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Hear Red Hot Chili Peppers’ new single ‘The Adventures Of Rain Dance Maggie’

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The Red Hot Chili Peppers have debuted their new single 'The Adventures Of Rain Dance Maggie' online. The track was not due to be released until later today, but after it leaked out early, the band have posted the new track online. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to hear it. The track is the first to be taken from the band's 10th studio album 'I'm With You' which is due to be released on August 30. The album marks the first time the band have recorded with new guitarist Josh Klinghoffer, who was formally the band's guitarist technician and a member of Warpaint. He replaced longtime player John Frusciante, who left in 2009 to focus on his solo work. The Los Angeles punk funkers have also recently revealed the artwork for 'I'm With You', which has been designed by British artist Damien Hirst. They are due to tour Europe in October and December. 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 Red Hot Chili Peppers have debuted their new single ‘The Adventures Of Rain Dance Maggie’ online.

The track was not due to be released until later today, but after it leaked out early, the band have posted the new track online. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to hear it.

The track is the first to be taken from the band’s 10th studio album ‘I’m With You’ which is due to be released on August 30.

The album marks the first time the band have recorded with new guitarist Josh Klinghoffer, who was formally the band’s guitarist technician and a member of Warpaint. He replaced longtime player John Frusciante, who left in 2009 to focus on his solo work.

The Los Angeles punk funkers have also recently revealed the artwork for ‘I’m With You’, which has been designed by British artist Damien Hirst. They are due to tour Europe in October and December.

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.

Thin Lizzy announce UK tour for early 2012

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Thin Lizzy have announced a UK tour for early next year. The legendary rockers, who now feature singer Ricky Warwick, former frontman of The Almighty, will play 12 dates in January and February. The tour begins at Glasgow's Barrowlands on January 19 and runs until February 4, when the band headl...

Thin Lizzy have announced a UK tour for early next year.

The legendary rockers, who now feature singer Ricky Warwick, former frontman of The Almighty, will play 12 dates in January and February.

The tour begins at Glasgow‘s Barrowlands on January 19 and runs until February 4, when the band headline London‘s HMV Hammersmith Apollo. Support on all dates will come from US metallers Clutch.

The band, who have not released a studio album since 1983’s ‘Thunder And Lightning’, indicated earlier this year that they are considering recording new material together. Were this to happen, it would mark the first new musicl the band had released since the death of frontman Phil Lynott in 1986.

Thin Lizzy will play:

Glasgow Barrowlands (January 19)

Newcastle City Hall (21)

Leicester De Montfort Hall (23)

York Barbican (24)

Cambridge Corn Exchange (25)

Wolverhampton Civic Hall (27)

O2 Apollo Manchester (28)

Sheffield City Hall (29)

Plymouth Pavilions (31)

Cardiff St. David’s Hall (February 1)

Brighton Dome (3)

HMV Hammersmith Apollo London (4)

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.

HOBO WITH A SHOTGUN

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Directed by Jason Eisener Starring Rutger Hauer, Brian Downey Like Machete, Jason Eisener’s homage to exploitation started life as a fake trailer for Tarantino and Rodriguez’ Grindhouse. Expanding a knowing two-minute fanboy gag into a knowing 90-minute fanboy gag could have been disastrously...

Directed by Jason Eisener

Starring Rutger Hauer, Brian Downey

Like Machete, Jason Eisener’s homage to exploitation started life as a fake trailer for Tarantino and Rodriguez’ Grindhouse.

Expanding a knowing two-minute fanboy gag into a knowing 90-minute fanboy gag could have been disastrously smug, but for one thing.

he movie stars 67-year-old Rutger Hauer, giving a performance that will thrill all who cherish The Hitcher, and remind us what a great screen presence he can be.

Rutger is a quiet soul, drifting into town with dreams of saving enough money to buy a lawnmower.

But when he realises the place is filled with abusive scum run by a sadistic tycoon (Brian Downey), he buys a shotgun instead, and kills everyone.

Along the way, this involves a kiddie-fiddling Santa, topless women with baseball bats and a giant octopus.

All the more remarkable, then, that, blasting through the shlock and scuzz, Hauer manages to be weirdly, grandly, moving.

His best since the Guinness ads.

Damien Love

THE HORRORS – SKYING

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The Horrors were viewed with some suspicion when they first emerged from Southend six years ago. A provincial gang of five exotically coiffed teenagers going by such names as Coffin Joe, Joshua Von Grimm and Spider Webb, they resembled a Tim Burton vision of The Cramps, and sounded like one, too, la...

The Horrors were viewed with some suspicion when they first emerged from Southend six years ago. A provincial gang of five exotically coiffed teenagers going by such names as Coffin Joe, Joshua Von Grimm and Spider Webb, they resembled a Tim Burton vision of The Cramps, and sounded like one, too, lacing their white-knuckle garage-rock with a macabre, cartoon viciousness.

They made the cover of NME and won influential fans, such as dark-arts filmmaking maestro Chris Cunningham, who came out of promo-directing retirement to shoot the video for “Sheena Is A Parasite”. They did not, however, immediately resemble the sort of band built to last. The look was fine-honed, but debut album Strange House<.strong> was somewhat slight, and it was hard to shake the impression that this was a band that privileged style over substance.

Behind the image, though, The Horrors were deadly serious about the music. They were DJs, and collectors – of obscure vintage musical equipment, and of equally obscure records. They put on club nights like the Cave Club and the Convex Club, in underground London drinking dens. Like Primal Scream, they were seduced by the idea of being in a band as much as the desire to play music together, and The Horrors became a vessel to fill with arcane influences and sonic touchstones: The Stooges and The MC5, Phil Spector and Joe Meek, Detroit techno and Chicago house.

Assimilating such diverse influences might, in the hands of some, feel contrived – but the beauty of their second record, 2009’s Primary Colours, is that it sounded entirely like a band being true to themselves. Ten tracks of luminous, expansive post-punk, it was a handsome blend of Neu!, Motown and MBV that enchanted critics, and sold nicely, too, swelling The Horrors’ already sizeable fanbase. It was nominated for the Mercury Prize, NME voted it album of the year. But it wasn’t just the contents that impressed; it was the manner in which these misfits knuckled down and returned with such an assured new sound. One thinks of Screamadelica following Primal Scream, or The Cure releasing Seventeen Seconds after Three Imaginary Boys – the feeling of, wait, where did that come from?

Skying, The Horrors’ third, again brilliantly confounds expectations. Its roots lie in early 2009, towards the end of the sessions for Primary Colours, when the young band met for an Indian meal in Bath with their producer, Geoff Barrow of Portishead. Talk turned to plans for the next record, whereupon Barrow makes it clear he believes they no longer need any help in the studio. They are more than capable of producing this third one themselves, he reckons. The band are amazed, flattered. So, back in London, they set to work building a home studio, from which Skying would, two years later, emerge.

Richer, heavier, more lustrous than Primary Colours, this is the band left to their own devices, shut away from the outside world, writing and playing their version of pop – pulsating six-minute songs called “Dive In” and “Endless Blue” that start with a canter only to soar beyond the clouds. Simple Minds may not be the most fashionable reference, but there’s a cocksure, anthemic lift to surging power-ballads such as “Still Life” and “You Said” that recalls the Breakfast Club prime of the Scots band. Whether this is by accident or design, it’s a sign that The Horrors are daring to make music for the grand occasion. If Primary Colours established The Horrors as outsider icons, the record acting as a gateway to a world of krautrock, noise, ’60s beat-pop and psych, then Skying finds them greatly improved as musicians, their horizons broadened and technique honed, ready for the big time.

‘Skying’ itself is an early technical term for phasing or flanging, an effect commonly found on guitar pedals and analogue synths that gently distorts a signal to produce a satisfyingly ragged sound. No doubt it’s a favourite setting of Joshua Hayward, The Horrors’ endlessly inventive guitarist whose fondness for circuit-bending means he’s on first-name terms with the staff of his local Maplin’s and leads him to build his own pedals and contraptions through which he coaxes an extraordinary range of sounds. His solo four minutes into the album’s finest song, “Moving Further Away”, when a throaty lick rips through soft electronics like silk being torn apart, has a primitive sensuality that’s almost shocking. The beautiful cacophony he generates on “Monica Gems” suggests The Horrors have their own Kevin Shields.

Written during a session in a country house in Devon, “Moving Further Away” was the only song recorded outside their new east London studio; ironically, for a set of songs largely concerned with nature, they found that the countryside wasn’t a particularly stimulating place to make music. Taking Barrow’s advice, the five set about producing the album themselves, which was not, perhaps, as idyllic as it sounds.

There was no one there to say, “So, what do you think of that?”, so the band had to weigh up the options and execute the best ones. They do have extracurricular studio experience: keyboardist Tom Furse has turned in several disco-slanted remixes, while, as Cat’s Eyes, frontman Faris Badwan recently cut an album of spooked girl group-inspired pop with Canadian soprano Rachel Zeffira.

More obviously, the images the title conjures seem appropriate for the record: with Skying, the band wanted to capture that feeling of rushing down a hill, of propulsion and elevation, both spiritual and emotional. That they’ve partly achieved this by innocently turning the clock back 20 years to that golden age of British indie is more a reflection of their youthful idealism than anything else. Shades of shoegazers Ride, Slowdive and The House Of Love colour the vivid swoon of “You Said” and “I Can See Through You”, and the prevailing mood of the album – one of frazzled, delirious joy – combined with the elemental imagery in Badwan’s lyrics reveals an unlikely but welcome affinity with late-’80s Julian Cope. “Wild Eyed” might be a groovier number from Peggy Suicide, although as of now, Badwan still falls a little short of the shamanic conviction of the bard of Avebury.

Give him time. When they formed, The Horrors’ sole aim was to put out a 7” and contribute in a small way to the wealth that had enriched their lives. Six years on, they’ve become one of our most cherished bands, a genuine cult act who’ve managed to preserve their mystique while growing in stature with each new record. If it’s taken them this long to go from nothing to Skying, where on earth will they take us in the next five years?

Piers Martin

REM – LIFES RICH PAGEANT 25th ANNIVERSARY EDITION

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The breakthrough fourth album, reissued with a trove of demos...In 1986, REM’s elevation to umpty-million-selling ubiquity, dominant influence and stadium marquees appeared other than inevitable. The Georgia quartet had released, in breakneck succession, two critically adored albums (1983’s Murmur, 1984’s Reckoning) and a third (1985’s Fables Of The Reconstruction) which was a much more expansive but nonetheless nervy and flawed record. Fables Of The Reconstruction seemed to represent a skittish struggle against the limitations of the indie/college rock milieu REM had grown up in, a hesitant grasp towards something bigger. REM sounded, at this point, like a band unsure of whether they were happier underground or overground. Lifes Rich Pageant – the apostrophe is intentionally absent, a symptom of a recurring and altogether deplorable disdain for punctuation – was where REM took that decision. Or, perhaps more accurately, realised that the two propositions were not necessarily contradictory. Produced by Don Gehman, previously best known for his work with John Mellencamp, Lifes Rich Pageant still flourishes the impeccably obscurantist indie rock credentials of Murmur and Reckoning – obtuse lyrics, unbridled guitars, tracks listed in the wrong order on the cover. But it also rises to the challenge only half-met on Fables Of The Reconstruction, of reconciling commercial and creative ambition. Lifes Rich Pageant is the bridge between the REM of “9-9” and “Feeling Gravitys Pull”, and the REM of “The One I Love” and “Losing My Religion”. As such, Lifes Rich Pageant is very plausibly REM’s finest album. Every note of Lifes Rich Pageant fizzes and crackles with the urgency of people who’ve made their minds up, are therefore determined to proceed, and damn the torpedoes. Opening the album with a song called “Begin The Begin” was certainly more straightforward than anything REM had done previously. The song itself also rapidly established that Lifes Rich Pageant was intended as a leap from the shadows, the chugging boogie of the verses erupting into a sublime chorus of a majesty and swagger at which REM had only previously hinted. For the first time, it had occurred to REM that they had a constituency – and, indeed, that it might be possible and desirable to build on that. The immediately ensuing songs continue with the theme established by “Begin The Begin”, in that they are all unbound by the diffident introspection that characterised the first three albums. These are efforts at outreach, attempts to unite a collective. “These Days”, for all Stipe’s self-conscious flights of opacity, is almost as wilfully naïve – and nearly as rocking – as The Who’s “My Generation” (“We are young despite the years/We are concern/We are hope despite the times”). The exquisite “Fall On Me” has been interpreted as environmental uplift, but reads just as plausibly as a swipe at the hymn of universal balm and brotherhood they’d perfect on “Everybody Hurts”. “Cuyahoga” is unmistakably environmental uplift – it’s named after the Cleveland river that became so chokingly polluted that it regularly caught fire – but the opening line radiates the daring of a band imagining themselves as a flag around which people might gather: “Let’s put our heads together/And start a new country up”. REM’s thinking at around this point is illuminated by the inclusion, with this edition of Lifes Rich Pageant, of “The Athens Demos” – 19 tracks recorded at home before the band decamped to Gehman’s studio in Indiana. They reveal that, if anything, the finished Lifes Rich Pageant was actually less arrestingly populist than it might have been. Most startling, in retrospect, is REM’s decision not proceed with “Bad Day”, an obvious ancestor of “It’s The End Of The World As We Know It”, which would not officially surface – without, mercifully, the bloody awful harmonica part heard here – until the 2003 compilation, In Time. REM presumably felt that the giddy, gorgeous “I Believe” pretty much covered their freewheelingly associative pop hit quota for the album (the demo version of this is substantially studiously hummed by Stipe, who clearly hadn’t yet finished the words). There are other intriguing indications on “The Athens Demos” that REM were, on Lifes Rich Pageant, actually restraining their urges to swing big. The vocal on the demo version of “Cuyahoga” is more crisp, more plaintive, and feels more unabashedly optimistic than on the deliberately growled and strained recording that made the album. This is, at least, true of what there is of it, as Stipe hadn’t finished this one, either. It’s a bit of a recurring theme of the demos – “Fall On Me” is also largely mumbled gibberish at this point, as if Stipe is trying to trick the words from his subconscious. “The Athens Demos” also contain sketches and/or snippets of other unfinished and/or unrealised songs which wouldn’t appear for years: “Rotary Ten” (b-side of “Fall On Me”), “All The Right Friends” (the Vanilla Sky soundtrack), “King Of Birds” (off Document). The much-bootlegged “Wait” – an actually fairly inconsequential thrash – also finally gets an official release. Lifes Rich Pageant sounds not even slightly wearied by the quarter century that has elapsed since its release. In some respects, it’s sort of a homecoming. The recherché post-punk influences which had informed REM’s earliest records were largely those they’d acquired in college – specifically, at the University of Georgia in Athens, and the nearby Wuxtry Records store, where Peter Buck once worked. Pageant is where REM properly admit to themselves the degree to which they’re a Southern rock band, who grew up on the likes of Tom Petty, who saw nothing wrong with a chorus that might prompt singing along, or with getting played on FM radio. REM were already walking head and shoulders taller than most by now, but Lifes Rich Pageant was nevertheless a startlingly great leap forward. Andrew Mueller

The breakthrough fourth album, reissued with a trove of demos…In 1986, REM’s elevation to umpty-million-selling ubiquity, dominant influence and stadium marquees appeared other than inevitable. The Georgia quartet had released, in breakneck succession, two critically adored albums (1983’s Murmur, 1984’s Reckoning) and a third (1985’s Fables Of The Reconstruction) which was a much more expansive but nonetheless nervy and flawed record. Fables Of The Reconstruction seemed to represent a skittish struggle against the limitations of the indie/college rock milieu REM had grown up in, a hesitant grasp towards something bigger. REM sounded, at this point, like a band unsure of whether they were happier underground or overground.

Lifes Rich Pageant – the apostrophe is intentionally absent, a symptom of a recurring and altogether deplorable disdain for punctuation – was where REM took that decision. Or, perhaps more accurately, realised that the two propositions were not necessarily contradictory. Produced by Don Gehman, previously best known for his work with John Mellencamp, Lifes Rich Pageant still flourishes the impeccably obscurantist indie rock credentials of Murmur and Reckoning – obtuse lyrics, unbridled guitars, tracks listed in the wrong order on the cover. But it also rises to the challenge only half-met on Fables Of The Reconstruction, of reconciling commercial and creative ambition. Lifes Rich Pageant is the bridge between the REM of “9-9” and “Feeling Gravitys Pull”, and the REM of “The One I Love” and “Losing My Religion”. As such, Lifes Rich Pageant is very plausibly REM’s finest album.

Every note of Lifes Rich Pageant fizzes and crackles with the urgency of people who’ve made their minds up, are therefore determined to proceed, and damn the torpedoes. Opening the album with a song called “Begin The Begin” was certainly more straightforward than anything REM had done previously. The song itself also rapidly established that Lifes Rich Pageant was intended as a leap from the shadows, the chugging boogie of the verses erupting into a sublime chorus of a majesty and swagger at which REM had only previously hinted.

For the first time, it had occurred to REM that they had a constituency – and, indeed, that it might be possible and desirable to build on that. The immediately ensuing songs continue with the theme established by “Begin The Begin”, in that they are all unbound by the diffident introspection that characterised the first three albums. These are efforts at outreach, attempts to unite a collective. “These Days”, for all Stipe’s self-conscious flights of opacity, is almost as wilfully naïve – and nearly as rocking – as The Who’s “My Generation” (“We are young despite the years/We are concern/We are hope despite the times”). The exquisite “Fall On Me” has been interpreted as environmental uplift, but reads just as plausibly as a swipe at the hymn of universal balm and brotherhood they’d perfect on “Everybody Hurts”. “Cuyahoga” is unmistakably environmental uplift – it’s named after the Cleveland river that became so chokingly polluted that it regularly caught fire – but the opening line radiates the daring of a band imagining themselves as a flag around which people might gather: “Let’s put our heads together/And start a new country up”.

REM’s thinking at around this point is illuminated by the inclusion, with this edition of Lifes Rich Pageant, of “The Athens Demos” – 19 tracks recorded at home before the band decamped to Gehman’s studio in Indiana. They reveal that, if anything, the finished Lifes Rich Pageant was actually less arrestingly populist than it might have been. Most startling, in retrospect, is REM’s decision not proceed with “Bad Day”, an obvious ancestor of “It’s The End Of The World As We Know It”, which would not officially surface – without, mercifully, the bloody awful harmonica part heard here – until the 2003 compilation, In Time. REM presumably felt that the giddy, gorgeous “I Believe” pretty much covered their freewheelingly associative pop hit quota for the album (the demo version of this is substantially studiously hummed by Stipe, who clearly hadn’t yet finished the words).

There are other intriguing indications on “The Athens Demos” that REM were, on Lifes Rich Pageant, actually restraining their urges to swing big. The vocal on the demo version of “Cuyahoga” is more crisp, more plaintive, and feels more unabashedly optimistic than on the deliberately growled and strained recording that made the album. This is, at least, true of what there is of it, as Stipe hadn’t finished this one, either. It’s a bit of a recurring theme of the demos – “Fall On Me” is also largely mumbled gibberish at this point, as if Stipe is trying to trick the words from his subconscious. “The Athens Demos” also contain sketches and/or snippets of other unfinished and/or unrealised songs which wouldn’t appear for years: “Rotary Ten” (b-side of “Fall On Me”), “All The Right Friends” (the Vanilla Sky soundtrack), “King Of Birds” (off Document). The much-bootlegged “Wait” – an actually fairly inconsequential thrash – also finally gets an official release.

Lifes Rich Pageant sounds not even slightly wearied by the quarter century that has elapsed since its release. In some respects, it’s sort of a homecoming. The recherché post-punk influences which had informed REM’s earliest records were largely those they’d acquired in college – specifically, at the University of Georgia in Athens, and the nearby Wuxtry Records store, where Peter Buck once worked.

Pageant is where REM properly admit to themselves the degree to which they’re a Southern rock band, who grew up on the likes of Tom Petty, who saw nothing wrong with a chorus that might prompt singing along, or with getting played on FM radio. REM were already walking head and shoulders taller than most by now, but Lifes Rich Pageant was nevertheless a startlingly great leap forward.

Andrew Mueller

Adele’s ’21’ becomes the biggest selling digital album in US history

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Adele's second album '21' has become the biggest selling digital album of all time in the US. The album, which is also set to return to the top of the UK album chart on Sunday (July 17), has now outsold Eminem's 'Recovery', which had previously held the record. According to US Today, '21' has now...

Adele‘s second album ’21’ has become the biggest selling digital album of all time in the US.

The album, which is also set to return to the top of the UK album chart on Sunday (July 17), has now outsold Eminem‘s ‘Recovery’, which had previously held the record. According to US Today, ’21’ has now sold 1.017 million copies, compared to Eminem‘s 1.005 million.

Digital sales have counted for almost half of ’21’‘s sales in the US, with a total of 2.6 million copies shifted in total.

It is also predicted that both Mumford and Sons‘ debut effort ‘Sigh No More’ and Lady Gaga‘s ‘The Fame’ will pass the million digital sales milestone later this year.

According to the report, digital sales of albums counted for nearly a third of all albums bought in the first half of 2011, which is five per cent up on the same period in 2010. Album sales have also increased across the board, with 155.5 million sold in the first half of this year, compared to 153.9 in the same part of 2010.

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.

Bridge immortalised on Nirvana’s ‘Nevermind’ to be named after Kurt Cobain?

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A bridge immortalised on Nirvana's 'Nevermind' album may soon be named after Kurt Cobain to commemorate the late singer. Aberdeen City Council are to decide whether to honour the frontman by lending his name to the Young Street Bridge, which was referenced in 'Something In The Way'. Cobain also often claimed to have slept rough under the Wishkah River crossing, which has become a visitor attraction for Nirvana fans. A public meeting is to be held on July 27 to decide whether to press ahead with the proposal, which also includes a motion to name a small public park after Cobain, reports the [url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/officials-in-kurt-cobains-wash-hometown-consider-naming-bridge-park-after-him/2011/07/14/gIQAavZHEI_story.html]Washington Post[/url]. Some council members are thought to be in favour of the commemoration. However, it's been reported that other officials are expecting a negative reaction during the public consultation due to Cobain's drug use, 1994 suicide and negative comments about the city. Earlier this year, a statue of Cobain's signature Fender Jag-Stang guitar was unveiled in Aberdeen. 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 bridge immortalised on Nirvana‘s ‘Nevermind’ album may soon be named after Kurt Cobain to commemorate the late singer.

Aberdeen City Council are to decide whether to honour the frontman by lending his name to the Young Street Bridge, which was referenced in ‘Something In The Way’.

Cobain also often claimed to have slept rough under the Wishkah River crossing, which has become a visitor attraction for Nirvana fans.

A public meeting is to be held on July 27 to decide whether to press ahead with the proposal, which also includes a motion to name a small public park after Cobain, reports the [url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/officials-in-kurt-cobains-wash-hometown-consider-naming-bridge-park-after-him/2011/07/14/gIQAavZHEI_story.html]Washington Post[/url].

Some council members are thought to be in favour of the commemoration. However, it’s been reported that other officials are expecting a negative reaction during the public consultation due to Cobain‘s drug use, 1994 suicide and negative comments about the city.

Earlier this year, a statue of Cobain‘s signature Fender Jag-Stang guitar was unveiled in Aberdeen.

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.

Morrissey to publish autobiography in December 2012

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Morrissey has said he plans to release his much discussed autobiography in December next year. Speaking to Billboard, the ex-Smiths singer said that he's sees it as the "sentimental climax to the last 30 years. Asked about the book, Morrissey replied: "I see it as the sentimental climax to the l...

Morrissey has said he plans to release his much discussed autobiography in December next year.

Speaking to Billboard, the ex-Smiths singer said that he’s sees it as the “sentimental climax to the last 30 years.

Asked about the book, Morrissey replied: “I see it as the sentimental climax to the last 30 years. It will not be published until December 2012, which gives me just enough time to pack all I own in a box and disappear to central Brazil. The innocent are named and the guilty are protected.”

The singer also layed into soul crooner Michael Buble, describing him as “famous and meaningless.”

Asked about how he chooses the material he plays at gigs, he said: “I would find the idea of compiling a setlist that doesn’t wildly excite me to be too restricting. The fire in the belly is essential, otherwise you become Michael Buble – famous and meaningless.”

Morrissey also criticized the state of modern pop music, saying: “I say without bitterness that it is nothing new. I like the idea of women who are in full control, but I am tired of seeing singers who cannot deliver a song without the aide of seven hundred and fifty frenzied dancers assuming the erotic.”

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 27th Uncut Playlist Of 2011

Looming deadlines mean my blogging has been sketchy this week, but I have at least kept a longer-than-usual log of the records played in the past few days. As you’ll see, a good few interesting new arrivals here, too. Check out the new Lindsey Buckingham and Hiss Golden Messenger tracks by hitting the links: both pretty special. And Purling Hiss are unstoppable at the moment, I think. 1 Blitzen Trapper – American Goldwing (Sub Pop) 2 A Winged Victory For The Sullen - A Winged Victory For The Sullen (Erased Tapes) 3 Screaming Trees – Last Words: The Final Recordings (Sunyata) 4 Wilco – The Whole Love (dBpm) 5 Brett Anderson – Black Rainbows (EMI) 6 PG Six – Starry Mind (Drag City) 7 Bobb Trimble – The Crippled Dog Band (Yoga) 8 Jim Lauderdale & Robert Hunter – Reason And Rhyme (Sugar Hill) 9 Dawes – Nothing Is Wrong (Loose) 10 Idaho – You Were A Dick (Talitres) 11 Kid Creole & The Coconuts – I Wake Up Screaming (Strut) 12 Jim Ford – Harlan County (Light In The Attic) 13 Siinai – Olympic Games (Splendour) 14 Hiss Golden Messenger – Call Him Daylight (Paradise Of Bachelors) 15 Metal Mountains – Golden Trees (Amish) 16 Metronomy – The English Riviera (Because) 17 Real Estate – It’s Real (Domino) 18 St Vincent – Strange Mercy (4AD) 19 Lucas Santtana – Sem Nostalgia (Mais Un Discos) 20 Queen – Flash Gordon (Universal) 21 Ry Cooder – Pull Up Some Dust And Sit Down (Nonesuch) 22 The Horrible Crowes – Elsie (Sideonedummy) 23 Tarwater – Inside The Ships (Bureau B) 24 Steve Moore – Primitive Neural Pathways/Vaalbara (Static Caravan) 25 Girls – Father, Son, Holy Ghost (Turnstile) 26 Purling Hiss – Lounge Lizards (Mexican Summer) 27 The War On Drugs – Slave Ambient (Secretly Canadian) 28 Lindsey Buckingham – Seeds We Sow (lindseybuckingham.com) 29 Zola Jesus – Conatus (Souterrain Transmissions)

Looming deadlines mean my blogging has been sketchy this week, but I have at least kept a longer-than-usual log of the records played in the past few days. As you’ll see, a good few interesting new arrivals here, too.

Two previously unreleased White Stripes tracks surface online

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Two previously unreleased tracks from The White Stripes have begun to circulate online. The tracks, which you can hear by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking, are titled 'Signed D.C and 'I've Been Loving You Too Long'. The latter is a cover of Otis Redding's 1965 single. Both songs were put on limited 7" vinyl as part of Jack White's Third Man Recordings' exclusive series of From The Vault releases, made available to 'platinum' subscribers, but have now been placed online. The tracks represent the first of a series of releases of previously unheard material, which Jack White indicated he would be putting out after the duo announced they were parting ways in February earlier this year. White announced yesterday (July 12) that the latest music to be released on Third Man Recordings record label will be two tracks from rapper Black Milk on which he himself has acted as co-producer, also playing drums and guitar. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cx_34o4GIR4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CbzCpU79Qqw Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Two previously unreleased tracks from The White Stripes have begun to circulate online.

The tracks, which you can hear by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking, are titled ‘Signed D.C and ‘I’ve Been Loving You Too Long’. The latter is a cover of Otis Redding‘s 1965 single.

Both songs were put on limited 7″ vinyl as part of Jack White‘s Third Man Recordings‘ exclusive series of From The Vault releases, made available to ‘platinum’ subscribers, but have now been placed online.

The tracks represent the first of a series of releases of previously unheard material, which Jack White indicated he would be putting out after the duo announced they were parting ways in February earlier this year.

White announced yesterday (July 12) that the latest music to be released on Third Man Recordings record label will be two tracks from rapper Black Milk on which he himself has acted as co-producer, also playing drums and guitar.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cx_34o4GIR4

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CbzCpU79Qqw

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Morrissey fans searched for meat before gig

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Ticket-holders who were entering Morrissey's gig at Middlesbrough Town Hall last Friday (July 8) were searched in case they were carrying any meat products, according to reports. The former Smiths man is an extremely strict vegetarian and is known to demand that venues he perform in have no meat on the premises, but this is the first time he has insisted that gig-goers be searched for meat. According to the Daily Mirror, when fans entered the venue they were directed toward security who searched their bags for any meat products. One concert-goer, Mel Stokes told the Mirror: "As you went into the venue you were funnelled through to the top of some steps where they were carrying out searches." "A member of the security staff then went through my bag and told me that they were checking to make sure that I was not carrying any meat products inside." Earlier this year, Morrissey had insisted that Belgian music festival Lokerse Feesten, ban all meat from the site on the day he is due to perform. He headlines two gigs in London next month. 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.

Ticket-holders who were entering Morrissey‘s gig at Middlesbrough Town Hall last Friday (July 8) were searched in case they were carrying any meat products, according to reports.

The former Smiths man is an extremely strict vegetarian and is known to demand that venues he perform in have no meat on the premises, but this is the first time he has insisted that gig-goers be searched for meat.

According to the Daily Mirror, when fans entered the venue they were directed toward security who searched their bags for any meat products.

One concert-goer, Mel Stokes told the Mirror: “As you went into the venue you were funnelled through to the top of some steps where they were carrying out searches.”

“A member of the security staff then went through my bag and told me that they were checking to make sure that I was not carrying any meat products inside.”

Earlier this year, Morrissey had insisted that Belgian music festival Lokerse Feesten, ban all meat from the site on the day he is due to perform.

He headlines two gigs in London next month.

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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.

Laura Marling reveals tracklisting for ‘A Creature I Don’t Know’

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Laura Marling has revealed the tracklisting for her third studio album 'A Creature I Don't Know'. The album, which is due for release on September 12, features 10 tracks and is the follow-up to her 2010 album 'I Speak Because I Can'. You can watch a video preview of the album by scrolling down to ...

Laura Marling has revealed the tracklisting for her third studio album ‘A Creature I Don’t Know’.

The album, which is due for release on September 12, features 10 tracks and is the follow-up to her 2010 album ‘I Speak Because I Can’. You can watch a video preview of the album by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

The singer will be playing material from ‘A Creature I Don’t Know’ during sets at End Of The Road Festival, Bestival and Green Man festival during the remainder of the summer.

The tracklisting for ‘A Creature I Don’t Know is:

‘The Muse’

‘I Was Just A Card’

‘Don’t Ask Me Why’

‘Salinas’

‘The Beast’

‘Night After Night’

‘My Friends’

‘Rest In the Bed’

‘Sophia’

‘All My Rage’

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Morrissey injures finger in dog attack

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Morrissey was recently injured by a dog, it has emerged. The former frontman of The Smiths suffered injures to his hand and arm after being attacked by the canine during his recent time in England, reports [url=http://true-to-you.net/morrissey_news_110711_01]True-To-You.net[/url]. The 'Alsatian Co...

Morrissey was recently injured by a dog, it has emerged.

The former frontman of The Smiths suffered injures to his hand and arm after being attacked by the canine during his recent time in England, reports [url=http://true-to-you.net/morrissey_news_110711_01]True-To-You.net[/url].

The ‘Alsatian Cousin’ singer later went to hospital in Malmo, Sweden where X-rays revealed he had fractured the tip of his index finger.

According to the posting on the fansite, which Morrissey regularly uses as his official mouthpiece, the injury will not affect any gigs on his current European tour.

He is due to play in Copenhagen tonight (July 11), before moving on to dates in Sweden, Germany, Poland and Ireland before the end of the month.

Morrissey recently completed an extensive UK tour, which saw him play high-profile sets at Glastonbury and Hop Farm Festival.

The singer recently announced two London shows for next month at O2 Academy Brixton (August 7) and the Palladium (8) – according to True To You, he is “delighted” that tickets for the latter sold out within five minutes of going onsale.

The singer is still currently searching for a record label to release his new studio album. Despite the follow-up to 2009’s ‘Years Of Refusal’ being complete and ready to release, Morrissey has said he is struggling to find a label to put it out for him.

He has said he has no interest in self-releasing the album as his “talents do not lie in DIY”.

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Patti Smith to release new ‘Greatest Hits’ LP ‘Outside Society’

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Patti Smith is to release a new 'Greatest Hits' compilation on September 12, which is titled 'Outside Society'. The 18-song LP will span Smith's entire body of work, from her 1975 debut all the way to her cover of Nirvana's Smells Like Teen Spirit in 2007. The special package will also feature bri...

Patti Smith is to release a new ‘Greatest Hits’ compilation on September 12, which is titled ‘Outside Society’.

The 18-song LP will span Smith’s entire body of work, from her 1975 debut all the way to her cover of Nirvana‘s Smells Like Teen Spirit in 2007. The special package will also feature brief recollections of each song written by Smith herself.

Smith has released ten studio albums across her career, the latest being ‘Twelve’ in 2007, which was an album of cover versions of artists including Jimi Hendrix, The Rolling Stones and REM.

The singer most recently released a memoir, which is titled Just Kids and tells of her life in New York with photographer Robert Mapplethorpe.

The tracklisting for ‘Outside Society’ is as follows:

‘Gloria’

‘Free Money’

‘Ain’t It Strange’

‘Pissing In A River’

‘Because The Night’

‘Rock ‘N’ Roll Nigger’

‘Dancing Barefoot’

‘Frederick’

‘So You Want To Be A Rock ‘N’ Roll Star’

‘People Have the Power’

‘Up There Down There’

‘Beneath The Southern Cross’

‘Summer Cannibals’

‘1959’

‘Glitter In Their Eyes’

‘Lo And Beholden’

‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’

‘Trampin’

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Paul McCartney hints that he may put together a version of the Beatles for the Olympics

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Paul McCartney has hinted that he and Ringo Starr may put together a new version of The Beatles for the Olympic opening ceremony. Speaking on US TV, he nodded when asked whether he would appear at the London games. But after quickly realising he may have said too much he backtracked. McCartney said...

Paul McCartney has hinted that he and Ringo Starr may put together a new version of The Beatles for the Olympic opening ceremony.

Speaking on US TV, he nodded when asked whether he would appear at the London games. But after quickly realising he may have said too much he backtracked. McCartney said: “I hear there’s a rumour that I might be involved.” However when referring to The Beatles he said: “I hear they’re planning this sort of music.”

According to The Sun an insider said: “Macca was just being coy about the details. He has been speaking to organisers and has said he’d love to be involved with the games in some way. The organisers want the music legend to appear alongside other big british acts. And they also want Ringo on stage as well to make it extra special.”

The newspaper even goes as far as to suggest that George Harrison and John Lennon could be represented by their kids. The source added: “The Beatles are loved all over the world so it’s a no-brainer that they should be represented at the Olympics.

McCartney is no stranger to playing The Beatles biggest hits at major events.

He headlined charity concert Live Aid and the follow-up Live 8 as well as performing at the US Super Bowl. He even made an appearance at the 2009 X Factor final after being asked by Simon Cowell.

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Jonathan Wilson: “Gentle Spirit”

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In his book Hotel California, Barney Hoskyns describes Laurel Canyon, Los Angeles, in the 1970s as “A funky Shangri-La for the laid-back and longhaired, who perched in cabins with awesome views of LA’s sprawling basin.” A short drive away is Sunset Strip, where Hoskyns’ cast of singer-songwriters could visit clubs and score drugs before heading back to their apparently bucolic idyll. The Canyon style, Hoskyns quoted film director Lisa Chodolenko, was “kind of lazy and kind of dirty and kind of earthy and sort of reckless.” Some four decades later, the debut solo album from Jonathan Wilson feeds on this local mythology with such gusto that, at first, you could be forgiven for thinking it was a conceptual art project on the idea of Laurel Canyon. Or, perhaps, a satire on the mellow, hippyish music associated with the place. For 13 long tracks, Wilson and the friends who drop by to play on "Gentle Spirit" at least sound like they are phenomenally stoned. Crosby, Stills and Young are studiously invoked, Graham Nash less so: too straight, presumably. There are songs called “Canyon In The Rain”, “Natural Rhapsody”, “Rolling Universe”, “Magic Everywhere”. Lyrics, correspondingly, achieve a sort of beatific wooliness: “Natural world she needs our energy,” Wilson sings on “Waters Down”, though his singing voice is more of a dry, awed whisper. “‘Valley Of The Silver Moon’ is a song about the modern music world not understanding what I have to offer as an artist,” he complains, with what one assumes is languid indignation, in the accompanying press release. Wilson, who owns his own LA studio, actually appears to have done reasonably well from the music world thus far. As an associate member of the country-rock band Dawes, he has recently backed Robbie Robertson, a credit to put alongside work with Erykah Badu, Elvis Costello and Jackson Browne on his CV. Friends who contribute to "Gentle Spirit" include Chris Robinson and Adam McDougal from The Black Crowes, Gary Louris from The Jayhawks, Vetiver’s Andy Cabic and Otto Hauser, plus a bunch of session vets (Barry Goldberg, Gerald Johnson, Gary Mallaber) with a shared past in the Steve Miller Band. All-star jams are not always appealing, but if there’s a single precedent for much of Gentle Spirit, it is one of the best of them: David Crosby’s cosmically befuddled "If I Could Only Remember My Name". Wilson not only recreates the woody reverie of that album, he also synthesises Crosby’s air of vague, dissolute guilt. “Can We Really Party Today” finds the singer being stirred from his wilderness socials with a nagging suspicion his energies should be directed elsewhere, “with all that’s going on”. It’s not a protest song, as such, but a mildly neurotic apology from Wilson for not writing one. Fortunately, it’s also ravishing (a contemporary analogue would be Devendra Banhart’s underrated – and similarly baked - "Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon"). “Valley Of The Silver Moon”, meanwhile, drifts along for a good ten minutes, anchored by a riff that, in a past life, may well have served time with Danny Whitten on “Cowgirl In The Sand”. And on the outstanding “Desert Raven”, Wilson does his best to complete the set, with a run of luxuriantly keening solos that would have done Stephen Stills proud. Wilson is quite the guitar virtuoso when roused, and a propulsive freakout through Gordon Lightfoot’s “The Way I Feel” suggests his finest work may be produced in less horizontal moods. Mostly, though, a strung-out folksiness dominates, even when Wilson’s muse spins away from the canyons and into more ethereal realms on “Natural Rhapsody” (a nod to “Echoes”-era Pink Floyd) and “Woe Is Me” (a blues dirge in the vein of Spiritualized’s “Take Your Time”). Reference-spotters, it more or less goes without saying, are going to have a high old time with "Gentle Spirit". The cumulative effect of all this historically-redolent data, though, is surprisingly transcendent. Wilson would doubtless attribute his album’s excellence to the ancient spirit and natural vibes of Laurel Canyon itself. But his debut illustrates a more prosaic act of creation, in which fastidious study is transformed into compelling new music: sometimes as homage; occasionally as inadvertent stoner comedy; mostly as an entirely satisfying late entry in the Canyon tradition.

In his book Hotel California, Barney Hoskyns describes Laurel Canyon, Los Angeles, in the 1970s as “A funky Shangri-La for the laid-back and longhaired, who perched in cabins with awesome views of LA’s sprawling basin.”

Red Hot Chili Peppers discuss reasons for calling new album ‘I’m With You’

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Red Hot Chili Peppers' frontman Anthony Kiedis has said that the band opted to call their new album 'I'm With You as it sums up how they currently feel. The singer revealed that it was new guitarist Josh Klinghoffer who came up with the name of the record and that producer Rick Rubin had talked th...

Red Hot Chili Peppers‘ frontman Anthony Kiedis has said that the band opted to call their new album ‘I’m With You as it sums up how they currently feel.

The singer revealed that it was new guitarist Josh Klinghoffer who came up with the name of the record and that producer Rick Rubin had talked them out of naming it after one of the album’s song titles.

Speaking to MTV News, Kiedis said of the album title: “It seems pretty open, pretty apropos to where the band is, what the band’s doing, how the record wants to be related to, or related with. It’s open, and there’s not really a negative connotation. It’s inviting.”

Kiedis continued: “We thought of calling it a song title off the record, and when I mentioned that to Rick [Rubin], he said, ‘That just makes it seem like we don’t have enough ideas.”

He then revealed that new guitarist Klinghoffer, who replaced longtime player John Frusciante in 2009, had come up with the title.

He added: “Josh showed up one day, maybe a day before there was some sort of deadline for a title, and he wrote [‘I’m With You’] on a piece of paper and we all kind of put our eyes on it at the same time and went: ‘That is the title of our record.'”

‘I’m With You’ is due for release on August 30. The first single from the album, ‘The Adventure Of Raindance Maggie’, will come out on July 18.

Red Hot Chili Peppers are due to tour Europe in October and December.

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Noel Gallagher confirms he will play Oasis songs on October tour

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Noel Gallagher has confirmed he will be touring the UK in the autumn and will be playing Oasis songs as part of his live set. Speaking earlier today (July 6) at a press conference to launch his new solo album 'Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds', he confirmed that he would be touring the week afte...

Noel Gallagher has confirmed he will be touring the UK in the autumn and will be playing Oasis songs as part of his live set.

Speaking earlier today (July 6) at a press conference to launch his new solo album ‘Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds’, he confirmed that he would be touring the week after the album is released on October 17. He also confirmed that the first show would be in Dublin on October 23 and that the tour would take in Manchester, London and Glasgow.

He said: “We’re going to go out on tour a week after the album is out. We’re going to start off slow in small theatres. If it’s [the solo album] good enough to get bigger than that then it’ll get bigger than that.”

Gallagher added that he would tour again in 2012, and more extensively. He said: “I don’t think there’ll be a huge great big tour this year. I think this year it’ll be a quick whizz around the world and try and do the major cities and then it will probably be a bigger tour next year.”

He also indicated that he would definitely be playing Oasis songs on the tour, saying: “The album lasts for 46 minutes and 12 seconds, so I will play some Oasis songs. They’re my songs and I wrote them on my own. I’m proud of them and I’m proud of where they sit with what I’ve done now. I don’t think I’d ever do a gig without playing them.”

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Deep Magic: “Lucid Thought”

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I’ve been playing a lot of music by Alex Gray, a guy from Oxnard, California, who tends to work under the name of Deep Magic. Gray favours New Age jargon to describe his sound – “Deep Magic is mystical music. Listen to it in a dark room and align yr chakras,” for instance – although it’s not entirely clear how seriously he buys into his own rhetoric. That said, if you actually were looking for music to play while aligning your chakras, then any number of Deep Magic releases would probably work just fine. Ostensibly, Gray deals in a particularly meditative kind of ambient music; gracefully dawdling epics of bells, drone, echo and endlessly rippling guitars. There are plenty of underground artists working this beat at the moment, stretching from assiduous students of 1970s German kosmische music, through to the hipper, ‘80s-obsessed types that are often described by bloggers as hypnagogic pop. For all the heat-hazed aesthetics and lo-fi warp, though, Deep Magic is closer to the German style - Gray’s albums like "Lucid Thought" have a sort of calm and organic grandeur that recalls Popol Vuh. Gray’s music is tranquil and addictive, too, but it’s also caused me to ask a mildly profound question: how much do you need to own an album that barely exists? My interest in Deep Magic was prompted a few weeks ago by the arrival of "Lucid Thought", on CD, from the Preservation label in Australia. The disc, it transpired, was part of a limited run of 300, so before writing about it, I made sure that it was also available digitally (It is). A few days spent peering into the nooks and crannies of Gray’s deeptapes.com have revealed, however, that a run of 300 CDs constitutes something of a major corporate push in Deep Magic’s world. Gray plays alongside Cameron Stallones in the live incarnation of Sun Araw, but he has also found time to create a bewildering number of his own releases in the last year or so, mostly on cassette, mostly in editions of 50 or less: I can recommend "Sky Haze", "Ancestor Worship" and "Ocean Breaths" in particular. The most beatifically ambient I’ve come across, "Illuminated Offerings", was limited to 25 copies, on microcassettes, packaged inside aromatherapy candles. From the pictures online, these are plainly lovely artefacts. But at the same time, the collaged cassette boxes and so on feel a little like the fetish objects of a lost Amazonian tribe. Many of us might still cling to concrete manifestations of recorded music, jewel cases and all, in the face of unavoidable digital realities. Nevertheless, the allure of Deep Magic seems uncommonly divorced from such material concerns. If ambient music thrives on the ethereal, on a concept of weightlessness, then surely the last thing it needs is a tangible physical form to anchor it? I am as guilty as anyone of hoarding CDs, records, even microcassettes in candles, given the chance. But still, it feels like I don’t need any Deep Magic cassettes: these “archaic spirit hymns”, as Gray describes them, seem much more at home in the virtual world.

I’ve been playing a lot of music by Alex Gray, a guy from Oxnard, California, who tends to work under the name of Deep Magic.

Pete Doherty released from jail a month early

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Pete Doherty has been released from jail, a month earlier than expected. Earlier this year (May 20) The Libertines and Babyshambles singer was sentenced to six months in prison for possession of cocaine. On the website Albion Rooms a message appeared stating, “On this bright sunny morning Peter...

Pete Doherty has been released from jail, a month earlier than expected.

Earlier this year (May 20) The Libertines and Babyshambles singer was sentenced to six months in prison for possession of cocaine.

On the website Albion Rooms a message appeared stating, “On this bright sunny morning Peter was released from prison and thanks everyone for their valued support while inside.”

Posting under the pseudonym ‘Babybear’, Doherty‘s manager, Adrian Hunter, hit the message boards of website French Dog Blues to show his thanks for the support fans had given the troubled singer.

He wrote, “Peter has been released as was reported there hours ago. Long day folks but a happy one. Many good things done. All’s good and peace and quiet shall now ensue. A bit of ‘bedding in’ and reflection is on the cards and so much the better.”

When originally sentenced Judge David Radford said Pete Doherty had an “appalling record” in court. He had already appeared on no less than 13 occasions.

Doherty could still face up to five years in prison for charges of burglary, after he allegedly broke into a record shop in Germany and stole a guitar.

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