice, sticky handcrafted melodies and sing-along refrains with Vernon’s heady arrangements is consistently intoxicating, as the moods and images continually shift between lacerating heartbreak (“A House Full Of Empty Rooms”, “Pink Champagne”) and open-hearted anticipation (the chunky, Tom Petty-style rocker “Mint”, the percolating “Sidecars”).

These juxtapositions continue through the course of Voyageur, forming its psychological and its musical dynamic, posed by continual shifts between the visceral and the ethereal. The most striking moments occur when the two extremes collide on “Change The Sheets” and “Going To Hell”, with Edwards’ wounded vocals enclosed in Vernon’s pillowy sonic tapestries like a lover’s embrace. “Change The Sheets” boasts the album’s biggest hook in Edwards’ urgent chanting of “Go ahead, run, run, run, run”, as if she can’t wait for the past to recede and the future to flood over her.

Though Voyageur can legitimately be seen as a companion piece to Bon Iver, Edwards’ defining characteristics have never been more dramatically present. Her alternating personas (vulnerable ingénue; ballsy chick).The Neil Young-like elliptical resonance of her lyrics. The homespun elegance of her melodies. As a divorce record, Voyageur is as brutally honest as Richard and Linda Thompson’s Shoot Out The Lights, but this is a song cycle that documents a journey from darkness toward a light at the end of the tunnel. Throughout, Vernon’s arrangements and performances come off not as an overlay to Edwards’ songs but rather as an ecstatic outgrowth of them, a literal labour of love. It’s hard to conceive of a more thrillingly romantic record than this one.

Bud Scoppa

Q&A

Kathleen Edwards

Were you consciously trying to escape the Americana/singer-songwriter pigeonhole in making this record?

I look at my body of work and everything is a snapshot of who I am and where I’ve been, and I don’t think any of it’s dishonest, but at the same time I have all of these musical influences laying under the surface that I’ve never had the opportunity to get on a record: Randy Newman, John Prine, and Richard Buckner. And Wilco has been able to progress as a musical entity without having to reinvent themselves.

That’s what you’ve done with Voyageur…

I finally got the opportunity to work with somebody who was really committed to the idea of helping me see that through. Someone who could step in and wasn’t just gonna finish the tracks but was actually gonna work on the ideas until they were where they needed to be – for him as a producer and for me as the person, going, “I need something to be different this time, not because I’m desperate but because I haven’t done it yet”.

“Empty Threat”, with its “Coming to America…” chorus, seems to anticipate what was about to happen to you.

[Laughs] Yeah, it’s pretty fucked up. The going joke with my friends and family is, “Not such an empty threat, is it”? And I’m like, “Well, I couldn’t see that comin’”. INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

The Make-Up reform to play ATP event in London

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Cult garage soul band The Make-Up will reform in order to play this May's I'll Be Your Mirror event at London's Alexandra Palace. The band, fronted by Nation Of Ulysses' Ian Svenonius, released their last studio album, 'Save Yourself', in 1999. This was followed by a live album, 'Untouchable Sound', which was released in 2006, after their split. Following the band's dissolution, Svenonious went on to play in Weird War with The Make-Up bassist Michelle Mae, and then fronted Chain And The Gang. The reformation of The Make-Up is being billed as a UK exclusive. This year's I'll Be Your Mirror takes place between May 25 and 27, and will be co-curated by Mogwai and see sets from Slayer, Dirty Three, Mudhoney, Yuck and Melvins. The Make-Up play the final day of the event (May 27). The current line up is below: May 25 – Curated by ATP Slayer performing 'Reign In Blood' Sleep Melvins Wolves In The Throne Room Yob Death Grips May 25 - Curated By Mogwai Mogwai Dirty Three Codeine Mudhoney Chavez Bill Wells & Aidan Moffat Harvey Milk Floor The Soft Moon Balam Acab Antoni Maiovvi May 27 – Curated by ATP The Afghan Whigs Ultramagnetic MCs The Make-Up Archers Of Loaf Thee Oh Sees Yuck Sleepy Sun Tennis Tall Firs Forest Swords Demdike Stare Siskiyou

Cult garage soul band The Make-Up will reform in order to play this May’s I’ll Be Your Mirror event at London’s Alexandra Palace.

The band, fronted by Nation Of Ulysses‘ Ian Svenonius, released their last studio album, ‘Save Yourself’, in 1999. This was followed by a live album, ‘Untouchable Sound’, which was released in 2006, after their split. Following the band’s dissolution, Svenonious went on to play in Weird War with The Make-Up bassist Michelle Mae, and then fronted Chain And The Gang.

The reformation of The Make-Up is being billed as a UK exclusive. This year’s I’ll Be Your Mirror takes place between May 25 and 27, and will be co-curated by Mogwai and see sets from Slayer, Dirty Three, Mudhoney, Yuck and Melvins. The Make-Up play the final day of the event (May 27).

The current line up is below:

May 25 – Curated by ATP

Slayer performing ‘Reign In Blood’

Sleep

Melvins

Wolves In The Throne Room

Yob

Death Grips

May 25 – Curated By Mogwai

Mogwai

Dirty Three

Codeine

Mudhoney

Chavez

Bill Wells & Aidan Moffat

Harvey Milk

Floor

The Soft Moon

Balam Acab

Antoni Maiovvi

May 27 – Curated by ATP

The Afghan Whigs

Ultramagnetic MCs

The Make-Up

Archers Of Loaf

Thee Oh Sees

Yuck

Sleepy Sun

Tennis

Tall Firs

Forest Swords

Demdike Stare

Siskiyou

Bruce Springsteen’s gig in Hyde Park at risk

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Gigs set for this summer in Hyde Park, London are reportedly at risk because of complaints by local residents. The London Evening Standard writes that Mayfair residents have complained about the noise from the regular shows which take place in the public park every summer. Rihanna and Drake are set to headline Wireless Festival over the weekend of July 6-8, while Madonna will play the park on July 11 and Bruce Springsteen on July 14. The acts most at risk of being pulled are dance acts who play repetitive beats. A report says last summer 109 complaints about the noise were made, which was double the number from 2010. The Environmental Health Department at Westminster City Council has now filed a report in application for a review of the licence to hold concerts in Hyde Park, with Westminster councillors set to make a decision on the review tomorrow (February 17). The report recommends that the number of shows is cut from 13 to six each summer, and also proposes that the capacity for four of those gigs is reduced from 80,000 to 65,000 people. The remaining two shows would hold a capacity of 50,000. The Evening Standard quotes two local residents who say of the noise: "It's pretty bad. There are two issues for us - the number of concerts and noise they're allowed to make. If you sit here with the windows open on a hot day, you can hear every word," says Mike Dunn, vice-chairman of the Mayfair Residents Group. Meanwhile, Councillor Glenys Roberts said: "I like to watch the men's Wimbledon final but there's always a concert on that Sunday and the noise completely drowns out the television." Mayor of London Boris Johnson has also stepped into the debate, adding: "I want to see Madonna in Hyde Park and so does everybody else, I hope a good solution will be reached this week."

Gigs set for this summer in Hyde Park, London are reportedly at risk because of complaints by local residents.

The London Evening Standard writes that Mayfair residents have complained about the noise from the regular shows which take place in the public park every summer. Rihanna and Drake are set to headline Wireless Festival over the weekend of July 6-8, while Madonna will play the park on July 11 and Bruce Springsteen on July 14.

The acts most at risk of being pulled are dance acts who play repetitive beats. A report says last summer 109 complaints about the noise were made, which was double the number from 2010. The Environmental Health Department at Westminster City Council has now filed a report in application for a review of the licence to hold concerts in Hyde Park, with Westminster councillors set to make a decision on the review tomorrow (February 17).

The report recommends that the number of shows is cut from 13 to six each summer, and also proposes that the capacity for four of those gigs is reduced from 80,000 to 65,000 people. The remaining two shows would hold a capacity of 50,000.

The Evening Standard quotes two local residents who say of the noise: “It’s pretty bad. There are two issues for us – the number of concerts and noise they’re allowed to make. If you sit here with the windows open on a hot day, you can hear every word,” says Mike Dunn, vice-chairman of the Mayfair Residents Group.

Meanwhile, Councillor Glenys Roberts said: “I like to watch the men’s Wimbledon final but there’s always a concert on that Sunday and the noise completely drowns out the television.”

Mayor of London Boris Johnson has also stepped into the debate, adding: “I want to see Madonna in Hyde Park and so does everybody else, I hope a good solution will be reached this week.”

Kraftwerk to play eight night ‘3D’ residency at New York’s Museum of Modern Art

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Iconic German synth band Kraftwerk are set to play an eight-night residency at New York's Museum of Modern Art in April. The band will appear in 'Retrospective 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8' from April 10-17 in The Donald B. and Catherine C Marron Atrium at the museum. They will play each of their albums live, in order, accompanied by a '3D visualization' of the record. Kraftwerk will also play additional songs from other albums at each show. Kraftwerk will play: 1 – 'Autobahn (1974) (April 10) 2 – 'Radio-Activity' (1975) (11) 3 – 'Trans Europe Express (1977) (11) 4 – 'The Man-Machine' (1978) (13) 5 – 'Computer World' (1981) (14) 6 – 'Techno Pop' (1986) (15) 7 – 'The Mix' (1991) (16) 8 – 'Tour de France' (2003) (17) Tickets will go on sale February 22. For more information, visit: MoMA.org Kraftwerk last performed in the UK in 2009, at Bestival and the Manchester International Festival. At the latter they appeared at the Manchester Velodrome and whilst playing 'Tour de France' were accompanied by members of the GB cycling team, who cycled around the track along with the music.

Iconic German synth band Kraftwerk are set to play an eight-night residency at New York’s Museum of Modern Art in April.

The band will appear in ‘Retrospective 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8’ from April 10-17 in The Donald B. and Catherine C Marron Atrium at the museum. They will play each of their albums live, in order, accompanied by a ‘3D visualization’ of the record. Kraftwerk will also play additional songs from other albums at each show.

Kraftwerk will play:

1 – ‘Autobahn (1974) (April 10)

2 – ‘Radio-Activity’ (1975) (11)

3 – ‘Trans Europe Express (1977) (11)

4 – ‘The Man-Machine’ (1978) (13)

5 – ‘Computer World’ (1981) (14)

6 – ‘Techno Pop’ (1986) (15)

7 – ‘The Mix’ (1991) (16)

8 – ‘Tour de France’ (2003) (17)

Tickets will go on sale February 22. For more information, visit: MoMA.org

Kraftwerk last performed in the UK in 2009, at Bestival and the Manchester International Festival. At the latter they appeared at the Manchester Velodrome and whilst playing ‘Tour de France’ were accompanied by members of the GB cycling team, who cycled around the track along with the music.

Paul McCartney: ‘We never reformed The Beatles in case it ruined our legacy’

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Paul McCartney has revealed that The Beatles considered reforming while they were all still alive, but decided against it in case it ruined their legacy. The singer, who released his new studio album 'Kisses On The Bottom' earlier this month (February 6), told Rolling Stone that the Fab Four had ...

Paul McCartney has revealed that The Beatles considered reforming while they were all still alive, but decided against it in case it ruined their legacy.

The singer, who released his new studio album ‘Kisses On The Bottom’ earlier this month (February 6), told Rolling Stone that the Fab Four had discussed reuniting on several occasions but the arguments to do so were “never convincing enough”.

Speaking to Rolling Stone, he said: “There was talk of reforming The Beatles a couple of times, but it didn’t gel, there was not enough passion behind the idea. More importantly, it could have spoiled the whole idea of The Beatles, so wrong that they’d be like, ‘Oh, my God, they weren’t any good’.”

He went on to reveal that he and his three former bandmates had never all been persuaded that it was the right thing to do, adding: “The reformation suggestions were never convincing enough.

“They were kind of nice when they happened – ‘That would be good, yeah’ – but then one of us would always not fancy it. And that was enough, because we were the ultimate democracy.”

‘Kisses On The Bottom’ is made up of songs McCartney listened to as a child as well as two new songs, ‘My Valentine’ and ‘Only Our Hearts’. It was recorded with producer Tommy LiPuma, Diana Krall and her band and also features appearances from Eric Clapton and Stevie Wonder.

Kings Of Leon to begin writing new album this year?

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Kings Of Leon have hinted that they could start work on a new studio album this year. Speaking to MTV, drummer Nathan Followill said the band had repaired their relationship after a tumultuous 2011 and would "probably start kicking around" some new ideas in the studio in the next six months. Th...

Kings Of Leon have hinted that they could start work on a new studio album this year.

Speaking to MTV, drummer Nathan Followill said the band had repaired their relationship after a tumultuous 2011 and would “probably start kicking around” some new ideas in the studio in the next six months.

The Tennessee stadium rockers were forced to cancel their entire US tour last year after frontman Caleb Followill stormed offstage in Dallas on July 29 and was deemed too ill and exhausted to tour, with his bandmates later plagued by rumours that they wanted to kick him out of the band and were forcing him to go to rehab.

However, Nathan claimed that the band were now on good terms, stating: “Over the holidays, [you] break some bread, have some turkey, everyone makes up. I don’t think it was as big as people thought it was, but the press machine takes it and runs with it.”

The sticksman also revealed that they had recently purchased a studio in Nashville and were hoping to start working on new material there soon, adding: “We’re going to spend the next few months getting that up and running; kind of make it our little clubhouse to get there and just kind of goof off whenever we want to. But, I’d say within the next six months, we’ll probably start kicking some stuff around.”

Meanwhile, his brother Caleb revealed that he had already started work on new ideas and was in the early stages of the writing process. “I’ve been writing a lot,” he said. “Kinda want everyone to get a little break from each other, but whenever they’re ready, I want to play some stuff.”

Speaking of his early efforts, he added: “The melodies are really strong, and the lyrics that I have written I think are pretty good, but we’ll see. These guys are always a good judge of if I’m going the right way with something or not.”

Kings Of Leon released their fifth studio album ‘Come Around Sundown’ in October 2010.

Singer-songwriter Dory Previn dies aged 86

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US singer-songwriter Dory Previn has died aged 86. Previn, who was formerly married to composer Andre Previn and collaborated with him on two Oscar-nominated songs, passed away in Massachusetts, according to the New York Times. Her death was confirmed by her current husband Joby Baker. She was born in 1925 as Dorothy Veronica Langin and embarked upon a career as an actress and a dancer before she met and married Andre in 1959. The pair received an Oscar nomination for their song 'Faraway Part Of Town' from the film Pepe in 1961, and picked up another nod from the Academy in 1961 for 'Second Chance', which featured on the soundtrack of Two For The Seesaw. Previn was briefly institutionalised in 1965 after she suffered a nervous breakdown. Her classic 'Valley Of The Dolls' soundtrack was written in 1967, but in 1970 she and Andre divorced after he had an affair with actress Mia Farrow. She responded by releasing six albums that decade directly inspired by the split, and also married for a second time in 1984 to Canadian actor Joby Baker. According to the BBC, Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker is amongst the artists to have publicly stated that they were influenced by Previn. He chose her track 'Lady With The Braid' as one of his Desert Island Discs in 2005, and also paid tribute to her in his 2011 tome Mother, Brother, Lover.

US singer-songwriter Dory Previn has died aged 86.

Previn, who was formerly married to composer Andre Previn and collaborated with him on two Oscar-nominated songs, passed away in Massachusetts, according to the New York Times. Her death was confirmed by her current husband Joby Baker.

She was born in 1925 as Dorothy Veronica Langin and embarked upon a career as an actress and a dancer before she met and married Andre in 1959. The pair received an Oscar nomination for their song ‘Faraway Part Of Town’ from the film Pepe in 1961, and picked up another nod from the Academy in 1961 for ‘Second Chance’, which featured on the soundtrack of Two For The Seesaw.

Previn was briefly institutionalised in 1965 after she suffered a nervous breakdown. Her classic ‘Valley Of The Dolls’ soundtrack was written in 1967, but in 1970 she and Andre divorced after he had an affair with actress Mia Farrow.

She responded by releasing six albums that decade directly inspired by the split, and also married for a second time in 1984 to Canadian actor Joby Baker.

According to the BBC, Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker is amongst the artists to have publicly stated that they were influenced by Previn. He chose her track ‘Lady With The Braid’ as one of his Desert Island Discs in 2005, and also paid tribute to her in his 2011 tome Mother, Brother, Lover.

Watch Jack White’s new video for ‘Love Interruption’

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Jack White has revealed the new video for his debut solo single 'Love Interruption' - scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to watch. As promised, the former White Stripes man released the video, which he also directed, for St Valentine's Day. The track sees him work with singer Ruby Ama...

Jack White has revealed the new video for his debut solo single ‘Love Interruption’ – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to watch.

As promised, the former White Stripes man released the video, which he also directed, for St Valentine’s Day. The track sees him work 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.

White’s debut solo album ‘Blunderbuss’, produced by the man himself and recorded at his Third Man Studio in Nashville, will be released on April 23. Of the album, he said it was a record he “couldn’t have released until now”.

He said: “I’ve put off making records under my own name for a long time but these songs feel like they could only be presented under my name. These songs were written from scratch, had nothing to do with anyone or anything else but my own expression, my own colours on my own canvas.”

Jack White will play:

Chattanooga Track 29 (March 10)

Birmingham WorkPlay Soundstage (12)

Memphis New Daisy Theatre (13)

Tulsa Cain’s Ballroom (15)