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Brendan Benson announces May UK and Ireland tour

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Brendan Benson has announced a UK and Ireland tour for this May. The Raconteurs man will play five shows on the trek, which begin at Portsmouth's Wedgewood Rooms on May 21 and end at Glasgow's Oran Mor on May 25. The run also includes shows in London, Manchester and Dublin, with Young Hines prov...

Brendan Benson has announced a UK and Ireland tour for this May.

The Raconteurs man will play five shows on the trek, which begin at Portsmouth’s Wedgewood Rooms on May 21 and end at Glasgow’s Oran Mor on May 25.

The run also includes shows in London, Manchester and Dublin, with Young Hines providing support on all the dates.

Benson will release his new solo album ‘What Kind Of World’ on April 30. The album is the follow-up to his 2009 effort ‘My Old, Familiar Friend’ and has been recorded at Welcome To 1979 Studios in Nashville.

The album is the fifth of Benson’s solo career and has been recorded entirely on analog equipment.

Brendan Benson will play:

Portsmouth Wedgewood Rooms (May 21)

London Scala (22)

Manchester Ruby Lounge (23)

Dublin Button Factory (24)

Glasgow Oran Mor (25)

PJ Harvey – Let England Shake: 12 Short Films By Seamus Murphy

On the generally acclaimed Let England Shake, Harvey gave her music a bony, volkish edge, flaying it back to strummed autoharp, electric guitar and crude drums, mongrelising it with awkwardy intrusive sampling of Middle Eastern singers, dub interjections and huntsmen’s horns. Seamus Murphy’s cinematography complements this approach perfectly: not storyboarded, but collaged from various journeys around the island made during 2011, from the remotest hedgerows to the heart of London. In doing so he innately understands Let England Shake’s problematic elixir of melancholic poetics, progressive patriotism and anti-war critique, using a visual language that speaks of England from the ground up. Harvey reportedly saw Murphy’s exhibition of war photographs, A Darkness Visible: Afghanistan, and commissioned him as a result. “I never wanted to interpret the album,” Murphy has commented, “but to capture something of its mood and force.” His films, made on lone trips, are largely in the mode of a travelogue, their photo-gallery approach recalling at times the British Transport Films of the late 1950s and 60s, or the static landscape framing of Patrick Keiller’s Robinson In Space. England can be, as he reminds us, “a gratifyingly odd place”. Harvey, who has held a tight rein on her visual representation throughout her career, allows Murphy frank and up-close access. He films her alone in her Dorset house, shuffling through a ring binder of lyrics and rehearsing her songs with a guitar, autoharp and playback tapes. She fluffs a line with an “oh bugger” and lets slip shy, slightly embarrassed smiles after the tracks have finished. It’s a very human portrait of an artist often represented via distancing techniques. But the films mostly consist of arrays of landscape photography. Murphy frames the ‘hunt’ aspect of “The Glorious Land” as a fast tracking shot of blurred treetops. “All And Everyone” ends with a gloriously desolate shot of a motorboat, tiny against the pewter sea, chugging away from Chesil Beach, just a triangle of pebbles in the bottom corner of the screen. It’s an apt and arresting image entirely suited to a record that has so much to do with England’s separateness from its neighbours. Intercut with the landscapes are plenty of people: chance encounters and faces from across the spectrum of society. Several videos feature scenes of soldiers and mourners at Wootton Bassett, the conduit for Britain’s war dead. Heavy Metal fans and video gamers appear in “The Words That Maketh Murder”. In “England”, an archer watches his arrow’s dying fall and the camera tracks around a pub’s crooked picture frames containing the 1966 World Cup squad and other past English glories. Each track is prefaced by a member of the public reading out a section of the song’s lyrics. Best of these is a car mechanic whose running commentary on the car he’s fixing serves as an epitaph to the nation itself, as represented in these films: “She’ll soldier on, the good old girl. The old ones are the good ones.” Harvey’s group – Mick Harvey, John Parish and Jean-Marc Butty – crop up in footage taken at St Peter’s Church in the village of Eype, near Harvey’s home, where the album was recorded and where she played an intimate launch party. “The Colour Of The Earth” is a real treat: the quartet huddles against the cold on the lane outside, performing the song a cappella, stomping out the rhythms and harmonising, like a modern-day Watersons in denim and leather. We’re left with a bonus solo version of “England”, just Polly facing the sea outside her window, vocally battling against Said El Kurdi’s ululations, telling how “England leaves a sadness”. It leaves you with an arresting and enchanting image of quiet resistance and creative determination. Rob Young

On the generally acclaimed Let England Shake, Harvey gave her music a bony, volkish edge, flaying it back to strummed autoharp, electric guitar and crude drums, mongrelising it with awkwardy intrusive sampling of Middle Eastern singers, dub interjections and huntsmen’s horns. Seamus Murphy’s cinematography complements this approach perfectly: not storyboarded, but collaged from various journeys around the island made during 2011, from the remotest hedgerows to the heart of London. In doing so he innately understands Let England Shake’s problematic elixir of melancholic poetics, progressive patriotism and anti-war critique, using a visual language that speaks of England from the ground up.

Harvey reportedly saw Murphy’s exhibition of war photographs, A Darkness Visible: Afghanistan, and commissioned him as a result. “I never wanted to interpret the album,” Murphy has commented, “but to capture something of its mood and force.” His films, made on lone trips, are largely in the mode of a travelogue, their photo-gallery approach recalling at times the British Transport Films of the late 1950s and 60s, or the static landscape framing of Patrick Keiller’s Robinson In Space. England can be, as he reminds us, “a gratifyingly odd place”.

Harvey, who has held a tight rein on her visual representation throughout her career, allows Murphy frank and up-close access. He films her alone in her Dorset house, shuffling through a ring binder of lyrics and rehearsing her songs with a guitar, autoharp and playback tapes. She fluffs a line with an “oh bugger” and lets slip shy, slightly embarrassed smiles after the tracks have finished. It’s a very human portrait of an artist often represented via distancing techniques.

But the films mostly consist of arrays of landscape photography. Murphy frames the ‘hunt’ aspect of “The Glorious Land” as a fast tracking shot of blurred treetops. “All And Everyone” ends with a gloriously desolate shot of a motorboat, tiny against the pewter sea, chugging away from Chesil Beach, just a triangle of pebbles in the bottom corner of the screen. It’s an apt and arresting image entirely suited to a record that has so much to do with England’s separateness from its neighbours.

Intercut with the landscapes are plenty of people: chance encounters and faces from across the spectrum of society. Several videos feature scenes of soldiers and mourners at Wootton Bassett, the conduit for Britain’s war dead. Heavy Metal fans and video gamers appear in “The Words That Maketh Murder”. In “England”, an archer watches his arrow’s dying fall and the camera tracks around a pub’s crooked picture frames containing the 1966 World Cup squad and other past English glories. Each track is prefaced by a member of the public reading out a section of the song’s lyrics. Best of these is a car mechanic whose running commentary on the car he’s fixing serves as an epitaph to the nation itself, as represented in these films: “She’ll soldier on, the good old girl. The old ones are the good ones.”

Harvey’s group – Mick Harvey, John Parish and Jean-Marc Butty – crop up in footage taken at St Peter’s Church in the village of Eype, near Harvey’s home, where the album was recorded and where she played an intimate launch party. “The Colour Of The Earth” is a real treat: the quartet huddles against the cold on the lane outside, performing the song a cappella, stomping out the rhythms and harmonising, like a modern-day Watersons in denim and leather. We’re left with a bonus solo version of “England”, just Polly facing the sea outside her window, vocally battling against Said El Kurdi’s ululations, telling how “England leaves a sadness”. It leaves you with an arresting and enchanting image of quiet resistance and creative determination.

Rob Young

Damon Albarn’s Rocketjuice And The Moon to release debut album in March

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Rocketjuice And The Moon, the new project featuring Damon Albarn, Flea and Tony Allen, will release their debut album on March 26. The Blur and Gorillaz man began working on the self-titled LP with the Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist and The Good, The Bad & The Queen drummer in 2008 when they m...

Rocketjuice And The Moon, the new project featuring Damon Albarn, Flea and Tony Allen, will release their debut album on March 26.

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

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

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

Albarn has previously explained that the band didn’t come up with their name themselves, stating: “Someone in Lagos did the sleeve design and that’s the name he gave it, which suits me because trying to find a name for another band is always tricky.”

Yesterday (February 9), Albarn’s band Gorillaz announced a collaboration with Outkast’s Andre 3000 and LCD Soundystem’s James Murphy. The track, which is called ‘DoYaThing’, was recorded for Converse’s ‘Three Artists. One Song’ project and will be released as a free download on February 23.

The Rolling Stones’ Ronnie Wood: ‘I turned down the chance to join Led Zeppelin’

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The Rolling Stones' Ronnie Wood has revealed that he turned down the chance to join Led Zeppelin. Speaking on his Absolute Radio show, the guitarist said that his old manager Peter Grant sounded him out about joining the group when they were still known as The New Yardbirds, but he refused as he ...

The Rolling StonesRonnie Wood has revealed that he turned down the chance to join Led Zeppelin.

Speaking on his Absolute Radio show, the guitarist said that his old manager Peter Grant sounded him out about joining the group when they were still known as The New Yardbirds, but he refused as he thought they were a “bunch of farmers”.

“Peter Grant used to manage myself and Jeff Beck and Rod Stewart and Mickey Waller and Nicky Hopkins back in the good old days,” he said. “He was behind a band that was going to be called The New Yardbirds.”

Wood added: “I had an offer to join, and I said ‘I can’t join that bunch of farmers’. Anyway, they eventually changed their name and turned out to be Led Zeppelin, and he managed them as well.”

Last month (January 9), Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts talked up the chances of the band touring this year. With the band set to celebrate their 50th anniversary, he said: “It would be lovely next year to do some shows because it will be 50 years. Ronnie [Wood] plays, I still play, Mick sings, he can do it anyway, I think Keith is doing some records.”

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

Starving Weirdos, “Land Lines”

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A quick video to carry us through the weekend. I've been playing the new Starving Weirdos album, "Land Lines", for a few weeks now. It's pretty cool, a kind of super-dense psych-ritual that sits someplace in between contemporary kosmische synth, tranced ethnological forgeries in the style of the Master Musicians Of Bukkake and the free drone of collectives like Sunburned Hand Of The Man. Catnip round these parts, basically. An uncharacteristic curiosity led me to check out the clip the Weirdos released for one track, "Periods", the other day. Very effective, really, not least because it captures the cultish grandeur and non-specific creepiness of the music, as well as the ambiguity of how seriously they're taking it all. If you've ever fantasised - unlikely, I suspect - about Flaming Lips's supporting cast being sent to work for Jodorowsky, this one could work for you...

A quick video to carry us through the weekend. I’ve been playing the new Starving Weirdos album, “Land Lines”, for a few weeks now.

It’s pretty cool, a kind of super-dense psych-ritual that sits someplace in between contemporary kosmische synth, tranced ethnological forgeries in the style of the Master Musicians Of Bukkake and the free drone of collectives like Sunburned Hand Of The Man. Catnip round these parts, basically.

An uncharacteristic curiosity led me to check out the clip the Weirdos released for one track, “Periods”, the other day. Very effective, really, not least because it captures the cultish grandeur and non-specific creepiness of the music, as well as the ambiguity of how seriously they’re taking it all. If you’ve ever fantasised – unlikely, I suspect – about Flaming Lips‘s supporting cast being sent to work for Jodorowsky, this one could work for you…

STARVING WEIRDOS – Periods from PɨK on Vimeo.

Noah And The Whale, Arcade Fire, REO Speedwagon feature on Barack Obama’s Spotify playlist

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Noah and the Whale, Arcade Fire and Florence and the Machine are amongst the artists that have made it on to US President Barack Obama's Spotify playlist. The official playlist for Obama's 2012 presidential campaign is said to "feature[s] picks by the campaign staff - including a few of President...

Noah and the Whale, Arcade Fire and Florence and the Machine are amongst the artists that have made it on to US President Barack Obama’s Spotify playlist.

The official playlist for Obama’s 2012 presidential campaign is said to “feature[s] picks by the campaign staff – including a few of President Obama’s favorites.”

The playlist also includes the new Bruce Springsteen single ‘We Take Care Of Our Own’, as well as Al Green‘s ‘Let’s Stay Together’, which Obama sang a snippet of at a recent campaign fundraiser in New York.

Wilco, No Doubt and Aretha Franklin‘s version of The Band‘s ‘The Weight’ also appear on the playlist, as do REO Speedwagon, ELO, James Taylor and U2. To listen to the full playlist, go to Spotify.com.

Barack Obama’s campaign playlist tracklisting is:

Raphael Saadiq – ‘Keep Marchin”

Noah And The Whale – ‘Tonight’s The Kind Of Night’

Bruce Springsteen – ‘We Take Care Of Our Own’

Zac Brown Band – ‘Keep Me In Mind’

Aretha Franklin – ‘The Weight’

U2 – ‘Even Better Than The Real Thing’

Dierks Bentley – ‘Home’

No Doubt – ‘Different People’

Earth Wind & Fire Experience feat. Al McKay Allstars – ‘Got To Get You Into My Life (live)’

Booker T. & The MG’s – ‘Green Onions’

Wilco – ‘I Got You’

The Impressions – ‘Keep On Pushing’

Jennifer Hudson – ‘Love You I Do’

AgesandAges – ‘No Nostalgia’

Ledisi – ‘Raise Up’

Sugarland – ‘Stand Up’

Darius Rucker – ‘This’

Arcade Fire – ‘We Used To Wait’

Florence + The Machine – ‘You’ve Got The Love’

James Taylor – ‘Your Smiling Face’

REO Speedwagon – ‘Roll With The Changes’

Sugarland – ‘Everyday America’

Darius Rucker – ‘Learn To Live’

Al Green – ‘Let’s Stay Together’

Electric Light Orchestra – ‘Mr Blue Sky’

Montgomery Gentry – ‘My Town’

Ricky Martin – ‘The Best Thing About Me Is You’ (Feat Joss Stone)

Ray LaMontagne – ‘You Are The Best Thing’

The Black Keys: ‘We don’t care if rock music is dead’

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The Black Keys' frontman Dan Auerbach has said that he doesn't 'really care' if rock music dies out. Last month (January 4), his bandmate – drummer Patrick Carney – had claimed there was a current lull in guitar music blamed the popularity of Canadian band Nickelback for its decline, adding: ...

The Black Keys‘ frontman Dan Auerbach has said that he doesn’t ‘really care’ if rock music dies out.

Last month (January 4), his bandmate – drummer Patrick Carney – had claimed there was a current lull in guitar music blamed the popularity of Canadian band Nickelback for its decline, adding: “Rock and roll is the music I feel the most passionately about, and I don’t like to see it fucking ruined and spoonfed down our throats in this watered-down, post-grunge crap, horrendous shit.”

However, in an interview with the Independent, Auerbach said he wasn’t concerned or worried about the future of the genre, stating: “Is rock music dead? Ha. Honestly? I don’t really care. I don’t listen to just one kind of music.”

He went on to add: “As long as music doesn’t die, I’ll be OK. All that talk is just fads and stories and that’s not my job. I don’t worry about anything other than playing music. We’ve always ignored the trends.”

The Black Keys are currently touring the UK and will play a one-off London show as part of the 2012 NME Awards Shows. They will headline London‘s Alexandra Palace on Saturday night (February 11).

Bruce Springsteen confirms Clarence Clemons’ nephew will replace him in the E Street Band

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Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band have announced that Clarence Clemons' nephew Jake will be taking over from his uncle as their band's touring saxophonist. Clemons passed away in June last year after suffering a stroke and the band have so far remained tight-lipped on their plans to replace him. ...

Bruce Springsteen‘s E Street Band have announced that Clarence Clemons’ nephew Jake will be taking over from his uncle as their band’s touring saxophonist.

Clemons passed away in June last year after suffering a stroke and the band have so far remained tight-lipped on their plans to replace him.

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

The post reads: “The expanded line up for this Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band tour features singers Cindy Mizelle and Curtis King, trombonist Clark Gayton and trumpeter Curt Ramm, all of whom have toured with Bruce Springsteen in the past along with newcomer Barry Danielian on trumpet. E Street stalwart Eddie Manion and first time tour member Jake Clemons, will share the saxophone role.”

Springsteen will release his 17th studio album ‘Wrecking Ball’ on March 5, with the album’s first single ‘We Take Care of Our Own’ already available online.

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

Martha Marcy May Marlene

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Psychological, cult-escapee drama... The first time we see Martha (Elizabeth Olsen), she’s slipping out of a ranch house, nestled deep in some isolated rural idyll, and bolting for the cover of nearby woods. Fetching up in a nearby town, she phones her sister – but when asked, she’s confused as to her whereabouts and, later, is unable to account for where she’s been the last two years. Martha, we learn, is on the run from a cult, presided over by charismatic leader, Patrick (John Hawkes). It was Patrick who gave Martha the name Marcy May, as part of a process in breaking down her identity. Marlene, meanwhile, is the name all the woman in the cult are instructed to use when answering the telephone. All this we discover in flashback: the film slips seamlessly between timelines, from the present day, following Martha’s escape from the cult, as she recouperates in the care of her yuppie-ish elder sister Lucy (Sarah Paulson) and brother-in-law Ted (Hugh Dancy), to her grueling time spent in Patrick’s tyrannical household. This is the feature debut of writer/director Sean Durkin, a follow-up to his 2010 short film, Mary Last Seen, which similarly found a young woman caught up in the pernicious influence of a controlling male. Durkin delivers an accomplished, disturbing movie, that at times feels like a horror movie: the idea of a female lead trapped in a remote environment and threatened by a predatory male echoes films from Psycho to The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet’s Nest. Elizabeth Olsen, the younger sister of the twins, brings to the part of Martha a measured intelligence and fierce vulnerability. John Hawkes – so good as the demonic Teardrop in Winter’s Bone – is tremendous as Patrick. He bestows or withholds his favour, gaining psychological hold over his followers. The new members – predominantly fragile young women, like Martha, who drift into his orbit – outdo each other to prove how fully they have accepted his ideology (which includes rape). Brady Corbet – clean cut, cold-eyed and gently menacing – is a suitably reptilian second in command, Watts. Martha might have escaped the physical boundaries of the cult’s ranch, but emotionally she is still very much a prisoner there. Recouperating at her sister’s home, Martha broods, lashing out at anyone who tries to help her. There is something of a wounded wild animal about her. Whether or not the cult still pose a genuine threat to her or not is a moot point – we are never expressly told as much, though Martha is convinced they do. She is spooked at the slightest noise, or the sight of an unfamiliar car, convinced Patrick or Watts are coming for her. “Fear is the most amazing emotion of all,” Patrick tutors Martha. It’s a lesson she never forgets. Wendy Ide

Psychological, cult-escapee drama…

The first time we see Martha (Elizabeth Olsen), she’s slipping out of a ranch house, nestled deep in some isolated rural idyll, and bolting for the cover of nearby woods. Fetching up in a nearby town, she phones her sister – but when asked, she’s confused as to her whereabouts and, later, is unable to account for where she’s been the last two years.

Martha, we learn, is on the run from a cult, presided over by charismatic leader, Patrick (John Hawkes). It was Patrick who gave Martha the name Marcy May, as part of a process in breaking down her identity. Marlene, meanwhile, is the name all the woman in the cult are instructed to use when answering the telephone. All this we discover in flashback: the film slips seamlessly between timelines, from the present day, following Martha’s escape from the cult, as she recouperates in the care of her yuppie-ish elder sister Lucy (Sarah Paulson) and brother-in-law Ted (Hugh Dancy), to her grueling time spent in Patrick’s tyrannical household.

This is the feature debut of writer/director Sean Durkin, a follow-up to his 2010 short film, Mary Last Seen, which similarly found a young woman caught up in the pernicious influence of a controlling male. Durkin delivers an accomplished, disturbing movie, that at times feels like a horror movie: the idea of a female lead trapped in a remote environment and threatened by a predatory male echoes films from Psycho to The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet’s Nest. Elizabeth Olsen, the younger sister of the twins, brings to the part of Martha a measured intelligence and fierce vulnerability. John Hawkes – so good as the demonic Teardrop in Winter’s Bone – is tremendous as Patrick. He bestows or withholds his favour, gaining psychological hold over his followers. The new members – predominantly fragile young women, like Martha, who drift into his orbit – outdo each other to prove how fully they have accepted his ideology (which includes rape). Brady Corbet – clean cut, cold-eyed and gently menacing – is a suitably reptilian second in command, Watts.

Martha might have escaped the physical boundaries of the cult’s ranch, but emotionally she is still very much a prisoner there. Recouperating at her sister’s home, Martha broods, lashing out at anyone who tries to help her. There is something of a wounded wild animal about her. Whether or not the cult still pose a genuine threat to her or not is a moot point – we are never expressly told as much, though Martha is convinced they do. She is spooked at the slightest noise, or the sight of an unfamiliar car, convinced Patrick or Watts are coming for her. “Fear is the most amazing emotion of all,” Patrick tutors Martha. It’s a lesson she never forgets.

Wendy Ide

Hear Jack White’s collaboration with Tom Jones ‘Evil’ now

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Tom Jones' cover of Howlin Wolf's 'Evil', which has been produced by Jack White, has debuted online. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to hear it. The track will be released on White's Third Man Records label as part of their 'Blue Series', along with a new version of Jones' 2002 t...

Tom Jones‘ cover of Howlin Wolf‘s ‘Evil’, which has been produced by Jack White, has debuted online. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to hear it.

The track will be released on White’s Third Man Records label as part of their ‘Blue Series’, along with a new version of Jones’ 2002 track ‘Jezebel’. It is due out on March 19.

Both tracks also feature Jack White’s bandmates in The Raconteurs Patrick Keeler and Jack Lawrence as well as My Morning Jacket‘s Tom Jones.

The ‘Blues Series’ has previously featured artists such as Stephen Colbert and Insane Clown Posse, who put out their track ‘Leck Mich Im Arsch’ as an exclusive seven-inch and download last September.

The unlikely hook-up with the controversial rap duo came about when they apparently crossed paths with White at an airport.

Jack White debuted his first solo single ‘Love Interruption’ online last week and will release his debut album ‘Blunderbuss’ on April 23.

Field Music stream new album ‘Plumb’ online before its release

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Field Music are streaming their new album 'Plumb' before its official release next Monday (February 13). To hear the album, visit NME.COM. 'Plumb' is the fourth studio album from the duo, which is made up of Sunderland siblings Peter and David Brewis, and is the follow-up to their 2010 double LP '...

Field Music are streaming their new album ‘Plumb’ before its official release next Monday (February 13). To hear the album, visit NME.COM.

‘Plumb’ is the fourth studio album from the duo, which is made up of Sunderland siblings Peter and David Brewis, and is the follow-up to their 2010 double LP ‘Field Music (Measure)’.

Field Music have also announced a run of UK tour shows to coincide with the release of the album, starting tomorrow night (February 10) at Newcastle Cluny. For more information, see Field-music.co.uk.

Field Music will play:

Newcastle Cluny (February 10, 12)

Glasgow Stereo (18)

Manchester The Deaf Institute (19)

Leeds The Brudenell Social Club (20)

Nottingham The Bodega Social Club (22)

Bristol The Fleece (23)

London King’s College (24)

Gorillaz to release new track ‘DoYaThing’ this month

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Gorillaz have announced that they will release a new track called 'DoYaThing' later this month. The band have teamed up with Outkast's Andre 3000 and LCD Soundsystem's James Murphy for the song, which was recorded for Converse's 'Three Artists. One Song' campaign and will be available as a free d...

Gorillaz have announced that they will release a new track called ‘DoYaThing’ later this month.

The band have teamed up with Outkast‘s Andre 3000 and LCD Soundsystem‘s James Murphy for the song, which was recorded for Converse’s ‘Three Artists. One Song’ campaign and will be available as a free download from their website Converse.co.uk on February 23.

In the past, the ‘Three Artists. One Song’ campaign brought together rapper Soulja Boy, Andrew WK and Matt And Kim to record a collaboration, and also saw Graham Coxon, Paloma Faith and ex-The Coral guitarist Bill Ryder-Jones collaborate to record a track together in 2010.

Gorillaz’ Jamie Hewlett has also designed a new shoe-range for Converse to go with the track, and is also working on an accompanying video. Singer Damon Albarn, meanwhile, told The Sun that a 12-minute unedited version of the track would also be released in the future.

To celebrate their ten-year anniversary last year, Gorillaz released the career-spanning compilation ‘The Singles Collection: 2001 – 2011’.

Albarn also revealed last November that he had been meeting up regularly with Blur to record new material, while producer William Orbit hinted that the band could soon start work on a new studio album. The Britpop legends will be performing together at this year’s Brit Awards, when they are honoured with the Outstanding Contribution To Music Award at the ceremony at the O2 Arena on February 21, 2012.

Sharon Osbourne denies firing Bill Ward from Black Sabbath

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Sharon Osbourne has denied that she asked for Black Sabbath to fire drummer Bill Ward. Ward, who is part of the iconic band's original line-up, said he would pull out of this summer's planned reunion shows and recording sessions for a new album unless he was presented with a "signable contract", ...

Sharon Osbourne has denied that she asked for Black Sabbath to fire drummer Bill Ward.

Ward, who is part of the iconic band’s original line-up, said he would pull out of this summer’s planned reunion shows and recording sessions for a new album unless he was presented with a “signable contract”, with the band then vowing to carry on without him.

Osbourne, who is manager of her husband Ozzy Osbourne, but not of Black Sabbath, has spoken out on Twitter in response to online reports that she had ordered the band to remove Ward as part of the contract dispute.

She wrote on Twitter.com/Mrssosbourne: “I am not in any position to hire or fire anyone in Black Sabbath. I don’t manage the band, I manage my husband.”

Ozzy Osbourne has also given an update on Tony Iommi’s progress in his battle against cancer. The guitarist was recently diagnosed with lymphoma, causing the band to move their recording sessions from Los Angeles to the UK, where the guitarist is receiving treatment.

Speaking to The Boneyard, the radio station he sponsors, Ozzy said of Iommi: “He’s going to beat it. What it’s down to is determination and believe me, this guy’s got more determination than anybody I’ve ever met. It’s going to be fine. It’s just one of those trials in life that happen.”

He continued: “When the bombshell hit about Tony’s cancer problem, I came to England. It would’ve been pretty bad if I would’ve stayed in L.A. He’s got so much support, not only from each one of us in the band, but the fan base; it’s unbelievable. It’s one of them problems you have in life. He isn’t going to die, I’m telling you. I told him if he dies, I’m going to kill him.”

Black Sabbath will headline this summer’s Download festival and undertake a full European tour.

Orbital, Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros to play Secret Garden Party

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The line-up for this summer's Secret Garden Party has been announced. The Cambridgeshire festival will take place from July 19-22 and play host to sets from Edward Sharpe And The Magnetic Zeros, KT Tunstall, Little Roy, The Jim Jones Revue, The Duke Spirit, Beth Jeans Houghton, Baxter Dury and more, as well as previously announced headliner Orbital. For more information about the line-up, visit SecretGardenParty.com. Secret Garden Party will take place at Mill Hill Field in Abbots Ripton. For more information about the festival, visit SecretGardenParty.com. The theme for this year's bash, with sees the festival celebrate its 10th birthday, is 'Standing on Ceremony' and the festival promises "more collective celebration, interactive theatre, hypnotic ceremonies and breathtaking spectacles than ever before." There will also be a number of artworks at the festival by installation artists from across the globe. Headliners Orbital release their new album 'Wonky', which is their first since 2004's 'Blue Album' and their first release since they returned from an indefinite hiatus, on April 1.

The line-up for this summer’s Secret Garden Party has been announced.

The Cambridgeshire festival will take place from July 19-22 and play host to sets from Edward Sharpe And The Magnetic Zeros, KT Tunstall, Little Roy, The Jim Jones Revue, The Duke Spirit, Beth Jeans Houghton, Baxter Dury and more, as well as previously announced headliner Orbital. For more information about the line-up, visit SecretGardenParty.com.

Secret Garden Party will take place at Mill Hill Field in Abbots Ripton. For more information about the festival, visit SecretGardenParty.com.

The theme for this year’s bash, with sees the festival celebrate its 10th birthday, is ‘Standing on Ceremony’ and the festival promises “more collective celebration, interactive theatre, hypnotic ceremonies and breathtaking spectacles than ever before.” There will also be a number of artworks at the festival by installation artists from across the globe.

Headliners Orbital release their new album ‘Wonky’, which is their first since 2004’s ‘Blue Album’ and their first release since they returned from an indefinite hiatus, on April 1.

Paul McCartney – Kisses On The Bottom

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Sir Paul’s romantic, (and loving) take on standards... Funny to think that Ringo beat everyone to it, on 1970’s Sentimental Journey, the first ever collection of standards and showtunes by someone from a rock music background. And now, 42 years later, his surviving bandmate becomes one of the last artists of his generation to step up to the podium and record an album of the songs of his parents’ generation. Of course, Paul McCartney is rooted in the music of the 1930s and ‘40s; if he wasn’t crooning songs like “Besame Mucho” and “Til There Was You” in the Beatles, he was pastiching the oldies in a long line of songs from “When I’m 64” to Wings’ “You Gave Me The Answer” and even punting his own “Suicide” to Frank Sinatra. Although it was George Harrison who wrote the song that Sinatra actually covered, “Something”. Mind you, Frank always credited it to Lennon and McCartney… Anyway, an album of standards from Paul McCartney is long overdue and this set – which could also be seen as a collection of love songs to his new missus, Nancy Shevell – shocks only in that you keep wanting to go back over McCartney’s discography to make sure that he hasn’t done this before, possibly under the name of Percy Thrillington, that this isn’t Kisses On The Bottom 2. But it’s not, and so in 2012, the album after ballet soundtrack Ocean’s Kingdom, and after 2007’s utterly superb Memory Almost Full, is finally the full-on swoon’n’croon, 12 genuine oldies and two brand new Macca songs, “My Valentine” and “Only Our Hearts”, that fit right in like olives in a Martini. There are no dub metal collaborations with Youth, no rockers, nothing of a classical or operatic nature, and not even any Ringo (which is a shame, as both Starr and McCartney cover “Bye Bye Blackbird” on their respective albums – there’s a mash-up waiting to happen). It ought to be the hoariest old lug of clichés, stuffed with every cliché from the retro Shure microphone to the black and white shot of Paul in a tuxedo. But it’s not, for a number of very decent reasons. For a start, McCartney is a great songwriter, and thus his choices are made for reasons of quality rather than popularity; unlike the X Factor contestants on Standards Night, Paul McCartney not only grew up with these songs, via the radio and his father Jim’s playing, he’s studied them. Even the more familiar songs here – Harold Arlen’s “It's Only a Paper Moon”, Billy Hill’s “The Glory Of Love” – aren’t Porter or Berlin megaliths, there’s a smattering of daft but lovely child-friendly tunes (“Inchworm”, “Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive”), and there’s no sense of crowd-pleasing here – the album opens with the song from which its daft title comes, “I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter”, which is just on the right side of obscure. By the time we’ve reached “My Very Good Friend The Milkman” and “We Three (My Echo, My Shadow and Me)”, we are entirely in the great man’s hands. The other cliché avoided is the Orchestra. Instead of the dead sweep of some fake Nelson Riddle arrangements, the music here is provided by jazznik Diane Krall’s band. Krall (married to former Macca collaborator Elvis Costello) and her musicians provide a lighter sound reminiscent of Nat King Cole and his Trio, and when strings do come in, they seep under the door like mist rather than hang like lead curtains. And McCartney’s voice fits these arrangements; a higher tenor than usual as befits the older vocalist, but investing each lyric with meaning and respect, full of lightness when required. There’s only one song here where his voice doesn’t have the airiness of an Astaire or the calm of a Crosby, and that’s “Get Yourself Another Fool”, in which we may or may not detect a controlled anger at a previous lover. And then there are the two new songs. In other hands, tacking your own compositions onto a set of classics might be seen as hubris, but in this case, it’s perfectly allowable. “Only Our Hearts” could be from some lost Broadway show, and is propelled into new excellence by Stevie Wonder’s best harmonica playing for decades (and even contains a properly Wings-y “whoo ooh hoo” at the end). And “My Valentine”, clearly written for Nancy Shevell, is beautiful, is a waft of a song that exists in the gap between Sinatra’s “A Very Good Year” and Nat King Cole’s “Nature Boy”. “(i)And I will love her for life(i)” sings Paul, and even though you know he’s sung it before, you also know he means it. In a genre mostly attempted from lazy despair, this album is made with care, love and expertise and it shows on every song. Kisses On The Bottom is all Valentine’s Day and no massacre. David Quantick

Sir Paul’s romantic, (and loving) take on standards…

Funny to think that Ringo beat everyone to it, on 1970’s Sentimental Journey, the first ever collection of standards and showtunes by someone from a rock music background. And now, 42 years later, his surviving bandmate becomes one of the last artists of his generation to step up to the podium and record an album of the songs of his parents’ generation.

Of course, Paul McCartney is rooted in the music of the 1930s and ‘40s; if he wasn’t crooning songs like “Besame Mucho” and “Til There Was You” in the Beatles, he was pastiching the oldies in a long line of songs from “When I’m 64” to Wings’ “You Gave Me The Answer” and even punting his own “Suicide” to Frank Sinatra. Although it was George Harrison who wrote the song that Sinatra actually covered, “Something”. Mind you, Frank always credited it to Lennon and McCartney…

Anyway, an album of standards from Paul McCartney is long overdue and this set – which could also be seen as a collection of love songs to his new missus, Nancy Shevell – shocks only in that you keep wanting to go back over McCartney’s discography to make sure that he hasn’t done this before, possibly under the name of Percy Thrillington, that this isn’t Kisses On The Bottom 2. But it’s not, and so in 2012, the album after ballet soundtrack Ocean’s Kingdom, and after 2007’s utterly superb Memory Almost Full, is finally the full-on swoon’n’croon, 12 genuine oldies and two brand new Macca songs, “My Valentine” and “Only Our Hearts”, that fit right in like olives in a Martini. There are no dub metal collaborations with Youth, no rockers, nothing of a classical or operatic nature, and not even any Ringo (which is a shame, as both Starr and McCartney cover “Bye Bye Blackbird” on their respective albums – there’s a mash-up waiting to happen).

It ought to be the hoariest old lug of clichés, stuffed with every cliché from the retro Shure microphone to the black and white shot of Paul in a tuxedo. But it’s not, for a number of very decent reasons. For a start, McCartney is a great songwriter, and thus his choices are made for reasons of quality rather than popularity; unlike the X Factor contestants on Standards Night, Paul McCartney not only grew up with these songs, via the radio and his father Jim’s playing, he’s studied them. Even the more familiar songs here – Harold Arlen’s “It’s Only a Paper Moon”, Billy Hill’s “The Glory Of Love” – aren’t Porter or Berlin megaliths, there’s a smattering of daft but lovely child-friendly tunes (“Inchworm”, “Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive”), and there’s no sense of crowd-pleasing here – the album opens with the song from which its daft title comes, “I’m Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter”, which is just on the right side of obscure. By the time we’ve reached “My Very Good Friend The Milkman” and “We Three (My Echo, My Shadow and Me)”, we are entirely in the great man’s hands.

The other cliché avoided is the Orchestra. Instead of the dead sweep of some fake Nelson Riddle arrangements, the music here is provided by jazznik Diane Krall’s band. Krall (married to former Macca collaborator Elvis Costello) and her musicians provide a lighter sound reminiscent of Nat King Cole and his Trio, and when strings do come in, they seep under the door like mist rather than hang like lead curtains. And McCartney’s voice fits these arrangements; a higher tenor than usual as befits the older vocalist, but investing each lyric with meaning and respect, full of lightness when required. There’s only one song here where his voice doesn’t have the airiness of an Astaire or the calm of a Crosby, and that’s “Get Yourself Another Fool”, in which we may or may not detect a controlled anger at a previous lover.

And then there are the two new songs. In other hands, tacking your own compositions onto a set of classics might be seen as hubris, but in this case, it’s perfectly allowable. “Only Our Hearts” could be from some lost Broadway show, and is propelled into new excellence by Stevie Wonder’s best harmonica playing for decades (and even contains a properly Wings-y “whoo ooh hoo” at the end). And “My Valentine”, clearly written for Nancy Shevell, is beautiful, is a waft of a song that exists in the gap between Sinatra’s “A Very Good Year” and Nat King Cole’s “Nature Boy”. “(i)And I will love her for life(i)” sings Paul, and even though you know he’s sung it before, you also know he means it.

In a genre mostly attempted from lazy despair, this album is made with care, love and expertise and it shows on every song. Kisses On The Bottom is all Valentine’s Day and no massacre.

David Quantick

The Beach Boys to collaborate with Foster The People and Maroon 5 at Grammys

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The Beach Boys are set to perform alongside Foster The People and Maroon 5 at this Sunday's (February 12) Grammy Awards. Brian Wilson, Mike Love, Al Jardine, Bruce Johnston and David Marks will perform together for the first time in over 15 years on stage at Los Angeles' Staples Center this weekend...

The Beach Boys are set to perform alongside Foster The People and Maroon 5 at this Sunday’s (February 12) Grammy Awards.

Brian Wilson, Mike Love, Al Jardine, Bruce Johnston and David Marks will perform together for the first time in over 15 years on stage at Los Angeles’ Staples Center this weekend. They will be joined by Grammy nominees Foster The People – pictured below – and Maroon 5 for the performance, reveals Grammy.com.

Kanye West has received the highest number of nominations for the 54th annual Grammy Awards, with seven nods. The rapper is vying for gongs for his solo work and tracks from ‘Watch The Throne’, his collaborative album with Jay-Z, while Foo Fighters have racked up six nominations.

Adele is also among the nominees, shortlisted for Album Of The Year for ’21’ and Best Solo Pop Performance. ‘Rolling In The Deep’ is up for Record Of The Year.

She is confirmed to perform at the ceremony, as are Bruce Springsteen, Katy Perry, Glen Campbell, Coldplay, Rihanna, Paul McCartney and Nicki Minaj.

See Grammy.com for a full list of this year’s nominations.

Sigur Ros to play first gig in four years

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Sigur Ros have revealed their first live date in almost four years, announcing plans to play Bestival in September. The band have said on their website that more tour dates will be revealed soon, but added that this will be their only UK show of 2012. Last year, they promised that their new album...

Sigur Ros have revealed their first live date in almost four years, announcing plans to play Bestival in September.

The band have said on their website that more tour dates will be revealed soon, but added that this will be their only UK show of 2012.

Last year, they promised that their new album will be a “floaty and minimal” affair. The experimental Icelandic band told The Wall Street Journal that they expect to release the LP, the follow-up to 2008’s ‘Með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust’, this spring. Drummer Orri Páll Dýrason explained that it would be an “ambient album” with a “slow take-off toward something”, while bassist Georg Holm suggested it would be “introverted”.

Sigur Ros released ‘Inni’, a concert film and live album, in November. It documented the group’s final two shows at London’s Alexandra Palace, before they went on their ‘indefinite hiatus’ at the end of their world tour following the release of their fifth album.

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.

Nick Cave and Blondie’s Debbie Harry duet on The Gun Club tribute album

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Nick Cave, Blondie's Debbie Harry, Mark Lanegan and Isobel Campbell, Warren Ellis, Lydia Lunch and more are all set to appear on 'The Jeffrey Lee Pierce Sessions Project - The Journey is Long' album, a tribute to the frontman of cult 1980s alt.rock band The Gun Club, who died from a brain haemorrhag...

Nick Cave, Blondie‘s Debbie Harry, Mark Lanegan and Isobel Campbell, Warren Ellis, Lydia Lunch and more are all set to appear on ‘The Jeffrey Lee Pierce Sessions Project – The Journey is Long’ album, a tribute to the frontman of cult 1980s alt.rock band The Gun Club, who died from a brain haemorrhage in 1996.

The compilation album will be released on April 9 and features versions of previously unreleased and unfinished songs by Pierce. It follows 2009’s similar ‘We Are Only Riders’ record. A third volume, called ‘The Task Has Overwhelmed Us’, will be released later in the year.

Nick Cave duets with Debbie Harry on ‘The Breaking Hands’ and Cave also sings the album’s opening track, ‘City In Pain’. The Jim Jones Revue also feature on the album. For a full list of those taking part, see the tracklisting below.

Pierce’s one time collaborator Cypress Grove has said of the album: “The idea was that, these are not our songs, we merely interpret them… In some cases the artists have had to finish the songs, so there can be no nonsense about this not being as good as the original version as these are the original versions! It’s a musical collective of artists who have come together to interpret or complete skeletal, unfinished material by Jeffrey. Where possible we have used Jeffrey’s contributions, so he actually appears posthumously on this album.”

Of the collaborative approach the artists took to the album, he added: “I like to think of it as being like Josh Homme’s ‘The Dessert Sessions’.”

‘The Jeffrey Lee Pierce Sessions Project – The Journey is Long’ tracklisting is:

‘City In Pain’ – Nick Cave

‘I’m Going Upstairs’ – Hugo Race

‘From Death To Texas’ – Steve Wynn

‘The Breaking Hands’ – Mark Lanegan & Isobel Campbell

‘The Jungle Book’ – The Amber Lights

‘Rose’s Blues’ – Bertrand Cantat, Pascal Humbert, Warren Ellis, Cypress Grove

‘Zonar Roze’ – Thalia Zedek & Chris Brokaw

‘L.A. County Jail Blues’ – Cypress Grove

‘I Wanna Be You’ – Barry Adamson

‘Sonny Boy’ – Mick Harvey

‘Book of Love’ – Vertical Smile

‘Body and Soul’ – Astro-Unicorn

‘The Brink’ – Lydia Lunch

‘The Breaking Hands’ – Nick Cave & Deborah Harry

‘In My Room’ – Tex Perkins & Lydia Lunch

‘The Jungle Book’ – Tav Falco’s Panther Burns

‘St Marks Place’ – Mick Harvey

‘Ain’t My Problem Baby’ – The Jim Jones Revue

Richard Hawley announces new album ‘Standing At The Sky’s Edge’

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Richard Hawley has announced full details of his new album 'Standing At The Sky's Edge'. The album, which is Hawley's first for his new label Parlophone, will come out on May 7. It contains a total of nine tracks and is the follow-up to his 2009 effort 'Truelove's Gutter'. Speaking about the alb...

Richard Hawley has announced full details of his new album ‘Standing At The Sky’s Edge’.

The album, which is Hawley’s first for his new label Parlophone, will come out on May 7. It contains a total of nine tracks and is the follow-up to his 2009 effort ‘Truelove’s Gutter’.

Speaking about the album, Hawley said he wanted to make a simpler record and move away from the grander sounds of his previous albums. He said of the album: “I wanted to get away from the orchestration of my previous records and make a live album with two guitars, bass, drums and rocket noises!”

Richard Hawley, who has indicated he will play a one-off London show to celebrate the album’s release, will also headline the brand new No Direction Home Festival this June.

The event, which is the sister festival of End Of The Road Festival, will take place from June 8 – 10 at Welbeck Abbey in Nottinghamshire. Andrew Bird, The Low Anthem, Dirty Three, Gruff Rhys and Slow Club are among the other artists booked to perform at the festival.

Hawley also recently collaborated with Arctic Monkeys on their new B-side ‘You And I’, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to watch the video for the track.

The tracklisting for ‘Standing At The Sky’s Edge’ is as follows:

‘She Brings The Sunlight’

‘Standing At The Sky’s Edge’

‘Time Will Bring You Winter’

‘Down In The Woods’

‘Seek It’

‘Don’t Stare At The Sun’

‘The Wood Collier’s Grave’

‘Leave Your Body Behind You’

‘Before’

Daniel Rossen, “Silent Hour/Golden Mile””

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I was playing a new record the other day that was, to all intensive purposes, mediocre American indie-rock; maybe with a touch of mediocre American post-rock. Uneventful enough, you might imagine, except for the fact that a constant barrage of overcomplicated arrangements – shooting for some kind of avant-garde audacity, I guess - made it actively annoying rather than merely nondescript. I can imagine, though, that this album will get a fair bit of praise, because it embodies a certain kind of Over-Reaching Maximalist Indie, and there’s a current tendency to praise records in part because of what are perceived as ‘ambitious’ arrangements, though not necessarily – to my ears, at least – good ones. A case in point being last year’s Bon Iver record, and perhaps most glaringly, the moment when Sufjan Stevens – previously a superbly measured arranger, I’d say – jumped the shark on “The Age Of Adz”. I mention all this today to set a context for the excellence of Daniel Rossen, his work with Grizzly Bear and Department Of Eagles, and his terrific new “Silent Hour/Golden Mile” EP (Warp are hosting one of the stand-out tracks, “Silent Song”, here). Apologies for doing what I normally deplore – ie spending most of a supposedly positive review griping about tangential other music. Nevertheless, it does feel like the grace and economy of the way Rossen goes about constructing chamber-pop deserves to be judged against those who use flashier, fussier and much less effective techniques as an attempted shortcut to grandeur. Rossen’s five solo songs collected here aren’t demonstrably that different to what he’s been doing for the past few years with Grizzly Bear and Department Of Eagles. There’s that same buccaneering air to the way his melodies and instruments are buffeted on the breeze, a sort of genteel swagger. Basically, “Silent Hour/Golden Mile” keeps working diligently on an idea of chamber pop learned originally from The Beatles, with especial attention paid to Paul McCartney (though check out the Harrison slide on “Silent Song” and “Golden Mile”), refracted through stuff like Elliott Smith’s “XO”. Rossen shares Smith’s craftsmanship, airy diffidence and sense of saturated romance. What’s missing – and this is not necessarily a criticism – is the usual visceral shorthand of that strain of singer-songwriters. Rossen’s music seems dreamy and abstracted rather than confessional, though at the same time very precise, measured and restrained in its construction. “Return To Form” might emerge from a thicket of fingerpicking comparable with some of Kurt Vile’s workouts, but while Vile cultivates an air of spontaneity, you’re never in doubt that Rossen knows exactly where he’s going. In his measure, control and calm intelligence, you can understand why Paul Simon sees a kindred spirit. Very nice record.

I was playing a new record the other day that was, to all intensive purposes, mediocre American indie-rock; maybe with a touch of mediocre American post-rock. Uneventful enough, you might imagine, except for the fact that a constant barrage of overcomplicated arrangements – shooting for some kind of avant-garde audacity, I guess – made it actively annoying rather than merely nondescript.

I can imagine, though, that this album will get a fair bit of praise, because it embodies a certain kind of Over-Reaching Maximalist Indie, and there’s a current tendency to praise records in part because of what are perceived as ‘ambitious’ arrangements, though not necessarily – to my ears, at least – good ones. A case in point being last year’s Bon Iver record, and perhaps most glaringly, the moment when Sufjan Stevens – previously a superbly measured arranger, I’d say – jumped the shark on “The Age Of Adz”.

I mention all this today to set a context for the excellence of Daniel Rossen, his work with Grizzly Bear and Department Of Eagles, and his terrific new “Silent Hour/Golden Mile” EP (Warp are hosting one of the stand-out tracks, “Silent Song”, here). Apologies for doing what I normally deplore – ie spending most of a supposedly positive review griping about tangential other music. Nevertheless, it does feel like the grace and economy of the way Rossen goes about constructing chamber-pop deserves to be judged against those who use flashier, fussier and much less effective techniques as an attempted shortcut to grandeur.

Rossen’s five solo songs collected here aren’t demonstrably that different to what he’s been doing for the past few years with Grizzly Bear and Department Of Eagles. There’s that same buccaneering air to the way his melodies and instruments are buffeted on the breeze, a sort of genteel swagger. Basically, “Silent Hour/Golden Mile” keeps working diligently on an idea of chamber pop learned originally from The Beatles, with especial attention paid to Paul McCartney (though check out the Harrison slide on “Silent Song” and “Golden Mile”), refracted through stuff like Elliott Smith’s “XO”.

Rossen shares Smith’s craftsmanship, airy diffidence and sense of saturated romance. What’s missing – and this is not necessarily a criticism – is the usual visceral shorthand of that strain of singer-songwriters. Rossen’s music seems dreamy and abstracted rather than confessional, though at the same time very precise, measured and restrained in its construction. “Return To Form” might emerge from a thicket of fingerpicking comparable with some of Kurt Vile’s workouts, but while Vile cultivates an air of spontaneity, you’re never in doubt that Rossen knows exactly where he’s going. In his measure, control and calm intelligence, you can understand why Paul Simon sees a kindred spirit. Very nice record.