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Weyes Blood & The Dark Juices: “The Outside Room”

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Kind of out of practice with blogging, I’ve been so distracted by other stuff these past few weeks. I have a long list of stuff to cover, though, and this album by Weyes Blood & The Dark Juices seems a good place to start. There’s a fair amount of focus on the Not Not Fun label at the moment, not least that recent Wire cover, at a time when I’m personally finding some of their releases less to my taste (a bit too much refracted ‘80s neon and not enough psych murk, I guess); Sun Araw has flown the coop too, with a new album imminent on Drag City. The candlelit, sepulchral and corroded “The Outside Room” by Weyes Blood is a big exception to the rule, though. Weyes Blood, a little googling reveals, is the project of Natalie Mering, once of Jackie O-Motherfucker (though since JOMF have had more lineup changes than The Fall in the past decade, I couldn’t say where or when she figured in the band). The last record on NNF that entered this territory was probably by Zola Jesus, but Mering’s gothic sensibilities take in a lot more folk – and a lot more "Marble Index"-era Nico, too. Consequently, the opening “Storms That Breed” is a supernaturally-distorted waltz, with Mering’s beautiful and somewhat forlorn vocals gradually being subsumed by rust-covered clanking which manages to be aesthetically harmonious rather than distorted. Imagine Linda Perhacs if she’d never emerged from that avant-garde well she falls into halfway through “Parallelograms”, or maybe a darker companion to Julianna Barwick. That clank appears to have been orchestrated, at least in part, by The Shadow Ring’s elusive Graham Lambkin, and it really comes to the fore on “Candyboy”, where the toolshed jam session co-exists with a wandering guitar lead, whirling organ and Mering’s mournful wail to outstanding effect. Again, the vibe is devotional and ethereal, but with an edge, hammered home by the long coda, in which a Bach-like organ fugue is given a characteristically unsettling sonic treatment. Next up, though, the beautiful “Romneydale” resembles nothing so much as Mazzy Star’s “Fade Into You”, heard through soup. Very good record, anyhow. If you’re in the mood for braving Myspace, give Weyes Blood a listen and let me know what you think.

Kind of out of practice with blogging, I’ve been so distracted by other stuff these past few weeks. I have a long list of stuff to cover, though, and this album by Weyes Blood & The Dark Juices seems a good place to start.

Paul Simon, Carlos Santana protest against Grammy Award changes

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Paul Simon and Carlos Santana are among a host of musicians who are protesting against Grammy Award plans to axe over 30 categories from the annual event. The artists, who argue the changes were made without consulting academy members, have delivered a letter of protest to the Recording Academy. ...

Paul Simon and Carlos Santana are among a host of musicians who are protesting against Grammy Award plans to axe over 30 categories from the annual event.

The artists, who argue the changes were made without consulting academy members, have delivered a letter of protest to the Recording Academy.

In a letter to the president of the Recording Academy Neil Portnow, Simon wrote: “I believe the Grammys have done a disservice to many talented musicians by combining previously distinct and separate types of music into a catch-all of blurry larger categories.

“They deserve the separate Grammy acknowledgements that they’ve been afforded until this change eliminated them.”

In a separate letter, Santana added: “To remove Latin Jazz and many other ethnic categories is doing a huge disservice to the brilliant musicians who keep the music vibrant for their fans – new and old.

“We strongly protest this decision and we ask you to represent all of the colours of the rainbow when it comes to music and give ethnic music a place in the heart of music lovers everywhere.”

In response, Portnow said a members committee had been consulted, reports BBC News.

Contemporary Blues, Native American, Hawaiian and Latin Jazz are among 31 categories that are being axed from the prestigious awards show.

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.

Pulp make live comeback at intimate Toulouse show

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Pulp made their live comeback last night (May 25) with an intimate show in Toulouse – their first gig since 2002. Jarvis Cocker's returning Britpop legends played the Le Bikini venue in the French city to warm up for their headline slot at Spain's Primavera Sound festival, scheduled for Saturday ...

Pulp made their live comeback last night (May 25) with an intimate show in Toulouse – their first gig since 2002.

Jarvis Cocker‘s returning Britpop legends played the Le Bikini venue in the French city to warm up for their headline slot at Spain’s Primavera Sound festival, scheduled for Saturday (27).

Accoridng to Setlist.fm, the band opened with their 1994 single ‘Do You Remember The First Time?’ and played hits including ‘Disco 2000’, ‘Sorted For E’s & Wizz’, ‘Common People’ and set-closer ‘Mis-Shapes’.

Watch some rather shaky fan footage of the show by clicking below.

The band are set to play festivals including the Isle Of Wight Festival on June 11, London‘s Wireless on July 3 and Scotland’s T In The Park on July 10.

Pulp played:

‘Do You Remember The First Time?’

‘Pink Glove’

‘Pencil Skirt’

‘Something Changed’

‘Disco 2000’

‘Babies’

‘Sorted For E’s & Wizz’

‘F.E.E.L.I.N.G.C.A.L.L.E.D.L.O.V.E’

‘I Spy’

‘Underwear’

‘This Is Hardcore’

‘Sunrise’

‘Bar Italia’

‘Common People’

‘O.U. (Gone, Gone)’

‘Countdown’

‘Joyriders’

‘His ‘n’ Hers’

‘Acrylic Afternoons’

‘Mis-Shapes’

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

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

The Who’s Roger Daltrey cancels UK shows due to poor ticket sales

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The Who frontman Roger Daltrey has cancelled three UK shows he was scheduled to play this summer due to poor ticket sales. Daltrey was due to perform at Ragley Hall in Warwickshire on July 3, Ripley Castle in Harrogate on July 17 and at Powderham Castle near Exeter on July 24, but all these dates ...

The Who frontman Roger Daltrey has cancelled three UK shows he was scheduled to play this summer due to poor ticket sales.

Daltrey was due to perform at Ragley Hall in Warwickshire on July 3, Ripley Castle in Harrogate on July 17 and at Powderham Castle near Exeter on July 24, but all these dates have now been cancelled. Ticket buyers have been told they can claim a full refund from their point of purchase.

According to Stereoboard organisers have cited poor ticket sales as the reason for the cancellation, with Simon Fishwick, General Manager at Powderham Castle commenting: “It’s all to do with poor ticket sales, I’m afraid. It was an exciting event, but it just does not seem to have got anyone going.”

The dates were booked as part of The Who frontman’s UK tour, which will see him performing the band’s rock opera ‘Tommy’.

Roger Daltrey will now play:

Gateshead Sage (July 4)

Glasgow Clyde Auditorium (6)

Manchester Bridgewater Hall (7)

Nottingham Royal Centre (9)

Newport Centre (10)

Bristol Colston Hall (12)

Southend Cliffs Pavillion (13)

Guildford Guilfest (15)

Hampshire Broadlands (16)

Hull City Hall (19)

London Indigo O2 (21)

Norwich Blicking Hall (22)

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.

First Look – X Men: First Class

X MEN: FIRST CLASS HHH DIRECTED BY Matthew Vaughn STARRING James McAvoy, Michael Fassbinder OPENS JUNE 1 // CERT 12A // 131 MINS As evangelists, millenarians and scholars have learned to their disappointment, predicting the apocalypse has never been an entirely accurate business. After The R...

X MEN: FIRST CLASS

HHH

DIRECTED BY Matthew Vaughn

STARRING James McAvoy, Michael Fassbinder

OPENS JUNE 1 // CERT 12A // 131 MINS

As evangelists, millenarians and scholars have learned to their disappointment, predicting the apocalypse has never been an entirely accurate business.

Eddie Vedder streams ‘Ukulele Songs’ album online – audio

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Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder is streaming his new album 'Ukulele Songs' online before its official release – click below to hear it. The album, made available to stream via We7, is set to come out on Monday (May 30). It's available to pre-order on iTunes now. The record features original and cover s...

Pearl Jam‘s Eddie Vedder is streaming his new album ‘Ukulele Songs’ online before its official release – click below to hear it.

The album, made available to stream via We7, is set to come out on Monday (May 30). It’s available to pre-order on iTunes now.

The record features original and cover songs played on the ukulele with Cat Power, aka Chan Marshal, guesting on the song ‘Tonight You Belong To Me’. It also features versions of the Mamas & The Papas‘Dream A Little Dream Of Me’ and Pearl Jam‘s own ‘Can’t Keep’.

The tracklisting of ‘Ukulele Songs’ is:

‘Can’t Keep’

‘Sleeping By Myself’

‘Without You’

‘More Than You Know’

‘Goodbye’

‘Broken Heart’

‘Satellite’

‘Longing To Belong’

‘Hey Fahkah’

‘You’re True’

‘Lights Today’

‘Sleepless Nights’

‘Once In Awhile’

‘Waving Palms’

‘Tonight You Belong To Me’

‘Dream A Little Dream’

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

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

Radiohead: ”The King Of Limbs’ wasn’t going to be an immediate record’

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Radiohead’s Phil Selway has said that the band knew from the outset that their new album 'The King Of Limbs' "wasn’t going to be an immediate record." Speaking to Drowned In Sound before he performed a solo gig at Liverpool Sound City festival, the drummer also said the album was "a reaction" t...

Radiohead’s Phil Selway has said that the band knew from the outset that their new album ‘The King Of Limbs’ “wasn’t going to be an immediate record.”

Speaking to Drowned In Sound before he performed a solo gig at Liverpool Sound City festival, the drummer also said the album was “a reaction” to the band’s 2007 effort ‘In Rainbows’. “With ‘The King of Limbs’, we all knew that it wasn’t going to be an immediate record but a lot of great records have been 38 minutes long,” he said. “It’s that old chestnut of a grower.”

He added: “Every record that we’ve done has been a reaction to the last one and ‘The King of Limbs’ carried on that tradition for us.”

Radiohead‘s ‘newspaper album’ version of ‘The King Of Limbs'[/url] came out earlier this month. Selway, meanwhile, is confirmed to perform a solo gig at this summer’s Truck Festival in Oxfordshire.

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.

Michael Eavis tried to get Prince for Glastonbury 2011

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Michael Eavis has said that he tried to get Prince to play this year's Glastonbury festival. The purple-themed funk rock legend had long been rumoured to headline the festival, as one of the world's remaining heavy musical hitters who has yet to play. And now organiser Eavis has admitted that he n...

Michael Eavis has said that he tried to get Prince to play this year’s Glastonbury festival.

The purple-themed funk rock legend had long been rumoured to headline the festival, as one of the world’s remaining heavy musical hitters who has yet to play. And now organiser Eavis has admitted that he negotiated for Prince to play the event that will now be headlined by U2, Coldplay and Beyonce.

He told the Daily Star: “I tried to get Prince earlier on. At once point, he was, then he wasn’t, then he was. It was a question of a bird in the hand. A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush, if not three in a bush. In the end I went for the bands we have on the bill now, which ain’t bad.”

Instead Prince is playing at the Hop Farm Festival in July. Eavis joked: “I think I must’ve set that one up.”

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

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

Bee Gees’ Barry Gibb reveals Michael Jackson collaboration

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Bee Gees frontman Barry Gibb has posted a 30-second clip of an unreleased collaboration with Michael Jackson online. The footage shows Gibb and Jackson in the studio writing and recording the track 'All In Your Name'. Watch it by clicking below. The singer first posted the clip on Barrygibb.com...

Bee Gees frontman Barry Gibb has posted a 30-second clip of an unreleased collaboration with Michael Jackson online.

The footage shows Gibb and Jackson in the studio writing and recording the track ‘All In Your Name’. Watch it by clicking below.

The singer first posted the clip on Barrygibb.com with a message explaining that the track was recorded in 2002. “Michael Jackson and I were the dearest of friends, that’s simply what it was,” he explained. “We gravitated towards the same kind of music and we loved collaborating and he was the easiest person to write with.”

He added: “The more we got to know each other the more those ideas entwined and it all came to this song ‘All In Your Name’. “All in Your Name” is in fact the message that Michael wanted to send out to all of his fans all over the world that he did it all for them and for the pure love of music. I hope and pray that we all get to hear it in its entirety. This experience I will treasure forever.”

Some media sources are speculating that the track was written in response to the US government’s plan to invade Iraq. The footage was shot by Gibb‘s daugher Ashley.

U2 wish Bob Dylan happy birthday at 360° Salt Lake City show

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U2 wished Bob Dylan a happy 70th birthday during their 360° tour show in Salt Lake City last night (May 24). The band performed a rare rendition of 'Love Rescue Me' from their 1998 album 'Rattle And Hum' at the Rice-Eccles Stadium, a track Dylan co-wrote. Bono then wished the folk legend many happ...

U2 wished Bob Dylan a happy 70th birthday during their 360° tour show in Salt Lake City last night (May 24).

The band performed a rare rendition of ‘Love Rescue Me’ from their 1998 album ‘Rattle And Hum’ at the Rice-Eccles Stadium, a track Dylan co-wrote. Bono then wished the folk legend many happy returns with the help of the crowd.

Watch footage of the singer paying tribute to Dylan by clicking below.

Later in the show Bono threw snippets of Dylan classics ‘Times They Are A-Changin’ and Blowin’ In The Wind’ into ‘Where The Streets Have No Name’ into the setlist.

U2 were among a host of stars who paid tribute to Dylan on his big day yesterday, with Arcade Fire, Kings Of Leon, Slash and My Chemical Romance among those offering their best wishes to him.

Liam Gallagher wants Johnny Depp for his Beatles film

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Liam Gallagher has declared that he wants Johnny Depp to star in his forthcoming Beatles feature film. The Beady Eye mouthpiece has set up a company, In 1 Productions, to make a film adaptation of the book The Longest Cocktail Party: An Insider's Diary Of The Beatles, Their Million Dollar Apple Emp...

Liam Gallagher has declared that he wants Johnny Depp to star in his forthcoming Beatles feature film.

The Beady Eye mouthpiece has set up a company, In 1 Productions, to make a film adaptation of the book The Longest Cocktail Party: An Insider’s Diary Of The Beatles, Their Million Dollar Apple Empire And Its Wild Rise And Fall. The book is by Richard DiLello and features an account of life with the band between 1968 and 1970.

Gallagher said he’d like Depp to play Derek Taylor, the band’s publicist. “Derek Taylor was a dude,” he told Q. “He’s up there with Lennon. The film script is done. It’s gonna blow people’s minds, man. I’m just waiting to find out when we choose the actors. I want Johnny Depp to play Derek Taylor. It’s got Johnny Depp written all over it, man.”

The singer and and In 1 Productions are collaborating in the project with Revolution Films, whose co-founder is Andrew Eaton, producer of 2002 Factory Records biopic 24 Hour Party People.

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 20th Uncut Playlist Of 2011

Thank you one and all for your extraordinary patience and willingness to play along with the game, and my apologies for not publishing messages from those of you who guessed correctly. Today, finally, I can reveal the tremendous mystery record that’s been preoccupying me for the past few weeks: check out Number Four in the list below. I’ll try and write something about it next week, and hopefully get back into a more rigorous blogging routine. My time has been taken up of late working on the next Uncut Music Guide, which has involved a lot of grappling with the collected works and thoughts of Pink Floyd. That’ll be out early in June. In the meantime, these are the records I’ve played this week: some good ones and, as implied, a pretty great one. 1 Michael Chapman – Growing Pains 3 (Market Square) 2 Popol Vuh – Revisited & Remixed (SPV) 3 La Big Vic – Actually (Underwater Peoples) 4 Gillian Welch – The Harrow And The Harvest (Acony) 5 Marissa Nadler – Marissa Nadler (Box Of Cedar) 6 Frank Fairfield – Out on the Open West (Tompkins Square) 7 Fatoumata Diawara – Kanou (World Circuit) 8 Tuusanuuskat - Nääksää Nää Mun Kyyneleet (Fonal) 9 Steve Mason/Dennis Bovell – Yesterday Dub (Domino) 10 Julian Lynch – Terra (Underwater Peoples) 11 Various Artists – True Soul Volume 2: Deep Sounds From The Left Of Stax (Now Again) 12 Wolf Gang – Suego Faults (Atlantic) 13 The Horrors – Skying (XL) 14 Deep Magic – Lucid Thought (Circa) 15 Jozef Van Wissem – The Joy That Never Ends (Important) 16 Carol Kleyn – Love Has Made Me Stronger (Drag City) 17 Quiet Evenings – Transcending Spheres (Circa) 18 Barn Owl & The Infinite Strings Ensemble - The Headlands (Important)

Thank you one and all for your extraordinary patience and willingness to play along with the game, and my apologies for not publishing messages from those of you who guessed correctly. Today, finally, I can reveal the tremendous mystery record that’s been preoccupying me for the past few weeks: check out Number Four in the list below.

Al Pacino to play Phil Spector in HBO TV movie

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A film based on Phil Spector's murder trial is being made, with Al Pacino set to play the producer. US network HBO have commissioned the TV movie, which will also see Bette Midler take up the role of Linda Baden, Spector's defence lawyer in his first murder trial over the killing of actress Lana Clarkson. The film will explore Baden and Spector's relationship during the first court case, which was declared a mistrial in 2007 after jurors were deadlocked. Spector was given a 19-years-to-life jail sentence in May 2009 for the murder of actress Lana Clarkson in 2003, after a second trial. Arrested Development star Jeffrey Tambor has also joined the cast to play Bruce Cutler, another defence lawyer for the convicted producer, according to Variety magazine. An appeal by [url=http://www.nme.com/news/phil-spector/56423]Spector's lawyers against his murder conviction[/url] was rejected earlier this month. The lawyers had urged the court to throw out the original sentence on the grounds that it was prejudiced by testimony from five women who claimed to be victims of gun-related incidents with the producer in the past. 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 film based on Phil Spector‘s murder trial is being made, with Al Pacino set to play the producer.

US network HBO have commissioned the TV movie, which will also see Bette Midler take up the role of Linda Baden, Spector‘s defence lawyer in his first murder trial over the killing of actress Lana Clarkson.

The film will explore Baden and Spector‘s relationship during the first court case, which was declared a mistrial in 2007 after jurors were deadlocked.

Spector was given a 19-years-to-life jail sentence in May 2009 for the murder of actress Lana Clarkson in 2003, after a second trial.

Arrested Development star Jeffrey Tambor has also joined the cast to play Bruce Cutler, another defence lawyer for the convicted producer, according to Variety magazine.

An appeal by [url=http://www.nme.com/news/phil-spector/56423]Spector’s lawyers against his murder conviction[/url] was rejected earlier this month. The lawyers had urged the court to throw out the original sentence on the grounds that it was prejudiced by testimony from five women who claimed to be victims of gun-related incidents with the producer in the past.

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.

Kings Of Leon, Slash, Arcade Fire, MCR pay tribute to Bob Dylan on his 70th birthday

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Kings Of Leon, Slash, Arcade Fire and My Chemical Romance are among the musicians who have been paying tribute to Bob Dylan, who turns 70 today (May 24). Kings frontman Caleb Followill said: "He's a huge hero. Anyone who's ever tried to write a song feels stupid when they hear one of his. We met hi...

Kings Of Leon, Slash, Arcade Fire and My Chemical Romance are among the musicians who have been paying tribute to Bob Dylan, who turns 70 today (May 24).

Kings frontman Caleb Followill said: “He’s a huge hero. Anyone who’s ever tried to write a song feels stupid when they hear one of his. We met him on tour. I almost passed out.” Slash was similarly effusive in his praise, saying: “I’ve played with some of the greats but Bob Dylan is one of the greatest without a doubt.”

The Kooks‘s Luke Pritchard also spoke highly of Dylan. He wrote in The Sun today: “People say he’s a terrible singer, but his voice is unique. He was not only a musical trailblazer, he was the icon for a generation.”

My Chemical Romance‘s Gerard Way, meanwhile, said it was “an honour” for his band to be able to cover Dylan‘s ‘Desolation Row’ and that the singer was “an inspiration to a lot of people.”

Arcade Fire‘s Win Butler said of Dylan: “Once I was exposed to his music it made the radio a lot harder to listen to.”

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.

Paul McCartney claims The Rolling Stones envied The Beatles’ singing

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Paul McCartney has said that The Rolling Stones' Keith Richards admitted that his band envied The Beatles' singing prowess. In a new interview with the Radio Times, McCartney said: "I talked to Keith Richards a couple of years ago, and his take on it was: 'Man, you were lucky, you guys, you had fo...

Paul McCartney has said that The Rolling StonesKeith Richards admitted that his band envied The Beatles‘ singing prowess.

In a new interview with the Radio Times, McCartney said: “I talked to Keith Richards a couple of years ago, and his take on it was: ‘Man, you were lucky, you guys, you had four lead singers,’ whereas the Rolling Stones only had one.”

McCartney also said that the Stones‘ singer Mick Jagger used to call The Beatles “the four-headed monster.” He said: “We were an entity. Mick [Jagger] used to call us the four-headed monster. We would show up at places all dressed the same.”

The Liverpool legend added that he believed his bandmates were lucky to have even met, as they only missed being forced to do national service by a couple of years. “One of the most amazing things for The Beatles is that we just missed it,” he said. “A couple of years earlier, we would have been in the army, and it’s very doubtful that The Beatles would have formed.”

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.

July 2011

The astonishing story of the Mod legends and their ill-fated frontman, Steve Marriott:...

The astonishing story of the Mod legends and their ill-fated frontman, Steve Marriott:

Lou Reed announces two July UK shows

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Lou Reed has announced two new UK live dates for July. The singer, who also plays Hop Farm Festival underneath headliner Morrissey on July 2, will play gigs in Wolverhampton and London and in the same month. Reed headlines the former's Civic Hall on July 1, the day before he plays the Kent festiva...

Lou Reed has announced two new UK live dates for July.

The singer, who also plays Hop Farm Festival underneath headliner Morrissey on July 2, will play gigs in Wolverhampton and London and in the same month. Reed headlines the former’s Civic Hall on July 1, the day before he plays the Kent festival. He then plays the capital’s HMV Hammersmith Apollo on July 5.

The singer is also set to release a new DVD, Lollapolooza Live, this summer. The DVD was filmed during Reed‘s spell on the Lollapolooza tour in 2009 and sees him showcasing the music of his 1975 album ‘Metal Machine Music’.

Hop Farm Festival is set to be Reed‘s only UK festival appearance of the summer. The festival will be headlined by Prince, The Eagles and Morrissey.

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

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

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

RED HILL

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Directed by Patrick Hughes Starring Ryan Kwanten, Steve Bisley, Tommy Lewis Rookie lawman Shane Cooper (True Blood’s Ryan Kwanten) moves to a sleepy one-horse town to shield his pregnant wife from the pressures of city living. Only, there he learns that dangerous criminal Jimmy Conway (Tommy Le...

Directed by Patrick Hughes

Starring Ryan Kwanten, Steve Bisley, Tommy Lewis

Rookie lawman Shane Cooper (True Blood’s Ryan Kwanten) moves to a sleepy one-horse town to shield his pregnant wife from the pressures of city living.

Only, there he learns that dangerous criminal Jimmy Conway (Tommy Lewis) has escaped from jail and is heading over to settle some unfinished business.

Though Patrick Hughes’ tense, often gripping film – which unfolds, with a tip of the Stetson to High Noon, in the space of a day – is much less derivative than such a precis might sound.

The immense swathes of Outback offer an appropriate, almost eerie sense of scale, while Conway’s backstory gives rise to both a political and even a surreal dimension more typical of the offbeat Spaghetti Westerns of the ’70s.

It might be too far out there for admirers of the recent Aussie gangster drama Animal Kingdom, but Red Hill has an imagination and intelligence that stays long in the mind.

DAMON WISE

MERCURY REV – DESERTER’S SONGS (R)

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In theory, the fourth album by the Buffalo sextet Mercury Rev should have lost the shock value it had in 1998, when Cosmic American Music was the preserve of a few obsessive Gram Parsons nostalgists. But Deserter’s Songs never depended entirely on the novelty of being out of place and out of time. It is still, 13 years later, the most purely beautiful American rock album of its era. Like many a great work, there are various reasons why it shouldn’t exist. Mercury Rev returned home from touring 1995’s ignored See You On The Other Side album determined to split. Leader Jonathan Donahue dealt with his depression by withdrawing from rock completely, finding comfort in records he’d loved as a child. His favourites were Talespinners For Children, a series of records featuring actors reciting fairy tales over classical music. Soon, Donahue was making rough home demos on piano of simple, ingenuous melodies, many of which are now available on this reissue’s bonus disc. Even while hiring a mini-orchestra of classical players and nervously approaching Buffalo neighbours Levon Helm and Garth Hudson of The Band to play drums and sax on “Opus 40” and “Hudson Line”, Mercury Rev recorded the songs with a resigned, what-the-fuck attitude, figuring, perhaps quite reasonably, that a market in love with OK, Computer wasn’t longing for a set of drifting, Disney-esque orchestral ballads featuring female sopranos, flugelhorns and the eerie whine of a bowed saw. They were spectacularly wrong. Deserter’s Songs was a commercial success because it captured a prevailing mood of pre-millennial dread, but dared to imbue it with a feeling of childlike wonder, and an implication that, if we really are standing at the end of the world, we may find that whatever’s next is an opportunity to be born again, and lost in awe and wonder It’s a concept album about saying goodbye (or walking away, as Donahue prefers to describe it) that defined the idea that the sadness of leaving lovers, homes, friends, the planet or even just a rock scene that doesn’t get you is always counterbalanced by the anxious joy of impending change, the search for adventure and new possibilities. Its opening shot, “Holes”, draws you immediately into its sonic world of stately shimmer and high, keening hooks led by Donahue’s fragile, friendly Neil Young voice. He’s singing about paranoia, but the song’s final line – “Bands/Those funny little plans/That never work quite right” – sounded amused and strangely resolved rather than wracked with complaint. The astonishing “Goddess On A Hiway” hints at inevitable apocalypse through ecological disaster, its huge chorus of “And I know/It ain’t gonna last” a joyous singalong that still swells the heart with pure, innocent pleasure. The angelic motif that carried the breathtaking “Endlessly” transforms a nightmare of infinite, repeated desertion into something transcendent, a lullaby for landing in the gutter and staring at the stars. By the time you reach “Delta Sun Bottleneck Stomp”, the old-school rock’n’roll hoedown that becomes an Italian house tune for a few golden moments, you feel as if you’ve taken a long drive through the American wilderness at night. Deserter’s Songs re-enters a world made for it, and by it. In 2011 we take the ambitious and anti-macho American alt.rock band for granted, but the record remains a unique experience, as well as a collection of great songs, performed, arranged and produced with a love born of ceasing to care what the world thinks. If Mercury Rev haven’t matched it since, that’s OK. Neither has anyone else. Garry Mulholland Q&A Jonathan Donahue Is it true, if Deserter’s Songs had not been successful, Mercury Rev would have split? It went further than that. The album was my way of calling it a day. Whatever it was we were doing seemed so far out of time with what was going on in the world. The world wasn’t exactly waiting for another Mercury Rev record. We didn’t have a manager or a lawyer or a label. So approaching Hudson and Helm to play with you must have been nerve-wracking. Yeah, it was. No one wants to be rejected by somebody that they feel inspired by. It was Amy Helm, Levon’s daughter, who whistled on the outro of “Opus 40”. She gained a certain whistling fame from this and went on to whistle on a burger chain TV ad which, she claimed, made her hundreds of thousands of dollars. The world sees Deserter’s Songs as your masterpiece. But do you? It’s a beloved record of mine because it came from somewhere that was purely genuine and purely guileless. But… I wouldn’t want to jump back down into that boiling cauldron again. I don’t really know how Deserter’s Songs made it to the light of day. INTERVIEW: GARRY MULHOLLAND

In theory, the fourth album by the Buffalo sextet Mercury Rev should have lost the shock value it had in 1998, when Cosmic American Music was the preserve of a few obsessive Gram Parsons nostalgists.

But Deserter’s Songs never depended entirely on the novelty of being out of place and out of time. It is still, 13 years later, the most purely beautiful American rock album of its era.

Like many a great work, there are various reasons why it shouldn’t exist. Mercury Rev returned home from touring 1995’s ignored See You On The Other Side album determined to split. Leader Jonathan Donahue dealt with his depression by withdrawing from rock completely, finding comfort in records he’d loved as a child. His favourites were Talespinners For Children, a series of records featuring actors reciting fairy tales over classical music. Soon, Donahue was making rough home demos on piano of simple, ingenuous melodies, many of which are now available on this reissue’s bonus disc.

Even while hiring a mini-orchestra of classical players and nervously approaching Buffalo neighbours Levon Helm and Garth Hudson of The Band to play drums and sax on “Opus 40” and “Hudson Line”, Mercury Rev recorded the songs with a resigned, what-the-fuck attitude, figuring, perhaps quite reasonably, that a market in love with OK, Computer wasn’t longing for a set of drifting, Disney-esque orchestral ballads featuring female sopranos, flugelhorns and the eerie whine of a bowed saw.

They were spectacularly wrong. Deserter’s Songs was a commercial success because it captured a prevailing mood of pre-millennial dread, but dared to imbue it with a feeling of childlike wonder, and an implication that, if we really are standing at the end of the world, we may find that whatever’s next is an opportunity to be born again, and lost in awe and wonder

It’s a concept album about saying goodbye (or walking away, as Donahue prefers to describe it) that defined the idea that the sadness of leaving lovers, homes, friends, the planet or even just a rock scene that doesn’t get you is always counterbalanced by the anxious joy of impending change, the search for adventure and new possibilities.

Its opening shot, “Holes”, draws you immediately into its sonic world of stately shimmer and high, keening hooks led by Donahue’s fragile, friendly Neil Young voice. He’s singing about paranoia, but the song’s final line – “Bands/Those funny little plans/That never work quite right” – sounded amused and strangely resolved rather than wracked with complaint.

The astonishing “Goddess On A Hiway” hints at inevitable apocalypse through ecological disaster, its huge chorus of “And I know/It ain’t gonna last” a joyous singalong that still swells the heart with pure, innocent pleasure. The angelic motif that carried the breathtaking “Endlessly” transforms a nightmare of infinite, repeated desertion into something transcendent, a lullaby for landing in the gutter and staring at the stars. By the time you reach “Delta Sun Bottleneck Stomp”, the old-school rock’n’roll hoedown that becomes an Italian house tune for a few golden moments, you feel as if you’ve taken a long drive through the American wilderness at night.

Deserter’s Songs re-enters a world made for it, and by it. In 2011 we take the ambitious and anti-macho American alt.rock band for granted, but the record remains a unique experience, as well as a collection of great songs, performed, arranged and produced with a love born of ceasing to care what the world thinks. If Mercury Rev haven’t matched it since, that’s OK. Neither has anyone else.

Garry Mulholland

Q&A Jonathan Donahue

Is it true, if Deserter’s Songs had not been successful, Mercury Rev would have split?

It went further than that. The album was my way of calling it a day. Whatever it was we were doing seemed so far out of time with what was going on in the world. The world wasn’t exactly waiting for another Mercury Rev record. We didn’t have a manager or a lawyer or a label.

So approaching Hudson and Helm to play with you must have been nerve-wracking.

Yeah, it was. No one wants to be rejected by somebody that they feel inspired by. It was Amy Helm, Levon’s daughter, who whistled on the outro of “Opus 40”. She gained a certain whistling fame from this and went on to whistle on a burger chain TV ad which, she claimed, made her hundreds of thousands of dollars.

The world sees Deserter’s Songs as your masterpiece. But do you?

It’s a beloved record of mine because it came from somewhere that was purely genuine and purely guileless. But… I wouldn’t want to jump back down into that boiling cauldron again. I don’t really know how Deserter’s Songs made it to the light of day.

INTERVIEW: GARRY MULHOLLAND

Primal Scream to release ‘Screamadelica’ live on CD/DVD

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Primal Scream are set to release a live CD/DVD of their recent 'Screamadelica' live tour, which was filmed and recorded last year during their headline shows at London's Olympia. The package, which is titled 'Screamadelica Live!', is released on May 31 and will feature both a DVD and CD. The DVD...

Primal Scream are set to release a live CD/DVD of their recent ‘Screamadelica’ live tour, which was filmed and recorded last year during their headline shows at London‘s Olympia.

The package, which is titled ‘Screamadelica Live!’, is released on May 31 and will feature both a DVD and CD.

The DVD contains a filmed version of the band performing ‘Screamadelica’ in its entirety accompanied by a brass section and gospel choir, as well as a bonus filmed live set of the band performing eight classic tracks from their back catalogue, including ‘Rocks’, ‘Jailbird’ and ‘Country Girl’.

The live CD features only the ‘Screamadelica’ live set. You can watch a preview of the DVD by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

Primal Scream are set to perform ‘Screamadelica’ live throughout the festival season, with high-profile slots at Glastonbury and Bestival among those booked.

The tracklisting for ‘Screamadelica Live!’ is as follows:

Screamadelica

‘Movin’ On Up’

‘Slip Inside This House’

‘Don’t Fight It, Feel It’

‘Damaged’

‘I’m Comin’ Down’

‘Shine Like Stars’

‘Inner Flight’

‘Higher Than The Sun’

‘Loaded’

‘Come Together’

Rocks

‘Accelerator’

‘Country Girl’

‘Jailbird’

‘Burning Wheel’

‘Suicide Bomb’

‘Shoot Speed / Kill Light’

‘Swastika Eyes’

‘Rocks’

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