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PJ Harvey: ‘I only sing the songs that I can still believe’

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PJ Harvey has revealed why she no longer plays a lot of her early material during shows, explaining that she can only sing the songs she can still “believe” in. Speaking to GQ, the ‘Let England Shake’ star said that she hardly plays any material from her first albums, 1992’s ‘Dry’ and...

PJ Harvey has revealed why she no longer plays a lot of her early material during shows, explaining that she can only sing the songs she can still “believe” in.

Speaking to GQ, the ‘Let England Shake’ star said that she hardly plays any material from her first albums, 1992’s ‘Dry’ and 1993’s ‘Rid Of Me’, live because of her concerns over authenticity.

She said: “I find that I can only play the songs that I can sing with any authenticity still, my being a 42-year-old woman. Some of the words of those songs were written when I was very young and they no longer feel honest for me to sing now at this stage of my life.”

She added: “When I sing for people I want to be able to feel that I can inhabit the song during that performance and in order to do so I need to believe in it. So I only sing the songs that I can still believe as I sing them.”

Harvey also spoke about how she feels little nostalgia for that era of her career. “I don’t get nostalgic, really,” she said. “I’m somebody that enjoys living in the present moment that I’m in. In fact, I very rarely reflect because it all feels part of me still. My past feels part of the ongoing journey towards where I’m going next.”

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The Cure to release Bestival headline set as a live album

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The Cure have announced that they will release a live album of their 2011 Bestival headline set this December. The band headlined the Isle Of Wight-based festival in September, playing a 32-song, two-and-a-half-hour set and have now announced that they will release a recording of the whole gig in ...

The Cure have announced that they will release a live album of their 2011 Bestival headline set this December.

The band headlined the Isle Of Wight-based festival in September, playing a 32-song, two-and-a-half-hour set and have now announced that they will release a recording of the whole gig in a 2CD package on December 5.

All profits from sales of the live album will be 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.

The Cure frontman Robert Smith said of the reasoning behind the album’s release: “We had such a great time in the Isle Of Wight at Bestival that we wanted to release this show as a way of thanking fans and islanders alike.”

The Cure are set to perform their debut album ‘Three Imaginary Boys’ (1979), plus 1980’s ‘Seventeen Seconds’ and 1981’s ‘Faith’ in their entirety at London‘s Royal Albert Hall on November 15. The gig sold out in under three hours.

The tracklisting for ‘The Cure: Bestival Live 2011 Disc One’ is as follows:

‘Plainsong

‘Open’

‘Fascination Street’

‘A Night Like This’

‘The End of the World’

‘Lovesong’

‘Just Like Heaven’

‘The Only One’

‘The Walk’

‘Push’

‘Friday I’m In Love’

‘Inbetween Days’

‘Play For Today’

‘A Forest’

‘Primary’

‘Shake Dog Shake’

The tracklisting for ‘The Cure: Bestival Live 2011 Disc Two’ is as follows:

‘The Hungry Ghost’

‘100 Years’

‘End’

‘Disintegration’

‘Lullaby’

‘The Lovecats’

‘The Caterpillar’

‘Close to Me’

‘Hot Hot Hot!!!’

‘Let’s Go to Bed’

‘Why Can’t I Be You?’

‘Boys Don’t Cry’

‘Jumping Someone Else’s Train’

‘Grinding Halt’

’10:15 Saturday Night’

‘Killing Another’

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 38, 2011, plus Wilco live

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To the Roundhouse last Saturday, for the Wilco and Jonathan Wilson show, which I suspect one or two of you may also have seen. More and more often these days, I turn to “Kicking Television” before any other Wilco album, and am beginning to suspect it might actually be their defining work. Watching on Saturday night, it’s clear that stability hasn’t brought any complacency to the lineup, and that now would be a sensible time to put out another live album. For all their imaginative use of the studio (not least on “The Whole Love”), it occurs that like one of their clear antecedents, The Grateful Dead, Wilco are at their most potent onstage. Saturday’s show was a brilliant operation in drawing affinities between different phases of the band. So an opening “One Sunday Morning” flowed artfully into “Poor Places”, then into a take on “Art Of Almost” that, with Glenn Kotche playing breaks, was the closest Wilco have ever come to sonically justifying that old ‘American Radiohead’ tag. A bit of a frontloaded set, I think: it’s hard to top a 5-6-7 of “At Least That's What You Said”, “Bull Black Nova” and “Via Chicago”; and some of the makeweight powerpop songs from the new album blurred into one another in the second half (culminating in Nick Lowe guesting on “Cruel To Be Kind”). Even then, though, there was always something interesting at the edges: Nels Cline, of course, providing imaginative friction; Pat Sansone’s intuitive piano lines; the relentless energy of the whole band, and the sheer creative joy that they seem to generate. Wilson was good, too, though he probably should loosen up live a bit more; a jam on “Natural Rhapsody” was the definite highlight. Anyone else want to share opinions? In the meantime, the 2012 albums have started rolling in, and there’s some very good stuff in this week’s playlist, not least the extraordinary Blues Control/Laraaji collaboration. 1 Blues Control & Laraaji – FRKWYS Vol 8: Blues Control & Laraaji (RVNG) 2 Doug Jerebine - Jesse Harper (Drag City) 3 Elephant Micah – Louder Than Thou (Unknown) 4 High Wolf – Atlas Nation (Holy Mountain) 5 Black Bananas – Rad Times Xpress IV (Drag City) 6 Guided By Voices – Let’s Go Eat The Factory (Fire) 7 Calexico – Selections From Road Atlas: 1998-2011 (City Slang) 8 Tom Waits – Bad As Me (Anti-) 9 Chairlift – Something (Young Turks) 10 Etta James – The Dreamer (Decca) 11 Field Music – Plumb (Memphis Industries) 12 Black Truth Rhythm Band – Ifetayo (Soundway) 13 Prinzhorn Dance School – Clay Class (DFA) 14 Barry Dransfield – Barry Dransfield (Spinney) 15 Hiss Golden Messenger – Poor Moon (Paradise Of Bachelors)

To the Roundhouse last Saturday, for the Wilco and Jonathan Wilson show, which I suspect one or two of you may also have seen.

New Order announce one-off London date

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New Order have announced a one-off London show for later this year. The band revealed that they had reunited earlier this year when they announced that they would play two benefit gigs, but also confirmed that bass player Peter Hook would not be part of their line-up. The group, who now include k...

New Order have announced a one-off London show for later this year.

The band revealed that they had reunited earlier this year when they announced that they would play two benefit gigs, but also confirmed that bass player Peter Hook would not be part of their line-up.

The group, who now include keyboard player Gillian Gilbert and new bassist Tom Chapman, will play London’s Troxy venue on December 10. The gig will be New Order‘s first UK show for over five years.

Peter Hook has repeatedly expressed his unhappiness that the band have reformed without him, previously saying that he had vowed to “fuck over” his former bandmates in “any possible way” he can.

Hook is currently touring with his band The Light, who have recently been playing Joy Division‘s classic album ‘Closer’ as part of their set.

Tickets go onsale on Friday (November 4) at 9am (GMT). To check the availability of [url=http://nme.seetickets.com/Tour/New-Order?affid1nmestory] New Order 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.

The Who’s Pete Townshend: ‘Apple is a digital vampire’

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The Who guitarist and songwriter Pete Townshend has labeled technology giant Apple as a "digital vampire". Townshend, who gave the first John Peel Lecture in Salford last night (October 31), said that he believed the internet was "destroying copyright as we know it" and was damaging the growth of ...

The Who guitarist and songwriter Pete Townshend has labeled technology giant Apple as a “digital vampire”.

Townshend, who gave the first John Peel Lecture in Salford last night (October 31), said that he believed the internet was “destroying copyright as we know it” and was damaging the growth of new music, reports BBC News.

He said of Apple: “Is there really any good reason why, just because iTunes exists in the wild west internet land of Facebook and Twitter, it can’t provide some aspect of these services to the artists whose work it bleeds like a digital vampire, like a digital Northern Rock, for its enormous commission.”

He continued: “Apple should employ 20 talent scouts from the dying record business to give guidance to new acts and provide financial and marketing support to the best ones.”

Townshend also laid into people who had downloaded his band’s music without paying, saying that they “may as well come and steal my son’s bike while they’re at it. If someone pretends that something I have created should be available to them free, I wonder what has gone wrong with human morality and social justice.”

The guitarist also said every new artist faced a dilemma about how they distributed their music, saying he believed creative people would prefer to starve then no-one hear their output. He added: “A creative person would prefer their music to be stolen and enjoyed than ignored. This is the dilemma for every creative soul: he or she would prefer to starve and be heard than to eat well and be ignored.”

Townshend is currently preparing for the release of his long-awaited memoir Who He? He has been writing the book for over 15 years and was cautioned by police in 2003 during its writing after accessing child pornography on the internet. When questioned by police about the material he cited researching for the book as his reason for doing so.

The Who guitarist has also described the book, which will be published by Harper Collins, as a “rite of passage”. It is expected to be published in the autumn of 2012.

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.

Radiohead, PJ Harvey, Bon Iver nominated for Uncut Music Award

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Radiohead, PJ Harvey and Bon Iver are among the nominees for the Uncut Music Award 2011. The award, which is given out by Uncut, sees one album chosen from a shortlist of eight by a panel of judges, which will include Uncut editor Allan Jones. Also nominated for the award are Bill Callahan, Fleet ...

Radiohead, PJ Harvey and Bon Iver are among the nominees for the Uncut Music Award 2011.

The award, which is given out by Uncut, sees one album chosen from a shortlist of eight by a panel of judges, which will include Uncut editor Allan Jones.

Also nominated for the award are Bill Callahan, Fleet Foxes, Josh T Pearson, Paul Simon and Gillian Welch.

The winner of the award will be announced in the new issue of

Uncut, which is on UK newsstands on November 27 or available digitally. The full transcript of the judging panel’s discussions about the album will also be published on Uncut.co.uk.

The full shortlist for the Uncut Music Award is as follows:

Bill Callahan – ‘Apocalypse’

Fleet Foxes – ‘Helplessness Blues’

PJ Harvey – ‘Let England Shake’

Bon Iver – ‘Bon Iver’

Josh T Pearson – ‘Last Of The Country Gentlemen’

Radiohead – ‘The King Of Limbs’

Paul Simon – ‘So Beautiful Or So What’

Gillian Welch – ‘The Harrow & The Harvest’

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 Karen O and David Lynch’s collaboration ‘Pinky’s Dream’

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Yeah Yeah Yeahs frontwoman Karen O and cult film director David Lynch have posted their collaboration track 'Pinky's Dream' online – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen. The track is taken from Lynch's debut album 'Crazy Clown Time', which is released on November 7 on the S...

Yeah Yeah Yeahs frontwoman Karen O and cult film director David Lynch have posted their collaboration track ‘Pinky’s Dream’ online – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen.

The track is taken from Lynch’s debut album ‘Crazy Clown Time’, which is released on November 7 on the Sunday Best label.

Lynch, who is best known as the visionary behind films such as Blue Velvet and Mulholland Drive, has described the LP as “modern blues”. He said: “The love of experimenting with sound and music is what was driving this boat. All of the songs on the album started as a jam. The jams eventually found a form and lyrics appeared.”

The director will play the guitar and sing on the album. The full tracklisting for ‘Crazy Clown Time’ is as follows:

‘Pinky’s Dream’

‘Good Day Today’

‘So Glad’

‘Noah’s Ark’

‘Football Game’

‘I Know’

‘Strange And Unproductive Thinking’

‘The Night Bell With Lightning’

‘Stone’s Gone Up’

‘Crazy Clown Time’

‘These Are My Friends’

‘Speed Roadster’

‘Movin’ On’

‘She Rise Up’

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.

Muse’s ‘Hysteria’ voted best bassline of all time

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Muse's 'Hysteria' has been voted as the track which features the best bassline of all time. In a new poll conducted by Musicradar.com, the bassline from the Devon trio's 2003 hit single came out on top, with Rush's 'YYZ' in second place. Queen held the next two places in the top ten, with 'Anoth...

Muse‘s ‘Hysteria’ has been voted as the track which features the best bassline of all time.

In a new poll conducted by Musicradar.com, the bassline from the Devon trio’s 2003 hit single came out on top, with Rush‘s ‘YYZ’ in second place.

Queen held the next two places in the top ten, with ‘Another One Bites The Dust’ and ‘Under Pressure at Number Three and Four respectively. Pink Floyd were at Number Five with ‘Money’, while Metallica, Michael Jackson, Yes, The Who and Tool made up the rest of the Top 10.

Muse are currently in the studio working on their sixth studio album, which is due to be released in late 2012.

The 10 best basslines of all time were named as follows:

1. Muse – ‘Hysteria’

2. Rush – ‘YYZ’

3. Queen – ‘Another One Bites The Dust’

4. Queen and David Bowie – ‘Under Pressure’

5. Pink Floyd – ‘Money’

6. Metallica – ‘Orion’

7. Michael Jackson – ‘Billie Jean’

8. Yes – ‘Roundabout’

9. The Who – ‘My Generation’

10. Tool – ‘Schism’

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 Amy Winehouse album set for release in December

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Amy Winehouse will release a new, posthumous studio album later this year. The album, which is titled 'Amy Winehouse Lioness: Hidden Treasures', will be released on December 5 and has been put together by producers Mark Ronson and Salaam Remi using tracks that the singer left unfinished when she p...

Amy Winehouse will release a new, posthumous studio album later this year.

The album, which is titled ‘Amy Winehouse Lioness: Hidden Treasures’, will be released on December 5 and has been put together by producers Mark Ronson and Salaam Remi using tracks that the singer left unfinished when she passed away earlier this year.

‘Amy Winehouse Lioness: Hidden Treasures’ features 12 tracks, including covers of The Shirelles‘ ‘Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow’, Donny Hathaway‘s ‘A Song For You’ and Ruby & The Romantics‘ ‘Our Day Will Come’.

The album will also feature alternative versions of Winehouse‘s previously released material, including a demo version of ‘Wake Up Alone and slowed down versions of ‘Tears Dry On Their Own’ and ‘Valerie’. It also includes ‘Body & Soul’, her duet with Tony Bennett which was released earlier this year.

The record also includes a number of previously unreleased tracks. Among them are ‘Halftime’ and ‘The Girl From Ipanema’ – which were recorded during her sessions for debut album ‘Frank’ – and ‘Like Smoke’, which sees the singer duetting with Nas. Another new song, ‘Between The Cheats’, is thought to chronicle her troubled marriage with ex-husband Blake Fielder-Civil.

£1 from each copy of the album that is sold will be donated to the Amy Winehouse Foundation, the charity set up in the singer’s honour.

The tracklisting for ‘Amy Winehouse Lioness: Hidden Treasures’ is as follows:

‘Our Day Will Come’

‘Between The Cheats’

‘Tears Dry’

‘Wake Up Alone’

‘Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow’

‘Valerie’

‘Like Smoke’

‘The Girl From Ipanema’

‘Halftime’

‘Best Friends’

‘Body & Soul’

‘A Song For You’

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.

CONTAGION

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Directed by Steven Soderbergh Starring Marion Cotillard, Matt Damon, Laurence Fishburne In Contagion, Steven Soderbergh applies his intelligent, steely touch to the medical disaster movie. A multi-stranded ensemble piece – imagine Traffic with microbes – Contagion traces the outbreak of a glo...

Directed by Steven Soderbergh

Starring Marion Cotillard, Matt Damon, Laurence Fishburne

In Contagion, Steven Soderbergh applies his intelligent, steely touch to the medical disaster movie.

A multi-stranded ensemble piece – imagine Traffic with microbes – Contagion traces the outbreak of a global pandemic.

A decidedly peaky-looking Gwyneth Paltrow plays Patient Zero, no sooner home from the East than she’s dead on a dissecting slab.

mong the medics and bureaucrats trying to contain the situation are Kate Winslet, Jennifer Ehle and a scene-stealing Elliott Gould.

The weakest links are Jude Law’s conspiracy-theorist blogger, whose Antipodean accent could set off allergic reactions, and the scenes of panic and looting – so cursory that you wish Soderbergh had been able to develop his themes at mini-series length.

Still Scott Z Burns’ shrewd script makes pointed parallels between biological viruses and (mis)information as transmitted online.

Jonathan Romney

LOU REED & METALLICA – LULU

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“It’s maybe the best thing done by anyone, ever. It could create another planetary system. I’m not joking, and I’m not being egotistical.” Thus Lou Reed on his new album. It’s quite a big claim, especially as this is not only a collaboration with Metallica, but is also a set of songs based on the Lulu plays by the late 19th-century German playwright Frank Wedekind. You can almost hear the ringtones in the playground. Both Reed and Metallica have had a chequered 21st century, the former getting most career notice when Susan Boyle covered “Perfect Day” (Reed objected, then graciously gave his consent), the latter becoming the Spinal Tap of today after the often hilarious Some Kind Of Monster doc. Despite a decent showing at the Rock’n’Roll Hall of Fame, where Metallica backed Reed on “Sweet Jane” and “White Light/White Heat”, a collaboration on songs about an “anti-Eve” who becomes a willing victim of Jack The Ripper was hardly going to a) bring Reed new fans and b) entice the notoriously open-minded and liberal heavy metal community. Lulu turns out to be, if not the best thing Lou Reed or Metallica have ever done, then more than pretty good. Everything on this immense album is intense, exciting, loud and generally all three. Metallica don’t so much sweep away Lou Reed’s musical cobwebs as fire nuclear warheads at them, while Reed adds a lyrical intensity and visceral poetry that makes everything bar the most Norwegian of metal sound weedy. What you don’t get is a rock band trying to play Velvet Underground songs; what you do get is a very big and horrible noise with lyrics and vocals that completely match. Reed has always tried to bring the ideas and form of the novel to rock; admittedly, by “novel” he tends not to mean Dan Brown or even Graham Greene, but here his obsession with the spunk and shit of life works. “I would cut my legs and tits off/When I think of Boris Karloff and Kinski” he declares on the opening track, “Brandenburg Gate”, while James Hetfield roars out the phrase “Small town girl!” like a burning Aslan, and they pretty much take it from there. On “Pumping Blood”, a guitar cuts through the storm and Reed sings, “I swallow your sharpest cutter like a coloured man’s dick,” Over the relentless industrial laundry riff of “Mistress Dread”, he sings, “I beg you to degrade me/Is there waste I could eat?” It’s bleak, in the way that being pulled in half by tanks during a firestorm tends to be bleak. Lulu is a record that stomps onwards and downwards. Eleven-and-a-half minutes of “Cheat On Me”, eight-and-a-half of “Frustration” (“I want you as my wife/Spermless as a girl”, sings Reed over a classic Metallica riff), and, as we pass from “Little Dog”’s bitterness (“A puny body and a tiny dick/A little dog can make you sick”) and “Dragon”’s 11 minutes of blind contempt (there’s a reference to “a Kotex jukebox” and the “red star of idiocy”), we come to the big one. “Junior Dad” has been performed by Lou Reed with Laurie Anderson and John Zorn. Live, it was more of a drone, a few emotional and soul-wrenching lyrics about a father. With Metallica, unsurprisingly, it’s different. After cellos and the sound of Reed humming, the most extraordinary thing happens; a lovely New Order bass riff comes in, accompanied by a harmonium. It’s gorgeous, melancholy and recalls my two favourite Lou Reed tracks, “Street Hassle” and Songs For Drella’s “A Dream”, all in 20 extraordinary minutes. Reed’s lyrics – “Pull me up/ Would you be my lord and saviour?” – are hard to pin down but effective. “Scalding, my dead father has the motor/And he’s driving towards an island of lost souls,” he continues, sounding like a David Lynch (or Laurie Anderson) character. And then “Hiccup/the dream is over/Get the coffee, turn the lights on/Say hello to junior dad/ The greatest disappointment…” By now, the listener is feeling fairly overwhelmed – Hetfield and Kirk Hammett, who’d recently lost their own fathers, were moved to tears – as the song moves into six-and-a-half glorious orchestral minutes which recall, if anything, Gavin Bryars’ The Sinking Of The Titanic. “Junior Dad” is breathtaking; and, while nothing else here is quite as astonishing, it’s a perfect ending to the most extraordinary, passionate and just plain brilliant record either participant has made for a long while. David Quantick Photo: Anton Corbijn

“It’s maybe the best thing done by anyone, ever. It could create another planetary system. I’m not joking, and I’m not being egotistical.” Thus Lou Reed on his new album. It’s quite a big claim, especially as this is not only a collaboration with Metallica, but is also a set of songs based on the Lulu plays by the late 19th-century German playwright Frank Wedekind. You can almost hear the ringtones in the playground.

Both Reed and Metallica have had a chequered 21st century, the former getting most career notice when Susan Boyle covered “Perfect Day” (Reed objected, then graciously gave his consent), the latter becoming the Spinal Tap of today after the often hilarious Some Kind Of Monster doc. Despite a decent showing at the Rock’n’Roll Hall of Fame, where Metallica backed Reed on “Sweet Jane” and “White Light/White Heat”, a collaboration on songs about an “anti-Eve” who becomes a willing victim of Jack The Ripper was hardly going to a) bring Reed new fans and b) entice the notoriously open-minded and liberal heavy metal community.

Lulu turns out to be, if not the best thing Lou Reed or Metallica have ever done, then more than pretty good. Everything on this immense album is intense, exciting, loud and generally all three. Metallica don’t so much sweep away Lou Reed’s musical cobwebs as fire nuclear warheads at them, while Reed adds a lyrical intensity and visceral poetry that makes everything bar the most Norwegian of metal sound weedy. What you don’t get is a rock band trying to play Velvet Underground songs; what you do get is a very big and horrible noise with lyrics and vocals that completely match.

Reed has always tried to bring the ideas and form of the novel to rock; admittedly, by “novel” he tends not to mean Dan Brown or even Graham Greene, but here his obsession with the spunk and shit of life works. “I would cut my legs and tits off/When I think of Boris Karloff and Kinski” he declares on the opening track, “Brandenburg Gate”, while James Hetfield roars out the phrase “Small town girl!” like a burning Aslan, and they pretty much take it from there. On “Pumping Blood”, a guitar cuts through the storm and Reed sings, “I swallow your sharpest cutter like a coloured man’s dick,” Over the relentless industrial laundry riff of “Mistress Dread”, he sings, “I beg you to degrade me/Is there waste I could eat?” It’s bleak, in the way that being pulled in half by tanks during a firestorm tends to be bleak.

Lulu is a record that stomps onwards and downwards. Eleven-and-a-half minutes of “Cheat On Me”, eight-and-a-half of “Frustration” (“I want you as my wife/Spermless as a girl”, sings Reed over a classic Metallica riff), and, as we pass from “Little Dog”’s bitterness (“A puny body and a tiny dick/A little dog can make you sick”) and “Dragon”’s 11 minutes of blind contempt (there’s a reference to “a Kotex jukebox” and the “red star of idiocy”), we come to the big one.

“Junior Dad” has been performed by Lou Reed with Laurie Anderson and John Zorn. Live, it was more of a drone, a few emotional and soul-wrenching lyrics about a father. With Metallica, unsurprisingly, it’s different. After cellos and the sound of Reed humming, the most extraordinary thing happens; a lovely New Order bass riff comes in, accompanied by a harmonium. It’s gorgeous, melancholy and recalls my two favourite Lou Reed tracks, “Street Hassle” and Songs For Drella’s “A Dream”, all in 20 extraordinary minutes. Reed’s lyrics – “Pull me up/ Would you be my lord and saviour?” – are hard to pin down but effective. “Scalding, my dead father has the motor/And he’s driving towards an island of lost souls,” he continues, sounding like a David Lynch (or Laurie Anderson) character. And then “Hiccup/the dream is over/Get the coffee, turn the lights on/Say hello to junior dad/ The greatest disappointment…” By now, the listener is feeling fairly overwhelmed – Hetfield and Kirk Hammett, who’d recently lost their own fathers, were moved to tears – as the song moves into six-and-a-half glorious orchestral minutes which recall, if anything, Gavin Bryars’ The Sinking Of The Titanic.

“Junior Dad” is breathtaking; and, while nothing else here is quite as astonishing, it’s a perfect ending to the most extraordinary, passionate and just plain brilliant record either participant has made for a long while.

David Quantick

Photo: Anton Corbijn

THE BEACH BOYS – THE SMILE SESSIONS

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So here it is: such stuff as dreams and bootlegs are made on. Brian Wilson’s unfinished symphony was in production at the same time as Disney’s The Jungle Book. It finally emerges, with a little CG assistance, in the same year as Pirates Of The Caribbean: On Stranger Tides. Preposterously late, The Smile Sessions fits into no present-day category, context or franchise. How could it? Wilson’s carnivalesque music and Van Dyke Parks’ flabbergasting libretto share a sophisticated naïveté, a corny profundity, unrecognisable in the world today. Greet the morning, sunny side up (“I’m In Great Shape”), rustle up some breakfast (“eggs and grits and lickety-split”), and sally forth, hat tilted at a carefree angle. This isn’t the hip 1966 humour of Lenny Bruce; it’s the broad, big-boned comedy of Oliver Hardy. Laughter breaks out in a cantina. A red-faced man throws away a candy bar and eats the wrapper. A swanee whistle – the whoopee cushion of musical instruments – romps goofily alongside fruity clarinets and marimbas. Smile was envisaged as an LP that would make the population grin; but it was also an odyssey on a vast scale – a journey both coast-to-coast and backwards in time – so you might meet a widower talking proudly of his kids (“head to toe, healthy wealthy and wise”) or a family of 19th century Midwesterners bemused by the railroad (“Who ran the iron horse?”) cutting through their meadows. Wilson’s genius was that he could turn the mood from burlesque to eeriness, and then back, without undermining his concept. A key passage begins with a baroque ballad for harpsichord (“Wonderful”) and ends in some of rock’s most aristocratic wordplay (“Surf’s Up”) with vocal harmonies so resplendent that ships should be named after them. But phantoms live here. Wilson’s piano chords (“Look”) are peculiar, disturbed by their own shadows. A key metaphor (“the child is father of the man”) recurs. Inside the belly of Smile, in the heart-land of America, the humour has gone awry. The 24-year-old Wilson was unable to complete Smile, and at 69 he’s unlikely to be much help in an editorial capacity. Mark Linett and Alan Boyd, two experienced Beach Boys producers and archivists, deserve serious credit for The Smile Sessions. They’ve assembled a plausible, honourable, 19-track, monaural Smile, tracing an arc from “Our Prayer” to “Good Vibrations”, via “Cabin Essence” and “The Elements: Fire (Mrs. O’Leary’s Cow)”, deviating only slightly from the roadmap of the acclaimed Brian Wilson Presents Smile (2004). Picking and choosing from the original session masters, Linett and Boyd’s 49-minute ‘approximation’ (their word) of the cancelled 1967 album dominates all five formats of The Smile Sessions – 1CD, 2CD, 5CD deluxe box set, vinyl and download. The five CDs in the deluxe box, like the four in The Pet Sounds Sessions (1997), take a forensic look at the music’s inner workings. Arranged chronologically for each song or section – for example, a track might be listed as “My Only Sunshine: Part 2 (Master Take With Vocal Overdubs) (2/10/67)” – these stereo discs are packed with isolated verses, choruses, inserts and overdubs, allowing us to eavesdrop on the intricate draughtsmanship of Wilson’s creation; virtually every bar of it. On CD2, we watch “Heroes And Villains” advance episodically in structure between October 1966 and June 1967. It seems to mushroom in ambition before our eyes. On CD5, devoted entirely to “Good Vibrations”, we scrutinise the song’s mind-boggling architecture for 79 minutes. Do 24 versions of “Good Vibrations” become repetitive? Less than you’d think – you get used to Hal Blaine clicking his drumsticks each time the musicians stop and restart. “It feels like you’re way behind the whole thing,” Wilson admonishes the flutes. “Try to get that quarter-note feel as perfect as we can.” Partly because the Smile sessions ended so sadly with Wilson’s breakdown, the bittersweet moments tend to come when he’s marshalling his troops, sounding confident and focused. Then again sometimes he’s alone (“Surf’s Up 1967 Version”, CD1), or in smaller groups, shepherding them through “Wonderful” (CD3) or “Wind Chimes” (CD4). Progress can be slow. “Carl is having a big hang-up at home and says he’ll be late,” someone butts in. When Carl and the others are present, it’s illuminating to witness them honing their vocals. They struggle at first with “Our Prayer”, a fiendishly tough piece, false-starting like Spinal Tap at Elvis’ graveside. However, CD1 has an eight-minute montage of their vocals from various sessions, which could be bottled and sold as an amazing new psychoactive drug. Fans unwilling to pay £120 for The Smile Sessions (it includes a double vinyl LP, two 7” singles and a 60-page book) should consider the 2CD edition, featuring the mono Smile, eight bonus tracks and 63 minutes of highlights from the box (“Our Prayer”, “Heroes And Villains”, “My Only Sunshine”, “Cabin Essence”, “Surf’s Up”, “Vega-Tables”, “The Elements: Fire”, “Cool, Cool Water”, “Good Vibrations”). Retailing at £11, it’s a top-value, bang-for-buck, pragmatic alternative. Wilson, meanwhile, releases an album of Disney tunes this month. For him, clearly, the magic has never faded. David Cavanagh Photo © 2011 GuyWebster.com-Courtesy of Brian Wilson Archive

So here it is: such stuff as dreams and bootlegs are made on. Brian Wilson’s unfinished symphony was in production at the same time as Disney’s The Jungle Book. It finally emerges, with a little CG assistance, in the same year as Pirates Of The Caribbean: On Stranger Tides. Preposterously late, The Smile Sessions fits into no present-day category, context or franchise. How could it? Wilson’s carnivalesque music and Van Dyke Parks’ flabbergasting libretto share a sophisticated naïveté, a corny profundity, unrecognisable in the world today.

Greet the morning, sunny side up (“I’m In Great Shape”), rustle up some breakfast (“eggs and grits and lickety-split”), and sally forth, hat tilted at a carefree angle. This isn’t the hip 1966 humour of Lenny Bruce; it’s the broad, big-boned comedy of Oliver Hardy. Laughter breaks out in a cantina. A red-faced man throws away a candy bar and eats the wrapper. A swanee whistle – the whoopee cushion of musical instruments – romps goofily alongside fruity clarinets and marimbas. Smile was envisaged as an LP that would make the population grin; but it was also an odyssey on a vast scale – a journey both coast-to-coast and backwards in time – so you might meet a widower talking proudly of his kids (“head to toe, healthy wealthy and wise”) or a family of 19th century Midwesterners bemused by the railroad (“Who ran the iron horse?”) cutting through their meadows. Wilson’s genius was that he could turn the mood from burlesque to eeriness, and then back, without undermining his concept. A key passage begins with a baroque ballad for harpsichord (“Wonderful”) and ends in some of rock’s most aristocratic wordplay (“Surf’s Up”) with vocal harmonies so resplendent that ships should be named after them. But phantoms live here. Wilson’s piano chords (“Look”) are peculiar, disturbed by their own shadows. A key metaphor (“the child is father of the man”) recurs. Inside the belly of Smile, in the heart-land of America, the humour has gone awry.

The 24-year-old Wilson was unable to complete Smile, and at 69 he’s unlikely to be much help in an editorial capacity. Mark Linett and Alan Boyd, two experienced Beach Boys producers and archivists, deserve serious credit for The Smile Sessions. They’ve assembled a plausible, honourable, 19-track, monaural Smile, tracing an arc from “Our Prayer” to “Good Vibrations”, via “Cabin Essence” and “The Elements: Fire (Mrs. O’Leary’s Cow)”, deviating only slightly from the roadmap of the acclaimed Brian Wilson Presents Smile (2004). Picking and choosing from the original session masters, Linett and Boyd’s 49-minute ‘approximation’ (their word) of the cancelled 1967 album dominates all five formats of The Smile Sessions – 1CD, 2CD, 5CD deluxe box set, vinyl and download.

The five CDs in the deluxe box, like the four in The Pet Sounds Sessions (1997), take a forensic look at the music’s inner workings. Arranged chronologically for each song or section – for example, a track might be listed as “My Only Sunshine: Part 2 (Master Take With Vocal Overdubs) (2/10/67)” – these stereo discs are packed with isolated verses, choruses, inserts and overdubs, allowing us to eavesdrop on the intricate draughtsmanship of Wilson’s creation; virtually every bar of it. On CD2, we watch “Heroes And Villains” advance episodically in structure between October 1966 and June 1967. It seems to mushroom in ambition before our eyes. On CD5, devoted entirely to “Good Vibrations”, we scrutinise the song’s mind-boggling architecture for 79 minutes. Do 24 versions of “Good Vibrations” become repetitive? Less than you’d think – you get used to Hal Blaine clicking his drumsticks each time the musicians stop and restart. “It feels like you’re way behind the whole thing,” Wilson admonishes the flutes. “Try to get that quarter-note feel as perfect as we can.” Partly because the Smile sessions ended so sadly with Wilson’s breakdown, the bittersweet moments tend to come when he’s marshalling his troops, sounding confident and focused. Then again sometimes he’s alone (“Surf’s Up 1967 Version”, CD1), or in smaller groups, shepherding them through “Wonderful” (CD3) or “Wind Chimes” (CD4). Progress can be slow. “Carl is having a big hang-up at home and says he’ll be late,” someone butts in.

When Carl and the others are present, it’s illuminating to witness them honing their vocals. They struggle at first with “Our Prayer”, a fiendishly tough piece, false-starting like Spinal Tap at Elvis’ graveside. However, CD1 has an eight-minute montage of their vocals from various sessions, which could be bottled and sold as an amazing new psychoactive drug. Fans unwilling to pay £120 for The Smile Sessions (it includes a double vinyl LP, two 7” singles and a 60-page book) should consider the 2CD edition, featuring the mono Smile, eight bonus tracks and 63 minutes of highlights from the box (“Our Prayer”, “Heroes And Villains”, “My Only Sunshine”, “Cabin Essence”, “Surf’s Up”, “Vega-Tables”, “The Elements: Fire”, “Cool, Cool Water”, “Good Vibrations”). Retailing at £11, it’s a top-value, bang-for-buck, pragmatic alternative. Wilson, meanwhile, releases an album of Disney tunes this month. For him, clearly, the magic has never faded.

David Cavanagh

Photo © 2011 GuyWebster.com-Courtesy of Brian Wilson Archive

U2’s Bono: ‘We have to make hits if we are to survive’

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U2 frontman Bono has questioned the band's future again, declaring that if the four-piece are to "survive" they need to come back with an album of hits. The singer admitted they have struggled to produce hit singles over the last few years especially on their last LP 'No Line On The Horizon' with t...

U2 frontman Bono has questioned the band’s future again, declaring that if the four-piece are to “survive” they need to come back with an album of hits.

The singer admitted they have struggled to produce hit singles over the last few years especially on their last LP ‘No Line On The Horizon’ with the first single off the record ‘Get On Your Boots’ failing to chart in the Top 10 while the remaining singles didn’t even get into the Top 20.

Bono made the admission as the band prepare to re-issue their 1991 seminal album ‘Achtung Baby’, which spawned 1991 UK singles chart-topper ‘The Fly’, on Monday (October 31).

He told The Sun: “We’ve been on the verge of irrelevance for the last 20 years, dodged, ducked, dived, made some great work, I hope, along the way – and the occasional faux pas.

“But this moment now, for me feels like really close to the edge of relevance. We can be successful and we can play the big music and the big places. Whether we can play music for small speakers of the radio or clubs or where people are living right now, remains to be seen, we have to go to that place again if we are to survive.”

The singer recently said he would be happy if U2 wrapped up their career now. He added that if the four-piece do return it will be some time before they resurface.

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.

Damon Albarn, Flea and Tony Allen name new band Rocketjuice And The Moon

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Damon Albarn has named his new band with Flea and Tony Allen Rocketjuice And The Moon. The Blur and Gorillaz man is due to make his live debut with the Red Hot Chili Peppers man and The Good, The Bad And The Queen cohort on Saturday (October 29) at the Barbican in London. The performance is takin...

Damon Albarn has named his new band with Flea and Tony Allen Rocketjuice And The Moon.

The Blur and Gorillaz man is due to make his live debut with the Red Hot Chili Peppers man and The Good, The Bad And The Queen cohort on Saturday (October 29) at the Barbican in London.

The performance is taking place as part of the Another Honest Jon’s Chop Up! event, which will also see the likes of Malian singer Fatoumata Diawara, Hypnotic Brass Ensemble and Detroit techno man Theo Parrish appear.

Rocketjuice And The Moon have also confirmed their debut album, which is due to be released in the new year, will be self-titled.

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

Along with the Rocketjuice And The Moon date, Albarn is also playing two gigs with The Good, The Bad And The Queen at the capital’s Coronet venue on November 10, their first live show since 2008.

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.

REM’s Mike Mills says Michael Stipe is unlikely to record a solo album

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REM bassist Mike Mills has revealed that he doesn't expect former frontman Michael Stipe to release any solo material in the near future. The band announced their official split last month after 31 years together. The guitarist said that he believes that Stipe is more likely to work with art and ph...

REM bassist Mike Mills has revealed that he doesn’t expect former frontman Michael Stipe to release any solo material in the near future.

The band announced their official split last month after 31 years together. The guitarist said that he believes that Stipe is more likely to work with art and photography instead of making music in the next chapter of his career.

Asked about the future plans of both his bandmates, he told Uncut: “Peter [Buck] enjoys collaborating with people and I see him doing a lot more of that. I think Michael [Stipe] wants to work with visual media, sculpture and photography”.

Mills recently stated that REM are unlikely to ever share a stage together again in the future, but that he himself would most likely make a solo record.

He added: “I’m going to let the dust settle. I’ll probably do a solo record at some point. There are a lot of musicians I want to work with and I see that happening soon.”

The band are due to release a post-split hits compilation next month. They put the finishing touches to ‘Part Lies, Part Heart, Part Truth, Part Garbage: 1982 – 2011’ before they called it a day after 31 years in September.

The collection will include three new tracks recorded after the release of recent album ‘Collapse Into Now’, including their final single ‘We All Go Back To Where We Belong’.

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.

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 actually 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 album’s front 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 Kate 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 and 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 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 that are given a coherence and momentum by Bush’s piano lines, gracefully reminiscent of Keith Jarrett. From austere and 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, amidst 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 John’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”, “Zhivagodamarbletash” – 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.

Even in the hinterlands of myth, the notion of sex with snowmen seems rather a neglected subject.

Review – The Ides Of March

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George Clooney’s fourth film as director takes place across a handful of tense days during a primary election in Ohio, where governor Mike Morris (Clooney) is a hair’s-breadth away from securing the Democratic party nomination to stand for office... THE IDES OF MARCH **** DIRECTED BY George Clooney STARRING George Clooney, Ryan Gosling, Phillip Seymour Hoffman OPENS OCTOBER 28 // CERT 15 // 100 MINS George Clooney’s fourth film as director takes place across a handful of tense days during a primary election in Ohio, where governor Mike Morris (Clooney) is a hair’s-breadth away from securing the Democratic party nomination to stand for office. Morris works the front of house with smooth, statesmanly charm; he’s a confident TV performer, a glad hander of voters, the consummate master of the sound bite. It’s easy to see Clooney playing up to his own reputation as a liberal activist: the veteran of G8 summits, anti-war marches and a vocal campaigner against the Darfur conflict. Clooney’s often said he’ll never run for President – “Drank too much, did too many drugs,” he once told Uncut – so this, perhaps, is the closest we’ll get to seeing him take a run at the White House. You can see echoes here of another film about politicians, starring another poster boy for the liberal left: Robert Redford’s The Candidate. As good as Morris is at pressing flesh, this is a really backroom yarn, set in sweaty campaign offices and airless hotel suites, and much of the film’s drama coming from the hurly burly of spin, compromises and dark arts deployed to secure Morris’ victory. The mood is one of highly-caffeinated paranoia. Everyone is locked into what news the next round of opinion polls will bring; each live TV debate carries an endless capacity for error, embarrassment and fuck-up. It’s here Clooney – with his director’s cap on – introduces us to Morris’ team, and particularly his “brain’s trust”, campaign manager Paul Zara (Philip Seymour Hoffman) the veteran of six previous primaries, and up-and-coming press secretary Stephen Myers (Ryan Gosling). On the other side, there’s Tom Duffy (Paul Giamatti), a rival campaign manager. There’s some great macho posturing between Zara and Duffy, like two crusty old rhinos locking horns down at the waterhole. The Ides Of March is adapted from a stage play, Farragut North, by Beau Willimon, based on his experiences working as an intern on Democrat Howard Dean’s 2004 primary campaign. In many respects, what we see on screen is hardly breaking news: politics is a mucky business with plenty of “negative shit” thrown around. Really, who knew? Stephen leaks online a rumour about a rival candidate having shares in a Liberian diamond mine: “I don’t care if it’s true,” he says, “I just want to hear him deny it.” Clooney has explored similar ideas before with K Street (2003) – a topical satire set among Washington’s lobbyists and politicians that he co-produced for HBO with Steven Soderbergh. While The Ides Of March at first resembles K Street’s behind-the-scenes shenanigans, the film detours into territory more familiar from Clooney’s cherished political thrillers from the 1960s and Seventies. The story turns on a late night phone call Stephen intercepts that threatens to thrown Morris’ campaign out of whack. It only gets worse, and before long Stephen’s got a corpse on his hands. Stephen appears here as a distant cousin to the alienated heroes who features in those thrillers Clooney loves. “This is the big league,” he’s told. “When you fuck up, you lose the right to play.” It’s Gosling’s second great performance in as many months, after his lead role in Drive. Gosling is a composed, self-contained actor, which stood him in good stead for playing a character as impassive as the Driver. It works well here, too, as Gosling internalises the growing conflict between Stephen’s ambitions and his ideological crisis. It’s right and proper to commend the high-end cast Clooney’s assembled here – everyone gets at least one meaty scene to play. But this is Gosling’s moment. It feels like we’re watching an actor at a tipping point in his career, about to make the jump from talked-about cult favourite (his best work is still in smaller films like Drive, Half Nelson and Blue Valentine) to talked-about movie star. It’s an exciting time.

George Clooney’s fourth film as director takes place across a handful of tense days during a primary election in Ohio, where governor Mike Morris (Clooney) is a hair’s-breadth away from securing the Democratic party nomination to stand for office…

December 2011

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15 great tracks by artists who influenced Waits or were inspired by him, including Captain Beefheart, Beirut, Howlin' Wolf, Harry Partch, Johnny Dowd, Frank Sinatra and The Low Anthem I was going to write something to mark the sad passing of Bert Jansch, in addition to John Robinson's fine tribute ...

15 great tracks by artists who influenced Waits or were inspired by him, including Captain Beefheart, Beirut, Howlin’ Wolf, Harry Partch, Johnny Dowd, Frank Sinatra and The Low Anthem

I was going to write something to mark the sad passing of Bert Jansch, in addition to John Robinson’s fine tribute in this month’s issue. But after reading Roy Harper’s fond farewell to his old friend on royharper.com, I asked Roy if I could reprint it here, which he was happy for me to do. This is some of what Roy wrote:

“Bert Jansch and I arrived at the same club in London within three months of each other in 1965. We’d both had very separate journeys to get there, we knew nothing of each other, but we arrived at Les Cousins in Greek St, Soho, for the same reason. We were both inspired to play music to people. I was introduced to the club by Peter Bellamy of The Young Tradition.

“Within a week I realised that this was going to be my new home. There was lots to take in. There were so many fantastic young musicians. I can remember being absolutely blown away by a young American called Danny Kalb in the first week. Going home and thinking that as far as the blues was concerned, I was miles behind where I could have been. I’d been in my own vacuum, it was time to get involved.

“The young players were all very gifted but very different people. It was an amazing place to be. Among the many I saw in that first week were John Renbourn, Alexis Korner, Paul Simon and Alex Campbell, oh, and yes, someone called Bert Jansch. Bert who? How d’you spell that then? At first I didn’t know what to think about Bert except that, in all probability, from a woman’s point of view, he was incredibly attractive. He was very softly spoken and obviously very shy

“For a young man of 20, his songs were astounding. Things like ‘Needle Of Death’, ‘Running From Home’ and ‘Strolling Down The Highway’, as well as his own version of Davy Graham’s famous ‘Anji’ were truly magic pieces of their age. He was a humble powerhouse whose honesty was so obviously unquestionable.

“Bert was always such a very private man. Getting him to respond was sometimes an undertaking. It was often a struggle for him to speak, but then again, his songs spoke for him. They were often among the most eloquent pieces of musical folk art imaginable. Plaintive, intricate and beckoning, with seemingly an ancient root reaching back across long centuries to some deeply pure and mysterious earth knowledge.

“As a presence, and particularly as a young man, his effect on most of his friends was beyond description… He gave love in such a gentle way that it was impossible not to immediately identify with that and be forever enraptured by one so gifted in that respect. Bert wrote his songs, and treated his friends from the heart, and his friends will never forget him. Ever.”

Shane Meadows to film documentary of The Stone Roses’ reunion tour

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British film director Shane Meadows will reportedly oversee a film of The Stone Roses' reunion tour next year. Meadows, whose work includes the films This Is England and Dead Man's Shoes, was present at the band's press conference last week (October 18) which saw them confirm that they will reunite for live shows in 2012. The Sun is reporting that Meadows will follow the band as they prepare to play their three homecoming shows at Manchester's Heaton Park, which will take place on June 29, June 30 and July 1 next year. According to reports, The Stone Roses will give official confirmation that they want Meadows to film the documentary in the next five weeks. The band's bassist Mani claimed that he had always believed that the band's reformation would be a success and revealed that "normal service had been resumed quickly" after the Madchester legends' reunion announcement earlier this month. Singer Ian Brown added that he was "currently flying at an altitude of 50,000 feet", while guitarist John Squire expressed his delight at the reunion by revealing: "I just hope this erection has subsided a bit by next June." The Stone Roses are rumoured to be following their Heaton Park gigs with festival dates at V Festival and T In The Park next year. 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.

British film director Shane Meadows will reportedly oversee a film of The Stone Roses‘ reunion tour next year.

Meadows, whose work includes the films This Is England and Dead Man’s Shoes, was present at the band’s press conference last week (October 18) which saw them confirm that they will reunite for live shows in 2012.

The Sun is reporting that Meadows will follow the band as they prepare to play their three homecoming shows at Manchester’s Heaton Park, which will take place on June 29, June 30 and July 1 next year.

According to reports, The Stone Roses will give official confirmation that they want Meadows to film the documentary in the next five weeks.

The band’s bassist Mani claimed that he had always believed that the band’s reformation would be a success and revealed that “normal service had been resumed quickly” after the Madchester legends’ reunion announcement earlier this month.

Singer Ian Brown added that he was “currently flying at an altitude of 50,000 feet”, while guitarist John Squire expressed his delight at the reunion by revealing: “I just hope this erection has subsided a bit by next June.”

The Stone Roses are rumoured to be following their Heaton Park gigs with festival dates at V Festival and T In The Park next year.

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.

Queen announce plans for new album of lost demos featuring Freddie Mercury

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Queen have announced plans for a new album of old demos featuring their late singer Freddie Mercury. Guitarist Brian May has confirmed that he is going through the band's old material with drummer Roger Taylor to compile a selection of unreleased tracks for a forthcoming LP. The axeman also said t...

Queen have announced plans for a new album of old demos featuring their late singer Freddie Mercury.

Guitarist Brian May has confirmed that he is going through the band’s old material with drummer Roger Taylor to compile a selection of unreleased tracks for a forthcoming LP.

The axeman also said the pair are working on the follow-up to the long-running West End musical ‘We Will Rock You’, which they wrote with comedian Ben Elton.

May told The Daily Star: “As well as seeing what we can unearth, we want to do a new musical to follow ‘We Will Rock You’. The songs are there, it’s just a question of finding time to get the right production.”

The last album the band made with Mercury while he was alive was their 1991 LP ‘Innuendo’. He died later that year. May recently admitted that he contemplated taking his own life shortly after the singer’s death. The guitarist, who also lost his father around the same time that Mercury died, said he felt like he “didn’t want to live” in the months following the deaths.

Lady Gaga was recently in talks to tour with the surviving members of the band as their singer following the departure of Paul Rodgers in 2009.

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