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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.

Johnny Marr: ‘John Lewis using ‘Please Please…’ doesn’t sully Smiths’ memory’

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Johnny Marr has insisted that allowing John Lewis to use The Smiths' 'Please Please Please Let Me Get What I Want' in an advert hasn't tarnished the track. The guitarist took to Twitter to respond to fans who had expressed surprise and disappointment that a cover of song had featured in the departm...

Johnny Marr has insisted that allowing John Lewis to use The Smiths‘Please Please Please Let Me Get What I Want’ in an advert hasn’t tarnished the track.

The guitarist took to Twitter to respond to fans who had expressed surprise and disappointment that a cover of song had featured in the department store’s recent Christmas advertisements by claiming that its legacy had not been “sullied”.

He said: “Writing ‘Please Please…’ one Friday in ’84 is one of the best memories of my life. This ad has not sullied that memory one bit.”

He then went on to criticise the fans who had been “bitching and moaning whilst, wait for it, watching X Factor” before linking to a YouTube video of former Black Flag frontman Henry Rollins, in which the punk singer dismisses the notion of using songs in advertisements as “selling out”.

Marr, who left The Cribs earlier this year, recently revealed that he had been discussing making new music with his former Smiths bandmate Andy Rourke.

He also claimed last month that Noel Gallagher owed him a fortune in rent, after he let the former Oasis chief borrow his flat in London during the ’90s.

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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 Lemonheads to release ‘Hotel Sessions’ album

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The Lemonheads are set to release a new album, 'Hotel Sessions' next year. The 14-track record, out on January 9, is made up of versions of classic Lemonheads tracks, including 'Into Your Arms', 'Down About It' and 'The Great Big No'. All the songs were recorded by Evan Dando in a hotel room in Bon...

The Lemonheads are set to release a new album, ‘Hotel Sessions’ next year.

The 14-track record, out on January 9, is made up of versions of classic Lemonheads tracks, including ‘Into Your Arms’, ‘Down About It’ and ‘The Great Big No’. All the songs were recorded by Evan Dando in a hotel room in Bondi Beach, Australia during the course of a Sunday night almost 20 years ago.

“I’ve always wanted to make an ‘Album’ for 53 dollars – Walkman 50, tape 3 bucks – Oh to record live to cassette, master it and put it out… I have finally done it!” said Dando of the recordings.

“I recorded this here biscuit in and around either December ’92, or Feb ’93. I remember it was a Sunday night in Bondi – the night the ‘car enthusiasts’ come out. I had just returned to Australia – my home away from home – from our first Japanese tour. Life was good.”

He continues: “This LP documents a lovely lull in the action. A Sunday night into morning, to collect myself and my songs. The songs that would be on our next album, some of these never made it, and the ‘Into Your Arms’ I did here is better than the one on the album (I like it anyway).”

“So sit back, snort some NoDoz and listen for the tunes, the sea, the tape hiss (ahhh), the cars, the birds, the trucks, and the killer motorcycle at the end of ‘Being Around’!”

The Lemonheads tour the UK later this month and during December, playing their classic 1992 album ‘It’s A Shame About Ray’ in full.

The ‘Hotel Sessions’ tracklisting is:

‘Big Gay Heart’

‘The Great Big No’

‘Paid To Smile’

‘It’s About Time’

‘Style’

‘I’ll Do It Anyway’

‘Rest Assured’

‘You Can Take It With You (prt.2)’

‘Down About It’

‘Into Your Arms’

‘Superhero’

‘And So The Story Goes’

‘Being Around’

‘You Can Take It With You (prt.1)’

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 Uncut Music Award 2011 Shortlist

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Just kicking off the Uncut Music Award 2011 blog with a reminder of our shortlist this year, as the day when our judges reveal the winner gets closer. Here's the shortlist: 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' 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 be published here in early December.

Just kicking off the Uncut Music Award 2011 blog with a reminder of our shortlist this year, as the day when our judges reveal the winner gets closer.

Courtney Love rants about Foo Fighters’ Dave Grohl – video

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Courtney Love has slammed Foo Fighters singer Dave Grohl in the aftermath of her onstage rant at Brazil's SWU festival last weekend (November 13) – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to watch. The Hole singer stormed off the stage at the Sao Paulo bash after a crowd member held up...

Courtney Love has slammed Foo Fighters singer Dave Grohl in the aftermath of her onstage rant at Brazil’s SWU festival last weekend (November 13) – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to watch.

The Hole singer stormed off the stage at the Sao Paulo bash after a crowd member held up a picture of her late husband Kurt Cobain during the gig, and only returned after her entourage convinced the crowd to chant: “The Foo Fighters are gay”.

She then made a thinly veiled dig at the former Nirvana drummer, telling the audience: “I don’t care what you listen to at home, but if a guy takes off money off my kid’s table, f**k him.”

In an interview recorded after the show, she continued to criticise Grohl for making money from the Nirvana name even though he “didn’t write one f***ing note” for the band.

“I wasn’t in Nirvana,” she said. “However, I do own Nirvana, with my daughter, and because of tax laws I have to give money to his sister, Kim Cobain, and [Kurt’s mother] Wendy Cobain.”

She then went on to add: “Dave makes $5 million a show, he doesn’t need the money – so why the fuck does he have a Nirvana Inc. credit card and I don’t? And last week, he bought an Aston Martin on it.”

The singer also claimed that Kim Cobain was homeless and lived under the same bridge Cobain mentioned in the track ‘Something In The Way’ from their 1991 album ‘Nevermind’, and also downplayed Grohl’s significance to Nirvana, adding: “He didn’t even write the drum riff for ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’. Kurt owns 100% of that publishing.”

She concluded by saying: “Forget me, I make tons of money – my daughter and Kim Cobain, Wendy Cobain and [Kurt’s half-sister] Brianne Cobain is what I care about.”

Hole are currently touring the world and recently pulled out of a planned stint on Australia’s Soundwave Festival after Courtney Love discovered that her band would be below Limp Bizkit on the bill.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2IPNIeLm28c

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.

Gorillaz set to record and release new track in February 2012

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Gorillaz have announced that they will be recording a new track in February next year as part of the Converse shoe company's 'Three Artists. One Song' series. The series has recently featured brought together rapper Soulja Boy, Andrew WK and Matt And Kim to record a collaboration and also saw Grah...

Gorillaz have announced that they will be recording a new track in February next year as part of the Converse shoe company’s ‘Three Artists. One Song’ series.

The series has recently featured brought together rapper Soulja Boy, Andrew WK and Matt And Kim to record a collaboration and also saw Graham Coxon, Paloma Faith and ex-The Coral guitarist Bill Ryder-Jones collaborate to record a track together in 2010.

The track will come out to coincide with the release of a new collection of Converse shoes, which have been created in association with Gorillaz and feature a heel tab created by the band’s design guru Jamie Hewlett.

The band will also host a special club night next month. The night, which is under the name Gorillaz Sound System, will be held at London‘s 100 Club on December 1.

To find out more information, to view the range of shoes and for more details about the night, visit Converse.co.uk.

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 40, 2011

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Really taken with the Suzanne Ciani album this week. Lindstrøm only arrived today, so I need to listen properly. 1 Portishead - Chase The Tear (XL) 2 Leila – U&I (Warp) 3 The Lemonheads – Hotel Sessions (Hall Of Records) 4 Gonjasufi – Mu.zz.le (Warp 5 Craig Finn - Clear Heart Full Eyes (Fulltime Hobby) 6 New Riders Of The Purple Sage – Instant Armadillo Blues: Best Of 1971-1975 (Raven) 7 Keith Kenniff – Branches (Village Green) 8 Suzanne Ciani – Lixiviation (Finders Keepers) 9 Lindstrøm – Six Cups Of Rebel (Smalltown Supersound) 10 Group Inerane – Guitars From Agadez Volume Three (Sublime Frequencies)

Really taken with the Suzanne Ciani album this week. Lindstrøm only arrived today, so I need to listen properly.

Josh T Pearson set to release Christmas EP

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Josh T Pearson is set to release a festive EP called 'Josh T Pearson's Rough Trade Christmas Bonus'. The seasonal five-track offering will be available from November 21 through Rough Trade Shops and features a selection of traditional Christmas carols. The tracks were recorded at Liam Watson's Toer...

Josh T Pearson is set to release a festive EP called ‘Josh T Pearson’s Rough Trade Christmas Bonus’.

The seasonal five-track offering will be available from November 21 through Rough Trade Shops and features a selection of traditional Christmas carols. The tracks were recorded at Liam Watson‘s Toerag Studios in Homerton, east London last month.

Josh T Pearson’s ‘Last Of The Country Gentlemen’, released earlier this year, has been named Rough Trade’s Album of the Year 2011 by the independent record store and label. Pearson will be appearing at London Rough Trade East on December 1 for a Q&A and signing session at the opening of an exhibition of pictures taken of him by photographer Steve Gullick over the past 10 years.

The former Lift to Experience man heads out on the road for a full UK tour later this month, ending up on November 26 at London Barbican for a special event entitled ‘An Evening with Josh T Pearson and Guests’.

Josh T Pearson plays:

Nottingham Glee Club (September 21)

Norwich Arts Centre (22)

Cambridge Junction 2 (24)

Leeds Brudenell Social Club (26)

Gateshead The Sage (27)

Birmingham Glee Club (28)

Manchester Royal Northern College of Music (November 21)

Glasgow Oran Mor (22)

Leicester The Musician (23)

Cardiff The Globe (24)

Exeter Phoenix (25)

London Barbican (26)

To check the availability of [url=http://www.seetickets.com/see/event.asp?artist=Josh+t.+pearson&filler1=see&filler3=id1nmestory]Josh T. Pearson 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.

Josh Homme set to guest on new Mark Lanegan Band album

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Mark Lanegan is set to release his first album under the Mark Lanegan Band name since 2004’s ‘Bubblegum’. The Isobel Campbell collaborator and Screaming Trees vocalist will release ‘Blues Funeral’ on February 6, 2012 through 4AD. The album was recorded in Hollywood by Queens of the St...

Mark Lanegan is set to release his first album under the Mark Lanegan Band name since 2004’s ‘Bubblegum’.

The Isobel Campbell collaborator and Screaming Trees vocalist will release ‘Blues Funeral’ on February 6, 2012 through 4AD.

The album was recorded in Hollywood by Queens of the Stone Age collaborator Alain Johannes at his 11AD Studio. Queens of the Stone Age frontman Josh Homme, Greg Dulli, Jack Irons and Johannes all appear on the album.

Lanegan and Homme have both remixed a Dead Weather track for Jack White‘s latest Third Man Records release.

The tenth package from White’s subscription series ‘The Vault’ includes a double A-side 7 inch of Beck remixing ‘The Hardest Button To Button’ from 2003 White Stripes album ‘Elephant’ while on the flip side, Lanegan and Homme have teamed up to remix The Dead Weather‘s ‘Hang You From The Heavens’. For more information go to Thirdmanrecords.com.

Mark Lanegan Band will be touring Europe next year, playing eight UK and Ireland shows.

Mark Lanegan Band will play:

O2 Academy Bristol (March 4)

Manchester Academy 2 (5)

Dublin Academy (7)

Belfast Mandela Hall (8)

Glasgow O2 ABC (9)

Leeds Cockpit (10)

Birmingham HMV Library (12)

London O2 Shepherds Bush Empire (13)

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Tory MP launches campaign to secure knighthood for Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page

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A Conservative MP has launched a campaign to secure a knighthood for Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page. Louise Mensch, who became MP for Corby in Northamptonshire at the 2010 general election and who is married to Peter Mensch, manager of the likes of Metallica, Muse and Snow Patrol, has revealed that she has suggested Page be knighted in the next Honours list. Mensch tweeted that she had proposed the Led Zeppelin man for a knighthood, writing on Twitter.com/LouiseMensch: "I've proposed Jimmy Page. Waiting to see if that finds favour with Honours Directorate. I hope so." The MP also denied that her husband, who used to managed Page, had any involvement in her suggesting the guitarist, adding: "Clearly there is nobody more worthy of a knighthood and I am glad to say I have gathered support from every major record label in the UK." Page had previously been awarded an OBE in 2005 for his charity work helping street children in Brazil. 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 Conservative MP has launched a campaign to secure a knighthood for Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page.

Louise Mensch, who became MP for Corby in Northamptonshire at the 2010 general election and who is married to Peter Mensch, manager of the likes of Metallica, Muse and Snow Patrol, has revealed that she has suggested Page be knighted in the next Honours list.

Mensch tweeted that she had proposed the Led Zeppelin man for a knighthood, writing on Twitter.com/LouiseMensch: “I’ve proposed Jimmy Page. Waiting to see if that finds favour with Honours Directorate. I hope so.”

The MP also denied that her husband, who used to managed Page, had any involvement in her suggesting the guitarist, adding: “Clearly there is nobody more worthy of a knighthood and I am glad to say I have gathered support from every major record label in the UK.”

Page had previously been awarded an OBE in 2005 for his charity work helping street children in Brazil.

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The Clash’s Paul Simonon reveals he was arrested and jailed in Greenland

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Paul Simonon, former bassist with The Clash and current member of The Good, The Bad & The Queen, has revealed that he was arrested and jailed in June this year by police in Greenland. Simonon was locked up after he joined 17 other Greenpeace activists in storming an oil rig as part of an ongoi...

Paul Simonon, former bassist with The Clash and current member of The Good, The Bad & The Queen, has revealed that he was arrested and jailed in June this year by police in Greenland.

Simonon was locked up after he joined 17 other Greenpeace activists in storming an oil rig as part of an ongoing campaign to raise awareness about oil drilling and its consequences. You can watch a video of Simonon talking about his experiences by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

The bassist, under an assumed identity, had previously spent a number of weeks working as an assistant cook on the Greenpeace ship Esperanza before he agreed to join the raid.

During the raid, he and the other activists boarded the Cairn oil rig and demanded to be given details of the rig’s oil spill response plan, which they had refused to make public. When the rig’s managers refused, the protesters said they would not leave, at which point the police were called and Simonon and the other activists were arrested and locked up. They were released later in the summer.

Simonon performed as part of The Good, The Bad & The Queen last Thursday (November 10) in the first gig aboard Greenpeace boat The Rainbow Warrior in the middle of the Thames. The show was the band’s first for three years.

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Black Sabbath set to earn over £100 million from 2012 reunion tour

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Black Sabbath are set to earn £100 million from their 2012 reunion tour, according to reports yesterday (November 13). The heavy metal legends, who consist of Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward, announced that they had reunited on Friday (November 11) at a Los Angeles press co...

Black Sabbath are set to earn £100 million from their 2012 reunion tour, according to reports yesterday (November 13).

The heavy metal legends, who consist of Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward, announced that they had reunited on Friday (November 11) at a Los Angeles press conference and are set to headline next summer’s Download Festival on June 10.

According to The People, the band’s planned world tour and festival appearances will earn them in excess of £100 million, meaning each member of the band could take home up to £25 million each.

The band revealed on Friday that they have written “seven or eight” new songs for the album, which they plan to release in autumn 2012 after their Download show and before they commence the tour.

Black Sabbath‘s new album, which will be their first with original frontman Ozzy Osbourne for 33 years, will be produced by Rick Rubin. Bassist Geezer Butler has said that the band’s new songs are “back to the old Sabbath style and sound. The stuff that Tony’s [Iommi – Guitarist] been playing is absolutely brilliant”.

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Queen set to release Freddie Mercury and Michael Jackson duets in 2012

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Queen are set to release a series of duets that their former frontman Freddie Mercury recorded with Michael Jackson next year. Guitarist Brian May has revealed that Michael Jackson's estate have given the band permission to release a series of duets which they recorded with the late singer during ...

Queen are set to release a series of duets that their former frontman Freddie Mercury recorded with Michael Jackson next year.

Guitarist Brian May has revealed that Michael Jackson‘s estate have given the band permission to release a series of duets which they recorded with the late singer during the 1980s.

He told the Evening Standard: “Michael [Jackson] used to come and see us when we were on tour in the States. He and Freddie became close friends, close enough to record a couple of tracks together at Michael’s house, tracks which have never seen the light of day.”

Asked when they will come out, May replied: “(They’ll be ready) in the next year. We’ve been talking to Jackson’s estate and they’re happy.”

Queen have previously announced plans to release a new album of old demos featuring Mercury, with May revealing that he had been going through the band’s old material with drummer Roger Taylor to compile a selection of unreleased tracks for a forthcoming LP. It is unknown whether the Jackson duets will be released as part of this or not.

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Review – The Rum Diary

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These are, at last, exhilarating times for Bruce Robinson. In the 26 years since his extraordinary debut, Withnail & I, the writer and director has withdrawn almost entirely from films after the grim experiences of his post-Withnail projects. THE RUM DIARY HHHH DIRECTED BY Bruce Robinson STARRING Johnny Depp, Michael Rispoli, Aaron Eckhart OPENS NOVEMBER 11 // CERT 15 // 119 MINS These are, at last, exhilarating times for Bruce Robinson. In the 26 years since his extraordinary debut, Withnail & I, the writer and director has withdrawn almost entirely from films after the grim experiences of his post-Withnail projects. Robinson’s last significant film work was a cameo in Clement and LeFrenais’ 1998 rock comedy, Still Crazy. There, he was required to play a reclusive, burned-out rock star – a character many incorrectly assumed wasn’t too far from Robinson himself. “I’ve got a reputation as this mad figure,” he once told me. “Full of vitriol and red wine, prancing round London, roaring through the Groucho Club high on cocaine.” In fact, Robinson has spent much of the last 13 years living quietly on the Welsh borders, writing a novel, 1998’s The Peculiar Memoirs Of Thomas Penman, and more recently two children’s books. He’s been coaxed back into active filmmaking by Johnny Depp – a Withnail fan – to adapt and direct The Rum Diary, based on Hunter Thompson’s experiences as a young journalist in Puerto Rico in 1960. As you’d hope from the creator of Withnail, there is plenty of scope for hilarious sequences involving savage drinking. The prevailing vibe is sweaty and hungover: everything is covered in an oily film of perspiration. Robinson, Depp and Thompson are an agreeable if tipsy combination. Depp’s Paul Kemp (Thompson’s alter ego) arrives in Puerto Rico to take up a job at the San Juan Star, an ailing English language paper staffed by aimless, drunken ex-pats. Among them, he befriends rotund photographer Bob Sala (Michael Rispoli) and the “hygienically unacceptable” Moberg (Giovanni Ribisi) – the paper’s crime and religious affairs correspondent. Ribisi pitches Moberg somewhere between Richard E Grant’s cadaverous Withnail and Dustin Hoffman’s sickly Ratso Rizzo in Midnight Cowboy. Rispoli’s bear-like Sala, meanwhile, is a genial sidekick with a profitable sideline in cockfighting. While watching dissolute men drinking heroically in a run-down flat ticks a number of boxes for Withnail fans, The Rum Diary also has a plot, concerning the real estate scams of Aaron Eckhart’s rapacious property developer, and Kemp’s growing infatuation with Eckhart’s girlfriend, Amber Head. Depp’s played an analogue of Thompson before, of course – Raoul Duke in Terry Gilliam’s hyper-stylised Fear And Loathing In Las Vegas. But essentially, The Rum Diary is Hunter: The Early Years, with Depp gradually introducing Kemp to his Gonzo during the film. We are given early glimpses of the kind of acerbic commentary for which Thompson would become famous: “There is no American Dream,” he spits, “just a piss puddle of greed spreading out through the world.”

These are, at last, exhilarating times for Bruce Robinson. In the 26 years since his extraordinary debut, Withnail & I, the writer and director has withdrawn almost entirely from films after the grim experiences of his post-Withnail projects.

Keith Richards opens up about working with ‘diva’ Mick Jagger

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The Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards has compared working with frontman Mick Jagger to working alongside opera diva Maria Callas. In an interview with the Observer, Richards, who was speaking ahead of the band's reissue of their 1978 album 'Some Girls', which is re-released on November 21, ...

The Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards has compared working with frontman Mick Jagger to working alongside opera diva Maria Callas.

In an interview with the Observer, Richards, who was speaking ahead of the band’s reissue of their 1978 album ‘Some Girls’, which is re-released on November 21, spoke about Jagger as “a diva” who the rest of the band try to not to annoy.

Asked whether his relationship with Jagger was like that of squabbling brothers, Richards replied: “No, it’s like working with Maria Callas. The diva is right and we’ve got to try and put music together without annoying the diva. If the diva gets too annoyed, then I get pissed off.”

He continued: “Do you think when we get together we’re all like happy families? Forget about it. We’ve been fighting cats and dogs all our career. We’re like brothers in that sometimes we love each other and sometimes we hate each other and sometimes we don’t even care. I’ve been playing guitar, watching that bum [dance in front of me] for years.”

Speaking in the same interview, Jagger played down the chances of the band reuniting for a tour next year to celebrate their 50th anniversary. Asked about how likely it would be that a tour would take place to celebrate the milestone, the singer replied: “I’ve no idea. We don’t really get together that much as a group.”

Jagger‘s comments come despite Richards‘ statement earlier this week that the band are planning to rehearse in a London studio later this month.

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STRAW DOGS

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Directed by Rod Lurie Starring James Marsden, Kate Bosworth With its rape scene, Sam Peckinpah’s 1971 film Straw Dogs was accused of celebrating sexual violence and eventually denied video certification. Lurie’s remake is likely to provoke only indifference. The action has been shifted from ...

Directed by Rod Lurie

Starring James Marsden, Kate Bosworth

With its rape scene, Sam Peckinpah’s 1971 film Straw Dogs was accused of celebrating sexual violence and eventually denied video certification.

Lurie’s remake is likely to provoke only indifference.

The action has been shifted from Cornwall to the Deep South.

Instead of Peter Vaughan’s patriarch, we have a violent ex high school football coach (James Woods), and instead of Dustin Hoffman’s US academic we have James Marsden as an LA screenwriter.

Kate Bosworth takes the Susan George role as the young bride returning home and inciting unholy passions in the locals.

As a thriller, Straw Dogs holds together reasonably well.

The siege of the farmhouse is expertly choreographed.

The rape scene is as uncomfortable to watch as its predecessor.

Lurie makes the same point as Peckinpah, namely that, when survival is threatened, even the most civilised types have a primal capacity for violence.

But, 40 years on, the shock factor has gone.

Geoffrey Macnab

CAN – TAGO MAGO R1971

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“The castle discovered with the excavation rectangular four bay window towers was 25 metres about 11 times and had a kennel offshore to the north.” (Make allowances: it’s a German-English translation website.) “Werner von Vlatten, a clerk between 1366 and 1394, might have inhabited them. His son Wilhelm, after a division, owned the castle.” (Here comes the relevant bit.) “In 1968–9 the rock group Can furnished their studio here.” (The quintet based themselves at the castle for three years, before relocating to a disused cinema at Weilerswist.) The castle – Schloss Nörvenich in North Rhine-Westphalia – was where Tago Mago, surely Krautrock’s greatest double album, was recorded over several months in 1971. It’s a record with a powerful reputation, and not just because it inspired bands like Radiohead and PiL. Links with Satanism and witchcraft have been suggested over the years; we’ve read of Can learning “forbidden rhythms” from West Africa, and having a fascination with Aleister Crowley. Irmin Schmidt’s grim bellow on “Aumgn”, as he intones as if from a coffin, is as chilling as rock vocals get, akin to an encounter with a cloven-hoofed goat-creature. The word ‘aumgn’ is derived from Om (or Aum), the sacred incantation in Hinduism and Buddhism, but it was also, according to his disciples, “Crowley’s ultimate word of power” – the word he believed would enable him to rule the planet by magick. Schmidt stretches out the two syllables (‘aum-gn’) for 20 or 30 seconds at a time, while a violin saws away and a double bass circles menacingly like the Jaws theme. The music loses all inhibition, building orgiastically to a frenzy. The rhythms on Tago Mago; they get into your eyeballs. When drummer Jaki Liebezeit first invented the hypnotic beat that became the foundation for “Halleluhwah”, it caused such a strong reaction in guitarist Michael Karoli that he began hallucinating. He begged Liebezeit to keep playing it, and we can empathise; it’s a groove that seems to suck our minds into its sorcerous clutches. Liebezeit, one of the acknowledged masters of the drums, could create these mesmerising patterns at will. On “Mushroom” we hear him judging the weight of his foot-pedal like a chemist measuring drops of liquid from a beaker to a flask. On “Paperhouse”, he sensually tickles the drowsy 6/8 beat in the opening bars, only to beat his drums and cymbals viciously when Karoli leads the charge into squealing acid-rock. At times, Can reveal a technical expertise on a par with prog-rockers like King Crimson, but Can always placed technique second to the communal responsibilities of improvisation. Schmidt, for example, would take his hands off his keyboards if he felt he had nothing to add. The music on Tago Mago was derived not from songwriting but from extensive jamming at the castle, which bassist Holger Czukay edited down into shorter pieces. Not too short, though. Even abridged, “Aumgn” lasts more than 17 minutes, and “Halleluhwah” runs to 18-and-a-half. It’s a fool’s errand to try to describe the styles and genres that Can touch on here; suffice to say that if there were an HMV category called Shockingly Beautiful And Pulsatingly Thunderous Space-Jazz-Concrète, Tago Mago would be at the front of the racks every time. Invoking and evoking just about all the spontaneity and scariness that you’d want from rock’n’roll, Tago Mago can offer experiences as spellbinding as the sequence that originally comprised side one (“Paperhouse”, “Mushroom”, “Oh Yeah”), or can be so extreme that you feel yourself under attack by maniacs. Not everyone, certainly, will carry a torch for “Peking O”, an 11-minute detour into drum-machine lunacy and babbling nonsense. Then again, “Peking O” is followed by its polar opposite, “Bring Me Coffee Or Tea”, a weird folky lullaby in the same ballpark as “Willow’s Song” in The Wicker Man. You learn to expect the unexpected with Tago Mago. Just as you think you’ve got a handle on “Mushroom” – singer Damo Suzuki must be describing a psilocybin trip when he speaks of being “born” and “dead” when he sees the “mushroom head” – something about his odd phrase “my despair” nags at you. Mushrooms? Despair? Then you remember that Suzuki was a child of 1950s Japan, when the country was rebuilding itself after the mushroom clouds of 1945. Dark riddles, occult practices, atom bombs. Perhaps, as some have suggested, this was the preferred reality – the only reality – for four Germans and one Japanese born either side of World War II. To mark its 40th anniversary, Tago Mago (which, like all Can’s early albums, was remastered in 2004), is being reissued with a bonus CD of live material from a Cologne gig in June 1972. Previously available on the bootleg, Free Concert, the tracks are “Mushroom”, “Spoon”, “Bring Me Coffee Or Tea” and “Halleluhwah”. The recording is in mono and the sound quality is passable, but not great. “Spoon”, all 20 minutes of it, has a dramatic performance from Suzuki as it nears its climax: first he starts urging “you gotta love me”, then he starts screaming it, at which point the momentum is halted by Karoli’s feedback and the music is hesitantly reshaped into “… Coffee Or Tea”. “Halleluhwah” is surprisingly laid back to begin with, but as funky as The Meters, with Liebezeit in mind-boggling octopoid form as usual. Schmidt organ-solos like a man demented as the track fades. In 1989, I got a chance to ask Can about Tago Mago. Karoli, a lovely man, sat next to me in the restaurant, enthusing about Liebezeit and explaining that Suzuki sings “searching for my black dope” in “Halleluhwah” – “because he’d lost it, you know”. Schmidt, a grumpy intellectual, told me that Can had revealed their ‘secrets’ only once, to a journalist in 1975, and she’d phoned up in a panic because that part of her cassette was inexplicably blank. We went back to a house in Notting Hill where Schmidt groped his wife on the settee all night, and Karoli bopped to Chic records. An unassuming guitar hero, he died in 2001. David Cavanagh

“The castle discovered with the excavation rectangular four bay window towers was 25 metres about 11 times and had a kennel offshore to the north.” (Make allowances: it’s a German-English translation website.) “Werner von Vlatten, a clerk between 1366 and 1394, might have inhabited them. His son Wilhelm, after a division, owned the castle.” (Here comes the relevant bit.) “In 1968–9 the rock group Can furnished their studio here.” (The quintet based themselves at the castle for three years, before relocating to a disused cinema at Weilerswist.)

The castle – Schloss Nörvenich in North Rhine-Westphalia – was where Tago Mago, surely Krautrock’s greatest double album, was recorded over several months in 1971. It’s a record with a powerful reputation, and not just because it inspired bands like Radiohead and PiL. Links with Satanism and witchcraft have been suggested over the years; we’ve read of Can learning “forbidden rhythms” from West Africa, and having a fascination with Aleister Crowley. Irmin Schmidt’s grim bellow on “Aumgn”, as he intones as if from a coffin, is as chilling as rock vocals get, akin to an encounter with a cloven-hoofed goat-creature. The word ‘aumgn’ is derived from Om (or Aum), the sacred incantation in Hinduism and Buddhism, but it was also, according to his disciples, “Crowley’s ultimate word of power” – the word he believed would enable him to rule the planet by magick. Schmidt stretches out the two syllables (‘aum-gn’) for 20 or 30 seconds at a time, while a violin saws away and a double bass circles menacingly like the Jaws theme. The music loses all inhibition, building orgiastically to a frenzy.

The rhythms on Tago Mago; they get into your eyeballs. When drummer Jaki Liebezeit first invented the hypnotic beat that became the foundation for “Halleluhwah”, it caused such a strong reaction in guitarist Michael Karoli that he began hallucinating. He begged Liebezeit to keep playing it, and we can empathise; it’s a groove that seems to suck our minds into its sorcerous clutches. Liebezeit, one of the acknowledged masters of the drums, could create these mesmerising patterns at will. On “Mushroom” we hear him judging the weight of his foot-pedal like a chemist measuring drops of liquid from a beaker to a flask. On “Paperhouse”, he sensually tickles the drowsy 6/8 beat in the opening bars, only to beat his drums and cymbals viciously when Karoli leads the charge into squealing acid-rock. At times, Can reveal a technical expertise on a par with prog-rockers like King Crimson, but Can always placed technique second to the communal responsibilities of improvisation. Schmidt, for example, would take his hands off his keyboards if he felt he had nothing to add. The music on Tago Mago was derived not from songwriting but from extensive jamming at the castle, which bassist Holger Czukay edited down into shorter pieces. Not too short, though. Even abridged, “Aumgn” lasts more than 17 minutes, and “Halleluhwah” runs to 18-and-a-half.

It’s a fool’s errand to try to describe the styles and genres that Can touch on here; suffice to say that if there were an HMV category called Shockingly Beautiful And Pulsatingly Thunderous Space-Jazz-Concrète, Tago Mago would be at the front of the racks every time. Invoking and evoking just about all the spontaneity and scariness that you’d want from rock’n’roll, Tago Mago can offer experiences as spellbinding as the sequence that originally comprised side one (“Paperhouse”, “Mushroom”, “Oh Yeah”), or can be so extreme that you feel yourself under attack by maniacs. Not everyone, certainly, will carry a torch for “Peking O”, an 11-minute detour into drum-machine lunacy and babbling nonsense. Then again, “Peking O” is followed by its polar opposite, “Bring Me Coffee Or Tea”, a weird folky lullaby in the same ballpark as “Willow’s Song” in The Wicker Man. You learn to expect the unexpected with Tago Mago. Just as you think you’ve got a handle on “Mushroom” – singer Damo Suzuki must be describing a psilocybin trip when he speaks of being “born” and “dead” when he sees the “mushroom head” – something about his odd phrase “my despair” nags at you. Mushrooms? Despair? Then you remember that Suzuki was a child of 1950s Japan, when the country was rebuilding itself after the mushroom clouds of 1945. Dark riddles, occult practices, atom bombs. Perhaps, as some have suggested, this was the preferred reality – the only reality – for four Germans and one Japanese born either side of World War II.

To mark its 40th anniversary, Tago Mago (which, like all Can’s early albums, was remastered in 2004), is being reissued with a bonus CD of live material from a Cologne gig in June 1972. Previously available on the bootleg, Free Concert, the tracks are “Mushroom”, “Spoon”, “Bring Me Coffee Or Tea” and “Halleluhwah”. The recording is in mono and the sound quality is passable, but not great. “Spoon”, all 20 minutes of it, has a dramatic performance from Suzuki as it nears its climax: first he starts urging “you gotta love me”, then he starts screaming it, at which point the momentum is halted by Karoli’s feedback and the music is hesitantly reshaped into “… Coffee Or Tea”. “Halleluhwah” is surprisingly laid back to begin with, but as funky as The Meters, with Liebezeit in mind-boggling octopoid form as usual. Schmidt organ-solos like a man demented as the track fades.

In 1989, I got a chance to ask Can about Tago Mago. Karoli, a lovely man, sat next to me in the restaurant, enthusing about Liebezeit and explaining that Suzuki sings “searching for my black dope” in “Halleluhwah” – “because he’d lost it, you know”. Schmidt, a grumpy intellectual, told me that Can had revealed their ‘secrets’ only once, to a journalist in 1975, and she’d phoned up in a panic because that part of her cassette was inexplicably blank. We went back to a house in Notting Hill where Schmidt groped his wife on the settee all night, and Karoli bopped to Chic records. An unassuming guitar hero, he died in 2001.

David Cavanagh

FLORENCE + THE MACHINE – CEREMONIALS

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From winning the BRITS Critics’ Choice in 2009 to scooping the Best British Album the following year, the rise of Florence + The Machine has been inexorable and irresistible. The same momentum suggests that, having been nominated for a Grammy in 2010, she will now look to follow Amy and Adele in conquering the US and the world. Ceremonials certainly feels like an album with imperial ambitions. Twelve tracks and almost an hour long, it’s an unashamedly, overwhelmingly epic bid for the big time. It is odd to remember that Florence once seemed the least convincing of 2009’s class of edgy pop hopefuls. Not as determinedly styled as La Roux, without the hip-pop affinities of Little Boots, her debut album Lungs often seemed like it was chasing old trends, from the Liberteeny skiffle of “Kiss With A Fist” to the Kate Bushery of “Rabbit Heart (Raise It Up)” and the blue-eyed soul of “Cosmic Love”. What ultimately secured her triumph wasn’t just her style – Ken Russell casting a female lead for a Lizstomanic take on the Pre-Raphs – or her timely gels-gone-wild-at-Glasto demeanour, but the gale force voice and performance that blew away reservations of place and genre, from the London indie circuit to V Festival, the Dizzee heights of the BRITS awards to collaborations with Drake and hanging with Beyoncé. Ceremonials is altogether more focused, designed to provide the proper stage for the global push. The overtures were encouraging. Album trailer “What The Water Gave Me” arrived burdened with allusions to Frida Kahlo and Virginia Woolf, but indicated producer Paul Epworth had created a cavernous, detailed soundworld, glittering with harps, booming with bass, like Mark Hollis producing All About Eve. It suggested that Ceremonials might be a work of sublime English pastoral pop: “River Deep, Mountain High”, if the river was the Ouse and the mountain was Scafell Pike. But if “What The Water…” was suggestively atmospheric, promising a climax that never quite arrived, the first single proper, “Shake It Out” plainly means business. From a deceptively rueful harmonium intro, the song wastes no time charging into a chorus that seems scaled not just for festivals or stadiums but for colosseums. So efficiently does it splice 21st-century Arcade-Fire anthemry with ’80s enormo-dome aesthetics, by the time the third chorus rolls around you fully expect it to be accompanied by the entrance of John Farnham’s stadium bagpipes. Elsewhere, Florence seems to have abandoned the struggle to restrain her inner Céline Dion. “Never Me Let Go” is a titanic ballad (calculatedly so, right down to the lines “the arms of the ocean are carrying me”) shamelessly auditioning for the soundtrack of the next James Cameron folly. Like the similarly grandiose “Heartlines”, it features the kind of pseudo-tribal backing vocals last heard on Red Box’s would-be Earthsong “Lean On Me”. Florence once described Lungs as sounding like “a choir, a harp, some metal chains and a piano all put through a car crusher”. Ceremonials, you might say, sounds like a dry iceberg, the Na’vi People’s Choir and Sydney Opera House, re-assembled by Jim Steinman in the Hadron Collider. It’s less impressive than that might sound. Songs like “Only If For A Night” and “Seven Devils” still try to summon the uncanny spirit of Kate Bush, but they retain little of the modernist shock of her best work. Epworth’s early production of the Futureheads’ “Hounds Of Love” has proved characteristic of his career: honouring the pioneering heritage of British pop, but tastefully draining it of the Fairlight stabs, the gated drums, the scandalously synthetic elements that might offend more conservative modern palates. If Ceremonials has a presiding spirit it might actually be Annie Lennox – particularly the Eurythmics circa “Be Yourself Tonight”, when they drafted in Stevie Wonder and Aretha in a bid to endear themselves to America. “Lover To Lover” and “Leave My Body” aim to repeat the trick of “You Got The Love”, channeling Hurricane Florence in a more gospel direction. Like Annie, Florence can undoubtedly sing up a storm, but even when she’s singing “there’s no salvation for me”, her relationship with real abandon feels oddly theoretical. Like the similarly Lennox-indebted Lady Gaga’s Born This Way, Ceremonials feels afflicted by its ambition, the desire to create an album so epic it miraculously re-establishes the mainstream pop blockbuster in an age of fragmented niche audiences. The result is exhausting, an album of songs that all want to be showstoppers. The high points are those tracks that offer some breathing space from the bombast: “What The Water Gave Me”, but also “Breaking Down”, a sole writing credit for James Ford on an album largely dominated by Epworth, and a song oddly redolent of The Waterboys of This Is The Sea. Moments like this suggest there might yet be other ways for Florence to reach the Big Music she seems intent on. Stephen Trousse

From winning the BRITS Critics’ Choice in 2009 to scooping the Best British Album the following year, the rise of Florence + The Machine has been inexorable and irresistible. The same momentum suggests that, having been nominated for a Grammy in 2010, she will now look to follow Amy and Adele in conquering the US and the world. Ceremonials certainly feels like an album with imperial ambitions. Twelve tracks and almost an hour long, it’s an unashamedly, overwhelmingly epic bid for the big time.

It is odd to remember that Florence once seemed the least convincing of 2009’s class of edgy pop hopefuls. Not as determinedly styled as La Roux, without the hip-pop affinities of Little Boots, her debut album Lungs often seemed like it was chasing old trends, from the Liberteeny skiffle of “Kiss With A Fist” to the Kate Bushery of “Rabbit Heart (Raise It Up)” and the blue-eyed soul of “Cosmic Love”. What ultimately secured her triumph wasn’t just her style – Ken Russell casting a female lead for a Lizstomanic take on the Pre-Raphs – or her timely gels-gone-wild-at-Glasto demeanour, but the gale force voice and performance that blew away reservations of place and genre, from the London indie circuit to V Festival, the Dizzee heights of the BRITS awards to collaborations with Drake and hanging with Beyoncé.

Ceremonials is altogether more focused, designed to provide the proper stage for the global push. The overtures were encouraging. Album trailer “What The Water Gave Me” arrived burdened with allusions to Frida Kahlo and Virginia Woolf, but indicated producer Paul Epworth had created a cavernous, detailed soundworld, glittering with harps, booming with bass, like Mark Hollis producing All About Eve. It suggested that Ceremonials might be a work of sublime English pastoral pop: “River Deep, Mountain High”, if the river was the Ouse and the mountain was Scafell Pike.

But if “What The Water…” was suggestively atmospheric, promising a climax that never quite arrived, the first single proper, “Shake It Out” plainly means business. From a deceptively rueful harmonium intro, the song wastes no time charging into a chorus that seems scaled not just for festivals or stadiums but for colosseums. So efficiently does it splice 21st-century Arcade-Fire anthemry with ’80s enormo-dome aesthetics, by the time the third chorus rolls around you fully expect it to be accompanied by the entrance of John Farnham’s stadium bagpipes.

Elsewhere, Florence seems to have abandoned the struggle to restrain her inner Céline Dion. “Never Me Let Go” is a titanic ballad (calculatedly so, right down to the lines “the arms of the ocean are carrying me”) shamelessly auditioning for the soundtrack of the next James Cameron folly. Like the similarly grandiose “Heartlines”, it features the kind of pseudo-tribal backing vocals last heard on Red Box’s would-be Earthsong “Lean On Me”. Florence once described Lungs as sounding like “a choir, a harp, some metal chains and a piano all put through a car crusher”. Ceremonials, you might say, sounds like a dry iceberg, the Na’vi People’s Choir and Sydney Opera House, re-assembled by Jim Steinman in the Hadron Collider.

It’s less impressive than that might sound. Songs like “Only If For A Night” and “Seven Devils” still try to summon the uncanny spirit of Kate Bush, but they retain little of the modernist shock of her best work. Epworth’s early production of the Futureheads’ “Hounds Of Love” has proved characteristic of his career: honouring the pioneering heritage of British pop, but tastefully draining it of the Fairlight stabs, the gated drums, the scandalously synthetic elements that might offend more conservative modern palates.

If Ceremonials has a presiding spirit it might actually be Annie Lennox – particularly the Eurythmics circa “Be Yourself Tonight”, when they drafted in Stevie Wonder and Aretha in a bid to endear themselves to America. “Lover To Lover” and “Leave My Body” aim to repeat the trick of “You Got The Love”, channeling Hurricane Florence in a more gospel direction. Like Annie, Florence can undoubtedly sing up a storm, but even when she’s singing “there’s no salvation for me”, her relationship with real abandon feels oddly theoretical.

Like the similarly Lennox-indebted Lady Gaga’s Born This Way, Ceremonials feels afflicted by its ambition, the desire to create an album so epic it miraculously re-establishes the mainstream pop blockbuster in an age of fragmented niche audiences. The result is exhausting, an album of songs that all want to be showstoppers. The high points are those tracks that offer some breathing space from the bombast: “What The Water Gave Me”, but also “Breaking Down”, a sole writing credit for James Ford on an album largely dominated by Epworth, and a song oddly redolent of The Waterboys of This Is The Sea. Moments like this suggest there might yet be other ways for Florence to reach the Big Music she seems intent on.

Stephen Trousse