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Wild Beasts announce March 2012 tour dates

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Wild Beasts have announced plans for a handful of UK tour dates for next year. The band, who are set to play at London's 02 Shepherds Bush Empire tonight (November 23) as part of their current UK tour, have confirmed a run of another seven shows to take place in March 2012. The tour will kick off...

Wild Beasts have announced plans for a handful of UK tour dates for next year.

The band, who are set to play at London‘s 02 Shepherds Bush Empire tonight (November 23) as part of their current UK tour, have confirmed a run of another seven shows to take place in March 2012.

The tour will kick off on March 11 at Coventry Warwick University and come to an end on March 17, when they play at Liverpool Masque Theatre.

Wild Beasts released their third studio LP, ‘Smother’, earlier this year. Earlier this month, the band’s frontman Hayden Thorpe told NME that they were planning on taking a long break next year, and warned fans not to expect a new album before mid-2013.

Thorpe also recently compared his vocals to Marmite and revealed he wasn’t aware how divisive fans would find his distinctive countertenor style until the Cumbrian troupe released their first record.

Wild Beasts will play:

Coventry Warwick University (March 11)

Norwich Waterfront (12)

Colchester Arts Centre (13)

Exeter Phoenix (14)

Falmouth Pavilion (15)

Cardiff Coal Exchange (16)

Liverpool Masque Theatre (17)

Tickets go onsale on Friday (November 25) at 9am (GMT). To check the availability of Wild Beasts tickets and get all the latest listings, go to [url=http://www.nme.com/tickets]NME.COM/TICKETS[/url] now, or call 0871 230 1094.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Peter Hook: ‘I’m not proud of the way New Order split up’

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Peter Hook has admitted that he is "not proud" of the way in which New Order split up. Speaking in an interview on the Jo Whiley Music Show, which will be broadcast on Friday (November 25) at 10pm on Sky Arts, Hook commented on the split of R.E.M by revealing his regret over how his own band parte...

Peter Hook has admitted that he is “not proud” of the way in which New Order split up.

Speaking in an interview on the Jo Whiley Music Show, which will be broadcast on Friday (November 25) at 10pm on Sky Arts, Hook commented on the split of R.E.M by revealing his regret over how his own band parted ways.

He said: “It was quite interesting the way Michael Stipe said he was proud the way they had done it [split-up] and of their legacy and if there is one thing I’m not proud of, it is the way New Order have done it.”

He continued: “It’s very, very sad actually. I suppose in a way it helps you understand the process people go through together when they are in a group. It’s like a marriage. You are together for so long you literally do drive each other crazy.”

New Order recently reformed without Hook and will play a London show in December, with the bassist subsequently commenting that he wanted to “fuck over New Order in any way he could”. However, Hook now says that he would actually prefer to “bury the hatchet” with his former bandmates rather than continue in this manner. He added though that there was no sign of this happening.

He said of this: “I would like to get on with my life to be honest. I have come to the conclusion that it would be better to bury the hatchet and sort it all out and get on with it. Unfortunately the other side, don’t seem to be doing that.”

Hook also said that the infighting within New Order affected their musical output. Again, commenting on the demise of R.E.M, he replied to a question about the amicable nature of the Georgia trio’s break-up by saying: “They are probably lying. You use every single trick you can throw. I think it shows a mature attitude to their fans. What I have found with our [New Order’s] constant bickering is that they [fans] get upset and that it affects the music.”

Hook is currently touring with his band The Light playing Joy Division songs.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Joe Strummer biopic to be directed by actress Julie Delpy

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Hollywood actress and director Julie Delpy is set to direct a new film about the life of The Clash frontman Joe Strummer. According to Variety, the film, entitled The Right Profile, will apparently focus on the guitarist and singer’s Clash years as well as his planned disappearance from the public spotlight in 1982. The film is named after a song on the punk classic ‘London Calling’ and will be produced by Simon Halfon. Another biopic about the late Joe Strummer is apparently also in the works. Film4 is backing the project, entitled Joe Public. Screenwriter Paul Viragh, who wrote Ian Dury biopic Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll, will be in charge of the script, reported Screendaily.com recently. Strummer was the subject of Julien Temple's 2007 documentary Joe Strummer: The Future Is Unwritten and Don Letts' recent film Strummerville. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Hollywood actress and director Julie Delpy is set to direct a new film about the life of The Clash frontman Joe Strummer.

According to Variety, the film, entitled The Right Profile, will apparently focus on the guitarist and singer’s Clash years as well as his planned disappearance from the public spotlight in 1982. The film is named after a song on the punk classic ‘London Calling’ and will be produced by Simon Halfon.

Another biopic about the late Joe Strummer is apparently also in the works. Film4 is backing the project, entitled Joe Public. Screenwriter Paul Viragh, who wrote Ian Dury biopic Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll, will be in charge of the script, reported Screendaily.com recently.

Strummer was the subject of Julien Temple‘s 2007 documentary Joe Strummer: The Future Is Unwritten and Don Letts‘ recent film Strummerville.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Uncut Playlist 41, 2011

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A mixed bag today, as I contemplate giving up and playing a bunch of old Gillian Welch and Dave Rawlings records in preparation for tonight’s Hammersmith gig. A couple of housekeeping things before I go, though. One, in my relentless and awkward campaign of self-promotion, please check out my new Twitter @JohnRMulvey; I’m using it a lot at the moment. Second, it seems an apposite week to remind everyone that these playlists are merely a record of the music played in the Uncut office, and consequently inclusion does not automatically equate with recommendation. Big cosmic thumbs-up for the new Starving Weirdos record, though, and enduring love for the Blues Control & Laraaji jam, which I’ve written about at length in the forthcoming issue of Uncut. 1 The Little Willies – For The Good Times (Parlophone) 2 Hot Knives – Hot Knives (Grown Up Wrong) 3 Lindstrøm – Six Cups Of Rebel (Smalltown Supersound) 4 Rhyton – Rhyton (Thrill Jockey) 5 Starving Weirdos – Land Lines (Amish) 6 King Krule – EP (True Panther Sounds) 7 Ital – Hive Mind (Planet Mu) 8 Handgjort – Handgjort (Silence) 9 Outfit – Two Islands (Double Denim) 10 Howler – America Give Up (Rough Trade) 11 Francois & The Atlas Mountains – E Volo Love (Domino) 12 Trailer Trash Tracys – Ester (Domino) 13 Blues Control & Laraaji – FRKWYS Vol 8: Blues Control & Laraaji (RVNG)

A mixed bag today, as I contemplate giving up and playing a bunch of old Gillian Welch and Dave Rawlings records in preparation for tonight’s Hammersmith gig.

Paul Weller to release new studio album ‘Sonik Kicks’ in March 2012

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Paul Weller has announced that he will release his 11th solo studio album 'Sonik Kicks' in March next year. The album will be released on March 26 and contains a total of 14 tracks. It also includes guest appearances from Noel Gallagher and Blur's Graham Coxon. You can hear a track from the album,...

Paul Weller has announced that he will release his 11th solo studio album ‘Sonik Kicks’ in March next year.

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

The album, which is the follow-up to his critically acclaimed, 2010 album ‘Wake Up The Nation’, will apparently include “pop art punch with soulful communication, jazzy explorations into psychedelia and dub with razor-sharp melodies, abstract soundscapes with clear-eyed forest-folk”.

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

The tracklisting for ‘Sonik Kicks’ is as follows:

‘Green’

‘The Attic’

‘Kling I Klang’

‘Sleep Of The Serene’

‘By The Waters’

‘That Dangerous Age’

‘Study In Blue’

‘Dragonfly’

‘When Your Garden’s Overgrown’

‘Around The Lake’

‘Twilight’

‘Drifters’

‘Paperchase’

‘Be Happy Children’

Tickets go onsale on Friday (November 25) at 9am (GMT). To check the availability of [url=http://nme.seetickets.com/Tour/Paul-Weller?affid1nmestory] Paul Weller tickets[/url] and get all the latest listings, go to [url=http://www.nme.com/gigs]NME.COM/TICKETS[/url] now, or call 0871 230 1094.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Leonard Cohen reveals tracklisting and release date for ‘Old Ideas’

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Leonard Cohen has confirmed full details of his new album 'Old Ideas' and has revealed it will be released in late January. The album, which will be the iconic singer-songwriter’s first studio album since 2004’s 'Dear Heather', has been given a release date of January 31 in the US, meaning it ...

Leonard Cohen has confirmed full details of his new album ‘Old Ideas’ and has revealed it will be released in late January.

The album, which will be the iconic singer-songwriter’s first studio album since 2004’s ‘Dear Heather’, has been given a release date of January 31 in the US, meaning it is likely to be released on January 30 in the UK.

‘Old Ideas’ contains 10 previously unreleased tracks which, according to the album’s official press release, will “poetically address some of the most profound quandaries of human existence – the relationship to a transcendent being, love, sexuality, loss and death.”

The album’s third track ‘Show Me The Place’ is set to be streamed online in the next few days.

Earlier this year, Leonard Cohen was awarded Spain’s esteemed Prince Of Asturias Award for literature, joining previous winners of the prestigious prize such as the playwright Arthur Miller and naturalist Sir David Attenborough.

The tracklisting for ‘Old Ideas’ is as follows:

‘Going Home’

‘Amen’

‘Show Me the Place’

‘The Darkness’

‘Anyhow’

‘Crazy To Love You’

‘Come Healing’

‘Banjo’

‘Lullaby’

‘Different Sides’

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Bob Dylan, London Hammersmith Odeon, Saturday November 19 2011

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I’m not sure what happens on Saturday towards the end of the first night of Bob Dylan’s three shows at London’s Hammersmith Apollo. Suddenly, though, he’s blazing through one of the songs he traditionally reserves for encores, “All Along The Watchtower”, with no break between it and the roaring version of “Ballad Of A Thin Man” that normally you’d have expected to be the show’s climax, the band then taking a well-deserved bow and a quick break before coming back for one, two or three more songs, further lapping up of the crowd’s applause prior to a final wave goodnight, perhaps even a nod from Bob in the general direction of a crowd he otherwise doesn’t go too far out of his way to acknowledge. Looking at set lists going back over the last few months, this seems to be the current way with Dylan, playing everything he’s going to play without going through the ritual rigmarole of pretending you’ve done with your evening’s work when everyone knows you haven’t really finished. I guess if you’re bringing down the house, why stop until the roof caves in and all is rubble around you, at which point you make your exit, job done and proverbially dusted. Anyway, what a hot show this turns out to be. The last couple of times I’ve seen Dylan have been in fields, at the Hop Farm Festival in 2010 and this summer, on a wet and windy Sunday in Finsbury Park, and the time before that at the O2, where even from reasonable seats Dylan seemed to be playing in a separate postal district. Good as these shows were, Hop Farm particularly, it was a thrill to see Dylan again in a somewhat more intimate setting, more suited than the great outdoors to the kind of roadhouse ruckus you would even more prefer to hear in some sweaty club where the distance between band and audience is even smaller and you can smell the guitar strings burning, a sweet but unlikely dream. Anyway, Saturday’s show is in a high gear from the start, a slutty “Leopard-Skin Pill Box Hat”, the first of four songs featuring Mark Knopfler, who’d earlier opened for Dylan, back on stage, joining Charlie Sexton and Stu Kimble on guitars, with Dylan vamping at a suitably stripped-down keyboard set up, behind which, throughout, he jives, hilariously. Knopfler stays on for a wonderfully delivered “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right”, illuminated by Donnie Herron’s plangent lap steel parts, and a version of “Things Have Changed”. The latter is brightly enlivened in its new Tex-Mex arrangement and in the evening’s first major surprise is followed by an unexpected, beautifully rolling take on “Mississippi”, from “Love And Theft”, the first time I’ve heard it played live. “Honest With Me”, a much less celebrated song from the same album, but a pretty constant part of Dylan’s repertoire over the last decade, is then sensationally dispatched, Dylan stalking the front of the stage with a hand-held microphone, like a carnival barker, whipping up the crowd for the appearance of a two-headed woman or some similar eccentricity in a creepy burlesque freak show. The evening’s unforgettable twin highlights quickly follow – “The Lonesome Death Of Hattie Carol”, played as something approaching an austere waltz, with a succession of liquid solos from Sexton and a mournful instrumental coda featuring an extended harmonica and mandolin duet that’s quietly sensational. For ages now, one of the pinnacles of Dylan sets has been “High Water”, whose place is taken tonight by a similarly dramatic arrangement of “The Ballad Of Hollis Brown”. This is truly frightening stuff, whose daunting atmosphere you could describe as supernatural, something spooked and haunted, Dylan’s vocal making you shiver like a cold wind coming off a bleak and inhospitable territory, a place of abandoned hope. It’s a relief when Dylan turns then to a tender “Make You Feel My Love”, reclaimed from Adele and distinguished by another great guitar solo from Charlie Sexton. The hardy “Highway 61 Revisited” is utterly frantic by comparison and has rarely sounded so exciting, especially during the guitar-keyboard face-off between Sexton and a clearly grooving Dylan. We are returned to more sombre places with a hypnotically-paced “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall”, Herron’s mandolin again prominently featured. “Thunder On the Mountain” is splendid, but sounds at times rushed enough to make you think Dylan can’t wait to get to grips with what follows, which is a hugely melodramatic “Ballad Of A Thin Man”, made quite eerie by the echo on Dylan’s vocal, a novelty for Bob. After this, it’s a ceremonial procession through “All Along The Watchtower”, Sexton unleashing all the firepower at his disposal over the band’s tidal roar, a bruising “Jolene”, from Together Through Life, and the inevitable but never unwelcome “Like A Rolling Stone”, Dylan and crew heading for the wings, mission accomplished and all that.

I’m not sure what happens on Saturday towards the end of the first night of Bob Dylan’s three shows at London’s Hammersmith Apollo. Suddenly, though, he’s blazing through one of the songs he traditionally reserves for encores, “All Along The Watchtower”, with no break between it and the roaring version of “Ballad Of A Thin Man” that normally you’d have expected to be the show’s climax, the band then taking a well-deserved bow and a quick break before coming back for one, two or three more songs, further lapping up of the crowd’s applause prior to a final wave goodnight, perhaps even a nod from Bob in the general direction of a crowd he otherwise doesn’t go too far out of his way to acknowledge.

Bon Iver release 10 short films to accompany ‘Bon Iver’ album

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Bon Iver will release a deluxe edition of their second album ‘Bon Iver’ on November 28. The new edition will feature 10 short films to accompany each of the 10 tracks on their album, which was released earlier this year. Called "the comprehensive vision for the record captured in moving picture...

Bon Iver will release a deluxe edition of their second album ‘Bon Iver’ on November 28.

The new edition will feature 10 short films to accompany each of the 10 tracks on their album, which was released earlier this year. Called “the comprehensive vision for the record captured in moving picture”, the films and videos have been created by Dan Huiting, Isaac Gale, David Jensen, JoLynn Garnes and band leader Justin Vernon.

A year in the making, the visual accompaniments to the album are digital only and available through iTunes, however, a limited number of DVDs will be given away at independent records stores with the purchase of ‘Bon Iver’.

Watch the trailer for the deluxe edition of ‘Bon Iver’ below:

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Hear two previously unreleased Radiohead demos – audio

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Two previously unreleased Radiohead demos have been posted online, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen to the tracks. The demos, which are titled 'Everybody Knows' and 'Girl (In The Purple Dress)', were recorded when the band were still known as On A Friday and before guitarist Jonny Greenwood joined the band. Both songs originally appeared on the band's first ever demo tape, which was recorded in 1986 in the band's hometown of Oxford. Radiohead announced more dates for their planned 2012 world tour on Friday (November 18). The band, who have already confirmed a 10-date North American tour for February 2012, confirmed that they will play five shows across Europe in June and July. The band are expected to announce UK and more European dates in the coming weeks, but have not said when this will be as yet. 'Everybody Knows' http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UIyOCeKkV-4 'Girl (In The Purple Dress)' http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3OS_YkO_Io Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Two previously unreleased Radiohead demos have been posted online, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen to the tracks.

The demos, which are titled ‘Everybody Knows’ and ‘Girl (In The Purple Dress)’, were recorded when the band were still known as On A Friday and before guitarist Jonny Greenwood joined the band.

Both songs originally appeared on the band’s first ever demo tape, which was recorded in 1986 in the band’s hometown of Oxford.

Radiohead announced more dates for their planned 2012 world tour on Friday (November 18). The band, who have already confirmed a 10-date North American tour for February 2012, confirmed that they will play five shows across Europe in June and July.

The band are expected to announce UK and more European dates in the coming weeks, but have not said when this will be as yet.

‘Everybody Knows’

‘Girl (In The Purple Dress)’

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters set to marry for a fourth time

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Former Pink Floyd co-frontman Roger Waters is to marry for a fourth time, his longtime girlfriend has confirmed. Waters, who will be on the road throughout 2012 with his live show in which he performs the entirety of Pink Floyd's classic 1979 concept album 'The Wall', will marry partner of seven years Laurie Durning before he begins the tour. Durning, who works as filmmaker, told the New York Post that wedding plans were definitely underway, telling the paper: "It just seems like a good time to do it before the tour". Waters confirmed earlier this year that despite his tour of Pink Floyd material, he has no desire to work with the band again. He said: "I'm really glad that I was in that band for the 20 years that I was in it and I really enjoyed it. I think we did some great work together but I have no wish to do it ever again." Waters was joined onstage by former bandmates Dave Gilmour and Nick Mason when he brought his tour to London O2 Arena earlier this year, but they have not appeared together onstage since. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Former Pink Floyd co-frontman Roger Waters is to marry for a fourth time, his longtime girlfriend has confirmed.

Waters, who will be on the road throughout 2012 with his live show in which he performs the entirety of Pink Floyd‘s classic 1979 concept album ‘The Wall’, will marry partner of seven years Laurie Durning before he begins the tour.

Durning, who works as filmmaker, told the New York Post that wedding plans were definitely underway, telling the paper: “It just seems like a good time to do it before the tour”.

Waters confirmed earlier this year that despite his tour of Pink Floyd material, he has no desire to work with the band again.

He said: “I’m really glad that I was in that band for the 20 years that I was in it and I really enjoyed it. I think we did some great work together but I have no wish to do it ever again.”

Waters was joined onstage by former bandmates Dave Gilmour and Nick Mason when he brought his tour to London O2 Arena earlier this year, but they have not appeared together onstage since.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Billy Corgan: ”Siamese Dream’ was my middle finger to the indie world’

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Smashing Pumpkins frontman Billy Corgan has spoken about the recording of the band's classic 1993 second album 'Siamese Dream' and has described it as his "middle finger to the indie world". The singer, who is currently preparing for the release of his band's ninth studio album 'Oceania', which is...

Smashing Pumpkins frontman Billy Corgan has spoken about the recording of the band’s classic 1993 second album ‘Siamese Dream’ and has described it as his “middle finger to the indie world”.

The singer, who is currently preparing for the release of his band’s ninth studio album ‘Oceania’, which is due to come out in early 2012, said that he viewed ‘Siamese Dream’ as the album that has “come through the best”.

Asked about how he viewed ‘Siamese Dream’ now, Corgan replied: “Even though it wasn’t the one that sold the most, it’s the one that seems to have come through the best. As dark a records as ‘Siamese Dream’ is, there’s a lot of fun in it, it’s almost like we’re kind of laughing at how stupid the whole thing is. It’s like, here’s my pop song about suicide and here’s my epic song about child abuse, and here’s my big middle finger to the indie world.”

Corgan also spoke about his desperate state of mind during the album’s recording, revealing that he’d been plotting his own death for two months during the album’s creation.

He said of this: “I was suicidal, and I’d been plotting my own death for about 2 months, and if you’ve ever read anything about the warning signs of suicide one of them is you give away all your stuff, and I’d given away all my stuff, I gave away all my records, I started giving away my guitars. I was fantasising about my own death, I started thinking what my funeral would be like and what music would be played, I was at that level of insanity”.

Corgan also spoke about the fact that during the recording of the album, he would often re-record the parts his bandmates at the time D’Arcy Wretsky and James Iha had played in order to achieve the sound he wanted.

He said of this: “We rehearsed a lot, we worked together a lot, we argued about things other than music, we actually never argued about music. They believed in what the album represented, they actually really believed in the album, but the actual physical making of the record, they couldn’t live up to that level of scrutiny, they couldn’t live up to that level of pressure. It destroyed my health you know, it destroyed my relationships, I went out of my mind.”

To hear the full interview with Billy Corgan and an interview with the album’s producer Butch Vig, listen To Zane Lowe on BBC Radio 1 tonight (November 21) from 7pm.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Bruce Springsteen to headline Isle Of Wight Festival and Hard Rock Calling

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Bruce Springsteen has been announced as the first headliner of next summer's Isle Of Wight Festival and London's Hard Rock Calling festival. The singer, who is currently putting the finishing touches to his 18th studio album, will make his first appearance at Isle Of Wight Festival on June 24, hea...

Bruce Springsteen has been announced as the first headliner of next summer’s Isle Of Wight Festival and London‘s Hard Rock Calling festival.

The singer, who is currently putting the finishing touches to his 18th studio album, will make his first appearance at Isle Of Wight Festival on June 24, headlining the festival’s closing night.

He will also top the bill at the London festival, playing the Hyde Park event’s Saturday night (July 14). Springsteen has also confirmed two huge stadium shows for next June. He will headline Sunderland‘s Stadium Of Light on June 21 and Manchester‘s Etihad Stadium on June 22.

Springsteen is expected to announce further European tour dates in the coming weeks. He has also said recently that his new studio album is almost complete, but remains untitled at the moment.

The Isle Of Wight Festival takes place on June 22 – 24 2012. See Isleofwightfestival.com for more information.

Hard Rock Calling takes place from July 13 – 15 2012 in London‘s Hyde Park. See Hardrockcalling.co.uk for more information.

Tickets for the Isle Of Wight Festival go onsale on Friday (November 25) at 9am (GMT). To check the availability of [url=http://nme.seetickets.com/Tour/Isle-Of-Wight-Festival?affid1nmestory] Isle Of Wight Festival tickets[/url] and get all the latest listings, go to [url=http://www.nme.com/gigs]NME.COM/TICKETS[/url] now, or call 0871 230 1094.

Tickets for the Hard Rock Calling go onsale on December 3 at 9am (GMT). To check the availability of [url=http://nme.seetickets.com/Tour/Hard-Rock-Calling?affid1nmestory] Hard Rock Calling tickets[/url] and get all the latest listings, go to [url=http://www.nme.com/gigs]NME.COM/TICKETS[/url] now, or call 0871 230 1094.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Wild Mercury Sound on Twitter

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As I mentioned briefly last week, I've started a Twitter account to try and make up for the lack of activity here on the blog. You can find and follow me @JohnRMulvey. Obviously I'll continue to post here, and endeavour to file some longer pieces as well as all the playlists, but I figured that Twitter would be a much more efficient way to keep in touch in what appear to be enduringly busy times. Apologies for all the bollocks about cricket/bike rides that I posted while taking some time off at the end of last week: I guess I'm slowly working out how I should use the account, for better and worse. Rather suspicious of the potential for self-indulgence, already, but we'll see how it goes. I'll try and be available to answer questions there, too, so don't be strangers - though the usual rule applies: please don't make me say bad things, be good to focus on all the good music being made, rather than grouching about stuff that can usefully be ignored. Sound OK?

As I mentioned briefly last week, I’ve started a Twitter account to try and make up for the lack of activity here on the blog.

Handwritten letter by Paul McCartney fetches £35,000 at auction

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A handwritten letter by Paul McCartney inviting a mystery drummer to audition for The Beatles has fetched £35,000 at auction. The note - which has been dated to 1960 and was found by a coin collector inside a book purchased at a car boot sale in Liverpool - had only been expected to sell for £9,000 when it went under the hammer at Christie's auction house in London. BBC News reports that the note was sold to a telephone bidder from Europe, whose identity is currently unknown. Christie's Neil Roberts said: "It is exciting to be able to offer to market a newly discovered important item of Beatles memorabilia, on behalf of an individual who was fortunate enough to find it folded up in a book at a car boot sale." The letter was originally penned by McCartney in response to a notice in the Liverpool Echo newspaper from the drummer advertising their availability. At the time, Pete Best was the band's sticksman and it was not known they were looking for a replacement. Three days later, the band travelled as a five-piece along with Stuart Sutcliffe to Germany for their tour. The identity of the drummer is not known, nor if the proposed audition ever took place. Ringo Starr eventually filled the position two years later. Beatles memorabilia has proved to be extremely valuable at auction houses recently. In September, a document showing how the band refused to play to segregated crowds was sold for $23,000 (£14,875). Earlier this month, meanwhile, a formerly belonging to the late John Lennon[/url] fetched nearly £20,000 at auction. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

A handwritten letter by Paul McCartney inviting a mystery drummer to audition for The Beatles has fetched £35,000 at auction.

The note – which has been dated to 1960 and was found by a coin collector inside a book purchased at a car boot sale in Liverpool – had only been expected to sell for £9,000 when it went under the hammer at Christie’s auction house in London.

BBC News reports that the note was sold to a telephone bidder from Europe, whose identity is currently unknown. Christie’s Neil Roberts said: “It is exciting to be able to offer to market a newly discovered important item of Beatles memorabilia, on behalf of an individual who was fortunate enough to find it folded up in a book at a car boot sale.”

The letter was originally penned by McCartney in response to a notice in the Liverpool Echo newspaper from the drummer advertising their availability. At the time, Pete Best was the band’s sticksman and it was not known they were looking for a replacement.

Three days later, the band travelled as a five-piece along with Stuart Sutcliffe to Germany for their tour. The identity of the drummer is not known, nor if the proposed audition ever took place. Ringo Starr eventually filled the position two years later.

Beatles memorabilia has proved to be extremely valuable at auction houses recently. In September, a document showing how the band refused to play to segregated crowds was sold for $23,000 (£14,875).

Earlier this month, meanwhile, a formerly belonging to the late John Lennon[/url] fetched nearly £20,000 at auction.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Keith Richards says ‘everybody’s welcome’ to band’s 50th anniversary rehearsal

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Keith Richards has said that "everybody's welcome" to The Rolling Stones' forthcoming rehearsal session, including band members who have long since moved on. The guitarist revealed earlier this month that the band are planning to rehearse in a London studio soon and has said that all former member...

Keith Richards has said that “everybody’s welcome” to The Rolling Stones‘ forthcoming rehearsal session, including band members who have long since moved on.

The guitarist revealed earlier this month that the band are planning to rehearse in a London studio soon and has said that all former members of the band, including the long departed Bill Wyman and Mick Taylor, were welcome at the practice session.

He told Spinner about the planned practice: “Everybody’s welcome. I don’t see why everybody who was a Stone shouldn’t be involved. I was going to ask Bill Wyman to come by. And Mick Taylor. The whole lot. They’re all Stones, you know? Why not?”.

Richards also said that he had made it his mission to get the band to perform live together to celebrate their 50th anniversary as a band and said he believes it was possible if “everyone wants to get together”.

Asked about the chances of a 50th anniversary tour, he said: “I want to pull it off. That, at the moment, is my task. I usually find that logistical nightmares can always be overcome if everyone wants to get together”.

The guitarist also downplayed the significance of the rehearsal, saying: “The idea is to go in December. I said, “Jesus Christ, we haven’t played together for a couple of years. We better get our chops together.” So it basically is just like that, it’s just a jam. I know nothing except we’re just going to play.”

The band are set to reissue their 1978 album ‘Some Girls’ on Monday (November 21).

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Hammett

0

One (or rather, three) from the heart of Coppola’s American Zoetrope dream...Hammett was intended by Francis Ford Coppola to be one of his American Zoetrope studio’s first movies, a calling card for the Zoetrope vision and the American debut of German director Wim Wenders. In the event, the film, an homage to novelist Dashiell Hammett boasting a rare lead from Coppola regular Frederic Forrest, did become synonymous with the studio. Just not the way Coppola had hoped. Slated by critics, ignored by the public, Hammett’s production became a familiar Zoetrope tale of spiralling costs, blown deadlines and creative battles. Coppola is rumoured to have reshot 70 per cent of Wenders’ movie himself. Revisiting it today, however, as it receives a belated UK DVD debut alongside two more from Zoetrope’s slate – One From The Heart and The Escape Artist – Hammett stands as a perfect expression of the Zoetrope ethos. American Zoetrope had a bold remit. First, to offer a home for artists telling stories mainstream studios wouldn’t touch – a European visionary like Wenders made the perfect showpiece. Second, to embrace technological advances to create a new, cutting-edge filmmaking, a prophet of cinema’s coming digital revolution. But Coppola aimed to blend the new with the best of the old. From the traditional studio system, he retained the idea of building a company buzzing in one creative hive. You see the factory in operation in these films as names and faces recur: Forrest joins Teri Garr and Raul Julia in One From The Heart; Garr and Julia co-star in The Escape Artist; Coppola’s production designer Dean Tavoularis oversees all three. Tavoularis is key. In reaction to Apocalypse Now’s location nightmares, Coppola’s Zoetrope films stress a retreat from the world and a return to studio sets: the fabricated dreamlands of Hammett’s 1920s San Francisco, the neon fantasy Vegas of One From The Heart. Hammett was based on Joe Gores’ 1975 novel, a meta-fiction that blends Dashiell Hammett’s biography with elements of his stories. It was in trouble long before Wenders came aboard. Coppola originally hired Nicolas Roeg to direct, and by the time Wenders arrived, Hammett had languished in development for four years. As shooting began, there was still no finished screenplay. Filming dragged on while Wenders, badgered by Coppola, wrestled with writing. When rumours spread that Wenders was rewriting to focus on a new character coincidentally played by his then-wife, Ronee Blakley, Coppola pulled the plug. It gives an idea of how bad things got that, during Hammett’s hiatus, Coppola had time to dismantle its set and shoot One From The Heart. Envisaged as a small, blue-collar love story, it ballooned to a budget of $27 million, leaving Coppola selling his property to save his studio. It took just $2.5 million on release. Today, it floats: a unique, mad, pop bubble. With songs by Tom Waits and Gene Kelly advising on dance numbers, it’s like a Raymond Carver story adapted in the style of Moulin Rouge. Compared with these, The Escape Artist, directed by Zooey Deschanel’s father, Caleb, went like a dream. With a script from ET’s Melissa Mathison about a teenage boy’s determination to become a magician like his dead father, it was completed on schedule, but on release ran true to Zoetrope form. Critics sneered, audiences stayed away. When Wenders and Coppola finally reconvened to resurrect Hammett, it was with a new script, set and substantially altered cast. The film we’re left with is a charming mongrel. Beautifully played by Forrest, Hammett has just left the Pinkerton detective agency, afflicted by tuberculosis and alcoholism. He’s trying to hack it as a pulp writer, but the writing won’t come. When an old detective pal (Peter Boyle) shows up, he gets pulled into one last case and stumbles over the inspiration for his great books, The Maltese Falcon and The Thin Man. Hammett bursts with ambition. Littered with noir nods and cameos (notably Elisha Cook Jr, of the 1941 Maltese Falcon), it’s in love with old movies, yet filled with new-cinema performers and ideas. By its 1982 release, Coppola had put his studio up for sale. The Zoetrope dream was over. But these films still dream. EXTRAS: Only on One From The Heart: four docs, deleted and alternate scenes, press conference, demo, rehearsals, trailers. Damien Love

One (or rather, three) from the heart of Coppola’s American Zoetrope dream…Hammett was intended by Francis Ford Coppola to be one of his American Zoetrope studio’s first movies, a calling card for the Zoetrope vision and the American debut of German director Wim Wenders. In the event, the film, an homage to novelist Dashiell Hammett boasting a rare lead from Coppola regular Frederic Forrest, did become synonymous with the studio. Just not the way Coppola had hoped. Slated by critics, ignored by the public, Hammett’s production became a familiar Zoetrope tale of spiralling costs, blown deadlines and creative battles. Coppola is rumoured to have reshot 70 per cent of Wenders’ movie himself.

Revisiting it today, however, as it receives a belated UK DVD debut alongside two more from Zoetrope’s slate – One From The Heart and The Escape Artist – Hammett stands as a perfect expression of the Zoetrope ethos. American Zoetrope had a bold remit. First, to offer a home for artists telling stories mainstream studios wouldn’t touch – a European visionary like Wenders made the perfect showpiece. Second, to embrace technological advances to create a new, cutting-edge filmmaking, a prophet of cinema’s coming digital revolution.

But Coppola aimed to blend the new with the best of the old. From the traditional studio system, he retained the idea of building a company buzzing in one creative hive. You see the factory in operation in these films as names and faces recur: Forrest joins Teri Garr and Raul Julia in One From The Heart; Garr and Julia co-star in The Escape Artist; Coppola’s production designer Dean Tavoularis oversees all three. Tavoularis is key. In reaction to Apocalypse Now’s location nightmares, Coppola’s Zoetrope films stress a retreat from the world and a return to studio sets: the fabricated dreamlands of Hammett’s 1920s San Francisco, the neon fantasy Vegas of One From The Heart.

Hammett was based on Joe Gores’ 1975 novel, a meta-fiction that blends Dashiell Hammett’s biography with elements of his stories. It was in trouble long before Wenders came aboard. Coppola originally hired Nicolas Roeg to direct, and by the time Wenders arrived, Hammett had languished in development for four years. As shooting began, there was still no finished screenplay. Filming dragged on while Wenders, badgered by Coppola, wrestled with writing. When rumours spread that Wenders was rewriting to focus on a new character coincidentally played by his then-wife, Ronee Blakley, Coppola pulled the plug.

It gives an idea of how bad things got that, during Hammett’s hiatus, Coppola had time to dismantle its set and shoot One From The Heart. Envisaged as a small, blue-collar love story, it ballooned to a budget of $27 million, leaving Coppola selling his property to save his studio. It took just $2.5 million on release. Today, it floats: a unique, mad, pop bubble. With songs by Tom Waits and Gene Kelly advising on dance numbers, it’s like a Raymond Carver story adapted in the style of Moulin Rouge.

Compared with these, The Escape Artist, directed by Zooey Deschanel’s father, Caleb, went like a dream. With a script from ET’s Melissa Mathison about a teenage boy’s determination to become a magician like his dead father, it was completed on schedule, but on release ran true to Zoetrope form. Critics sneered, audiences stayed away. When Wenders and Coppola finally reconvened to resurrect Hammett, it was with a new script, set and substantially altered cast. The film we’re left with is a charming mongrel. Beautifully played by Forrest, Hammett has just left the Pinkerton detective agency, afflicted by tuberculosis and alcoholism. He’s trying to hack it as a pulp writer, but the writing won’t come. When an old detective pal (Peter Boyle) shows up, he gets pulled into one last case and stumbles over the inspiration for his great books, The Maltese Falcon and The Thin Man.

Hammett bursts with ambition. Littered with noir nods and cameos (notably Elisha Cook Jr, of the 1941 Maltese Falcon), it’s in love with old movies, yet filled with new-cinema performers and ideas. By its 1982 release, Coppola had put his studio up for sale. The Zoetrope dream was over. But these films still dream.

EXTRAS: Only on One From The Heart: four docs, deleted and alternate scenes, press conference, demo, rehearsals, trailers.

Damien Love

Pink Floyd – Wish You Were Here Immersion Box Set

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Five whole remastered discs and a mountain of trinkets. But is it worth a ton?JEEZ, THE SOUND quality is INCREDIBLE. It’s like David Gilmour is playing his acoustic guitar IN YOUR ROOM. You really can hear the strings BUZZ and hear his fingers SCRAPE on the fretboard. You can hear Nick Mason’s drum stool SQUEAK, hear Rick Wright’s Clavinet THROB, and you can actually hear Roger Waters having a BREAKDOWN about two minutes into “Welcome To The Machine”. Amazing. Thing is, I’m not actually listening to the remastered version of this album, just a bog-standard CD – one pressed three remasters ago – played through a modest home stereo. Even my scratchy vinyl version sounds great. In fact, all Pink Floyd albums – certainly everything between Meddle and The Wall – were expensively recorded works that still sound thoroughly impressive on a decent system. It questions the need for these £100 “Immersion” box-sets, where each package contains at least two discs of remastered mixes – 5.1 Surround, BluRay, Quad, etc – that, judging by a playback at the EMI HQ, all sound virtually identical. However, those of you who don’t possess a stereo system worth as much as a house will be pleased to see that this particular package contains more than an hour of illuminating bonus tracks. Wish You Were Here was, of course, the follow-up to the squillion-selling The Dark Side Of The Moon, and the ensuing pressures of fame are documented in the lyrics, an early example of the little-guy-against-the-corporate-machine shtick that would become Waters’ stock-in-trade. Recording was a tortured process: Floyd nerds will know about the aborted Household Objects project, a brave attempt to create an LP from domestic sounds. Nick Mason’s memoir mentions rhythm tracks made from sawn wood, footsteps and clinking bottles, basslines created from plucked rubber bands. You can hear some of that on the first three minutes of “The Hard Way”, a wonderfully weird extra track on the Dark Side… Immersion box that’s somewhere between the BBC Radiophonic Workshop and a Matthew Herbert experiment. Here we get a two-minute track “Wine Glasses” – effectively the sound of around half a dozen wine glasses being played, wetted finger to rim, each tuned to a note in an extended chord, and each faded in and out at the mixing desk. It creates a pleasing minimalist drone, not dissimilar to something from Steve Reich’s roughly contemporaneous “Music For 18 Musicians”. There are also two more orthodox outtakes from the WYWH sessions, including an early version of “Have A Cigar”. Instead of the band’s pal Roy Harper doing his best Waters impression as the oily record exec (which is what the band eventually went with), we get Waters and Gilmour in harmony, Waters straining for the high notes and Gilmour a third below him. The song seems too verbose to handle harmonies – besides, Floyd harmonies (on, say “Echoes”, “Us And Them” or “Time”) tend to be handled by Gilmour and Wright – but this still has a distinct appeal. Floyd obsessives will also know Stéphane Grappelli appears in the fade out of the title track on the original LP. Apparently he was recording a Gershwin tribute with Yehudi Menuhin in another part of Abbey Road, and both fiddlers were gracious enough to guest on separate versions of the song. Menuhin’s take is (probably mercifully) not included here, but Grappelli’s is. It’s a curio with lovely flourishes but, for a jazz violinist who spent much of his career playing similarly bluesy obbligatos with Django Reinhardt, Grappelli sounds slightly meandering and out of his depth. There’s also the audio of a November 1974 show at Wembley Arena. Nick Kent’s ill-tempered NME review of this gig – criticising the band’s limited musicianship, infantile songwriting and rambling delivery – set the tone for punk’s scapegoating of the Floyd, but it all sounds convincing to these ears. It features an exploratory 20-minute preview of “Shine On You Crazy Diamond”, all flarey drums and organ drones, along with “Raving And Drooling” and “You Gotta Be Crazy”, both of which ended up being reworked for Animals, respectively as “Sheep” and “Dogs”. What else? There are two audio-visual discs – one DVD, one BluRay – featuring excerpts from the animated films by Storm Thorgerson and Gerald Scarfe that were back-projected during the Wish You Were Here tour. There’s a poster, a replica ticket and backstage pass, two art books, nine coasters, three marbles and, er, a scarf. To buy the entire 100-quid package, you’d have to be a scary Floyd obsessive, or a nutjob (sadly, there’s considerable overlap between the two). However, the two-CD package of the original LP, the live tracks and the studio outtakes seems a good deal. John Lewis

Five whole remastered discs and a mountain of trinkets. But is it worth a ton?JEEZ, THE SOUND quality is INCREDIBLE. It’s like David Gilmour is playing his acoustic guitar IN YOUR ROOM. You really can hear the strings BUZZ and hear his fingers SCRAPE on the fretboard. You can hear Nick Mason’s drum stool SQUEAK, hear Rick Wright’s Clavinet THROB, and you can actually hear Roger Waters having a BREAKDOWN about two minutes into “Welcome To The Machine”. Amazing.

Thing is, I’m not actually listening to the remastered version of this album, just a bog-standard CD – one pressed three remasters ago – played through a modest home stereo. Even my scratchy vinyl version sounds great. In fact, all Pink Floyd albums – certainly everything between Meddle and The Wall – were expensively recorded works that still sound thoroughly impressive on a decent system. It questions the need for these £100 “Immersion” box-sets, where each package contains at least two discs of remastered mixes – 5.1 Surround, BluRay, Quad, etc – that, judging by a playback at the EMI HQ, all sound virtually identical. However, those of you who don’t possess a stereo system worth as much as a house will be pleased to see that this particular package contains more than an hour of illuminating bonus tracks.

Wish You Were Here was, of course, the follow-up to the squillion-selling The Dark Side Of The Moon, and the ensuing pressures of fame are documented in the lyrics, an early example of the little-guy-against-the-corporate-machine shtick that would become Waters’ stock-in-trade. Recording was a tortured process: Floyd nerds will know about the aborted Household Objects project, a brave attempt to create an LP from domestic sounds. Nick Mason’s memoir mentions rhythm tracks made from sawn wood, footsteps and clinking bottles, basslines created from plucked rubber bands. You can hear some of that on the first three minutes of “The Hard Way”, a wonderfully weird extra track on the Dark Side… Immersion box that’s somewhere between the BBC Radiophonic Workshop and a Matthew Herbert experiment.

Here we get a two-minute track “Wine Glasses” – effectively the sound of around half a dozen wine glasses being played, wetted finger to rim, each tuned to a note in an extended chord, and each faded in and out at the mixing desk. It creates a pleasing minimalist drone, not dissimilar to something from Steve Reich’s roughly contemporaneous “Music For 18 Musicians”. There are also two more orthodox outtakes from the WYWH sessions, including an early version of “Have A Cigar”. Instead of the band’s pal Roy Harper doing his best Waters impression as the oily record exec (which is what the band eventually went with), we get Waters and Gilmour in harmony, Waters straining for the high notes and Gilmour a third below him. The song seems too verbose to handle harmonies – besides, Floyd harmonies (on, say “Echoes”, “Us And Them” or “Time”) tend to be handled by Gilmour and Wright – but this still has a distinct appeal.

Floyd obsessives will also know Stéphane Grappelli appears in the fade out of the title track on the original LP. Apparently he was recording a Gershwin tribute with Yehudi Menuhin in another part of Abbey Road, and both fiddlers were gracious enough to guest on separate versions of the song. Menuhin’s take is (probably mercifully) not included here, but Grappelli’s is. It’s a curio with lovely flourishes but, for a jazz violinist who spent much of his career playing similarly bluesy obbligatos with Django Reinhardt, Grappelli sounds slightly meandering and out of his depth.

There’s also the audio of a November 1974 show at Wembley Arena. Nick Kent’s ill-tempered NME review of this gig – criticising the band’s limited musicianship, infantile songwriting and rambling delivery – set the tone for punk’s scapegoating of the Floyd, but it all sounds convincing to these ears. It features an exploratory 20-minute preview of “Shine On You Crazy Diamond”, all flarey drums and organ drones, along with “Raving And Drooling” and “You Gotta Be Crazy”, both of which ended up being reworked for Animals, respectively as “Sheep” and “Dogs”.

What else? There are two audio-visual discs – one DVD, one BluRay – featuring excerpts from the animated films by Storm Thorgerson and Gerald Scarfe that were back-projected during the Wish You Were Here tour. There’s a poster, a replica ticket and backstage pass, two art books, nine coasters, three marbles and, er, a scarf. To buy the entire 100-quid package, you’d have to be a scary Floyd obsessive, or a nutjob (sadly, there’s considerable overlap between the two). However, the two-CD package of the original LP, the live tracks and the studio outtakes seems a good deal.

John Lewis

KATE BUSH – 50 WORDS FOR SNOW

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Even in the hinterlands of myth, the notion of sex with snowmen seems rather a neglected subject. Hans Christian Andersen tells of a snowman who, promisingly, falls in love, though the object of his affection turns out to be a stove rather than a mortal. One looks in vain for much evidence of an eroticised Frosty in, say, Angela Carter: evidently, such a combination of the twee and the sensuous is too much for most committed fabulists. Kate Bush, however, is not one to shirk that kind of creative challenge. The centrepiece of 50 Words For Snow, her first album of new songs in six years, is a 14-minute love song to a snowman, one made by her own hands and named “Misty”. Logic, at this point, would suggest that the snowman is a metaphor for a particularly short-lived lover, or a notably frigid one. The evidence, though, seems to demand a more literal explanation. When she wakes after their “one and only tryst”, he has melted away, leaving wet sheets and “dead leaves, bits of twisted branches” on her pillow. Should ambiguity remain, the LP’s cover dissolves it utterly, a bas-relief, apparently made out of ice, portrays a snowman’s puckered lips touching those of a young girl. It is not the first time Bush has created an image that induces cringes of embarrassment rather than gasps of wonder. “Misty”, though, is extraordinary: a torch song, driven along by the gently kicking jazz of Steve Gadd (drums) and Danny Thompson (bass), that makes nuanced romantic currency out of a truly preposterous idea. “Misty” forms the climax of what we might tentatively call the first movement of 50 Words For Snow; three piano-led pieces (“Snowflake”, “Lake Tahoe”, “Misty”), 35 minutes in total, that take their cues from “Mrs Bartolozzi” and “A Coral Room” on 2005’s Aerial, and from the stripped-back, wistful version of “Moments Of Pleasure” on this year’s Director’s Cut. As that last album of reworkings proved, Bush’s voice is not what it was. Where once it soared and ululated in such an untethered way, now it is often deeper, warmer, evoking a sort of curdled soulfulness. One of the marked poignancies of 50 Words For Snow is that, while Bush’s subject matter is more evanescent than ever, she addresses it in much more human and earthy tones. Ten-and-a-half minutes into “Misty”, as she details what the snowman has left behind, her voice cracks on “stolen grasses from slumbering lawn”, intensifying the emotional heft of the song so much that its subject matter – to recap: sex with a snowman – is rendered profound rather than ludicrous. “Snowflake” and “Lake Tahoe”, meanwhile, find Bush contracting out some high notes to other singers. On “Snowflake” – narrated, perhaps inevitably, by a falling snowflake – the lead is taken by her 13-year-old son, Albert McIntosh. McIntosh already has quite a recording history, having talked with the birds on Aerial, been eulogised by his mother on “Bertie”, and appeared in Autotuned form on the Director’s Cut version of “Deeper Understanding”. This time, though, his voice is untreated, revealing its uncanny potency; it sounds as if Bush is being rechannelled through the larynx of an ingenuous choirboy. Some of the serious lifting on “Lake Tahoe” is handled by two classical singers, Stefan Roberts and Michael Wood, with their Schubert-like passages alternating with bluesier ones sung by Bush. These are slow, long songs, given coherence and momentum by Bush’s piano lines, gracefully reminiscent of Keith Jarrett. From austere, absurd materials, the cumulative effect is remarkable. It would, though, be expecting a little too much for even Bush to sustain such a heightened atmosphere for another half hour. Consequently, the second phase of 50 Words For Snow is more diverse and less satisfying. “Wildman” is fine, a sensual pursuit of the yeti (though, amid a scree of esoteric reference, that name is never used) delivered by Bush as a kind of incantatory, whispered rap. The music is a sprung cousin to “Somewhere In Between” from Aerial, the chorus shared by Andy Fairweather Low; another musician from a generation, slightly older than Bush, that she has called on throughout her career. That generation, often rather conservative, has magically sounded radical in Bush’s company. Not all dinosaurs, though, can be taught new tricks so easily. “Snowed In At Wheeler Street” charts the progress of two lovers who keep reconnecting at crisis points in history, and features Bush drawn into a stand-off with one of her earliest heroes, Elton John. The backing is nearly ambient, but Bush chronically over-emotes, as if she is straining to match Elton’s histrionics rather than forcing him to play her more subtle game. The spotlight is also shared on the title track, with Stephen Fry cast as Dr Joseph Yupik (Yupiks being an Eskimo tribe of Siberia and Alaska), goaded by Bush – “Come on Joe, you’ve got 32 to go!” – into finding 50 synonyms for snow. The droll neologising “Wenceslasaire”, “spangladasha”, “shnamistoflopp’n”, is charming enough, and the soft urgency of the music reiterates the genteel rave influence that crept into the second half of Aerial. But at the same time, the way the track is predicated on Fry’s reputation as bibliophilic fount of all knowledge seems somehow crass. Given how much of Kate Bush’s appeal is built on an image of her being blissfully disconnected from the real world, it is disappointing to imagine her coming up with the concept while slumped in front of QI on a Friday night. This, then, is the paradox of 50 Words For Snow. Kate Bush has never made a record that seems so ethereally disdainful of convention, of the parameters, themes and expectations of a simple pop song. But at the same time, she has never seemed so normal: a little indulgent to celebrity; acutely aware of how time has brought mortal vulnerability to her voice. 50 Words For Snow ends with another beautiful and glacial piano song, “Among Angels”, where she identifies seraphim clustered around her subject. It is, perhaps, a blessing and a curse that Kate Bush can no longer be mistaken for one herself. John Mulvey

Even in the hinterlands of myth, the notion of sex with snowmen seems rather a neglected subject. Hans Christian Andersen tells of a snowman who, promisingly, falls in love, though the object of his affection turns out to be a stove rather than a mortal. One looks in vain for much evidence of an eroticised Frosty in, say, Angela Carter: evidently, such a combination of the twee and the sensuous is too much for most committed fabulists.

Kate Bush, however, is not one to shirk that kind of creative challenge. The centrepiece of 50 Words For Snow, her first album of new songs in six years, is a 14-minute love song to a snowman, one made by her own hands and named “Misty”. Logic, at this point, would suggest that the snowman is a metaphor for a particularly short-lived lover, or a notably frigid one. The evidence, though, seems to demand a more literal explanation. When she wakes after their “one and only tryst”, he has melted away, leaving wet sheets and “dead leaves, bits of twisted branches” on her pillow. Should ambiguity remain, the LP’s cover dissolves it utterly, a bas-relief, apparently made out of ice, portrays a snowman’s puckered lips touching those of a young girl.

It is not the first time Bush has created an image that induces cringes of embarrassment rather than gasps of wonder. “Misty”, though, is extraordinary: a torch song, driven along by the gently kicking jazz of Steve Gadd (drums) and Danny Thompson (bass), that makes nuanced romantic currency out of a truly preposterous idea. “Misty” forms the climax of what we might tentatively call the first movement of 50 Words For Snow; three piano-led pieces (“Snowflake”, “Lake Tahoe”, “Misty”), 35 minutes in total, that take their cues from “Mrs Bartolozzi” and “A Coral Room” on 2005’s Aerial, and from the stripped-back, wistful version of “Moments Of Pleasure” on this year’s Director’s Cut.

As that last album of reworkings proved, Bush’s voice is not what it was. Where once it soared and ululated in such an untethered way, now it is often deeper, warmer, evoking a sort of curdled soulfulness. One of the marked poignancies of 50 Words For Snow is that, while Bush’s subject matter is more evanescent than ever, she addresses it in much more human and earthy tones. Ten-and-a-half minutes into “Misty”, as she details what the snowman has left behind, her voice cracks on “stolen grasses from slumbering lawn”, intensifying the emotional heft of the song so much that its subject matter – to recap: sex with a snowman – is rendered profound rather than ludicrous.

“Snowflake” and “Lake Tahoe”, meanwhile, find Bush contracting out some high notes to other singers. On “Snowflake” – narrated, perhaps inevitably, by a falling snowflake – the lead is taken by her 13-year-old son, Albert McIntosh. McIntosh already has quite a recording history, having talked with the birds on Aerial, been eulogised by his mother on “Bertie”, and appeared in Autotuned form on the Director’s Cut version of “Deeper Understanding”. This time, though, his voice is untreated, revealing its uncanny potency; it sounds as if Bush is being rechannelled through the larynx of an ingenuous choirboy.

Some of the serious lifting on “Lake Tahoe” is handled by two classical singers, Stefan Roberts and Michael Wood, with their Schubert-like passages alternating with bluesier ones sung by Bush. These are slow, long songs, given coherence and momentum by Bush’s piano lines, gracefully reminiscent of Keith Jarrett. From austere, absurd materials, the cumulative effect is remarkable.

It would, though, be expecting a little too much for even Bush to sustain such a heightened atmosphere for another half hour. Consequently, the second phase of 50 Words For Snow is more diverse and less satisfying. “Wildman” is fine, a sensual pursuit of the yeti (though, amid a scree of esoteric reference, that name is never used) delivered by Bush as a kind of incantatory, whispered rap. The music is a sprung cousin to “Somewhere In Between” from Aerial, the chorus shared by Andy Fairweather Low; another musician from a generation, slightly older than Bush, that she has called on throughout her career. That generation, often rather conservative, has magically sounded radical in Bush’s company. Not all dinosaurs, though, can be taught new tricks so easily. “Snowed In At Wheeler Street” charts the progress of two lovers who keep reconnecting at crisis points in history, and features Bush drawn into a stand-off with one of her earliest heroes, Elton John. The backing is nearly ambient, but Bush chronically over-emotes, as if she is straining to match Elton’s histrionics rather than forcing him to play her more subtle game.

The spotlight is also shared on the title track, with Stephen Fry cast as Dr Joseph Yupik (Yupiks being an Eskimo tribe of Siberia and Alaska), goaded by Bush – “Come on Joe, you’ve got 32 to go!” – into finding 50 synonyms for snow. The droll neologising “Wenceslasaire”, “spangladasha”, “shnamistoflopp’n”, is charming enough, and the soft urgency of the music reiterates the genteel rave influence that crept into the second half of Aerial. But at the same time, the way the track is predicated on Fry’s reputation as bibliophilic fount of all knowledge seems somehow crass. Given how much of Kate Bush’s appeal is built on an image of her being blissfully disconnected from the real world, it is disappointing to imagine her coming up with the concept while slumped in front of QI on a Friday night.

This, then, is the paradox of 50 Words For Snow. Kate Bush has never made a record that seems so ethereally disdainful of convention, of the parameters, themes and expectations of a simple pop song. But at the same time, she has never seemed so normal: a little indulgent to celebrity; acutely aware of how time has brought mortal vulnerability to her voice.

50 Words For Snow ends with another beautiful and glacial piano song, “Among Angels”, where she identifies seraphim clustered around her subject. It is, perhaps, a blessing and a curse that Kate Bush can no longer be mistaken for one herself.

John Mulvey

Lambchop announce new album and UK tour – ticket details

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Alt.country icons Lambchop are to release a new album , 'Mr M', on February 20, 2012. Their 11th studio album was recorded in Nashville at producer Mark Nevers' Beech House studio and is dedicated to singer Kurt Wagner's late friend and collaborator, the singer-songwriter Vic Chesnutt, who died in 2009. You can listen to the album's opening track 'If Not I'll Just Die' by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking. According to Wagner, Nevers' idea for the album was to give it a "'psycha-Sinatra' sound". He continues: "It was a studio creation, not a type of recording based on band performance, and this was a radical approach for us. I felt Lambchop had one more good record in us, and this time I was going to do things as directly and true to my desires as possible." Kurt Wagner and co will follow the release with a handful of UK tour dates, starting at London Barbican on March 1 before finishing up at Bristol Fleece on March 7. Lambchop play: London Barbican (March 1) Gateshead Sage (4) Glasgow Oran Mor (5) Manchester Cathedral (6) Bristol Fleece (7) The 'Mr M' tracklisting is: 'If Not I'll Just Die' '2B2' 'Gone Tomorrow' 'Mr. Met' 'Gar' 'Nice Without Mercy' 'Buttons' 'The Good Life (Is Wasted)' 'Kind Of' 'Betty's Overture' 'Never My Love' To check the availability of [url=http://www.seetickets.com/see/event.asp?artist=lambchop&filler1=see&filler3=id1nmestory]Lambchop tickets[/url] and get all the latest listings, go to [url=http://www.nme.com/gigs]NME.COM/TICKETS[/url] now, or call 0871 230 1094. Lambchop - If Not I'll Just Die by cityslang Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Alt.country icons Lambchop are to release a new album , ‘Mr M’, on February 20, 2012.

Their 11th studio album was recorded in Nashville at producer Mark Nevers’ Beech House studio and is dedicated to singer Kurt Wagner‘s late friend and collaborator, the singer-songwriter Vic Chesnutt, who died in 2009. You can listen to the album’s opening track ‘If Not I’ll Just Die’ by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

According to Wagner, Nevers’ idea for the album was to give it a “‘psycha-Sinatra‘ sound”. He continues: “It was a studio creation, not a type of recording based on band performance, and this was a radical approach for us. I felt Lambchop had one more good record in us, and this time I was going to do things as directly and true to my desires as possible.”

Kurt Wagner and co will follow the release with a handful of UK tour dates, starting at London Barbican on March 1 before finishing up at Bristol Fleece on March 7.

Lambchop play:

London Barbican (March 1)

Gateshead Sage (4)

Glasgow Oran Mor (5)

Manchester Cathedral (6)

Bristol Fleece (7)

The ‘Mr M’ tracklisting is:

‘If Not I’ll Just Die’

‘2B2’

‘Gone Tomorrow’

‘Mr. Met’

‘Gar’

‘Nice Without Mercy’

‘Buttons’

‘The Good Life (Is Wasted)’

‘Kind Of’

‘Betty’s Overture’

‘Never My Love’

To check the availability of [url=http://www.seetickets.com/see/event.asp?artist=lambchop&filler1=see&filler3=id1nmestory]Lambchop tickets[/url] and get all the latest listings, go to [url=http://www.nme.com/gigs]NME.COM/TICKETS[/url] now, or call 0871 230 1094.

Lambchop – If Not I’ll Just Die by cityslang

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

New Order to release EP of outtakes from final album

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New Order will release a new EP comprised of outtakes from their final studio album. The 'Lost Sirens' EP will be made up of material that didn't make it onto the electronic pioneers' 2005 effort 'Waiting For The Sirens' Call', and is due for release in December. Slicingupeyeballs.com are report...

New Order will release a new EP comprised of outtakes from their final studio album.

The ‘Lost Sirens’ EP will be made up of material that didn’t make it onto the electronic pioneers’ 2005 effort ‘Waiting For The Sirens’ Call’, and is due for release in December.

Slicingupeyeballs.com are reporting that although the band haven’t officially confirmed the release of the EP, it will feature tracks from their final recording sessions as well as the song ‘Hellbent’, which was included on the joint Joy Division and New Order compilation album ‘Total’ that was released earlier this year.

Hook had told the same site in August that he wanted to release the unused material as a way of bringing closure to his time in New Order.

He said: “It would be nice, from my point of view, to get rid of those tracks in the nicest possible way that would at last draw a line under the New Order split-up in 2006. It hasn’t felt clean in any way, to be honest. So I’m hoping the release of the last remaining material will make it a little cleaner.”

In September, New Order announced that they would be reforming for two benefit shows to take place in October, and have since confirmed they will be playing another concert in London this December. However, Hook will not be part of the line-up for the gigs.

He has repeatedly expressed his unhappiness at his former band’s reformation, claiming that they should have consulted him over the decision first and later declaring that he would try to “fuck over” New Order in any possible way he could.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.