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London ATP venue gets restoration grant

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Alexandra Palace, where All Tomorrow's Parties holds its now yearly I'll Be Your Mirror event - headlined in 2011 by Portishead - has received a £320,000 grant from English Heritage for "urgent repairs". The roof of the Victorian theatre, which has been closed to the public for years, will be fixed up, as will the south terrace, reports the Hornsey Journal. Alexandra Palace has been on English Heritage's Buildings At Risk Register for 15 years. ATP campaigned for money to help with the restoration of the Victorian theatre last year. This year's I'll Be Your Mirror takes place May 25-27, and will be co-curated by Mogwai and see sets from Slayer, Dirty Three, Mudhoney, Yuck and Melvins. The Black Keys recently played three nights at the iconic venue in Wood Green, North London, and the London landmark has seen shows from Arctic Monkeys, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds and the White Stripes over the years.

Alexandra Palace, where All Tomorrow’s Parties holds its now yearly I’ll Be Your Mirror event – headlined in 2011 by Portishead – has received a £320,000 grant from English Heritage for “urgent repairs”.

The roof of the Victorian theatre, which has been closed to the public for years, will be fixed up, as will the south terrace, reports the Hornsey Journal. Alexandra Palace has been on English Heritage’s Buildings At Risk Register for 15 years.

ATP campaigned for money to help with the restoration of the Victorian theatre last year. This year’s I’ll Be Your Mirror takes place May 25-27, and will be co-curated by Mogwai and see sets from Slayer, Dirty Three, Mudhoney, Yuck and Melvins.

The Black Keys recently played three nights at the iconic venue in Wood Green, North London, and the London landmark has seen shows from Arctic Monkeys, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds and the White Stripes over the years.

Jamie Oliver finds Joy Division and New Order master tapes in restaurant basement

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Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver has apparently found rare Joy Division and New Order master tapes when digging up the basement of a new restaurant in Manchester. The new restaurant, which is being built in a former branch of Midland bank, was being excavated when the tapes were found, alongside guns, gold and jewellery. The total value of the haul is £1.1 million, reports Holy Moly. Oliver has since given everything found in the basement to the treasury. New Order have just been announced as the Saturday night (September 8) headliner at this year's Bestival. Bestival will take place from September 6–9 at Robin Hill Park on the Isle Of Wight. For more information about the event, see Bestival.net. Prior to that, the Manchester band tour the UK for the first time in over five years. New Order will play: O2 Apollo Manchester (April 26, 27) Birmingham Ballroom (29) O2 Academy Brixton (May 2, 3) O2 Academy Glasgow (5)

Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver has apparently found rare Joy Division and New Order master tapes when digging up the basement of a new restaurant in Manchester.

The new restaurant, which is being built in a former branch of Midland bank, was being excavated when the tapes were found, alongside guns, gold and jewellery. The total value of the haul is £1.1 million, reports Holy Moly. Oliver has since given everything found in the basement to the treasury.

New Order have just been announced as the Saturday night (September 8) headliner at this year’s Bestival.

Bestival will take place from September 6–9 at Robin Hill Park on the Isle Of Wight. For more information about the event, see Bestival.net.

Prior to that, the Manchester band tour the UK for the first time in over five years.

New Order will play:

O2 Apollo Manchester (April 26, 27)

Birmingham Ballroom (29)

O2 Academy Brixton (May 2, 3)

O2 Academy Glasgow (5)

Paul McCartney will not make a cameo appearance in ‘Mad Men’

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Paul McCartney will not be making a cameo in US television show Mad Men, despite earlier reports suggesting he would. McCartney, who released his new album 'Kisses On The Bottom' last week (February 6), has signed a deal with the show's producers giving them permission to use his songs. A sourc...

Paul McCartney will not be making a cameo in US television show Mad Men, despite earlier reports suggesting he would.

McCartney, who released his new album ‘Kisses On The Bottom’ last week (February 6), has signed a deal with the show’s producers giving them permission to use his songs.

A source had told The Sun that the Beatles legend could also make a fleeting appearance in the programme himself, but this rumour has now been quashed by Vulture.com who say a source close to the show has denied that Macca will appear.

Last month Mad Men‘s creator teased more details about the show’s imminent fifth season. Matthew Weiner gave hints about what fans can expect from the opening episode A Little Kiss in an interview with TV Guide.

Of the two-hour special, Weiner said: ”I like the title to have some kind of synergy with the show so it will pique your interest.”

He said that the kiss in question could be between Don Draper and his new fiancé Megan or ex-wife Betty: “Who says Megan’s even going to be part of Don’s life? He may be back with Betty. One of my favourite scenes from [the series four finale] was when Betty offered herself to him again. And let’s face it, those two look really good together.”

After contractual negotiations took the show off air in 2011, Mad Men‘s fifth series begins in the US on March 25, with the UK premiere expected shortly after.

Radiohead confirm another summer festival headline slot

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Radiohead have confirmed that they will headline this summer's Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival in Manchester, Tennessee. The festival, which runs from June 7–10, will be headlined by the Oxford band as well as Phish and the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Also on the bill are the newly reunited Be...

Radiohead have confirmed that they will headline this summer’s Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival in Manchester, Tennessee.

The festival, which runs from June 7–10, will be headlined by the Oxford band as well as Phish and the Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Also on the bill are the newly reunited Beach Boys, Bon Iver, Foster The People, Skrillex, Two Door Cinema Club, The Black Lips and a whole host of others.

Radiohead are currently preparing for their extensive world tour in support of 2011 album ‘The King Of Limbs’, They will tour the US in February and March and have booked assorted European shows and festival appearances throughout the summer, including slots at Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival and Bilbao BBK Live festival.

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

For more information about Bonnaroo, visit Bonnaroo.com.

The Seventh Uncut Playlist Of 2012, and Dory Previn RIP

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Sad news this morning, with the announcement of Dory Previn’s death at the age of 86. The first thing I came across this morning at home was a useful comp from a few years back, “The Art Of Dory Previn”, which works well as a primer to this eccentric, wise and mostly undervalued singer-songwriter. It’s often easier to compare women singer-songwriters with others of their own sex, though not always the fairest way to adjudge their talents. Playing again some of my favourite Previn songs – “Beware Of Young Girls”, “Doppelganger”, “Angels And Devils The Following Day” – it’s striking how better they match up against contemporary work by Leonard Cohen, David Ackles, perhaps Randy Newman, too, rather than, say, Joni Mitchell. A fine artist: please check her out today – “Beware Of Young Girls” is here, “Doppelganger” here - if you’re unfamiliar. Apologies for the scarcity of blogs this week: we’ve been a little distracted by finishing up the next issue of our generously reupholstered magazine. The redesign is looking good, I think – though of course I would say that. I’ll be interested to hear your thoughts when it goes on sale at the end of the month, anyhow. There has been time, of course, to put a few tunes on: much love, as a consequence, for the Ty Segall and White Fence hook-up, for the rejuvenated Dexys, and for Dan Auerbach’s gris-gris-heavy production makeover of Dr John. Elsewhere, though, it seems a particularly apposite week to point out again that I don’t always personally like all the records we play here and consequently include in the playlist. One or two tough spots to get through here, I found… 1 “Blue” Gene Tyranny – Detours (Unseen Worlds) 2 Ty Segall & White Fence – Hair (Drag City) 3 Lower Dens – Nootropics (Ribbon) 4 Rocket Juice And The Moon – Rocket Juice And The Moon (Honest Jon’s) 5 Rufus Wainwright – Out Of The Game (Polydor) 6 Dexys – Nowhere/Lost (?) 7 Julia Holter – Ekstasis (RVNG ITL) 8 Various Artists – Julia Holter Fact Mix (Fact) 9 Norah Jones – Little Broken Hearts (Capitol) 10 The Men – Open Your Heart (Sacred Bones) 11 Hiss Golden Messenger – Fennario (Tompkins Square) 12 Dr John – Locked Down (Nonesuch) 13 Universal Energy – Universal Energy (Harvest) 14 Hannah Cohen – Child Bride (Bella Union) 15 Deer Tick – Divine Providence (Partisan) 16 Spiritualized – Sweet Heart Sweet Light (Double Six) 17 Dylan LeBlanc – Cast The Same Old Shadow (Rough Trade) 18 Howlin Rain – The Russian Wilds (Agitated) 19 Dory Previn – The Art Of Dory Previn (EMI) Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

Sad news this morning, with the announcement of Dory Previn’s death at the age of 86. The first thing I came across this morning at home was a useful comp from a few years back, “The Art Of Dory Previn”, which works well as a primer to this eccentric, wise and mostly undervalued singer-songwriter.

It’s often easier to compare women singer-songwriters with others of their own sex, though not always the fairest way to adjudge their talents. Playing again some of my favourite Previn songs – “Beware Of Young Girls”, “Doppelganger”, “Angels And Devils The Following Day” – it’s striking how better they match up against contemporary work by Leonard Cohen, David Ackles, perhaps Randy Newman, too, rather than, say, Joni Mitchell. A fine artist: please check her out today – “Beware Of Young Girls” is here, “Doppelganger” here – if you’re unfamiliar.

Apologies for the scarcity of blogs this week: we’ve been a little distracted by finishing up the next issue of our generously reupholstered magazine. The redesign is looking good, I think – though of course I would say that. I’ll be interested to hear your thoughts when it goes on sale at the end of the month, anyhow.

There has been time, of course, to put a few tunes on: much love, as a consequence, for the Ty Segall and White Fence hook-up, for the rejuvenated Dexys, and for Dan Auerbach’s gris-gris-heavy production makeover of Dr John. Elsewhere, though, it seems a particularly apposite week to point out again that I don’t always personally like all the records we play here and consequently include in the playlist. One or two tough spots to get through here, I found…

1 “Blue” Gene Tyranny – Detours (Unseen Worlds)

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

3 Lower Dens – Nootropics (Ribbon)

4 Rocket Juice And The Moon – Rocket Juice And The Moon (Honest Jon’s)

5 Rufus Wainwright – Out Of The Game (Polydor)

6 Dexys – Nowhere/Lost (?)

7 Julia Holter – Ekstasis (RVNG ITL)

8 Various Artists – Julia Holter Fact Mix (Fact)

9 Norah Jones – Little Broken Hearts (Capitol)

10 The Men – Open Your Heart (Sacred Bones)

11 Hiss Golden Messenger – Fennario (Tompkins Square)

12 Dr John – Locked Down (Nonesuch)

13 Universal Energy – Universal Energy (Harvest)

14 Hannah Cohen – Child Bride (Bella Union)

15 Deer Tick – Divine Providence (Partisan)

16 Spiritualized – Sweet Heart Sweet Light (Double Six)

17 Dylan LeBlanc – Cast The Same Old Shadow (Rough Trade)

18 Howlin Rain – The Russian Wilds (Agitated)

19 Dory Previn – The Art Of Dory Previn (EMI)

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

Beth Jeans Houghton set to record in Los Angeles after Neil Young encounter

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Beth Jeans Houghton has spoken about her plans to make her second album in Los Angeles, explaining that Neil Young has a lot to do with her decision. The Newcastle-born singer wants to record the follow-up to her delayed debut album 'Yours Truly, Cellophane Nose', released earlier this month, as q...

Beth Jeans Houghton has spoken about her plans to make her second album in Los Angeles, explaining that Neil Young has a lot to do with her decision.

The Newcastle-born singer wants to record the follow-up to her delayed debut album ‘Yours Truly, Cellophane Nose’, released earlier this month, as quickly as possible, and after a special experience in Los Angeles last year, wants to do it in the City Of Angels.

She told NME: “I was with a mate who said ‘I’m going to meet my friend Neil later. You should come.’ When we arrived, it turned out ‘Neil’ was Neil Young. He picked us up in a white Cadillac and we drove around Malibu beach all day. He’s a slow driver, but a lovely man.”

Asked whether Young had any tips for her, Houghton said: “Don’t be daft. I didn’t tell him I was a musician. How do you tell Neil Young that you also write songs?”

Of her LA love, she added: “Whenever I’ve been there I’ve always loved it. It’s such a poetic city, and a great place to work. I love the weather, the palm trees, the feeling it’s still the 1970s and the fact there’s not much around you to prove that it isn’t.”

Beth Jeans Houghton and the Hooves Of Destiny begin their UK tour at Glasgow Captain’s Rest on February 17.

Sharon Van Etten announces UK tour dates

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Sharon Van Etten has announced a UK tour for May, which includes her biggest ever UK headline show at London's Scala on May 16. Van Etten, known for her work with The Antlers and The National alongside her solo career, will also release new single 'Leonard', taken from third album 'Tramp' on Marc...

Sharon Van Etten has announced a UK tour for May, which includes her biggest ever UK headline show at London’s Scala on May 16.

Van Etten, known for her work with The Antlers and The National alongside her solo career, will also release new single ‘Leonard’, taken from third album ‘Tramp’ on March 12.

The Brooklyn-based singer songwriter is also one of the first confirmations for December National-curated ATP Nightmare Before Christmas, which takes place between December 7-9 at Butlins in Minehead, Somerset.

She will also appear at London’s Rough Trade East on February 28, and at Cargo on March 1.

You can stream Van Etten’s latest album ‘Tramp’ on NME.com

Sharon Van Etten will play

London Scala (May 16)

Manchester Deaf Institute (17)

Dublin Whelans (18)

Leeds Brudenell Social Club (20)

Brighton Komedia (21)

Arcade Fire record new track ‘Abraham’s Daughter’ for ‘The Hunger Games’ soundtrack

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Arcade Fire have recorded a brand new song for the soundtrack to the new fantasy film The Hunger Games. The track, which is titled 'Abraham's Daughter', was recorded last week and is confirmed to feature on the soundtrack along with tracks from The Decemberists, Kid Cudi and The Low Anthem. The...

Arcade Fire have recorded a brand new song for the soundtrack to the new fantasy film The Hunger Games.

The track, which is titled ‘Abraham’s Daughter’, was recorded last week and is confirmed to feature on the soundtrack along with tracks from The Decemberists, Kid Cudi and The Low Anthem.

The film itself will also feature a track titled ‘Horn Of Plenty’ which has been written and recorded by Arcade Fire’s Win Butler and Regine Chassagne.

The Hunger Games is set to be released on March 23 in the UK and stars Winter’s Bone actress Jennifer Lawrence, Woody Harrelson and Elizabeth Banks.

The tracklisting for ‘The Hunger Games: Songs From District 12 and Beyond’ is as follows:

Taylor Swift – ‘Safe & Sound’

Taylor Swift – ‘Eyes Wide Open’

Arcade Fire – ‘Abraham’s Daughter’

Kid Cudi – ‘The Ruler & The Killer’

Miranda Lambert – ‘Run Daddy Run’

The Civil Wars – ‘Kingdom Come’

The Decemberists – ‘One Engine’

Glen Hansard – ‘Take The Heartland’

The Low Anthem – ‘Lover Is Childlike’

Punch Brothers – ‘Dark Days’

The Secret Sisters – ‘Tomorrow Will Be Kinder’

Birdy – ‘Just A Game’

Ella Mae Bowen – ‘Oh Come And Sing’

Jayme Dee – ‘Rules’

Carolina Chocolate Drops – ‘Reaping Day’

Throbbing Gristle: the industrial pioneers, reissued

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Their unsavoury reputation precedes them, but the photo of Throbbing Gristle on the sleeve of Greatest Hits (1981; 7/10) reminds us there was more to the first Industrial group – their capital letter – than first appeared. Posing in a tiki lounge in Hawaiian shirts, Cosey Fanni Tutti coquettish in a cocktail dress, they look more like Hi-De-Hi campers than the group Tory MP Nicholas Fairbain called “wreckers of civilisation”. Nor was this irony, exactly. ‘Dedicated to Martin Denny’, reads the sleeve, and one might wonder what the bandleader and self-styled “king of exotica” made of it all, were his letter of response not printed in the glossy booklet inside. “I do have a sense of humour,” types Denny, before admitting to being “incredulous” that someone would choose to cut Throbbing Gristle’s music to wax. “Is it intended to be a shocker?” he asks. “I would appreciate a reply.” To be fair to Denny, this sort of confusion to the work of Genesis P-Orridge and friends was far from uncommon. Appearing in 1976, Throbbing Gristle shared certain things with punk – an outsider stance, a taste for transgression – but their methods were alien by comparison. While the punks were busy scribbling zines and folding seven-inch sleeves, TG were way ahead; their DIY activity yielded modular synths, tape-loop machines, and the Gristleizer, a custom effects box built by the group’s electronics wizard Chris Carter. They recorded in the ruin of a Hackney school, provocatively christened the Death Factory, and released it on their own Industrial Records, styled like a corporation, right down to the pseudo-businesspeak communiques. Jon Savage described them in the terms of a “laboratory… a research institute”, while vocalist Genesis P-Orridge said, of the group’s ambitions: “We wanted to get away from all the connotations of rock’n’roll and blues… drag it out of slave music and into the 20th Century”. The death of the band’s Peter “Sleazy” Christopherson in 2010 brought to a close the second incarnation of the band, precipitating this final issue of five albums. The music collected within veers from visionary electronic invention to meandering unmusical passages and ambiguous field recordings. That moments border on being boring would seem to be the point: TG specialised in a sort of exquisite tedium, of music decayed. 1977’s Second Annual Report (8/10) collects live recordings and one studio piece, “After Cease To Exist”, but really it’s more about an atmosphere than distinct songs, a dystopian churn of smoke and asbestos dust, P-Orridge reciting true-crime tales from the gloom. Queerly hypnotic, it takes a live rendition of “Maggot Death” from Brighton to break the spell, as the music is interrupted by hecklers, an irate DJ berating them as “a load of fucking wankers” before putting a record on. If Throbbing Gristle were much misunderstood in their day, perhaps this was because in an era of preachers and polemicists, they stood at a slight remove from their material; they were documenters of their surroundings, paying special attention to social ills, the mechanical and the macabre. 1978’s excellent DOA: The Third And Final Report (8/10) reflects the world in strange and bold ways. “IBM” utilises chattering machine code found on a tape disposed of by the computer manufacturers. “Hamburger Lady”, inspired by the tale of a burns victim, pulsates like some grotesque organism. “Death Threats” is audio direct from the group’s answering machine, while the rudimentary electropop of “United” – inspired by Abba, quoting Alastair Crowley – showed the breadth of their reference. 1979's 20 Jazz Funk Greats (8/10) marked a turn into lighter territory, the tongue-in-cheek cover picturing Throbbing Gristle posing like catalogue models at notorious suicide spot Beachy Head. Musically, it turned away from the precipice; not exactly jazz and funk, but sublimating TG’s noise elements within electronic rhythms and proto-exotica. Album highlight “Hot On The Heels Of Love” is convincingly Moroder-esque disco, Cosey breathing sweet nothings amid bubbling synthesisers and whip-crack snare. Elsewhere, P-Orridge mines a lyrical seam of control and domination. “I’ve got a little biscuit tin,” he wheedles of “Persuasion”, “to keep your panties in.” Two more releases complete the campaign: 1980's Heathen Earth (6/10), a stern live album recorded in front of an invited audience, and Greatest Hits. Marking the group’s 1981 split, it mixes TG’s modes with impunity, brittle synth disco giving way to misanthropic squall, and back again. A bewildering entry point, as Martin Denny could confirm, but there is pleasure in the fact that Throbbing Gristle remained perverse until the end. Louis Pattison Q&A Chris and Cosey What has taken place in this reissue process? Cosey: When Sleazy left us last year we were just about to start work on the reissues. Historically he'd always overseen TG's artworks, graphics and photography. By the time we could actually face doing anything and Chris had completed the remastering, it dawned that responsibility for redoing the cover artworks was on our shoulders. Chris: Gen offered to send us material but didn't bother to follow it through. But we hold the bulk of the TG archive and had access to Sleazy's negatives so it's not like we had a shortage of material. Is there an album that stands out as a favourite? Chris: My strongest connection is with DOA because at the time of recording I'd fallen head over heels in love with Cosey. DOA showcased some of our strongest work and established the course we would head in. And what of the final TG record? Chris: Desertshore - The Final Report will be TG's last studio album, and is a cover of the Nico album. The concept came about in Berlin in 2006, but when Genesis walked out on TG in 2010, Sleazy began reworking the album with the intention of using guest vocalists and an esoteric piece of equipment he'd bought. This year we've been recording those vocals and trying to make sense of the recordings he left us with. INTERVIEW: LOUIS PATTISON

Their unsavoury reputation precedes them, but the photo of Throbbing Gristle on the sleeve of Greatest Hits (1981; 7/10) reminds us there was more to the first Industrial group – their capital letter – than first appeared.

Posing in a tiki lounge in Hawaiian shirts, Cosey Fanni Tutti coquettish in a cocktail dress, they look more like Hi-De-Hi campers than the group Tory MP Nicholas Fairbain called “wreckers of civilisation”. Nor was this irony, exactly. ‘Dedicated to Martin Denny’, reads the sleeve, and one might wonder what the bandleader and self-styled “king of exotica” made of it all, were his letter of response not printed in the glossy booklet inside. “I do have a sense of humour,” types Denny, before admitting to being “incredulous” that someone would choose to cut Throbbing Gristle’s music to wax. “Is it intended to be a shocker?” he asks. “I would appreciate a reply.”

To be fair to Denny, this sort of confusion to the work of Genesis P-Orridge and friends was far from uncommon. Appearing in 1976, Throbbing Gristle shared certain things with punk – an outsider stance, a taste for transgression – but their methods were alien by comparison. While the punks were busy scribbling zines and folding seven-inch sleeves, TG were way ahead; their DIY activity yielded modular synths, tape-loop machines, and the Gristleizer, a custom effects box built by the group’s electronics wizard Chris Carter. They recorded in the ruin of a Hackney school, provocatively christened the Death Factory, and released it on their own Industrial Records, styled like a corporation, right down to the pseudo-businesspeak communiques. Jon Savage described them in the terms of a “laboratory… a research institute”, while vocalist Genesis P-Orridge said, of the group’s ambitions: “We wanted to get away from all the connotations of rock’n’roll and blues… drag it out of slave music and into the 20th Century”.

The death of the band’s Peter “Sleazy” Christopherson in 2010 brought to a close the second incarnation of the band, precipitating this final issue of five albums. The music collected within veers from visionary electronic invention to meandering unmusical passages and ambiguous field recordings. That moments border on being boring would seem to be the point: TG specialised in a sort of exquisite tedium, of music decayed. 1977’s Second Annual Report (8/10) collects live recordings and one studio piece, “After Cease To Exist”, but really it’s more about an atmosphere than distinct songs, a dystopian churn of smoke and asbestos dust, P-Orridge reciting true-crime tales from the gloom. Queerly hypnotic, it takes a live rendition of “Maggot Death” from Brighton to break the spell, as the music is interrupted by hecklers, an irate DJ berating them as “a load of fucking wankers” before putting a record on.

If Throbbing Gristle were much misunderstood in their day, perhaps this was because in an era of preachers and polemicists, they stood at a slight remove from their material; they were documenters of their surroundings, paying special attention to social ills, the mechanical and the macabre. 1978’s excellent DOA: The Third And Final Report (8/10) reflects the world in strange and bold ways. “IBM” utilises chattering machine code found on a tape disposed of by the computer manufacturers. “Hamburger Lady”, inspired by the tale of a burns victim, pulsates like some grotesque organism. “Death Threats” is audio direct from the group’s answering machine, while the rudimentary electropop of “United” – inspired by Abba, quoting Alastair Crowley – showed the breadth of their reference.

1979’s 20 Jazz Funk Greats (8/10) marked a turn into lighter territory, the tongue-in-cheek cover picturing Throbbing Gristle posing like catalogue models at notorious suicide spot Beachy Head. Musically, it turned away from the precipice; not exactly jazz and funk, but sublimating TG’s noise elements within electronic rhythms and proto-exotica. Album highlight “Hot On The Heels Of Love” is convincingly Moroder-esque disco, Cosey breathing sweet nothings amid bubbling synthesisers and whip-crack snare. Elsewhere, P-Orridge mines a lyrical seam of control and domination. “I’ve got a little biscuit tin,” he wheedles of “Persuasion”, “to keep your panties in.”

Two more releases complete the campaign: 1980’s Heathen Earth (6/10), a stern live album recorded in front of an invited audience, and Greatest Hits. Marking the group’s 1981 split, it mixes TG’s modes with impunity, brittle synth disco giving way to misanthropic squall, and back again. A bewildering entry point, as Martin Denny could confirm, but there is pleasure in the fact that Throbbing Gristle remained perverse until the end.

Louis Pattison

Q&A Chris and Cosey

What has taken place in this reissue process?

Cosey: When Sleazy left us last year we were just about to start work on the reissues. Historically he’d always overseen TG’s artworks, graphics and photography. By the time we could actually face doing anything and Chris had completed the remastering, it dawned that responsibility for redoing the cover artworks was on our shoulders.

Chris: Gen offered to send us material but didn’t bother to follow it through. But we hold the bulk of the TG archive and had access to Sleazy’s negatives so it’s not like we had a shortage of material.

Is there an album that stands out as a favourite?

Chris: My strongest connection is with DOA because at the time of recording I’d fallen head over heels in love with Cosey. DOA showcased some of our strongest work and established the course we would head in.

And what of the final TG record?

Chris: Desertshore – The Final Report will be TG’s last studio album, and is a cover of the Nico album. The concept came about in Berlin in 2006, but when Genesis walked out on TG in 2010, Sleazy began reworking the album with the intention of using guest vocalists and an esoteric piece of equipment he’d bought. This year we’ve been recording those vocals and trying to make sense of the recordings he left us with.

INTERVIEW: LOUIS PATTISON

Former Supergrass singer Gaz Coombes: ‘I don’t want to be in a band’

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Former Supergrass frontman Gaz Coombes has said that he is relieved to have gone solo and doesn't miss being in a band. Coombes is set to release his debut solo album 'Here Come The Bombs' on May 21, with a single 'Hot Fruit', preceeding it on May 14. You can stream his new track 'Sub Divider' now by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking on the link. The track is his first new material since Supergrass announced their split in June of 2010. Speaking to NME, Coombes said: "With my solo album I'm making the kind of music I want to make. I don't have to have a discussion with a bandmate where I'm trying to convince them of the direction I want to go in. Right now I don't want to to be in a band or anything like a band." He continued: "I get a bit anxious because of my experiences. I don't want to sound negative, because it was great to spend 18 years in a band with guys I love. But I'm happy doing what I'm doing now." The singer told us that the new album was influenced by the soundtrack work of John Barry and John Carpenter. "In terms of experimenting with sounds, using synths and finding sounds, I was looking to soundtracks," he said. Coombes added that he would love to collaborate with Tim Burton on the visuals for the project. "He'd do some great, strange animation for it," he said. Speaking about the track 'Sub Divider', Coombes explained: "It has two distinctive sections. It doesn't have a verse or chorus part. It's one of my favourites, it's about identity."

Former Supergrass frontman Gaz Coombes has said that he is relieved to have gone solo and doesn’t miss being in a band.

Coombes is set to release his debut solo album ‘Here Come The Bombs’ on May 21, with a single ‘Hot Fruit’, preceeding it on May 14. You can stream his new track ‘Sub Divider’ now by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking on the link. The track is his first new material since Supergrass announced their split in June of 2010.

Speaking to NME, Coombes said: “With my solo album I’m making the kind of music I want to make. I don’t have to have a discussion with a bandmate where I’m trying to convince them of the direction I want to go in. Right now I don’t want to to be in a band or anything like a band.”

He continued: “I get a bit anxious because of my experiences. I don’t want to sound negative, because it was great to spend 18 years in a band with guys I love. But I’m happy doing what I’m doing now.”

The singer told us that the new album was influenced by the soundtrack work of John Barry and John Carpenter. “In terms of experimenting with sounds, using synths and finding sounds, I was looking to soundtracks,” he said.

Coombes added that he would love to collaborate with Tim Burton on the visuals for the project. “He’d do some great, strange animation for it,” he said.

Speaking about the track ‘Sub Divider’, Coombes explained: “It has two distinctive sections. It doesn’t have a verse or chorus part. It’s one of my favourites, it’s about identity.”

Public Image Ltd to play one-off London gig in March

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Public Image Ltd will play a one-off London show in March to celebrate the 10th anniversary of BBC Radio 6 Music. John Lydon and co will be the special guests at the Queen Elizabeth Hall at the Southbank Centre on March 16, with Super Furry Animals frontman Gruff Rhys, songstress Anna Calvi and B...

Public Image Ltd will play a one-off London show in March to celebrate the 10th anniversary of BBC Radio 6 Music.

John Lydon and co will be the special guests at the Queen Elizabeth Hall at the Southbank Centre on March 16, with Super Furry Animals frontman Gruff Rhys, songstress Anna Calvi and Beth Jeans Houghton & The Hooves Of Destiny also scheduled for the bash.

Meanwhile, the Purcell Room in the same venue will host performances from Laura Marling and BBC Sound Of 2012 nominee Lianne La Havas, also on March 16. For more information, see Southbankcentre.co.uk.

Public Image Ltd will release their new EP ‘One Drop’ on April 16, with their new studio album ‘This Is PiL’ expected to drop in May or June of this year.

Speaking to NME about the LP, Lydon said: “It’s very different. I would call it folk music. I’ve met with quite a few of the Irish folkies and they hate me. They think I’m mocking tradition, but for God’s sake, that’s been the story of my life. It’s not mockery, it’s called advancement. We can’t all be stuck in 17th century ditties.

“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, 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.

Jack White announces debut solo live shows

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Jack White has announced plans for his debut solo live shows, which are set to take place in March in the United States. The video for his debut solo single, 'Love Interruption', which White directed himself, will premiere at 4.30pm (GMT) on February 14, Valentine's Day at Vevo.com. The video wi...

Jack White has announced plans for his debut solo live shows, which are set to take place in March in the United States.

The video for his debut solo single, ‘Love Interruption’, which White directed himself, will premiere at 4.30pm (GMT) on February 14, Valentine’s Day at Vevo.com.

The video will feature appearances from vocalist Ruby Amanfu, Emily Bowland (bass clarinet) and Brooke Wagonner (Wurlitzer electric piano).

Prior to his previously announced show at Radio 1’s Hackney Weekend on June 23-24, alongside Lana Del Rey and The Maccabees, Jack White will play a number of Stateside shows, in the south of the country, appearing in Chattanooga, Birmingham, Memphis and Tulsa.

The ex-White Stripes man releases his debut solo album ‘Blunderbuss’ on April 23. The album was produced by White at his own Third Man Studio in Nashville. Speaking about ‘Blunderbuss’, White commented that it was “an album I couldn’t have released until now”.

He continued: “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)

New Order to headline Bestival

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New Order have been announced as the Saturday night (September 8) headliner at this year's Bestival. Friendly Fires, Death in Vegas, Django Django, Daughter and Drums of Death have also been added to the line-up. Last week The xx, Sigur Ros and The Horrors were revealed to be on the bill for Best...

New Order have been announced as the Saturday night (September 8) headliner at this year’s Bestival.

Friendly Fires, Death in Vegas, Django Django, Daughter and Drums of Death have also been added to the line-up. Last week The xx, Sigur Ros and The Horrors were revealed to be on the bill for Bestival, which takes place on the Isle of Wight from September 6-9.

Two Door Cinema Club, Azealia Banks, Soulwax, Nero, Emeli Sande, Warpaint, Spiritualized, Gary Numan, Charli XCX, First Aid Kit, Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs, Turbowolf, De La Soul, Major Lazer, Justice and Gallows will also play the four-day event.

The festival’s organiser Rob da Bank has confirmed that Sigur Ros and The xx will make their only UK festival appearances of 2012 at Bestival.

Bestival will take place from September 6–9 at Robin Hill Park on the Isle Of Wight. For more information about the event, see Bestival.net.

The Lost Genius Of Paul Siebel

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After spending last weekend catching up with what seems like a veritable deluge of great new music, I had a yen for some old favourites this weekend, among them two albums by the cult singer-songwriter, Paul Siebel, Woodsmoke & Oranges and Jack-Knife Gypsy. It’s sadly probable that only a handful of people reading this will actually have heard of Siebel, let alone the music he made on these two incredible records. Originally released in 1970 and 1971, they quickly disappeared without trace, vinyl chimera, as did, soon after, Siebel, their charismatic author. What acknowledgement they received at the time was unbelievably meagre, but often ecstatic. For those of us fortunate enough to have heard them on first release, these albums were testaments to a breathtaking talent, whose genius flared briefly, but brilliantly enough to be mentioned in the same breath as any of the songwriting legends who rode the folk and country rock booms of the 60s and early 70s, from Dylan to Gram Parsons. Much revered by his contemporaries, Siebel simply blew out of town after Jack-Knife Gypsy, destination: obscurity. He was born in Buffalo, New York, in 1937, studied at the university there and later spent time in the US Army. By 1965, after serving a musical apprenticeship in the clubs and coffee houses in Buffalo, he was in Greenwich Village, playing the usual haunts. Inspired by Hank Williams and Dylan, he was also by now writing the brilliant songs that eventually got him signed to Elektra, who bankrolled the four three hour sessions it took to record Woodsmoke And Oranges. With fiddles, acoustic guitars, occasional pedal steel and Siebel’s glorious voice to the fore, Woodsmoke’s honky tonk exuberance, backporch ruminations and broken-hearted ballads are more than passingly reminiscent of Gram Parsons’ first solo album, GP. It would be fair to say from some of these songs that Siebel’s view of love is somewhat more than jaundiced, and there’s a cruel misogynistic edge to songs like “Miss Cherry Lane” that wouldn’t be out of place in the Jagger-Richards’ songbook. More typical, however, of Siebel’s temperament, is the dream-like reverie of “Long Afternoons”, a requiem for lost love set to one of his most achingly affecting melodies – as keenly piercing as anything on Blood On The Tracks. Siebel also has an unflinching eye for the sad detail of emotional trauma. And while the captivating “Then Came The Children” and the anti-war song “My Town” are lyrically allusive, powerfully allegorical, the best of his early songs – “Louise” and “Bride 1945” – are models of narrative clarity, deeply moving portraits of a lonely truckstop whore and a young war bride, the two women separately condemned to lives of mutual disappointment and serial unhappiness. If he’d never written anything else, these two songs alone would justify Siebel’s reputation as one of the finest songwriters of his time. The people who heard it and got it loved Woodsmoke. . ., but it sold poorly. Elektra gave Siebel another chance, however, and with a band of crack session men – including Byrds’ guitarist Clarence White, David Grisman on mandolin, Buddy Emmons on pedal steel, drummer Russ Kunkel, Doug Kershaw, Sea Train’s Richard Greene – he recorded Jack-Knife Gypsy, which is by turns ravishing, forlorn, ecstatic, delirious and ultimately bleak beyond words. Dylan’s influence is again enormous – especially on the dark and menacing title track and the surreal “Jasper And The Miners” – with Siebel revelling in the vernacular story-telling styles of The Basement Tapes and John Wesley Harding. Elsewhere, there’s the rhapsodic “Prayer Song”, the desperate “If I Could Stay” and – best of all - the desolate introspection of “Chips Are Down”, one of the most self-lacerating songs ever written, a bleak nugget, as soiled as Dylan’s “Dirge”. Disappointed by poor sales, Siebel went into artistic decline, writer’s block giving way to addiction, depression and self-destruction. He was last heard of, in 1996, working as a bread-maker in a café in Maryland. We shouldn’t lament for too long his drift towards the edge of things, however, because over the course of these two albums Siebel recorded more good songs than most artists manage in a lifetime. Elektra re-released Woodsmoke & Oranges and Jack-Knife Gypsy in 2004 as a double CD, after a long period out of catalogue. Miraculously, it’s still available or you can download them individually on iTunes for an incredibly reasonable £3.95 each. There's also a third album, Live At McCabe's, recorded in 1978 with guitarists David Bromberg and Gary White that you can also get easily enough from either Amazon or iTunes, that features tracks from his two studio albums as well as covers of "Lonesome House", originally recorded in 1927 by Blind Lemon Jefferson, Hank Williams' "I'm So Lonely I Could Cry" and Jimmie Rodgers' "Woman Made A Fool Out Of Me" and "I'm In The Jailhouse Now". Give them a listen, at least. Have a good week.

After spending last weekend catching up with what seems like a veritable deluge of great new music, I had a yen for some old favourites this weekend, among them two albums by the cult singer-songwriter, Paul Siebel, Woodsmoke & Oranges and Jack-Knife Gypsy.

It’s sadly probable that only a handful of people reading this will actually have heard of Siebel, let alone the music he made on these two incredible records. Originally released in 1970 and 1971, they quickly disappeared without trace, vinyl chimera, as did, soon after, Siebel, their charismatic author.

What acknowledgement they received at the time was unbelievably meagre, but often ecstatic. For those of us fortunate enough to have heard them on first release, these albums were testaments to a breathtaking talent, whose genius flared briefly, but brilliantly enough to be mentioned in the same breath as any of the songwriting legends who rode the folk and country rock booms of the 60s and early 70s, from Dylan to Gram Parsons. Much revered by his contemporaries, Siebel simply blew out of town after Jack-Knife Gypsy, destination: obscurity.

He was born in Buffalo, New York, in 1937, studied at the university there and later spent time in the US Army. By 1965, after serving a musical apprenticeship in the clubs and coffee houses in Buffalo, he was in Greenwich Village, playing the usual haunts. Inspired by Hank Williams and Dylan, he was also by now writing the brilliant songs that eventually got him signed to Elektra, who bankrolled the four three hour sessions it took to record Woodsmoke And Oranges.

With fiddles, acoustic guitars, occasional pedal steel and Siebel’s glorious voice to the fore, Woodsmoke’s honky tonk exuberance, backporch ruminations and broken-hearted ballads are more than passingly reminiscent of Gram Parsons’ first solo album, GP. It would be fair to say from some of these songs that Siebel’s view of love is somewhat more than jaundiced, and there’s a cruel misogynistic edge to songs like “Miss Cherry Lane” that wouldn’t be out of place in the Jagger-Richards’ songbook. More typical, however, of Siebel’s temperament, is the dream-like reverie of “Long Afternoons”, a requiem for lost love set to one of his most achingly affecting melodies – as keenly piercing as anything on Blood On The Tracks. Siebel also has an unflinching eye for the sad detail of emotional trauma.

And while the captivating “Then Came The Children” and the anti-war song “My Town” are lyrically allusive, powerfully allegorical, the best of his early songs – “Louise” and “Bride 1945” – are models of narrative clarity, deeply moving portraits of a lonely truckstop whore and a young war bride, the two women separately condemned to lives of mutual disappointment and serial unhappiness. If he’d never written anything else, these two songs alone would justify Siebel’s reputation as one of the finest songwriters of his time.

The people who heard it and got it loved Woodsmoke. . ., but it sold poorly. Elektra gave Siebel another chance, however, and with a band of crack session men – including Byrds’ guitarist Clarence White, David Grisman on mandolin, Buddy Emmons on pedal steel, drummer Russ Kunkel, Doug Kershaw, Sea Train’s Richard Greene – he recorded Jack-Knife Gypsy, which is by turns ravishing, forlorn, ecstatic, delirious and ultimately bleak beyond words.

Dylan’s influence is again enormous – especially on the dark and menacing title track and the surreal “Jasper And The Miners” – with Siebel revelling in the vernacular story-telling styles of The Basement Tapes and John Wesley Harding. Elsewhere, there’s the rhapsodic “Prayer Song”, the desperate “If I Could Stay” and – best of all – the desolate introspection of “Chips Are Down”, one of the most self-lacerating songs ever written, a bleak nugget, as soiled as Dylan’s “Dirge”.

Disappointed by poor sales, Siebel went into artistic decline, writer’s block giving way to addiction, depression and self-destruction. He was last heard of, in 1996, working as a bread-maker in a café in Maryland. We shouldn’t lament for too long his drift towards the edge of things, however, because over the course of these two albums Siebel recorded more good songs than most artists manage in a lifetime.

Elektra re-released Woodsmoke & Oranges and Jack-Knife Gypsy in 2004 as a double CD, after a long period out of catalogue. Miraculously, it’s still available or you can download them individually on iTunes for an incredibly reasonable £3.95 each. There’s also a third album, Live At McCabe’s, recorded in 1978 with guitarists David Bromberg and Gary White that you can also get easily enough from either Amazon or iTunes, that features tracks from his two studio albums as well as covers of “Lonesome House”, originally recorded in 1927 by Blind Lemon Jefferson, Hank Williams’ “I’m So Lonely I Could Cry” and Jimmie Rodgers’ “Woman Made A Fool Out Of Me” and “I’m In The Jailhouse Now”. Give them a listen, at least.

Have a good week.

This One’s For Him – A Tribute To Guy Clark

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All-star cap-doffer to one of the uncrowned kings of American roots... You could never accuse Guy Clark of being impetuous. Having issued less than a dozen studio albums since his classic 1975 debut Old No.1, he is instead a prime example of quality over quantity, crafting his folk-blues songs with the same artful diligence as the guitars he makes in his other career as a skilled luthier. Clark’s simple chords have served to frame his rare gift for salting universal truths down into rhyme, much like his late great friend Townes Van Zandt. The hits were never forthcoming, but he’s never been short of admirers. Johnny Cash, The Highwaymen and Jerry Jeff Walker are among many who’ve covered his tunes. But the occasion of Clark’s 70th birthday has now brought This One’s For Him, a comprehensive two-disc tribute with several boxcars’ worth of big names. The case for Clark as perhaps the greatest songwriter mainstream America never knew it had is made from the off, with Rodney Crowell's version of the sad, lyrical “That Old Time Feeling”. James McMurty offers a faithful “Cold Dog Soup”, a song that suggests Clark was never destined for the enormodomes of this world: “Ain't no money in poetry / That's what sets the poet free / I've had all the freedom I can stand”. Though the major highlights are Ron Sexsmith’s piano-driven version of barfly ballad “Broken Hearted People” and Willie Nelson’s forlornly stoic take on “Desperadoes Waiting For A Train”. Having voices as lived-in as Clark’s certainly helps. Emmylou Harris and John Prine bring out the border town ennui of “Magnolia Wind” like two old hands who’ve been there more than once. While Vince Gill, who played guitar on the original “Randall Knife”, takes stage centre for a fresh update on one of the most moving elegies to a dead father that you’ll ever hear. In truth, these people don’t need to do an awful lot to the source material. There are no radical reinventions or bold new experiments in form. Ultimately, Clark’s songs are left to speak for themselves, which is just as it should be. Rob Hughes

All-star cap-doffer to one of the uncrowned kings of American roots…

You could never accuse Guy Clark of being impetuous. Having issued less than a dozen studio albums since his classic 1975 debut Old No.1, he is instead a prime example of quality over quantity, crafting his folk-blues songs with the same artful diligence as the guitars he makes in his other career as a skilled luthier. Clark’s simple chords have served to frame his rare gift for salting universal truths down into rhyme, much like his late great friend Townes Van Zandt.

The hits were never forthcoming, but he’s never been short of admirers. Johnny Cash, The Highwaymen and Jerry Jeff Walker are among many who’ve covered his tunes. But the occasion of Clark’s 70th birthday has now brought This One’s For Him, a comprehensive two-disc tribute with several boxcars’ worth of big names.

The case for Clark as perhaps the greatest songwriter mainstream America never knew it had is made from the off, with Rodney Crowell‘s version of the sad, lyrical “That Old Time Feeling”. James McMurty offers a faithful “Cold Dog Soup”, a song that suggests Clark was never destined for the enormodomes of this world: “Ain’t no money in poetry / That’s what sets the poet free / I’ve had all the freedom I can stand”. Though the major highlights are Ron Sexsmith’s piano-driven version of barfly ballad “Broken Hearted People” and Willie Nelson’s forlornly stoic take on “Desperadoes Waiting For A Train”.

Having voices as lived-in as Clark’s certainly helps. Emmylou Harris and John Prine bring out the border town ennui of “Magnolia Wind” like two old hands who’ve been there more than once. While Vince Gill, who played guitar on the original “Randall Knife”, takes stage centre for a fresh update on one of the most moving elegies to a dead father that you’ll ever hear.

In truth, these people don’t need to do an awful lot to the source material. There are no radical reinventions or bold new experiments in form. Ultimately, Clark’s songs are left to speak for themselves, which is just as it should be.

Rob Hughes

Dexys to release first new album in 27 years

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Dexys Midnight Runners - now known simply as Dexys are set to release their first album in 27 years. 'One Day I'm Going To Soar' will be out on June 4 and makes for their first release since 1985's 'Don't Stand Me Down'. The band announced the news via their Facebook page. They added that they are...

Dexys Midnight Runners – now known simply as Dexys are set to release their first album in 27 years.

‘One Day I’m Going To Soar’ will be out on June 4 and makes for their first release since 1985’s ‘Don’t Stand Me Down’. The band announced the news via their Facebook page.

They added that they are currently looking at venues for a forthcoming tour in support of the record. They also posted a link to a YouTube clip called ‘Now – The first 2 minutes of the new Dexys album’. Scroll down to listen to the audio, which is accompanied by new press shots of the band.

Dexys released their three studio albums in the first half of the 1980s, with their debut, ‘Searching For The Young Soul Rebels’, in 1980, ‘Too-Rye-Ay’ in 1982 and ‘Don’t Stand Me Down’ in 1985.

The band’s frontman Kevin Rowland became a solo artist in the late 1980s but in 2003, Dexys reunited for a tour and the release of a greatest hits album, which featured two new songs.

A new album has been touted by Rowland since 2005.

Arctic Monkeys’ Matt Helders to remix Paul Weller’s new single ‘That Dangerous Age’

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Arctic Monkeys drummer Matt Helders has remixed Paul Weller's comeback single 'That Dangerous Age'. The track is set to be released as a single on March 11 and will also be accompanied by a remix from Ladytron as well as a live version of new track 'Green'. 'That Dangerous Age', which you can ...

Arctic Monkeys drummer Matt Helders has remixed Paul Weller‘s comeback single ‘That Dangerous Age’.

The track is set to be released as a single on March 11 and will also be accompanied by a remix from Ladytron as well as a live version of new track ‘Green’.

‘That Dangerous Age’, which you can hear by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking, is the first single to be taken from the singer’s 11th solo album ‘Sonik Kicks’.

The album will be released on March 26 and contains a total of 14 tracks. It also includes guest appearances from Noel Gallagher and Blur‘s Graham Coxon. You can hear a track from the album, which is titled ‘Around The Lake’, by visiting the singer’s official website Paulweller.com.

Weller will play two new London shows to promote the album’s release. He will headline the UK capital’s Roundhouse venue on March 18 and 19, with support from Baxter Dury. Weller will perform ‘Sonik Kicks’ in full at both shows.

Bruce Springsteen posts ‘We Take Care Of Our Own’ video online

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Bruce Springsteen has posted the video for his current single 'We Take Care of Our Own' online. The black and white video sees the song's lyrics subtitled over images of Springsteen playing guitar on a rooftop and in an empty venue. Towards the end, the video bursts into colour. Scroll down to wa...

Bruce Springsteen has posted the video for his current single ‘We Take Care of Our Own’ online.

The black and white video sees the song’s lyrics subtitled over images of Springsteen playing guitar on a rooftop and in an empty venue. Towards the end, the video bursts into colour. Scroll down to watch.

Springsteen will release his 17th studio album ‘Wrecking Ball’ on March 5. He will then tour the UK this summer, playing shows at Sunderland’s Stadium of Light, Manchester’s Etihad Stadium, Isle Of Wight Festival in June and London Hard Rock Calling in July.

It was announced last week that Clarence Clemons’ nephew Jake will be taking over from his uncle as their The E Street Band’s touring saxophonist. Clemons passed away in June last year after suffering a stroke.

According to a post on Springsteen’s official Facebook page Facebook.com/Brucespringsteen Jack Clemons is set to share sax duties with long-time member Eddie Manion on the band’s new tour.

Paul McCartney: ‘John Lennon and I had the same premonition about The Beatles’ success

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Paul McCartney has revealed that he and John Lennon both had the exact same dream about achieving worldwide success with The Beatles. In an interview with The Big Issue, McCartney – who released his new studio album 'Kisses On The Bottom' last week (February 6) – said that both he and his son...

Paul McCartney has revealed that he and John Lennon both had the exact same dream about achieving worldwide success with The Beatles.

In an interview with The Big Issue, McCartney – who released his new studio album ‘Kisses On The Bottom’ last week (February 6) – said that both he and his songwriting partner experienced the same premonition about digging up gold coins in a garden.

The singer, who suggested that the dream was a metaphor for the fame they’d achieve with the Fab Four, said: “Life gives you minor premonitions. You don’t think of them as premonitions until the dream comes true and you think, ‘Hey, I wonder if that was a sign?’

“I remember when John and I were first hanging out together, I had a dream about digging in the garden with my hands. I’d dreamt that before but I’d never found anything other than an old tin can. But in this dream, I found a gold coin. I kept digging and I found another. And another.”

McCartney, who revealed that Lennon had told him he’d had the same dream, added: “So both of us had this dream of finding treasure. And I suppose you could say it came true.”

Over the weekend, it was reported that McCartney had signed a deal with the US television show Mad Men, giving them permission to use his songs. It was also rumoured that he could make a cameo in the programme.

‘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.

The Black Keys: ‘It used to piss us off that we weren’t bigger’

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The Black Keys frontman Dan Auerbach has admitted that it used to "piss" him off that his band weren't bigger. In an interview with The Sun, the singer said that he had grown frustrated with their lack of mainstream success, but claimed that he and his drummer bandmate Patrick Carney now apprecia...

The Black Keys frontman Dan Auerbach has admitted that it used to “piss” him off that his band weren’t bigger.

In an interview with The Sun, the singer said that he had grown frustrated with their lack of mainstream success, but claimed that he and his drummer bandmate Patrick Carney now appreciated it more because it had taken them longer to achieve.

He said: “Stuff used to piss me off and I’d moan about it. Like ‘Why aren’t we up here on the bill? Why aren’t we playing a higher festival slot?”

He went on to add: “I don’t know. I’m glad it took us this long because we appreciate every opportunity that we’ve got. Every step up we feel better about it. I love our audience – that they are all so different. Old and new fans across the board. The shows have got bigger – but gradually, so it’s lessened the blow.”

Carney also criticised the Grammy Awards, which took place last night in Los Angeles. “There’s so much good music in the US and there is just a small section that gets recognized at the Grammys,” he said. “I don’t have any patience and I can’t bullshit myself by sitting through a Justin Bieber song. I am not interested in that shit. I am an adult and really I don’t know who the fuck listens to Justin Bieber.”

The Black Keys, who are currently touring the UK, played a one-off show as part of the 2012 NME Awards Shows on Saturday (February 11) at London‘s Alexandra Palace.