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Noel Gallagher announces full debut solo album details

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Noel Gallagher has announced full details of his new solo debut album 'Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds' at a London press conference. The ex-Oasis guitarist said his new record will be released on his own label Sour Mash Records on October 17 and will be followed up by a second collaboration LP ...

Noel Gallagher has announced full details of his new solo debut album ‘Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds’ at a London press conference.

The ex-Oasis guitarist said his new record will be released on his own label Sour Mash Records on October 17 and will be followed up by a second collaboration LP in 2012 with Amorphous Androgynous.

The LP, his first material since Oasis split in August 2009, was recorded in London and completed in Los Angeles during 2010 and the first half of this year. It features 10 new songs and was produced by Gallagher and Dave Sardy.

Musicians appearing on the records include ex-Oasis keyboard player Mike Rowe, The Lemon TreesJeremy Stacey and American percussionist Lenny Castro, best known for playing on records by The Rolling Stones, Stevie Wonder and Elton John.

The album also includes guest appearances from the Crouch End Festival Chorus, who Oasis and Gallagher have performed with before, and The Wired Strings.

Gallagher is due to tour in the autumn but no further details have been announced yet. He launched his own official website, Twitter, YouTube, Facebook and MySpace ahead of the press conference. No material has been posted up on any site so far.

The full tracklisting for ‘Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds’ is as follows:

‘Everybody’s On The Run’

‘Dream On’

‘If I Had A Gun’

‘The Death Of You And Me’

‘(I Wanna Live In A Dream In My) Record Machine’

‘AKA…What A Life!’

‘Soldier Boys And Jesus Freaks’

‘AKA….Broken Arrow’

‘(Stranded On) The Wrong Beach’

‘Stop The Clocks’

Rumours surfaced earlier this year that the first single from the record will be the ‘The Death Of You And Me’.

Although the track does feature on the record, it is yet to be confirmed as the album’s official first single.

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 26th Uncut Playlist Of 2011

A few anxious messages these past few days, enquiring about the new Wilco album. For various reasons (not least because I have a stream rather than a download), I haven’t been able to play it and concentrate on it as much as I’d like, so I’m reluctant to say too much at this point. Seems to be one of those albums, though, where one or two tracks come impressively into focus with each play, and the sound is kind of evolved from previous Wilco albums. “One Sunday Morning (Song For Jane Smiley's Boyfriend)”, at this point, is amazing. Bear with me, anyhow; positive vibes right now. Likewise for PG Six, Sun Araw, Fool’s Gold and Laura Marling, the last of those making me suspect I should’ve spent more time with her previous albums than I did. In the archive department, Light In The Attic on a hot streak, and great pleasures to be found in the Screaming Trees’ ill-starred late ‘90s attempt to make one last album. Here you go… 1 Wilco – The Whole Love (dBpm) 2 PG Six – Starry Mind (Drag City) 3 Other Lives – Tamer Animals (PIAS) 4 Brian Olive – Two Of Everything (Alive!) 5 Sun Araw – Ancient Romans (Drag City) 6 Laura Marling – A Creature I Don’t Know (Virgin) 7 Glen Campbell – Ghost On The Canvas (Surfdog) 8 Shin Joong Hyun – Beautiful Rivers And Mountains: The Psychedelic Rock Sound Of South Korea’s Shin Joong Hyun 1958-1974 (Light In The Attic) 9 Screaming Trees – Last Words: The Final Recordings (Sunyata Music) 10 Augustus Pablo – Ital Dub (Get On Down) 11 James Elkington & Nathan Salsburg – Avos (Tompkins Square) 12 Charles ‘Packy’ Axton – Late Late Party 1965-1967 (Light In The Attic) 13 Fool’s Gold – Leave No Trace (Iamsound)

A few anxious messages these past few days, enquiring about the new Wilco album. For various reasons (not least because I have a stream rather than a download), I haven’t been able to play it and concentrate on it as much as I’d like, so I’m reluctant to say too much at this point.

Pete Doherty for fresh prison sentence?

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Pete Doherty is said to be facing another prison sentence after allegedly breaking into a shop and robbing the contents in Regensburg, Germany earlier this year. The owners of the music shop, from which The Libertines singer allegedly stole a guitar and record, are said to be pressing charges again...

Pete Doherty is said to be facing another prison sentence after allegedly breaking into a shop and robbing the contents in Regensburg, Germany earlier this year.

The owners of the music shop, from which The Libertines singer allegedly stole a guitar and record, are said to be pressing charges against him.

Doherty has admitted to smashing the shop window, but says he doesn’t remember stealing anything, as he was drunk at the time, reports The Sun.

The stolen goods were found after the incident in the Regensburg main square. Doherty had been staying in the town to shoot his part in the film Confessions of a Young Contemporary. Starring opposite fellow musician/actor Charlotte Gainsbourg, Doherty was playing French poet and novelist Alfred de Musset.

Doherty, who is currently serving time for cocaine possession in the UK, could face up to five years if he is found guilty of the theft and breaking and entering charges.

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 announces two London shows for August

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Morrissey has announced a pair of London shows for August. The former singer of the Smiths will headline O2 Academy Brixton on August 7 before moving across town to the London Palladium on the following night, August 8. Morrissey is currently nearing the end of an extensive UK tour, which has se...

Morrissey has announced a pair of London shows for August.

The former singer of the Smiths will headline O2 Academy Brixton on August 7 before moving across town to the London Palladium on the following night, August 8.

Morrissey is currently nearing the end of an extensive UK tour, which has seen him perform high profile slots at Glastonbury and Hop Farm Festivalas well as slew of dates in theatres around the country.

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”.

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.

Sting cancels Kazakhstan gig due to ‘repression’ of oil and gas workers

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Sting has cancelled a scheduled live date in Kazakhstan because he doesn’t want to promote the country’s ‘repression’ of its oil and gas workers. With workers in the country currently in the middle of a strike that has lasted for longer than 40 days, a statement was posted on the singer’s...

Sting has cancelled a scheduled live date in Kazakhstan because he doesn’t want to promote the country’s ‘repression’ of its oil and gas workers.

With workers in the country currently in the middle of a strike that has lasted for longer than 40 days, a statement was posted on the singer’s website revealing that he’d chosen to pull out of an appearance at Kazakhstan’s Astana Day Festival, which was due to take place tonight (July 4).

The statement reveals that Sting had recently been apprised of the situation in Kazakhstan by Amnesty International and, as a result, felt that playing the show would “be interpreted as an endorsement of the presidents’ administration and surely will go against everything he has stood for, while supporting Amnesty and the fight for human rights, for the past 40 years.”

A statement from Sting himself, meanwhile, said: “Hunger strikes, imprisoned workers and tens of thousands on strike represents a virtual picket line which I have no intention of crossing.”

“The Kazakh gas and oil workers and their families need our support and the spotlight of the international media on their situation in the hope of bringing about positive change.”

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 Best Of 2011 Thus Far – Your Top 20

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Many thanks to all of you who stopped by and registered your votes for this Albums Of 2011 Thus Far poll. I've finally done the requisite dark mathematics and come up with this Top 20. A big gap between the top three and the rest of the field and, perhaps, an unexpected winner… 20. Metronomy – The English Riviera 19. Fucked Up – David Comes To Life 18. Raphael Saadiq – Stone Rollin’ 17. Panda Bear – Tomboy 16. Six Organs Of Admittance – Asleep On The Floodplain 15. Jonny – Jonny 14. Arbouretum - The Gathering 13. The Felice Brothers – Celebration Florida 12. Peaking Lights - 936 11. Anna Calvi – Anna Calvi 10. EMA – Past Life Martyred Saints 9. Gang Gang Dance – Eye Contact 8. J Mascis – Several Shades Of Why 7. Radiohead – The King Of Limbs 6. Low – C’Mon 5. Bill Callahan – Apocalypse 4. Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues 3. PJ Harvey - Let England Shake 2. White Denim – D 1. Kurt Vile – Smoke Ring For My Halo

Many thanks to all of you who stopped by and registered your votes for this Albums Of 2011 Thus Far poll. I’ve finally done the requisite dark mathematics and come up with this Top 20. A big gap between the top three and the rest of the field and, perhaps, an unexpected winner…

Members of The Doors honour Jim Morrison on 40th anniversary of his death

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The Doors late frontman Jim Morrison has been honoured by two of his former bandmates on the 40th anniversary of his death today (July 3). Keyboardist Ray Manzarek and guitarist Robby Krieger visited the singer's grave in Paris to light candles in his memory, reports Associated Press. They were jo...

The Doors late frontman Jim Morrison has been honoured by two of his former bandmates on the 40th anniversary of his death today (July 3).

Keyboardist Ray Manzarek and guitarist Robby Krieger visited the singer’s grave in Paris to light candles in his memory, reports Associated Press.

They were joined at the Pere Lachaise cemetery by a group of Morrison‘s fans, who laid flowers while wearing t-shirts bearing the words “40th anniversary”.

The grave has long been a pilgrimage site for his fans.

Morrison died in 1971 in the French capital, with the cause of death believed to have been a drug overdose.

However, there are many theories surrounding his death, with some fans believing he faked his demise and is still alive today.

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.

Prince closes Hop Farm Festival with Dylan, Beatles and Michael Jackson covers

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Prince’s first UK show in two years closed this weekend’s Hop Farm Festival in Paddock Wood, Kent. The pop icon, clad all in white, played a set featuring covers of Michael Jackson's 'Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough', The Beatles' 'Come Together' and Bob Dylan's 'Make You Feel My Love'. He was ...

Prince’s first UK show in two years closed this weekend’s Hop Farm Festival in Paddock Wood, Kent.

The pop icon, clad all in white, played a set featuring covers of Michael Jackson‘s ‘Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough’, The Beatles‘Come Together’ and Bob Dylan‘s ‘Make You Feel My Love’.

He was also joined onstage by Larry Graham of Sly And The Family Stone for a cover of Wild Cherry‘s ‘Play That Funky Music’.

After playing ‘Nothing Compares 2 U’, made a global hit by Sinead O’Connor, he joked “that wasn’t my song, that was Sinead O’Connor’s song. What? That song bought me a house.”

Prince played:

‘Laydown’

‘Let’s Go Crazy’/’Delirious’/’Let’s Go Crazy(Reprise)’

‘1999’

‘Raspberry Beret’

‘Little Red Corvette’

‘Take Me With U’

‘U Got the Look

‘Nothing Compares 2 U’

‘Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough’

‘Cream’

‘Cool’

‘Make You Feel My Love’

‘Purple Rain’

‘Kiss’

‘Controversy’/’Housequake’

‘Play That Funky Music’

‘Come Together’

‘Dance (Disco Heat)’

‘If I Was Your Girlfriend’

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.

Mick Jagger’s new band Super Heavy reveal debut album details

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Mick Jagger’s new band Super Heavy have revealed that their debut album will be released on September 20. The first album by the supergroup – whose star-studded line-up includes Joss Stone, Damian Marley, Eurythmics’ Dave Stewart and composer AR Rahman – does not currently have a title, bu...

Mick Jagger’s new band Super Heavy have revealed that their debut album will be released on September 20.

The first album by the supergroup – whose star-studded line-up includes Joss Stone, Damian Marley, EurythmicsDave Stewart and composer AR Rahman – does not currently have a title, but it has been confirmed that the band’s first single will be called ‘Miracle Worker’.

Jagger told The Hollywood Reporter that the project had initially started with “ideas, a few guitar riffs and a few snippets of lyrics”, adding: “It’s not my usual sort of way of working. You always want to leave some room for improvisation, but you need to have something, some songs, when you walk into the studio.

“It evolved very quickly. We sat around with our little pads [writing]. We did do a lot of jams but it’s all coherent and arranged. We just wrote them quickly.”

Jagger had previously compared Super Heavy to the Rolling Stones, claiming: “If you’re a Rolling Stones fan there’s definitely stuff you can relate to. Other stuff that you can’t relate to so much, maybe if you listen you’ll enjoy it. I don’t think it’s so far off the beaten track that you can’t understand it.”

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.

August 2011

16 great tracks, featuring Eddie Cochran, Bo Diddley, Link Wray, Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters and more Last July, Bob Dylan headlined the Hop Farm festival on the hottest day of the year with perhaps his best UK performance since the great Wembley Arena shows of October 2000. A little shy of 12 mont...

16 great tracks, featuring Eddie Cochran, Bo Diddley, Link Wray, Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters and more

Last July, Bob Dylan headlined the Hop Farm festival on the hottest day of the year with perhaps his best UK performance since the great Wembley Arena shows of October 2000.

A little shy of 12 months later, and a few weeks after celebrating his 70th birthday, Dylan played the inaugural Feis festival in London’s Finsbury Park on a day of relentless rain. When it wasn’t merely drizzling, it was pouring. Nevertheless, the miserable downpour failed to dampen spirits soon being typically lifted by The Gaslight Anthem’s set of by now well-worn festival favourites, mostly drawn from The ’59 Sound and American Slang. By the end, even people who’d never heard them before were singing along as if they’d been listening to these songs for just about forever, if not a little longer.

With The Cranberries due next on the main stage, it seemed opportune to check out what was happening elsewhere. This involved an arduous trek across the mud to a far corner, where Shane MacGowan was playing in a tent that turned out to be too packed to get into. What I could hear from the back of a noisy throng sounded like a happy shambles, with Shane barely decipherable above a din the crowd inside the tent clearly couldn’t get enough of. Shane’s bedraggled, toothless appearance seemed to put the wind up a few of the photographers I spoke to who were astonished he’d made it through his set without falling over, but he remains uncommonly loved.

It’s 9.15 when Dylan punctually appears, dapper and keen to get on with things, which he does with a sprightly

DAVE ALVIN – ELEVEN ELEVEN

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The heart beats a little faster at the thought of The Blasters in their prime, that brief moment when they were by some distance the flat-out most exciting rock’n’roll band a lot of us have ever seen. Dave Alvin was their incendiary lead guitarist and songwriter, his vocalist brother Phil, who formed the band with Dave in the blue-collar East Los Angeles suburb of Downey, their grandstanding front man. The chemistry between them was often as dangerously volatile as their music – a sensational mix of blues, rockabilly, R’n’B and rock’n’roll – and their increasingly fractious relationship meant the band’s career was incredibly lively when it lasted, but woefully short-lived. They did as much as, say, REM, The Replacements and Hüsker Dü to revitalise American music in the early ’80s. They split, though, in 1985, after just four albums. For a while after he quit his own band, Alvin played guitar with X, hooked up briefly with The Gun Club and recorded some still-unreleased sessions with Bob Dylan before making his solo debut with 1987’s admittedly tentative Romeo’s Escape (re-titled Every Night About This Time in the UK). He really hit his stride, however, with 1994’s King Of America and the mostly acoustic folk-blues of 1998’s Blackjack David, for which he should probably have won the Grammy he got for 2000’s Public Domain: Songs From The Wild Land, which drew on a rich heritage of traditional American music in a manner that anticipated Springsteen’s 2006 album The Seeger Sessions. Eleven Eleven is Alvin’s first album of original new material since Ashgrove, seven years ago, and mixes to great effect the rowdy road-house blues of his work with regular touring band The Guilty Men and the more poised and reflective Blackjack David, revisiting along the way many of the themes he’s remained constant to over the years. “The songs are all about life, love, death, loss, money, justice, labour, faith, doubt, family and friendship. The usual stuff,” he says of Eleven Eleven, which unfolds like a series of road movies, vivid vignettes, episodes from distressed lives, real and imagined. Among the former is a song called “Johnny Ace Is Dead”, a dramatic re-telling of the death of the eponymous young R’n’B singer, who drunkenly put a bullet in his own head, backstage at Houston’s City Auditorium on Christmas Night, 1954 – an event also evoked on Paul Simon’s “The Late Great Johnny Ace” from his 1983 album, Hearts And Bones. “Murrieta’s Head” is another song here based on fact, in this instance the story of Joaquin Murrieta – a rebel idol to the hard-pressed Mexican communities of 1850s’ California, a savage bandit according to the state’s legislature who put a bounty on his head and unleashed a small army against him. Bob Frank and John Murry told the same tale on “Joaquin Muriette, 1853”, from their 2007 album of murder ballads, World Without End, casting him in their version as a beleaguered hero, oppressed, brutalised, hounded down and butchered by grim authority. In his own simmering version, Alvin approaches the story from the compromised perspective of one of Murrieta’s executioners, a poor white farmer who needs the bounty to pay off his debts, save his farm and keep his family together even if it costs someone else their life, the song’s bitter fatalism angrily expressed by Alvin’s scorching guitar. The characters we meet in many of the album’s other fine songs are just as vividly rendered. They include the weary road dog drifter of “Harlan County Line”, a swaggering blues written for the TV series Justified, in which Alvin recently made a guest appearance; the ruined boxer in the Bo Diddley-fuelled “Run Conejo Run” and the ageing union man in “Gary, Indiana 1959”. The latter, incidentally, features great barrel-house piano from former Blasters’ pianist Gene Taylor, back in the studio with Alvin for the first time since 1985. Eleven Eleven also reunites Dave with brother Phil, now a professor in mathematical semantics, on the very funny “What’s Up With Your Brother?” – a question asked of each of the Alvins down the years by Blasters fans fascinated by the rivalry between them that drove the band into a ditch. It ends up, hilariously, in squabbling. Best of all, perhaps, are two songs that recall the melancholic drift of Blackjack David and songs on it like “Evening Blues” and “California Snow”. The first is the beautifully wrought “Black Rose Of Texas”, in which the song’s narrator reflects on the lonely death of a former lover. “No Worries Mija”, meanwhile, is a first-person border ballad set to lilting cantina accordion, in which the singer reassures his young wife that he’ll be back in no time from the job he’s doing as a favour for a friend – a drugs run, driving a getaway car, something dangerous anyway. The song’s sombre lilt, however, anticipates a less than happy ending, everything going wrong and his shoes filling with blood. Brilliant stuff. Allan Jones

The heart beats a little faster at the thought of The Blasters in their prime, that brief moment when they were by some distance the flat-out most exciting rock’n’roll band a lot of us have ever seen.

Dave Alvin was their incendiary lead guitarist and songwriter, his vocalist brother Phil, who formed the band with Dave in the blue-collar East Los Angeles suburb of Downey, their grandstanding front man. The chemistry between them was often as dangerously volatile as their music – a sensational mix of blues, rockabilly, R’n’B and rock’n’roll – and their increasingly fractious relationship meant the band’s career was incredibly lively when it lasted, but woefully short-lived. They did as much as, say, REM, The Replacements and Hüsker Dü to revitalise American music in the early ’80s. They split, though, in 1985, after just four albums.

For a while after he quit his own band, Alvin played guitar with X, hooked up briefly with The Gun Club and recorded some still-unreleased sessions with Bob Dylan before making his solo debut with 1987’s admittedly tentative Romeo’s Escape (re-titled Every Night About This Time in the UK). He really hit his stride, however, with 1994’s King Of America and the mostly acoustic folk-blues of 1998’s Blackjack David, for which he should probably have won the Grammy he got for 2000’s Public Domain: Songs From The Wild Land, which drew on a rich heritage of traditional American music in a manner that anticipated Springsteen’s 2006 album The Seeger Sessions.

Eleven Eleven is Alvin’s first album of original new material since Ashgrove, seven years ago, and mixes to great effect the rowdy road-house blues of his work with regular touring band The Guilty Men and the more poised and reflective Blackjack David, revisiting along the way many of the themes he’s remained constant to over the years. “The songs are all about life, love, death, loss, money, justice, labour, faith, doubt, family and friendship. The usual stuff,” he says of Eleven Eleven, which unfolds like a series of road movies, vivid vignettes, episodes from distressed lives, real and imagined. Among the former is a song called “Johnny Ace Is Dead”, a dramatic re-telling of the death of the eponymous young R’n’B singer, who drunkenly put a bullet in his own head, backstage at Houston’s City Auditorium on Christmas Night, 1954 – an event also evoked on Paul Simon’s “The Late Great Johnny Ace” from his 1983 album, Hearts And Bones.

“Murrieta’s Head” is another song here based on fact, in this instance the story of Joaquin Murrieta – a rebel idol to the hard-pressed Mexican communities of 1850s’ California, a savage bandit according to the state’s legislature who put a bounty on his head and unleashed a small army against him. Bob Frank and John Murry told the same tale on “Joaquin Muriette, 1853”, from their 2007 album of murder ballads, World Without End, casting him in their version as a beleaguered hero, oppressed, brutalised, hounded down and butchered by grim authority. In his own simmering version, Alvin approaches the story from the compromised perspective of one of Murrieta’s executioners, a poor white farmer who needs the bounty to pay off his debts, save his farm and keep his family together even if it costs someone else their life, the song’s bitter fatalism angrily expressed by Alvin’s scorching guitar.

The characters we meet in many of the album’s other fine songs are just as vividly rendered. They include the weary road dog drifter of “Harlan County Line”, a swaggering blues written for the TV series Justified, in which Alvin recently made a guest appearance; the ruined boxer in the Bo Diddley-fuelled “Run Conejo Run” and the ageing union man in “Gary, Indiana 1959”. The latter, incidentally, features great barrel-house piano from former Blasters’ pianist Gene Taylor, back in the studio with Alvin for the first time since 1985. Eleven Eleven also reunites Dave with brother Phil, now a professor in mathematical semantics, on the very funny “What’s Up With Your Brother?” – a question asked of each of the Alvins down the years by Blasters fans fascinated by the rivalry between them that drove the band into a ditch. It ends up, hilariously, in squabbling.

Best of all, perhaps, are two songs that recall the melancholic drift of Blackjack David and songs on it like “Evening Blues” and “California Snow”. The first is the beautifully wrought “Black Rose Of Texas”, in which the song’s narrator reflects on the lonely death of a former lover. “No Worries Mija”, meanwhile, is a first-person border ballad set to lilting cantina accordion, in which the singer reassures his young wife that he’ll be back in no time from the job he’s doing as a favour for a friend – a drugs run, driving a getaway car, something dangerous anyway. The song’s sombre lilt, however, anticipates a less than happy ending, everything going wrong and his shoes filling with blood. Brilliant stuff.

Allan Jones

TREE OF LIFE

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Directed by Terrence Malick Starring Brad Pitt, Sean Penn, Jessica Chastain The long-awaited new film by Terrence Malick is the most outright love-it-or-hate-it phenomenon to emerge from a major American director in living memory. Although it was awarded this year’s Palme d’Or at the Cannes Fi...

Directed by Terrence Malick

Starring Brad Pitt, Sean Penn, Jessica Chastain

The long-awaited new film by Terrence Malick is the most outright love-it-or-hate-it phenomenon to emerge from a major American director in living memory. Although it was awarded this year’s Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival, Malick’s The Tree Of Life is a polarising experience all the same. While it’s hard not to be bowled over by its immense ambition, it’s difficult to connect with a film that’s so unambiguously religious. As to whether or not it works, that’s like asking whether Chartres cathedral works. You really have to acknowledge its scale and significance and start from there.

At its simplest, The Tree Of Life is about an American family, the O’Briens, from the middle of the 20th century to the present day, and how the dramatic events of the past can still cause aftershocks decades on. Sean Penn, in a pivotal though slight role, appears as a successful businessman, Jack, who finds himself remembering his childhood in the family home in smalltown Texas, with Mr O’Brien (Brad Pitt), Mrs O’Brien (Jessica Chastain) and his two brothers. Very early in this fragmented, hyper-sketchy narrative, Mom receives word that one of their sons has died – presumably in Vietnam, though it’s never made clear. As Malick jumps around in his chronology, we find out more about the O’Briens’ life, a mixture of everyday joys and sorrows – the latter caused partly by Mr O’Brien’s brusque, authoritarian manners.

In fact, if Mr O’Brien represents the earthbound tendency in the family, Mrs O’Brien embodies humanity’s connection with grace – so much so that, in one shot, she’s seen levitating. Meanwhile, Malick represents the ineffable mystery of creation in a grandiose – sometimes dazzling, sometimes bewildering – stream of imagery. He takes us into volcanoes, under oceans, even to primeval beaches and forests where a plesiosaur faces its predator. At times, this resembles nothing less than an insane mash-up of Jurassic Park and Norman Rockwell. Then there are repeated glimpses of a trembling sheaf of light that, if you were so inclined, you might think of as the spark of Creation – or perhaps some sub-atomic phenomenon. One thing you can say about The Tree Of Life is that it makes a bold attempt to reconcile religious imagery with the demands of hard science.

Brad Pitt anchors the film as the loving, but often terrifying paterfamilias. O’Brien is a complex character – he’s a devout man, yet he aspires to wealth. An engineer who invests the family’s savings in patents, he’s also a failed musician. He is a man filled with frustrations and contradictions. Jessica Chastain’s character, however, is too transparently airy to transcend her status as the eternal material archetype. Penn, on the other hand, wanders in and out looking careworn as he contemplates monumental urban architecture – dehumanised hell on Earth, or the modern incarnation of the ageless symbolic Tree that’s glimpsed throughout? Penn is also at the centre of the film’s most questionable dream imagery, which suggests that when you go to heaven you get to hug everyone you ever knew. On a beach.

At its least convincing, Malick’s film is an overblown philosophical folly. But few mainstream films are so ambitious, so downright symphonic in their scale – not to mention so defiantly anti-narrative. There’s certainly something uncomfortably overbearing about the film’s constant need to declaim “Behold – the Miracle of Creation!” The result can feel like an evangelical sermon on an IMAX scale. For better or worse, though, The Tree Of Life pushes American cinema into regions uncharted since Stanley Kubrick’s heyday.

Jonathan Romney

WILLIAM ELLIOTT WHITMORE – FIELD SONGS

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The photograph on the cover of William Elliott Whitmore’s fifth album speaks volumes about what lies within. A simple sepia shot of an overloaded hay cart with two farm workers perched on top, it encapsulates the essence of Whitmore’s stark milieu: man’s relationship with the land, the rigours of hard labour, the basic reward of “three square meals and a living wage”. It could have been taken 80 years ago or last week, just as the hard times detailed in one of several stand-out tracks, “Get There From Here”, could be those of 1931 or 2011. Whitmore was raised and still lives on his grandparent’s 160-acre horse farm, situated on the banks of the Mississippi in the south-eastern corner of Iowa. These facts are essential rather than extracurricular. Ground down to little more than banjo, unadorned acoustic guitar and foot stomps, his music is profoundly redolent of America’s agricultural heartland, while his voice summons up the ghost of some atavistic gospel shouter. Signed to Southern in 2003, Whitmore’s first three records, Hymns For The Hopeless, Ashes To Dust and Song Of The Blackbird, formed a trilogy of sorts. Hard and weathered as the black Iowan soil, the mix of folk, blues and gospel initially seemed a million miles from his origins playing at punk shows in Iowa City. Then again, perhaps not. In its unsparing desire to cut directly to the heart of the matter, his music walked the wire connecting Ralph Stanley to Minor Threat. Given Whitmore’s ultra-minimalist aesthetic, the addition of cello, keyboards and backing vocals on 2009’s Animals In The Dark felt like a seismic shift. Lyrically, too, the focus widened, several songs railing against the political machinations of the Bush era. Field Songs backs away from such matters. As its title implies, it returns unequivocally to the earth. Entirely self-played, Field Songs thrums with the sounds of rural life. Cocks crow, birds cheep, water flows and bees buzz, while Whitmore seeks transcendence through simplicity. On “Don’t Need It” he renounces everything except his own iron will; as if to prove the point, the song is stripped to just a thudding heartbeat rhythm and skeletal banjo. Much of the imagery in his lyrics is deathly, borrowed from old blues and gospel. We might find Whitmore “rowing to the other shore”, or laying down his earthy load in the bleak blues of “Bury Your Burdens In The Ground”. The loss of both parents in his teens is revisited on “We’ll Carry On”, where Whitmore addresses the departed and finds solace in memory and nature’s resilience: “The birds are still singing”. Similarly, on “Everything Gets Gone” he measures the precarious nature of his own fleeting existence against the trees, hills and rivers that surround him. Elsewhere he gazes far beyond his farm fence. “Let’s Do Something Impossible” is a rousing call to arms which finds inspiration in history’s heroic acts of opposition, from the French Resistance to Custer’s vanquishing at Little Bighorn. “Field Song”, meanwhile, has more than a hint of Springsteen’s widescreen grandeur. Telling an alternative history of agricultural America, it follows the original pioneers out west, tracing their progress through the rigorous decades of factory-farming and barn-burning. If the sense of hard-won victory here is palpable, the closing “Not Feeling Any Pain” feels more like a valediction. Seeds die, crops fail, the rains don’t come, even death – that hard arbiter – won’t answer the call, yet Whitmore “toasts the setting sun” and rages joyously against the eternal struggle, ultimately finding reassurance in the fact that we’re forever at the mercy of nature’s whims. For what keeps Field Songs on the right side of unyielding darkness, what keeps it ringing with an affirming note of beauty, is the certain knowledge that however black it gets, “the sun’s about to rise”. Graeme Thomson

The photograph on the cover of William Elliott Whitmore’s fifth album speaks volumes about what lies within. A simple sepia shot of an overloaded hay cart with two farm workers perched on top, it encapsulates the essence of Whitmore’s stark milieu: man’s relationship with the land, the rigours of hard labour, the basic reward of “three square meals and a living wage”. It could have been taken 80 years ago or last week, just as the hard times detailed in one of several stand-out tracks, “Get There From Here”, could be those of 1931 or 2011.

Whitmore was raised and still lives on his grandparent’s 160-acre horse farm, situated on the banks of the Mississippi in the south-eastern corner of Iowa. These facts are essential rather than extracurricular. Ground down to little more than banjo, unadorned acoustic guitar and foot stomps, his music is profoundly redolent of America’s agricultural heartland, while his voice summons up the ghost of some atavistic gospel shouter.

Signed to Southern in 2003, Whitmore’s first three records, Hymns For The Hopeless, Ashes To Dust and Song Of The Blackbird, formed a trilogy of sorts. Hard and weathered as the black Iowan soil, the mix of folk, blues and gospel initially seemed a million miles from his origins playing at punk shows in Iowa City. Then again, perhaps not. In its unsparing desire to cut directly to the heart of the matter, his music walked the wire connecting Ralph Stanley to Minor Threat.

Given Whitmore’s ultra-minimalist aesthetic, the addition of cello, keyboards and backing vocals on 2009’s Animals In The Dark felt like a seismic shift. Lyrically, too, the focus widened, several songs railing against the political machinations of the Bush era. Field Songs backs away from such matters. As its title implies, it returns unequivocally to the earth. Entirely self-played, Field Songs thrums with the sounds of rural life. Cocks crow, birds cheep, water flows and bees buzz, while Whitmore seeks transcendence through simplicity. On “Don’t Need It” he renounces everything except his own iron will; as if to prove the point, the song is stripped to just a thudding heartbeat rhythm and skeletal banjo.

Much of the imagery in his lyrics is deathly, borrowed from old blues and gospel. We might find Whitmore “rowing to the other shore”, or laying down his earthy load in the bleak blues of “Bury Your Burdens In The Ground”. The loss of both parents in his teens is revisited on “We’ll Carry On”, where Whitmore addresses the departed and finds solace in memory and nature’s resilience: “The birds are still singing”. Similarly, on “Everything Gets Gone” he measures the precarious nature of his own fleeting existence against the trees, hills and rivers that surround him.

Elsewhere he gazes far beyond his farm fence. “Let’s Do Something Impossible” is a rousing call to arms which finds inspiration in history’s heroic acts of opposition, from the French Resistance to Custer’s vanquishing at Little Bighorn. “Field Song”, meanwhile, has more than a hint of Springsteen’s widescreen grandeur. Telling an alternative history of agricultural America, it follows the original pioneers out west, tracing their progress through the rigorous decades of factory-farming and barn-burning.

If the sense of hard-won victory here is palpable, the closing “Not Feeling Any Pain” feels more like a valediction. Seeds die, crops fail, the rains don’t come, even death – that hard arbiter – won’t answer the call, yet Whitmore “toasts the setting sun” and rages joyously against the eternal struggle, ultimately finding reassurance in the fact that we’re forever at the mercy of nature’s whims. For what keeps Field Songs on the right side of unyielding darkness, what keeps it ringing with an affirming note of beauty, is the certain knowledge that however black it gets, “the sun’s about to rise”.

Graeme Thomson

Red Hot Chili Peppers: ‘Our career has been a series of deaths and rebirths’

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Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist Flea has spoken about their new album and the change in direction from the band, brought on by John Frusciante's departure. Speaking to Stereogum about their imminent release, Flea said, "The number one difference is John Frusciante left the band, and he was a huge par...

Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist Flea has spoken about their new album and the change in direction from the band, brought on by John Frusciante‘s departure.

Speaking to Stereogum about their imminent release, Flea said, “The number one difference is John Frusciante left the band, and he was a huge part of our creative process for a long time. I’m so grateful for him.

“He just gave us so much as a songwriter, as a player, as a human being, and just his relationship to music, which is such a beautiful and pure and powerful one.”

Frusciante left the band in 2009. He has since worked on music with The Mars Volta and Wu Tang Clan as well as his own duo, Speed Dealer Moms.

Flea, real name Michael Balzary, said of the Chili Peppers, “Those changes are really big for us, you know, aesthetically and emotionally and spiritually.

“It’s a much different thing, our career has been a series of lives and deaths and rebirths. It’s just like a very meaningful and rejuvenating rebirth for us.”

‘I’m With You’, the Red Hot Chili Peppers‘ 10th album, is due for release on August 30.

The band will headline the Summer Sonic Festival in Japan in August.

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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.

Paul McCartney: ‘I was told to retire when I reached 50’

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Paul McCartney has said he was advised to retire when he reached 50. The former Beatle, whose solo career is still going strong at 69, said his former manager suggested he call time on his career but the singer refused. "One of my old guys who I used to have as my manager, I was knocking 50 and he...

Paul McCartney has said he was advised to retire when he reached 50.

The former Beatle, whose solo career is still going strong at 69, said his former manager suggested he call time on his career but the singer refused.

“One of my old guys who I used to have as my manager, I was knocking 50 and he said ‘I think it’s time you retired’,” McCartney told Mojo. “I thought, I know what you mean, but I don’t really feel like it, you know.”

“And if I’m really enjoying this, why retire? So I decided against it, and got rid of him,” he added. “I wonder what he thinks today. Perhaps that he was right, but hopefully not.”

Since then he has continued to enjoy a successful career releasing 11 further albums and famously headlining Glastonbury in 2004.

McCartney also said he has no plans to retire soon and that he doesn’t see his music career as work.

“People say to me ‘you work so hard’. We don’t work hard, we play music – we don’t work music,” he added. “It sounds simplistic but it’s really true. It’s not like going into an office.”

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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.

Arcade Fire play biggest ever UK show at London’s Hyde Park

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Arcade Fire headlined their biggest UK show ever at London's Hyde Park tonight (June 30). The Montreal band played a host of tracks from all three of their albums plus new track 'Speaking In Tongues', which features on the repackaged version of their 2010 LP 'The Suburbs'. Although ex-Talking Hea...

Arcade Fire headlined their biggest UK show ever at London‘s Hyde Park tonight (June 30).

The Montreal band played a host of tracks from all three of their albums plus new track ‘Speaking In Tongues’, which features on the repackaged version of their 2010 LP ‘The Suburbs’.

Although ex-Talking Heads singer David Byrne features on the studio performance of the track, he didn’t make a surprise appearance tonight. Instead support act Owen Pallett stepped in to help out on violin.

It was only the song’s second appearance after a recent show in France. “That was the least time we’ve been scared doing a song, we’ve only really played in rehearsal to 60,000 people, so thank you so much,” Butler said after it was warmly received.

The band arrived onstage to a huge cinema billboard backdrop and a giant screen which projected old cinema ads and clips from the band’s short film ‘Scenes From The Suburbs’ before they kicked off with ‘Ready To Start’.

Singer Win Butler then took the 60,000 crowd by surprise early on when he declared: “I can’t tell you how happy we are to be here. This a song we normally do later in the set but I want to fucking do it now.” The band then launched into ‘Wake Up’ to huge cheers.

Before starting ‘The Suburbs’ he made a joke about the warm weather and before later taking a pop at the local residents while he was mid-song on ‘Month Of May’. “You know all the rich people who live around this park, every year they try to buy up the rights so you can’t make a little noise,” he said referring to the venue’s strict time curfew.

He took a further dig during ‘Neighborhood #2 (Laika)’, adding: “The neighbourhood is asking if you can keep it down a little bit.”

The band went on to wrap up their show with ‘Keep The Car Running’, ‘Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)’ and ‘Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)’.

As they left the stage, Butler told the crowd it could be a while before Arcade Fire return to the UK. “Goodbye London, we’ll see you in a couple years,” he added.

Arcade Fire played:

‘Ready To Start’

‘Wake Up’

‘No Cars Go’

‘Haïti’

‘Intervention’

‘Rococo’

‘Speaking In Tongues’

‘Crown Of Love’

‘The Suburbs’

‘Month Of May’

‘Rebellion (Lies)’

‘Neighborhood #2 (Laika)’

‘We Used To Wait’

‘Neighborhood #3 (Power Out)’

‘Keep The Car Running’

‘Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)’

‘Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)’

Earlier Mumford & Sons played their last performance in the capital before they head into the studio to record their second album.

They performed a series of new tracks including ‘Below My Feet’, ‘Lover Of The Light’ and ‘Lover’s Eyes’ alongside more well-known hits such as ‘Little Lion Man’.

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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 25th Uncut Playlist Of 2011

I suspect there may be one or two things on this list that you’ll be asking questions about, though bear with me a little: I’m playing Number 11 for the first time as I type… 1 Basement Jaxx Vs Metropole Orkest - Basement Jaxx Vs Metropole Orkest (Atlantic Jaxx) 2 Sun Araw – Ancient Romans (Drag City) 3 PG Six – Starry Mind (Drag City) 4 St Vincent – Strange Mercy (4AD) 5 Glenn Jones – The Wanting (Thrill Jockey) 6 Fairport Convention – Full House (Island) 7 Laura Marling – A Creature I Don’t Know (Virgin) 8 Wilco – I Might (dBpm) 9 Bjõrk – Crystalline (One Little Indian) 10 Carlos Paredes – Guitarra Portuguesa (Drag City) 11 Wilco – The Whole Love (dBpm)

I suspect there may be one or two things on this list that you’ll be asking questions about, though bear with me a little: I’m playing Number 11 for the first time as I type…

Arcade Fire promise a ‘great show’ at London’s Hyde Park

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Arcade Fire's Win Butler has admitted that it is hard work writing, recording and touring as part of the band. In a new interview with Q Magazine, the band have also promised to deliver a "great show" when they headline London's Hyde Park on Thursday (June 30). Asked about how seriously Arcade F...

Arcade Fire‘s Win Butler has admitted that it is hard work writing, recording and touring as part of the band.

In a new interview with Q Magazine, the band have also promised to deliver a “great show” when they headline London‘s Hyde Park on Thursday (June 30).

Asked about how seriously Arcade Fire take recording and touring, Butler replied: “Every record, there’s been some point where we’ve looked at each other and gone, ‘What are we doing? This is so hard’. Because it is. It’s just hard. Making anything properly is really hard.”

The frontman also spoke about what fans can expect from their performance at Hyde Park, Win Butler replied: “It should be a great show. We’re just going to do what Arcade Fire do best. Just get out there and play some rock n’roll.”

Arcade Fire have also revealed the stage times for their Hyde Park show, which are as follows:

The Vaccines: 16:40 – 17:10

Beirut: 17:30 – 18:30

Mumford & Sons: 19:00 – 20:10

Arcade Fire: 20:45 – 22:15

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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.

Morrissey slammed by drummer for performing Smiths’ songs at Glastonbury

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Former Smiths sticksman Mike Joyce has criticised Morrissey for singing the band's songs at Glastonbury. The drummer took to his Twitter page Twitter.com/mikejoycedrums immediately after the show last Friday (June 24) to make his feelings known. "Great performance from M at Glasto but didn't like the cover versions," he wrote. "M was in the group...but not in the band, those tunes belong to them. The 'band'were the musicians in The Smiths... Mozzer wasn't in the 'band' M was the singer/lyricist in the group." Joyce later backtracked for branding his renditions "cover versions" and added that he "just didn't enjoy The Smiths songs". Morrissey played five of his former band's tracks during his performance, including 'This Charming Man' and 'Meat Is Murder'. During his slot on the Pyramid Stage the singer also took a pop at U2 and UK Prime Minister David Cameron. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Former Smiths sticksman Mike Joyce has criticised Morrissey for singing the band’s songs at Glastonbury.

The drummer took to his Twitter page Twitter.com/mikejoycedrums immediately after the show last Friday (June 24) to make his feelings known.

“Great performance from M at Glasto but didn’t like the cover versions,” he wrote. “M was in the group…but not in the band, those tunes belong to them. The ‘band’were the musicians in The SmithsMozzer wasn’t in the ‘band’ M was the singer/lyricist in the group.”

Joyce later backtracked for branding his renditions “cover versions” and added that he “just didn’t enjoy The Smiths songs”.

Morrissey played five of his former band’s tracks during his performance, including ‘This Charming Man’ and ‘Meat Is Murder’.

During his slot on the Pyramid Stage the singer also took a pop at U2 and UK Prime Minister David Cameron.

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.

Tom Petty threatens Republican congresswoman with legal action

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Tom Petty has threatened Republican congresswoman Michele Bachmann with legal action after she used his 1977 single 'American Girl' without his permission. According to Rolling Stone, Bachmann, who is intending to stand as a candidate for the presidency in 2012, used 'American Girl' as the exit m...

Tom Petty has threatened Republican congresswoman Michele Bachmann with legal action after she used his 1977 single ‘American Girl’ without his permission.

According to Rolling Stone, Bachmann, who is intending to stand as a candidate for the presidency in 2012, used ‘American Girl’ as the exit music at the launch of her campaign earlier this week. However, as soon as Petty was informed of this, he instructed his lawyer to issue a cease and desist letter.

Bachmann, who was recently heavily criticized after she confused actor John Wayne with serial killer John Wayne Gacy in a speech, represents Michigan in US Congress and hopes to secure the Republican nomination in the 2012 race for the White House.

This is the second time in recent years Petty has criticized a Republican presidential candidate for using his music.

In 2000, he issued a similar threat to George W.Bush, who had been using his song ‘I Won’t Back Down’ at campaign rallies. Bush agreed to stop after being informed of Petty‘s displeasure.

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.