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Ryan Adams announces April UK tour

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Ryan Adams has announced a new UK tour for April. The singer, who released his 13th studio album 'Ashes & Fire' last year, will play seven shows across the UK. The tour begins at Belfast Waterfront Auditorium on April 20 and include dates in Nottingham, Glasgow, Gasteshead and Sheffield as we...

Ryan Adams has announced a new UK tour for April.

The singer, who released his 13th studio album ‘Ashes & Fire’ last year, will play seven shows across the UK. The tour begins at Belfast Waterfront Auditorium on April 20 and include dates in Nottingham, Glasgow, Gasteshead and Sheffield as well as two shows at the London Palladium.

‘Ashes & Fire’ was released on the singer’s own label PAX-AM in October and was recorded at Hollywood’s Sunset Sound. It was produced by Glyn Johns, father of Ethan Johns, who worked on Adams’ albums ‘Heartbreaker’, ‘Gold’ and ’29’.

Norah Jones features on ‘Ashes & Fire’, singing backing vocals on a number of songs, including ‘Come Home’, ‘Save Me’ and ‘Kindness’.

Ryan Adams will play:

Belfast Waterfront Auditorium (April 20)

Gateshead Sage Theatre (22)

London Palladium (23, 30)

Nottingham Royal Concert Hall (25)

Glasgow Royal Concert Hall (26)

Sheffield City Hall (27)

Brett Anderson: ‘If the new Suede album isn’t amazing, we won’t release it’

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Brett Anderson has said that if the new Suede album isn't "amazing", then it will never see the light of day. The band are currently in the studio working on their first new album in a decade and Anderson has said that although the writing is going well, Suede are prepared not to release anything...

Brett Anderson has said that if the new Suede album isn’t “amazing”, then it will never see the light of day.

The band are currently in the studio working on their first new album in a decade and Anderson has said that although the writing is going well, Suede are prepared not to release anything.

He told BBC 6Music: “We’re writing a new Suede album. We don’t know how that’s going to turn out. If it’s not amazing, I don’t think we’ll release it. We’re just at the writing stage and it feels pretty good and it’s very exciting.”

Anderson then said that he had no idea when the album would be finished or when the band hoped to release it. Asked when he thought it would come out, he replied: “I wish I knew. We’re just at the writing stage, we’ve written about seven or eight songs and who knows if any of those will make it on to the final album. We might go somewhere completely different.”

Suede will release a new DVD box set of their 2010 comeback performance at the Royal Albert Hall on March 24. The box set will contain a DVD of the entire concert featuring 21 songs, a DVD of backstage footage, two audio CDs of the show and a 48-page bound book.

Smashing Pumpkins – Gish & Siamese Dream

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Before the rampant egomania, before the bloated double albums, before the mass band purgings and the hagiographic documentary in which Billy Corgan, saintly in white bathrobe, sits in a hotel room writing songs about Nazi Germany and receiving a pair of fans who present him with a huge plaster model of his own head… yeah, it’s easy to forget that before all that stuff, the Smashing Pumpkins used to be a pretty great rock band. In part, their preposterous success – over 30 million albums sold – should be considered fortunate timing. Rising out of the Chicago club scene in 1991, just as Seattle’s alternative rock underground had hit on the formula of turning angst into dollars, the Pumpkins’ mix of bruising dream-rock and bruised introversion made them seem, if not kin, at least a foil – fey flower children, adrift in grunge’s forest of tormented lumberjacks. Whereas Nirvana, Mudhoney and Screaming Trees slotted into a lineage of American punk-rock that stretched back to Black Flag and Minor Threat, Corgan had experienced no such DIY weaning: his totems were Cheap Trick, Queen, Yngwie Malmsteen. He was also ambitious, deeply so, and in a way that rubbed up the alternative gatekeepers: Steve Albini called them “by, of and for the mainstream”, while Bob Mould coined the fabulous term “the grunge Monkees” – jabs Corgan would return on Siamese Dream’s “Cherub Rock”, a sardonic riposte to what he regarded as sniffy hipsters out to spoil his deserved success. Gish was the first evidence of Corgan’s exacting manner. Recorded in a 30-day stint at Butch Vig’s Smart Studios, where Nirvana had laid down the demos for Nevermind eight months earlier, this was, by alternative standards, a fastidious piece of work. Vig speaks of hours perfecting guitar tone, and Corgan reportedly (and not for the last time) played the lion’s share of guitarist James Iha and bassist D’arcy Wretzky’s parts himself. Lyrically, it’s not much to speak of – a vague angst, sophomoric at best – but Gish is a gem nonetheless. Vig’s warm, radiant production proves a neat fit for Corgan’s dreamy guitar expressionism, and while “I Am One” and “Siva” neatly blend the ethereal and the heavy, it is the record’s softer moments – the lullaby-like “Crush”, and the Wretsky-sung “Day Dream” – that glow the brightest. Bob Ludwig’s remaster job adds fine detail, and a second CD collects 18 tracks, mostly diverting: fresh mixes of B-sides “Plume” and “Starla”, Peel sessions (including a Hendrix-channelling cover of the Animals’ LSD hymn “Girl Named Sandoz”) and “Hippy Trippy”, a fragile early take on “Crush”. Corgan may not have harboured the troublesome integrity of Kurt Cobain, but the Pumpkins’ alternative success brought with it its own problems. Iha and Wretsky hooked up, then broke up; in accordance with grunge cliché, the band’s trump card, powerhouse drummer Jimmy Chamberlin, got hooked on heroin; Billy got married, and grappled with the monumental responsibility of being the genius Billy Corgan. From all this came Siamese Dream. In places, one might call this an album of love songs – “Luna”, “Soma” and “Hummer” all address another with affection. Really, though, the subject is me, me, me. The Pumpkins may not have been “authentic” in the DIY punk sense, but it’s clear that when Corgan said he was a fuck-up, he wasn’t exaggerating. “Disarm” muses on a childhood of abuse and neglect, strummed acoustic guitar and cello laced with, as Corgan has it, “The bitterness of one who’s left alone”. Two booming anthems, “Cherub Rock” and “Today”, are equal parts earnestness and irony, on the surface wide-eyed and innocent, but coloured with a sickly patina. The winsome “Spaceboy” gives way to a snatch of audio pulled from some American TV show, a housewife complaining her partner “ends up just masturbating himself, and I end up feeling very alienated and unsatisfied…” And then there is “Silverfuck”, which finds Billy locking bits of his past self in a box under his bed – any thoughts, Dr Freud? – before the song goes up like a catherine wheel and burns out in a squall of screaming feedback. Corgan’s megalomania hides a damaged soul, and on Siamese Dream, he swaddles his dysfunction in layers upon layers of cotton-wool guitar fuzz. Its essence, more or less, is, “I’m not OK, you’re not OK… but enough about you”. Still, everyone needs a refuge, and never did the Pumpkins build one more sonically gorgeous than this. Extras? Mostly inferior takes, or material similar to that on ’94’s out-takes collection Pisces Iscariot and 2005’s Rarities And B-sides, although for those that haven’t plumbed the depths of the Pumpkins catalogue, it’s a fair brace. Louis Pattison

Before the rampant egomania, before the bloated double albums, before the mass band purgings and the hagiographic documentary in which Billy Corgan, saintly in white bathrobe, sits in a hotel room writing songs about Nazi Germany and receiving a pair of fans who present him with a huge plaster model of his own head… yeah, it’s easy to forget that before all that stuff, the Smashing Pumpkins used to be a pretty great rock band.

In part, their preposterous success – over 30 million albums sold – should be considered fortunate timing. Rising out of the Chicago club scene in 1991, just as Seattle’s alternative rock underground had hit on the formula of turning angst into dollars, the Pumpkins’ mix of bruising dream-rock and bruised introversion made them seem, if not kin, at least a foil – fey flower children, adrift in grunge’s forest of tormented lumberjacks.

Whereas Nirvana, Mudhoney and Screaming Trees slotted into a lineage of American punk-rock that stretched back to Black Flag and Minor Threat, Corgan had experienced no such DIY weaning: his totems were Cheap Trick, Queen, Yngwie Malmsteen. He was also ambitious, deeply so, and in a way that rubbed up the alternative gatekeepers: Steve Albini called them “by, of and for the mainstream”, while Bob Mould coined the fabulous term “the grunge Monkees” – jabs Corgan would return on Siamese Dream’s “Cherub Rock”, a sardonic riposte to what he regarded as sniffy hipsters out to spoil his deserved success.

Gish was the first evidence of Corgan’s exacting manner. Recorded in a 30-day stint at Butch Vig’s Smart Studios, where Nirvana had laid down the demos for Nevermind eight months earlier, this was, by alternative standards, a fastidious piece of work. Vig speaks of hours perfecting guitar tone, and Corgan reportedly (and not for the last time) played the lion’s share of guitarist James Iha and bassist D’arcy Wretzky’s parts himself. Lyrically, it’s not much to speak of – a vague angst, sophomoric at best – but Gish is a gem nonetheless. Vig’s warm, radiant production proves a neat fit for Corgan’s dreamy guitar expressionism, and while “I Am One” and “Siva” neatly blend the ethereal and the heavy, it is the record’s softer moments – the lullaby-like “Crush”, and the Wretsky-sung “Day Dream” – that glow the brightest. Bob Ludwig’s remaster job adds fine detail, and a second CD collects 18 tracks, mostly diverting: fresh mixes of B-sides “Plume” and “Starla”, Peel sessions (including a Hendrix-channelling cover of the Animals’ LSD hymn “Girl Named Sandoz”) and “Hippy Trippy”, a fragile early take on “Crush”.

Corgan may not have harboured the troublesome integrity of Kurt Cobain, but the Pumpkins’ alternative success brought with it its own problems. Iha and Wretsky hooked up, then broke up; in accordance with grunge cliché, the band’s trump card, powerhouse drummer Jimmy Chamberlin, got hooked on heroin; Billy got married, and grappled with the monumental responsibility of being the genius Billy Corgan. From all this came Siamese Dream. In places, one might call this an album of love songs – “Luna”, “Soma” and “Hummer” all address another with affection. Really, though, the subject is me, me, me.

The Pumpkins may not have been “authentic” in the DIY punk sense, but it’s clear that when Corgan said he was a fuck-up, he wasn’t exaggerating. “Disarm” muses on a childhood of abuse and neglect, strummed acoustic guitar and cello laced with, as Corgan has it, “The bitterness of one who’s left alone”. Two booming anthems, “Cherub Rock” and “Today”, are equal parts earnestness and irony, on the surface wide-eyed and innocent, but coloured with a sickly patina. The winsome “Spaceboy” gives way to a snatch of audio pulled from some American TV show, a housewife complaining her partner “ends up just masturbating himself, and I end up feeling very alienated and unsatisfied…” And then there is “Silverfuck”, which finds Billy locking bits of his past self in a box under his bed – any thoughts, Dr Freud? – before the song goes up like a catherine wheel and burns out in a squall of screaming feedback.

Corgan’s megalomania hides a damaged soul, and on Siamese Dream, he swaddles his dysfunction in layers upon layers of cotton-wool guitar fuzz. Its essence, more or less, is, “I’m not OK, you’re not OK… but enough about you”. Still, everyone needs a refuge, and never did the Pumpkins build one more sonically gorgeous than this. Extras? Mostly inferior takes, or material similar to that on ’94’s out-takes collection Pisces Iscariot and 2005’s Rarities And B-sides, although for those that haven’t plumbed the depths of the Pumpkins catalogue, it’s a fair brace.

Louis Pattison

The Cure confirm three festival headline slots for summer 2012

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The Cure have announced three festival headline shows for this summer. The band, who headlined Bestival event last September, have confirmed that they will be appearing at Hultsfred festival in Sweden alongside The Stone Roses as well as German festivals Southside and Hurricane. The Cure are ex...

The Cure have announced three festival headline shows for this summer.

The band, who headlined Bestival event last September, have confirmed that they will be appearing at Hultsfred festival in Sweden alongside The Stone Roses as well as German festivals Southside and Hurricane.

The Cure are expected to announce a number of further festival shows in the coming weeks, but have not been strongly linked with any of the UK’s major festivals thus far.

The band recently completed a run of dates, including one at London’s Royal Albert Hall, which saw them performing their debut album ‘Three Imaginary Boys’ (1979), plus 1980’s ‘Seventeen Seconds’ and 1981’s ‘Faith’ in their entirety.

They also recently released a live album of their 2011 Bestival headline set in December. The 32-song, two-and-a-half-hour set was released on double CD, with all the profits from sales donated to the Isle Of Wight Youth Trust, a charitable, independent and professional organisation which offers counselling, advice, information and support services to young people aged 25 and under on the Isle of Wight.

Paul McCartney to start sightseeing business?

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Paul McCartney wants to start his own sightseeing business, according to reports. The Winnipeg Free Press claims that the Beatles legend wants to "give something back" to Liverpool by starting his own touring company, which will give punters a look into his own personal experiences of his home ci...

Paul McCartney wants to start his own sightseeing business, according to reports.

The Winnipeg Free Press claims that the Beatles legend wants to “give something back” to Liverpool by starting his own touring company, which will give punters a look into his own personal experiences of his home city.

McCartney said: “I would really love to start a sightseeing business. I have my own magical mystery tours of the city, my own special route I go on and I think other people would love it, too. I want to give something back to the locals.”

Last week (January 9), McCartney announced that his forthcoming new album would be called ‘Kisses On The Bottom’. The album, which will be released on February 6, is made up of songs that the singer listened to as a child as well as two new songs, ‘My Valentine’ and ‘Only Our Hearts’.

The tracklisting for ‘Kisses On The Bottom’, which will feature contributions from Eric Clapton and Stevie Wonder, is as follows:

‘I’m Gonna Sit Right Down And Write Myself A Letter’

‘Home (When Shadows Fall)’

‘It’s Only A Paper Moon’

‘More I Cannot Wish You’

‘The Glory Of Love’

‘We Three (My Echo, My Shadow And Me)’

‘Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive’

‘My Valentine’

‘Always’

‘My Very Good Friend The Milkman’

‘Bye Bye Blackbird’

‘Get Yourself Another Fool’

‘The Inch Worm’

‘Only Our Hearts’

Michael Eavis: ‘I may introduce microchip wristbands at Glastonbury in 2013’

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Glastonbury festival organiser Michael Eavis has revealed he is considering introducing a new microchipped wristband system in 2013. The devices, which look like standard festival bands but are fitted with a microchip which tracks festival goers going on and off site, were recently rolled out at ...

Glastonbury festival organiser Michael Eavis has revealed he is considering introducing a new microchipped wristband system in 2013.

The devices, which look like standard festival bands but are fitted with a microchip which tracks festival goers going on and off site, were recently rolled out at the Eurosonic Noorderslag festival in the Netherlands.

Eavis said he is considering introducing the new technology at next year’s Glastonbury and added that it “seems like an incredible system”.

He told BBC Newsbeat: “It does look as though it’s something better than what we’re doing at the moment and I might be tempted to use it.”

But Eavis did admit that he had some reservations over the system, which is designed to wipe out ticket fraud and touting, and can be loaded with cash to pay for goods on site

“All the commerical implications of the chip are slightly worrying aren’t they?” he added. “I don’t want to take people into a land they don’t want to go into. And using information about people, I wouldn’t be happy about that.”

Glastonbury currently uses a registration system where ticket holders have their photos displayed on printed tickets.

Meanwhile, Eavis recently confirmed that the headliners for Glastonbury 2013 are “already sorted”.

Julia Holter: “Ekstasis”

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One of my favourite labels at the moment is probably RVNG INTL, thanks mostly to the Blues Control & Laraaji album I fixated on at the end of last year, and to the forthcoming collaboration between Sun Araw, M Geddes Gengras and The Congos. There’s also, though, Julia Holter, whose forthcoming album is a crystalline pleasure called “Ekstasis”, and is the sort of cleanly-etched and marginally ethereal record that seems very well-suited to bright winter days like this one (in London, at least). If you drop in on RVNG’s site, you can hear “Marienbad”, the first track from “Ekstasis”, which gives a pretty idea of what to expect. Comparisons are to some degree invidious when dealing with such an individual artist but, nevertheless, you could feasibly pitch Holter’s music as a cross between the nuanced trajectories of Joanna Newsom, and Julianna Barwick’s sepulchral and in some cases disorienting use of ambient effects. As you’ll hear, there’s also a point in “Marienbad” which exquisitely promises a dance breakdown that never quite arrives; a link, perhaps, with Fever Ray and a de-gothified Zola Jesus. One of my wise colleagues also spotted a certain melodic kinship with the Aphex Twin circa “Richard D James”. Once or twice, the rest of the album verges on being rather winsome indie-synthpop, but Holter is always skilled at pulling her music into a less expected place. The final “This Is Ekstasis” begins as a dislocated piano ballad, expands into a chorale of dislocated Holters (which reminds me, thrillingly, of Linda Perhacs’ “Parallelograms”), staggers onwards on knifelike synths, and gradually finds a place for some meandering jazz. There is a free sax solo, some panting, eerie incantations, double bass and cellos, and a sense that Holter is keen to mix an unorthodox but vivid kind of pop with something akin to the avant-garde; maybe those of you who’ve heard last year’s “Tragedy” would know more about that? One last damned comparison, anyhow: if you were as disappointed as I was with the last Björk album, check this out. Follow me on Twitter: @JohnRMulvey

One of my favourite labels at the moment is probably RVNG INTL, thanks mostly to the Blues Control & Laraaji album I fixated on at the end of last year, and to the forthcoming collaboration between Sun Araw, M Geddes Gengras and The Congos.

There’s also, though, Julia Holter, whose forthcoming album is a crystalline pleasure called “Ekstasis”, and is the sort of cleanly-etched and marginally ethereal record that seems very well-suited to bright winter days like this one (in London, at least).

If you drop in on RVNG’s site, you can hear “Marienbad”, the first track from “Ekstasis”, which gives a pretty idea of what to expect. Comparisons are to some degree invidious when dealing with such an individual artist but, nevertheless, you could feasibly pitch Holter’s music as a cross between the nuanced trajectories of Joanna Newsom, and Julianna Barwick’s sepulchral and in some cases disorienting use of ambient effects.

As you’ll hear, there’s also a point in “Marienbad” which exquisitely promises a dance breakdown that never quite arrives; a link, perhaps, with Fever Ray and a de-gothified Zola Jesus. One of my wise colleagues also spotted a certain melodic kinship with the Aphex Twin circa “Richard D James”.

Once or twice, the rest of the album verges on being rather winsome indie-synthpop, but Holter is always skilled at pulling her music into a less expected place. The final “This Is Ekstasis” begins as a dislocated piano ballad, expands into a chorale of dislocated Holters (which reminds me, thrillingly, of Linda Perhacs’ “Parallelograms”), staggers onwards on knifelike synths, and gradually finds a place for some meandering jazz.

There is a free sax solo, some panting, eerie incantations, double bass and cellos, and a sense that Holter is keen to mix an unorthodox but vivid kind of pop with something akin to the avant-garde; maybe those of you who’ve heard last year’s “Tragedy” would know more about that? One last damned comparison, anyhow: if you were as disappointed as I was with the last Björk album, check this out.

Follow me on Twitter: @JohnRMulvey

Tom Petty announces June UK and Ireland shows

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Tom Petty has announced a short UK and Ireland tour for June. The singer, along with his band The Heartbreakers, will play gigs in Dublin, Cork and London in June. All three shows precede his headline slot at the Isle Of Wight Festival. Petty will first play Dublin's O2 Arena on June 7, then Cork'...

Tom Petty has announced a short UK and Ireland tour for June.

The singer, along with his band The Heartbreakers, will play gigs in Dublin, Cork and London in June. All three shows precede his headline slot at the Isle Of Wight Festival.

Petty will first play Dublin’s O2 Arena on June 7, then Cork’s ‘Live At The Marquee’ event on June 8 and finally London’s Royal Albert Hall on June 20.

Petty headlines Isle Of Wight Festival two days after the London show on June 22, with Pearl Jam and Bruce Springsteen acting as the event’s other headliners.

The singer released his 12th studio album ‘Mojo’ last year.

Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers will play:

Dublin O2 Arena (June 7)

Cork Live At The Marquee (8)

London Royal Albert Hall (20)

The Stranglers announce new album ‘Giants’ and March UK tour

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The Stranglers have announced details of their first studio album for six years. The punk veterans will be release the album, which has been given the title of 'Giants', on March 5. It is the band's first album since 2006's 'Suite XVI' and the 17th album of their career so far. The tracklisting ...

The Stranglers have announced details of their first studio album for six years.

The punk veterans will be release the album, which has been given the title of ‘Giants’, on March 5. It is the band’s first album since 2006’s ‘Suite XVI’ and the 17th album of their career so far.

The tracklisting for ‘Giants’ is as follows:

‘Another Camden Afternoon’

‘Freedom Is Insane’

‘Giants’

‘Lowlands’

‘Boom Boom’

‘My Fickle Resolve’

‘Time Was Once On My Side’

‘Mercury Rising’

‘Adios’

’15 Steps’

The band have also confirmed an extensive UK tour to go alongside the album’s release, playing a total of 18 shows across March.

The gigs kick off in Leeds at the O2 Academy on March 1 and run until March 24 when the band will headline Manchester’s Academy.

The Stranglers will play:

O2 Academy Leeds (March 1)

Dunfermline Alhambra (2)

O2 Academy Glasgow (3)

O2 Academy Liverpool (5)

Nottingham Rock City (6)

Cambridge Corn Exchange (8)

London Roundhouse (9)

O2 Academy Birmingham (10)

O2 Academy Oxford (12)

Portsmouth Pyramids Centre (13)

Lincoln Engine Shed (15)

Brighton Dome (16)

O2 Academy Bristol (17)

Leamington Spa Assembly

Guildford G-Live (20)

O2 Academy Newcastle (22)

O2 Academy Sheffield (23)

Manchester Academy (24)

Black Sabbath’s Tony Iommi issues statement over cancer diagnosis

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Black Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi has issued a statement after he revealed earlier this week that he has been diagnosed with cancer. The reunited metal legends stated on Monday (January 9) that Iommi had been diagnosed with the early stages of lymphoma and that they would now be moving the recor...

Black Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi has issued a statement after he revealed earlier this week that he has been diagnosed with cancer.

The reunited metal legends stated on Monday (January 9) that Iommi had been diagnosed with the early stages of lymphoma and that they would now be moving the recording process for their new studio album over to the UK so the guitarist can undergo treatment.

In a statement on his official website Iommi.com, the axeman wrote: “I just want to say how overwhelmed I am with all your messages of support, thank you so much. Well it’s not what I wanted for Christmas, that’s for sure, but now I can’t wait for the test results to come in and get going with the treatment.”

He continued: “It’s really good that the guys are coming over so that we can continue working on the album as things are going great in the studio. Not much else to say at this time, so thanks again.”

The band have not said if Iommi’s condition affects their planned world tour as yet. The band are scheduled to tour Europe in the summer, with a headline slot at Download Festival among the dates.

Bob Dylan Sings For Martin Scorsese

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Martin Scorsese was a special guest last night at the Critics' Choice Awards in Hollywood last night, where he picked up the Best Documentary Feature prize for his George Harrison documentary, Living In The Material World and was further honoured with the Critics' Choice Music And Film Award. No less thrillingly, there was a performance in his honour by Bob Dylan, who turned in a spectacular version of "Blind Willie McTell" that brought the hosue down and the attending celebrities to their feet. You can watch Dylan's performance here.

Martin Scorsese was a special guest last night at the Critics’ Choice Awards in Hollywood last night, where he picked up the Best Documentary Feature prize for his George Harrison documentary, Living In The Material World and was further honoured with the Critics’ Choice Music And Film Award.

No less thrillingly, there was a performance in his honour by Bob Dylan, who turned in a spectacular version of “Blind Willie McTell” that brought the hosue down and the attending celebrities to their feet.

You can watch Dylan’s performance here.

Moonrise Kingdom: The return of Wes Anderson

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Thinking about it now, it seems as if many of our favourite film makers decided to take 2011 off. Aside from the Coens' True Grit at the start of the year and Martin Scorsese's foray into children's movies at its close, you could be forgiven for wondering where had all the directors we'd so assiduously championed since Uncut began, in 1997, disappeared off to. But there are encouraging signs that 2012 might find many of them resuming filmmaking duties. Out in just a few weeks is Alexander Payne's latest, quite brilliant, take on the plight of the middle age male, The Descendants, and we're waiting impatiently for Whit Stillman's first film in 13 years, Damsels In Distress, which has already done the rounds of the festival circuit overseas. For now, though, here's a taster of another one of our most anticipated films of this year, Wes Anderson's Moonrise Kingdom, the trailer for which appeared online last night. So what can we tell you about it? Well, it looks like we're in reassuringly familiar territory: the meticulous composition, the highly stylised colour palette, the '60s pop songs on the soundtrack and - yep - there's Bill Murray in there, too. The story appears to be set in the mid 1960s and follows two teenagers who fall in love and decide to elope, much to the consternation of their local community. Lots of regular faces - Jason Schwartzman among them - plus a couple of late comers to the Anderson party, including Ed Norton and Bruce Willis. Enjoy it here. Meanwhile, why not tell us what you think of the Moonrise Kingdom taster, or let us know what films you're looking forward to seeing this coming year. I know plenty of folk who're excited by the year's larger films - The Dark Knight Rises and Prometheus, in particular. But what about smaller films like Young Adult, from the Juno team of Jason Reitman and Diablo Cody, or gritty British drama Wild Bill? Maybe you're just made up that there's going to be a new Muppets film out in a few weeks time... It'd be good to hear from you, anyway.

Thinking about it now, it seems as if many of our favourite film makers decided to take 2011 off. Aside from the Coens’ True Grit at the start of the year and Martin Scorsese’s foray into children’s movies at its close, you could be forgiven for wondering where had all the directors we’d so assiduously championed since Uncut began, in 1997, disappeared off to.

But there are encouraging signs that 2012 might find many of them resuming filmmaking duties. Out in just a few weeks is Alexander Payne’s latest, quite brilliant, take on the plight of the middle age male, The Descendants, and we’re waiting impatiently for Whit Stillman’s first film in 13 years, Damsels In Distress, which has already done the rounds of the festival circuit overseas.

For now, though, here’s a taster of another one of our most anticipated films of this year, Wes Anderson’s Moonrise Kingdom, the trailer for which appeared online last night.

So what can we tell you about it? Well, it looks like we’re in reassuringly familiar territory: the meticulous composition, the highly stylised colour palette, the ’60s pop songs on the soundtrack and – yep – there’s Bill Murray in there, too. The story appears to be set in the mid 1960s and follows two teenagers who fall in love and decide to elope, much to the consternation of their local community. Lots of regular faces – Jason Schwartzman among them – plus a couple of late comers to the Anderson party, including Ed Norton and Bruce Willis.

Enjoy it here.

Meanwhile, why not tell us what you think of the Moonrise Kingdom taster, or let us know what films you’re looking forward to seeing this coming year. I know plenty of folk who’re excited by the year’s larger films – The Dark Knight Rises and Prometheus, in particular. But what about smaller films like Young Adult, from the Juno team of Jason Reitman and Diablo Cody, or gritty British drama Wild Bill? Maybe you’re just made up that there’s going to be a new Muppets film out in a few weeks time…

It’d be good to hear from you, anyway.

The Flaming Lips to work with Bon Iver and Yoko Ono on new album

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The Flaming Lips' Wayne Coyne has revealed that the band are working on a new collaborative LP with Bon Iver and Yoko Ono. Rolling Stone reports that the frontman has also lined up collaborations with artists including Nick Cave, Ke$ha, Lykke Li and Erykah Badu for the LP, which is set to be rele...

The Flaming LipsWayne Coyne has revealed that the band are working on a new collaborative LP with Bon Iver and Yoko Ono.

Rolling Stone reports that the frontman has also lined up collaborations with artists including Nick Cave, Ke$ha, Lykke Li and Erykah Badu for the LP, which is set to be released in April.

Coyne confirmed that he had already recorded collaborations with Cave and the Plastic Ono Band for the record, while Bon Iver‘s Justin Vernon had signed on to be part of the project and was set to send the band two tracks he had been working on.

Speaking about the other would-be-collaborators, the singer said: “All these things happen within a couple of days. You set up these [collaborations] in your mind and immediately get to work. Sometimes it just takes a matter of connecting.”

Coyne also paid tribute to Ke$ha, who he hopes to recruit for a “weird rap” on the record, by describing her as “a freak”. He added: “We knew that she was a fan. There are a lot of these sort of druggy outlets out there that people get connected through.”

The frontman had previously made his desire to work with both Ke$ha and Lykke Li public last October, and also spoke of the Flaming Lips’ collaboration with Nick Cave, stating: “I think we’ll get a good Nick Cave collection of songs with The Flaming Lips. We already have one really good one, so that seems like it’ll work out.”

Last year, The Flaming Lips released a 24-hour long track to coincide with Halloween. The song, titled ‘7 Skies H3’, was embedded in a hard drive inside 13 actual human skulls topped with chrome drips – and was available to buy for a cool $5,000 (£3,100) a pop.

Elvis Costello & The Imposters – The Return Of The Spectacular Singing Songbook

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Elvis Costello wasn’t himself 25 years ago, the musician credits on the two albums he released in 1986 listing him as Little Hands Of Concrete (King Of America) and Napoleon Dynamite (Blood & Chocolate). While the former was a self-mocking reference to his habit of breaking guitar strings, the latter was a more boastful persona who made his stage bow as the mad-eyed master of ceremonies at fairground-like live shows. Revived earlier this summer on a lengthy series of dates across America (and coming to the UK next May), the Spectacular Spinning Songbook is a novel way for Costello to take requests; a giant multi-coloured wheel, resembling a pie chart containing the names of about 40 songs, dominates the stage, random audience members are plucked from their seats and invited to give the wheel a spin. Wherever it stops determines which number EC and his Imposters will play next. This elaborate box set comprises a CD and DVD (plus a bonus 10-inch vinyl “encore” disc) of two shows from the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles, the location raising questions about how random the selection of audience spinners might be. Can it really be just by chance that (i)Mad Men(i) creator Matthew Wiener and (i)Sideways/Grey’s Anatomy(i) actress Sandra Oh made the journey from stalls to stage the night the cameras were there? Whoever spins the wheel, though, it still results in unpredictable sequences of songs, never guaranteeing that big hits or long-term live favourites get an airing, Elvis (or rather Napoleon Dynamite, an over-the-top circus barker making the alliterative declarations in keeping with Costello’s guest introductions on his Spectacle TV show) following the raucous garage of “Stella Hurt” from 2008’s Momofuku with the baroque lament “All Grown Up” from 1991’s Mighty Like A Rose. Of course, the song has to be on the wheel in the first place, and there are some intriguing inclusions. A soulful cover of the Stones’ “Out Of Time” gives The Imposters (and the manically dextrous Steve Nieve in particular) an opportunity to pretend they’re Booker T & The MGs, “Tear Off Your Own Head” enables special guests The Bangles to croon away on the comeback hit Costello wrote for them, but the real surprise is the fatalistic ballad “Earthbound”, one of 10 tracks Elvis allegedly knocked out in a single weekend for a Wendy James album in 1993. “Of all the songs I’ve ever written, I think this is the truest,” he tells us. As a performing unit, The Imposters take everything thrown at them in their stride, all pomp and majesty on “Man Out Of Time”, lean and hungry on a cover of Nick Lowe’s “Heart Of The City”, and Nieve’s delicate new arrangement of “God Give Me Strength” more than compensates for the lack of lush orchestration from the original Burt Bacharach collaboration. The wheel spins, and the mood swings; in the space of an hour-and-a-half Elvis gets to be the surly aggressor of his youth, the wordy troubadour of the Imperial Bedroom era, or the deep baritone crooner of more recent times. Before 2011, Costello had been averaging an album of new songs every 12 months since brokering a lucrative deal with Universal five years ago, allowing them to exploit his first decade of releases in any way they see fit, in return for leaving him alone to make records at his own pace and as often as he wanted. Cynics may suggest that while the Allen Toussaint collaboration The River In Reverse, the aforementioned noisy Momofuku, the bluegrass-tinged Secret, Profane & Sugarcane and last year’s National Ransom hardly had the label’s sales teams popping champagne corks, Elvis staying away from the studio this year and once again gamely pitching his back pages opens the door for further marketing of former glories. Certainly, another re-upholstered My Aim Is True or Punch The Clock may ultimately shift more units than this bespoke offering, a limited edition of 1,500 which, despite the top-notch music, lavish packaging and poster/book/diary/postcard extras, might struggle to justify its £200 price-tag. Terry Staunton

Elvis Costello wasn’t himself 25 years ago, the musician credits on the two albums he released in 1986 listing him as Little Hands Of Concrete (King Of America) and Napoleon Dynamite (Blood & Chocolate). While the former was a self-mocking reference to his habit of breaking guitar strings, the latter was a more boastful persona who made his stage bow as the mad-eyed master of ceremonies at fairground-like live shows.

Revived earlier this summer on a lengthy series of dates across America (and coming to the UK next May), the Spectacular Spinning Songbook is a novel way for Costello to take requests; a giant multi-coloured wheel, resembling a pie chart containing the names of about 40 songs, dominates the stage, random audience members are plucked from their seats and invited to give the wheel a spin. Wherever it stops determines which number EC and his Imposters will play next.

This elaborate box set comprises a CD and DVD (plus a bonus 10-inch vinyl “encore” disc) of two shows from the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles, the location raising questions about how random the selection of audience spinners might be. Can it really be just by chance that (i)Mad Men(i) creator Matthew Wiener and (i)Sideways/Grey’s Anatomy(i) actress Sandra Oh made the journey from stalls to stage the night the cameras were there?

Whoever spins the wheel, though, it still results in unpredictable sequences of songs, never guaranteeing that big hits or long-term live favourites get an airing, Elvis (or rather Napoleon Dynamite, an over-the-top circus barker making the alliterative declarations in keeping with Costello’s guest introductions on his Spectacle TV show) following the raucous garage of “Stella Hurt” from 2008’s Momofuku with the baroque lament “All Grown Up” from 1991’s Mighty Like A Rose. Of course, the song has to be on the wheel in the first place, and there are some intriguing inclusions.

A soulful cover of the Stones’ “Out Of Time” gives The Imposters (and the manically dextrous Steve Nieve in particular) an opportunity to pretend they’re Booker T & The MGs, “Tear Off Your Own Head” enables special guests The Bangles to croon away on the comeback hit Costello wrote for them, but the real surprise is the fatalistic ballad “Earthbound”, one of 10 tracks Elvis allegedly knocked out in a single weekend for a Wendy James album in 1993. “Of all the songs I’ve ever written, I think this is the truest,” he tells us.

As a performing unit, The Imposters take everything thrown at them in their stride, all pomp and majesty on “Man Out Of Time”, lean and hungry on a cover of Nick Lowe’s “Heart Of The City”, and Nieve’s delicate new arrangement of “God Give Me Strength” more than compensates for the lack of lush orchestration from the original Burt Bacharach collaboration. The wheel spins, and the mood swings; in the space of an hour-and-a-half Elvis gets to be the surly aggressor of his youth, the wordy troubadour of the Imperial Bedroom era, or the deep baritone crooner of more recent times.

Before 2011, Costello had been averaging an album of new songs every 12 months since brokering a lucrative deal with Universal five years ago, allowing them to exploit his first decade of releases in any way they see fit, in return for leaving him alone to make records at his own pace and as often as he wanted.

Cynics may suggest that while the Allen Toussaint collaboration The River In Reverse, the aforementioned noisy Momofuku, the bluegrass-tinged Secret, Profane & Sugarcane and last year’s National Ransom hardly had the label’s sales teams popping champagne corks, Elvis staying away from the studio this year and once again gamely pitching his back pages opens the door for further marketing of former glories. Certainly, another re-upholstered My Aim Is True or Punch The Clock may ultimately shift more units than this bespoke offering, a limited edition of 1,500 which, despite the top-notch music, lavish packaging and poster/book/diary/postcard extras, might struggle to justify its £200 price-tag.

Terry Staunton

Shame

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Directed by Steve McQueen Starring Michael Fassbender, Carey Mulligan When the Manhattan branch of the Standard Hotel opened for business in summer 2009, it instantly became the hot topic of conversation among New Yorkers. Not as you might think for its stunning views across the Hudson river – b...

Directed by Steve McQueen

Starring Michael Fassbender, Carey Mulligan

When the Manhattan branch of the Standard Hotel opened for business in summer 2009, it instantly became the hot topic of conversation among New Yorkers. Not as you might think for its stunning views across the Hudson river – but because people were flocking to the park below to watch guests having sex in front of the hotel’s floor to ceiling windows.

Some of these scenes are repeated in Shame, British director Steve McQueen’s bracing and unsettling film about sex addiction in New York that features a powerful central performance from Michael Fassbender.

Fassbender, an actor who can move fluidly between the mainstream and arthouse, is perhaps best known for playing the ‘young’ Ian McKellen in last year’s X Men prequel, but he’s also done bold work in films like Andrea Arnold’s Fish Tank. Here, though, in his second collaboration with McQueen, he is required to go the extra mile. In the first five minutes, we see his character, Brandon Sullivan, naked, then masturbating in the shower. In a near-silent opening half hour, Brandon prowls New York, hitting on women in the subway on his way to work, scoring in bars, entertaining call-girls at home. We understand this is Brandon’s routine. Into this Sissy (Carey Mulligan), Brandon’s sister, arrives uninvited. She and Brandon are refugees from an unspecified childhood trauma, and accordingly Sissy suffers from her own particular set of problems. “We’re not bad people,” she tells her brother. “We just come from a bad place.”

The other main character in all this is New York, shown here as a city of white workspaces and antiseptic apartments, filthy sidewalks and subways. Arguably, New York acts as a facilitator for Brandon, providing him with outlets and opportunities to feed his addiction. There are echoes of Midnight Cowboy in the damaged, mutually dependent relationship between Brandon and Sissy, and Taxi Driver in its depiction of a nighttime New York. With its inclusion on the soundtrack of Chic’s “I Want Your Love” and Blondie’s “Rapture”, you could be forgiven for thinking this was set in the grimy New York in the late Seventies or early Eighties. I’m reminded, too, of American Psycho: when Brandon tells a girl in a bar exactly what he’d like to do to her, he sounds like Patrick Bateman describing his plans for his latest victim. One famous Bateman line – “I simply am not there” – could just as easily apply to the inscrutable, cipher-liker Brandon.

Shame is less formal than Hunger, McQueen and Fassbender’s previous collaboration about IRA hunger striker Bobby Sands, which owed a debt to McQueen’s background as a visual artist. Shame moves more fluidly, particularly in a long, ambitious tracking shot of Bandon jogging through New York at night. Strangely, for a film filled with memorable and often shocking images, this is one that lingers: Brandon, alone, running through a noctural neon landscape.

Michael Bonner

Radiohead confirmed to headline Japan’s Fuji Rock Festival

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Radiohead have announced another summer festival headline appearance, this time at Japan's Fuji Rock festival. The band will headline the event, which takes place in Niigata from July 27–29, along with The Stone Roses. Radiohead are also confirmed to headline Portugal's Optimus Alive festival...

Radiohead have announced another summer festival headline appearance, this time at Japan’s Fuji Rock festival.

The band will headline the event, which takes place in Niigata from July 27–29, along with The Stone Roses.

Radiohead are also confirmed to headline Portugal’s Optimus Alive festival, which is set to take place between July 12–15 in Lisbon, and Spain’s Bilbao BBK festival, which takes place between July 12–14.

The band also confirmed earlier this week that they would be headlining this summer’s Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in California. They also extended their US tour by a further four dates and added a show at Nanang Exhibition Hall in Taipei, Taiwan on July 25.

Radiohead are expected to confirm UK and more European 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.

Lee Ranaldo: “Off The Wall”

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A fine morning thus far, thanks to Julia Holter, Leonard Cohen and, as I type, the new album by Lee Ranaldo, “Between The Times & The Tides”. “Between The Times…” is the first Ranaldo solo project to grapple with more orthodox songforms. While last year’s Thurston Moore album “Demolished Thoughts” notionally stripped back the Sonic Youth sound, a good few of the tracks here appear to supercharge it. Early days to judge this properly, but it does sound very good on first listen, not least because Ranaldo has wisely built a band, to showcase his rare songs, that could reasonably be a match for the apparently moribund Sonic Youth: Nels Cline and Alan Licht on guitars; Irwin Menken on bass; John Medeski on keys; plus Youth alumni Steve Shelley and Bob Bert (drums) and the elusive Jim O’Rourke (bass). “Fire Island (Phases)” is playing right now, and it flits between inventive expansions and Deadlike country rock in just the way longterm Ranaldo admirers – who’ve long lamented the scarcity of his songs on Youth albums - might have hoped. We’ll talk about all this later, then. But in the meantime, Matador have just released the first track for public consumption. It’s called “Off The Wall” and you can hear it here: oceanic strums Ranaldo’s usual quizzical resonance, a clear path from Sonic Youth, and a pretty poppy core. Let me know, as ever, what you think. Follow me on Twitter: @JohnRMulvey

A fine morning thus far, thanks to Julia Holter, Leonard Cohen and, as I type, the new album by Lee Ranaldo, “Between The Times & The Tides”.

“Between The Times…” is the first Ranaldo solo project to grapple with more orthodox songforms. While last year’s Thurston Moore album “Demolished Thoughts” notionally stripped back the Sonic Youth sound, a good few of the tracks here appear to supercharge it.

Early days to judge this properly, but it does sound very good on first listen, not least because Ranaldo has wisely built a band, to showcase his rare songs, that could reasonably be a match for the apparently moribund Sonic Youth: Nels Cline and Alan Licht on guitars; Irwin Menken on bass; John Medeski on keys; plus Youth alumni Steve Shelley and Bob Bert (drums) and the elusive Jim O’Rourke (bass). “Fire Island (Phases)” is playing right now, and it flits between inventive expansions and Deadlike country rock in just the way longterm Ranaldo admirers – who’ve long lamented the scarcity of his songs on Youth albums – might have hoped.

We’ll talk about all this later, then. But in the meantime, Matador have just released the first track for public consumption. It’s called “Off The Wall” and you can hear it here: oceanic strums Ranaldo’s usual quizzical resonance, a clear path from Sonic Youth, and a pretty poppy core. Let me know, as ever, what you think.

Follow me on Twitter: @JohnRMulvey

Bon Iver, Fleet Foxes, PJ Harvey nominated for Brit Awards

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Ryan Adams, Laura Marling and Kate Bush are also in the running for awards Bon Iver, Fleet Foxes and PJ Harvey have been nominated for this year's Brit Awards. Bon Iver is nominated in two categories, firstly for Best International Male where he is up alongside Aloe Blacc, Bruno Mars, David Guetta and Ryan Adams and secondly for Best International Newcomer, where he is up against Aloe Blacc, Foster The People, Lana Del Rey and Nicki Minaj. Fleet Foxes are in the running for Best International Group, where they face competition from Foo Fighters, Jay -Z and Kanye West, Lady Antebellum and Maroon 5. PJ Harvey is nominated for Best British Album alongside Coldplay, Adele, Florence And The Machine and Ed Sheeran, while Kate Bush is up for Best British Female as well as Adele, Florence And The Machine, Jessie J and Laura Marling. Arctic Monkeys and Elbow are both nominated for Best British Group, where they are up alongside Chase & Status, Coldplay and Kasabian, while Feist and Bjork are both nominated for Best International Female as well as Lady Gaga, Beyonce and Rihanna. Visit Brits.co.uk for the full list of nominees. The Brit Awards will take place at the O2 Arena on February 21 next year. Blur will receive the Outstanding Contribution To Music award at the 2012 event. Previous winners of that gong include the band's Britpop rivals Oasis, as well as Paul McCartney, The Who, U2 and Queen.

Ryan Adams, Laura Marling and Kate Bush are also in the running for awards

Bon Iver, Fleet Foxes and PJ Harvey have been nominated for this year’s Brit Awards.

Bon Iver is nominated in two categories, firstly for Best International Male where he is up alongside Aloe Blacc, Bruno Mars, David Guetta and Ryan Adams and secondly for Best International Newcomer, where he is up against Aloe Blacc, Foster The People, Lana Del Rey and Nicki Minaj.

Fleet Foxes are in the running for Best International Group, where they face competition from Foo Fighters, Jay -Z and Kanye West, Lady Antebellum and Maroon 5.

PJ Harvey is nominated for Best British Album alongside Coldplay, Adele, Florence And The Machine and Ed Sheeran, while Kate Bush is up for Best British Female as well as Adele, Florence And The Machine, Jessie J and Laura Marling.

Arctic Monkeys and Elbow are both nominated for Best British Group, where they are up alongside Chase & Status, Coldplay and Kasabian, while Feist and Bjork are both nominated for Best International Female as well as Lady Gaga, Beyonce and Rihanna.

Visit Brits.co.uk for the full list of nominees.

The Brit Awards will take place at the O2 Arena on February 21 next year. Blur will receive the Outstanding Contribution To Music award at the 2012 event.

Previous winners of that gong include the band’s Britpop rivals Oasis, as well as Paul McCartney, The Who, U2 and Queen.

Watch the trailer for the new LCD Soundsystem film

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'Shut Up And Play The Hits' premieres at the Sundance Film Festival later this month 'Shut Up And Play The Hits', a film documenting LCD Soundsystem's last show at New York's Madison Square Garden in April 2011, is set to screen at the Sundance Film Festival later this month. Scroll down to watch the trailer for the film, which was directed by Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace. "If it's a funeral… let's have the best funeral ever," reads the film’s tagline. The film will premiere on January 22 at the US film festival. The band's former frontman, James Murphy, also appears as an 'ageing Brooklyn hipster' in new film 'The Comedy', which will also screen at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival (January 19-29, 2012) in Utah. The film was directed by Rick Alverson and stars Tim Heidecker as a man who "whiles away his days with a group of ageing Brooklyn hipsters, engaging in acts of recreational cruelty and pacified boredom," reports Pitchfork. Co-produced by the independent record label Jagjaguwar, the film is pitched as: "A scathing look at the white male on the verge of collapse, Rick Alverson’s carefully observed portrait provokes and disorients; a cautionary fable for the autumn of the American Era." For more information, visit Glasseyepix.com and Jagjaguwar. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_FAUyrFWDvw

‘Shut Up And Play The Hits’ premieres at the Sundance Film Festival later this month

‘Shut Up And Play The Hits’, a film documenting LCD Soundsystem‘s last show at New York’s Madison Square Garden in April 2011, is set to screen at the Sundance Film Festival later this month.

Scroll down to watch the trailer for the film, which was directed by Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace. “If it’s a funeral… let’s have the best funeral ever,” reads the film’s tagline.

The film will premiere on January 22 at the US film festival. The band’s former frontman, James Murphy, also appears as an ‘ageing Brooklyn hipster’ in new film ‘The Comedy’, which will also screen at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival (January 19-29, 2012) in Utah.

The film was directed by Rick Alverson and stars Tim Heidecker as a man who “whiles away his days with a group of ageing Brooklyn hipsters, engaging in acts of recreational cruelty and pacified boredom,” reports Pitchfork.

Co-produced by the independent record label Jagjaguwar, the film is pitched as: “A scathing look at the white male on the verge of collapse, Rick Alverson’s carefully observed portrait provokes and disorients; a cautionary fable for the autumn of the American Era.”

For more information, visit Glasseyepix.com and Jagjaguwar.

Michael Eavis say he has ‘sorted’ the headliners for Glastonbury 2013

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Organiser also talks up his 50th anniversary plans for the Worthy Farm event Michael Eavis has said that the headliners for Glastonbury 2013 are "already sorted". The festival will not take place this summer as it now takes a customary year off once in every five, but the organiser has said that this has not stopped him from booking the festival's bill toppers for when it returns in 2013. Speaking to BBC Radio 1 Newsbeat, Eavis responded to a question about what stage he was at in booking his headliners for 2013 by saying that they were "already sorted", but gave no clues about who they might be. Eavis also spoke about his plans for the festival's 50th anniversary celebrations in 2020 and said that he was determined to see the Worthy Farm event celebrate the milestone. He said: "I'm really determined somehow or other to make the 50 years - I don't see why I shouldn't make it. Strangely enough, I do feel incredibly fit. I don't see why I shouldn't make it. I've got the bands who want to play and the people who want to buy the tickets so why shouldn't we carry on?" Eavis' comments suggest he has reversed his opinion on the future of the festival after he said last year that Glastonbury may only take place for another "three or four years" and that music fans are generally growing bored of festivals. The Glastonbury organiser was speaking before he was honoured with a Lifetime achievement award at the European Festival Awards ceremony in Groningen, Holland last night (January 11). Coldplay won the award for Best Headliner and Festival Anthem Of The Year at the event, while James Blake was awarded Best Newcomer. Hungarian festival Sziget won the award for Best Major European Festival.

Organiser also talks up his 50th anniversary plans for the Worthy Farm event

Michael Eavis has said that the headliners for Glastonbury 2013 are “already sorted”.

The festival will not take place this summer as it now takes a customary year off once in every five, but the organiser has said that this has not stopped him from booking the festival’s bill toppers for when it returns in 2013.

Speaking to BBC Radio 1 Newsbeat, Eavis responded to a question about what stage he was at in booking his headliners for 2013 by saying that they were “already sorted”, but gave no clues about who they might be.

Eavis also spoke about his plans for the festival’s 50th anniversary celebrations in 2020 and said that he was determined to see the Worthy Farm event celebrate the milestone.

He said: “I’m really determined somehow or other to make the 50 years – I don’t see why I shouldn’t make it. Strangely enough, I do feel incredibly fit. I don’t see why I shouldn’t make it. I’ve got the bands who want to play and the people who want to buy the tickets so why shouldn’t we carry on?”

Eavis’ comments suggest he has reversed his opinion on the future of the festival after he said last year that Glastonbury may only take place for another “three or four years” and that music fans are generally growing bored of festivals.

The Glastonbury organiser was speaking before he was honoured with a Lifetime achievement award at the European Festival Awards ceremony in Groningen, Holland last night (January 11).

Coldplay won the award for Best Headliner and Festival Anthem Of The Year at the event, while James Blake was awarded Best Newcomer. Hungarian festival Sziget won the award for Best Major European Festival.