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Phil Spector murder conviction appeal rejected

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An appeal by Phil Spector's lawyers against his 2009 murder conviction has been rejected. A three-judge panel at California's 2nd District Court of Appeal upheld his sentence over the killing of actress Lana Clarkson in 2003. This comes after his legal team [url=http://www.nme.com/news/phil-spector/56088]urged the court to throw out his original sentence on the grounds it was prejudiced[/url] by testimony from five women who claimed to be victims of gun-related incidents with the producer in the past. "The evidence showed that, when fuelled by alcohol and faced with a lack or loss of control over a woman who was alone with him and in whom he had a romantic or sexual interest, Spector underwent a sharp mood swing," they said. In addition the producer "exhibited extreme anger and threatened the woman with a gun when she refused to do his bidding," according to an 81-page ruling by presiding judge Joan D Klein and two other justices. The judges found that the evidence was "admissible to prove that the cause of [Lana] Clarkson's death had neither been an accident nor a suicide", reports AFP. Spector, 71, was given a [url=http://www.nme.com/news/phil-spector/44989] 19-years-to-life jail sentence in May 2009 for shooting dead Clarkson in his home on February 3, 2003[/url] after a second trial. His first was declared a mistrial after jurors were deadlocked. The producer, who created the famed "Wall of Sound" recording technique during the 1960s, is not eligible for parole until 2028. If he is not freed then under California law his sentence will become a life term. 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.

An appeal by Phil Spector‘s lawyers against his 2009 murder conviction has been rejected.

A three-judge panel at California‘s 2nd District Court of Appeal upheld his sentence over the killing of actress Lana Clarkson in 2003. This comes after his legal team [url=http://www.nme.com/news/phil-spector/56088]urged the court to throw out his original sentence on the grounds it was prejudiced[/url] by testimony from five women who claimed to be victims of gun-related incidents with the producer in the past.

“The evidence showed that, when fuelled by alcohol and faced with a lack or loss of control over a woman who was alone with him and in whom he had a romantic or sexual interest, Spector underwent a sharp mood swing,” they said.

In addition the producer “exhibited extreme anger and threatened the woman with a gun when she refused to do his bidding,” according to an 81-page ruling by presiding judge Joan D Klein and two other justices.

The judges found that the evidence was “admissible to prove that the cause of [Lana] Clarkson‘s death had neither been an accident nor a suicide”, reports AFP.

Spector, 71, was given a [url=http://www.nme.com/news/phil-spector/44989] 19-years-to-life jail sentence in May 2009 for shooting dead Clarkson in his home on February 3, 2003[/url] after a second trial.

His first was declared a mistrial after jurors were deadlocked.

The producer, who created the famed “Wall of Sound” recording technique during the 1960s, is not eligible for parole until 2028. If he is not freed then under California law his sentence will become a life term.

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.

Kasabian announce June UK gigs and ticket details

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Kasabian have announced details of four UK shows set for June. The band will play gigs in Sheffield, Leeds, Wolverhampton and Manchester on the short gig run as they gear up for festival season. They are expected to debut material from their forthcoming fourth album at the shows. The Leicester band have been working on the new album in San Francisco with producer Dan The Automator following sessions in London. It is expected to be released in October. Following the newly-announced shows Kasabian are set to headline the Isle Of Wight Festival and RockNess later in June. Sheffield O2 Academy (June 4) Leeds O2 Academy (5) Wolverhampton Civic Hall (7) Manchester O2 Apollo (8) Tickets go on sale on Friday (May 6). 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.

Kasabian have announced details of four UK shows set for June.

The band will play gigs in Sheffield, Leeds, Wolverhampton and Manchester on the short gig run as they gear up for festival season. They are expected to debut material from their forthcoming fourth album at the shows.

The Leicester band have been working on the new album in San Francisco with producer Dan The Automator following sessions in London. It is expected to be released in October.

Following the newly-announced shows Kasabian are set to headline the Isle Of Wight Festival and RockNess later in June.

Sheffield O2 Academy (June 4)

Leeds O2 Academy (5)

Wolverhampton Civic Hall (7)

Manchester O2 Apollo (8)

Tickets go on sale on Friday (May 6).

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 16th Uncut Playlist Of 2011

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One or two auspicious things amidst this lot, though check out Weyes Blood and Robert Stillman, too. Very conscious of cryptic hyperbole here, but Record 14 is as good as anything I’ve heard this year, this morning at least. 1 Popol Vuh – Seligpreisung (Kosmische Musik) 2 Neil Young & The International Harvesters – A Treasure (Reprise) 3 These Trails – These Trails (Drag City) 4 Jerusalem And The Starbaskets – Dost (De Stijl) 5 Sons And Daughters – Mirror Mirror (Domino) 6 Weyes Blood – The Outside Room (Not Not Fun) 7 Jesse Sparhawk & Eric Carbonara – Sixty Strings (VHF) 8 Robert Stillman – Machine’s Song (OIB) 9 White Denim – D (Downtown) 10 Ty Segall – Goodbye Bread (Drag City) 11 The Happy End – Kazemachi Roman (URC) 12 Bon Iver – Bon Iver (4AD) 13 Power Of Zeus – The Gospel According To Zeus (Get On Down) 14 The Same Mystery Record As Playlist 14 15 Moebius – Ding (Klangbad)

One or two auspicious things amidst this lot, though check out Weyes Blood and Robert Stillman, too. Very conscious of cryptic hyperbole here, but Record 14 is as good as anything I’ve heard this year, this morning at least.

Beastie Boys put ‘Fight For Your Right’ film online – video

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Beastie Boys have posted their full 30-minute Fight For Your Right – Revisited film online. Scroll down now to watch the film, which stars the likes of Elijah Wood, Danny McBride, Seth Rogen, Susan Sarandon and sees the rappers revisit their classic 1987 video for '(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (To Party!)'. The band's Adam Yauch wrote and directed the film, which acts as a sequel to the events in the original video. A number of other actors and musicians make cameos in it, including Will Ferrell, Jack Black, Steve Buscemi, Shannyn Sossamon, Kirsten Dunst, Ted Danson, Chloe Sevigny and Orlando Bloom, as well as the actual Beasties. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=evA-R9OS-Vo 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.

Beastie Boys have posted their full 30-minute Fight For Your Right – Revisited film online.

Scroll down now to watch the film, which stars the likes of Elijah Wood, Danny McBride, Seth Rogen, Susan Sarandon and sees the rappers revisit their classic 1987 video for ‘(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (To Party!)’.

The band’s Adam Yauch wrote and directed the film, which acts as a sequel to the events in the original video. A number of other actors and musicians make cameos in it, including Will Ferrell, Jack Black, Steve Buscemi, Shannyn Sossamon, Kirsten Dunst, Ted Danson, Chloe Sevigny and Orlando Bloom, as well as the actual Beasties.

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.

Roger Daltrey announces UK ‘Tommy’ tour

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The Who's Roger Daltrey is set to tour the band’s rock opera 'Tommy' in the UK this summer. Daltrey recently played the 1969 album at the Royal Albert Hall in London for the Teenage Cancer Trust , and will now take it on the road this July. He will be joined on the tour by Simon Townshend, the younger brother of his The Who bandmate Pete Townshend. Townshend said: "I will be there in spirit and Roger has my complete and most loving support." Roger Daltrey will play: Alchester Ragley Hall (July 3) Gateshead Sage (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) Harrogate Ripley House (17) Hull City Hall (19) London Indigo O2 (21) Norwich Blicking Hall (22) Exeter Powderham Castle (24) Tickets go on sale on Friday (April 29) at 9am (GMT). 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 is set to tour the band’s rock opera ‘Tommy‘ in the UK this summer.

Daltrey recently played the 1969 album at the Royal Albert Hall in London for the Teenage Cancer Trust

, and will now take it on the road this July.

He will be joined on the tour by Simon Townshend, the younger brother of his The Who bandmate Pete Townshend.

Townshend said: “I will be there in spirit and Roger has my complete and most loving support.”

Roger Daltrey will play:

Alchester Ragley Hall (July 3)

Gateshead Sage (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)

Harrogate Ripley House (17)

Hull City Hall (19)

London Indigo O2 (21)

Norwich Blicking Hall (22)

Exeter Powderham Castle (24)

Tickets go on sale on Friday (April 29) at 9am (GMT).

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 re-releasing solo albums

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Paul McCartney is set to re-issue his 1970 solo album 'McCartney' and 1980’s 'McCartney II' on June 13 with a vast array of extras. The remastering process was supervised by the singer and was undertaken at Abbey Road Studios by the same team who remastered The Beatles' back catalogue recently. The re-issue of 'McCartney' will feature seven bonus tracks. There will also be a 'Deluxe Edition' issued, which will include a DVD of rare and previously-unreleased footage along with a 128-page booklet featuring previously-unpublished photos taken by McCartney and his late wife Linda. The re-issue of 'McCartney II' will feature eight bonus tracks, including b-sides and alternative song versions. The four-disc ‘Deluxe Edition’ will featured a DVD and an additional eight bonus audio tracks. It will also feature a 128-page booklet with photos from Linda. The tracklisting of 'McCartney' is: CD1: 'The Lovely Linda' 'That Would Be Something' 'Valentine Day' 'Every Night' 'Hot As Sun/Glasses' 'Junk' 'Man We Was Lonely' 'Oo You' 'Momma Miss America' 'Teddy Boy' 'Singalong Junk' 'Maybe I’m Amazed' 'Kreen-Akrore' CD2: 'Suicide' (outtake) 'Maybe I’m Amazed' (from TV special One Hand Clapping) 'Every Night' (live in Glasgow, 1979) 'Hot As Sun' (live in Glasgow, 1979) 'Maybe I’m Amazed' (Live in Glasgow, 1979) 'Don’t Cry Baby' (outtake) 'Women Kind' (demo) DVD: 'The Album Story' 'The Beach' 'Maybe I’m Amazed' (music video) 'Suicide' (from TV special One Hand Clapping) 'Every Night' (live at Concert For The People Of Kampuchea) 'Hot As Sun' (live at Concert For The People Of Kampuchea) 'Junk' (from MTV Unplugged) 'That Would Be Something' (from MTV Unplugged) The tracklisting of 'McCartney II' is: CD1: 'Coming Up' 'Temporary Secretary' 'On The Way' 'Waterfalls' 'Nobody Knows' 'Front Parlour' 'Summer’s Day Song' 'Frozen Jap' 'Bogey Music' 'Darkroom' 'One Of These Days' CD2: 'Blue Sway' (with Richard Niles orchestration) 'Coming Up' (live in Glasgow) 'Check My Machine' (edit) 'Bogey Wobble' 'Secret Friend' 'Mr H Atom'/ 'You Know I’ll Get You Baby' 'Wonderful Christmastime' (edit) 'All You Horse Riders'/ 'Blue Sway' CD3: 'Coming Up' (full length version) 'Front Parlour' (full length version) 'Frozen Jap' (full length version) 'Darkroom' (full length version) 'Check My Machine' (full length version) 'Wonderful Christmastime' (full length version) 'Summer’s Day Song' (original without vocals) 'Waterfalls' (DJ edit) DVD: 'Meet Paul McCartney' 'Coming Up' (music video) 'Waterfalls' (music video) 'Wonderful Christmastime' (music video) 'Coming Up' ((live at the Concert For The People Of Kampuchea) 'Coming Up' (taken from a rehearsal session at Lower Gate Farm, 1979) 'Making the 'Coming Up' music video' 'Blue Sway' 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 is set to re-issue his 1970 solo album ‘McCartney’ and 1980’s ‘McCartney II’ on June 13 with a vast array of extras.

The remastering process was supervised by the singer and was undertaken at Abbey Road Studios by the same team who remastered The Beatles‘ back catalogue recently.

The re-issue of ‘McCartney’ will feature seven bonus tracks. There will also be a ‘Deluxe Edition’ issued, which will include a DVD of rare and previously-unreleased footage along with a 128-page booklet featuring previously-unpublished photos taken by McCartney and his late wife Linda.

The re-issue of ‘McCartney II’ will feature eight bonus tracks, including b-sides and alternative song versions. The four-disc ‘Deluxe Edition’ will featured a DVD and an additional eight bonus audio tracks. It will also feature a 128-page booklet with photos from Linda.

The tracklisting of ‘McCartney’ is:

CD1:

‘The Lovely Linda’

‘That Would Be Something’

‘Valentine Day’

‘Every Night’

‘Hot As Sun/Glasses’

‘Junk’

‘Man We Was Lonely’

‘Oo You’

‘Momma Miss America’

‘Teddy Boy’

‘Singalong Junk’

‘Maybe I’m Amazed’

‘Kreen-Akrore’

CD2:

‘Suicide’ (outtake)

‘Maybe I’m Amazed’ (from TV special One Hand Clapping)

‘Every Night’ (live in Glasgow, 1979)

‘Hot As Sun’ (live in Glasgow, 1979)

‘Maybe I’m Amazed’ (Live in Glasgow, 1979)

‘Don’t Cry Baby’ (outtake)

‘Women Kind’ (demo)

DVD:

‘The Album Story’

‘The Beach’

‘Maybe I’m Amazed’ (music video)

‘Suicide’ (from TV special One Hand Clapping)

‘Every Night’ (live at Concert For The People Of Kampuchea)

‘Hot As Sun’ (live at Concert For The People Of Kampuchea)

‘Junk’ (from MTV Unplugged)

‘That Would Be Something’ (from MTV Unplugged)

The tracklisting of ‘McCartney II’ is:

CD1:

‘Coming Up’

‘Temporary Secretary’

‘On The Way’

‘Waterfalls’

‘Nobody Knows’

‘Front Parlour’

‘Summer’s Day Song’

‘Frozen Jap’

‘Bogey Music’

‘Darkroom’

‘One Of These Days’

CD2:

‘Blue Sway’ (with Richard Niles orchestration)

‘Coming Up’ (live in Glasgow)

‘Check My Machine’ (edit)

‘Bogey Wobble’

‘Secret Friend’

‘Mr H Atom’/ ‘You Know I’ll Get You Baby’

‘Wonderful Christmastime’ (edit)

‘All You Horse Riders’/ ‘Blue Sway’

CD3:

‘Coming Up’ (full length version)

‘Front Parlour’ (full length version)

‘Frozen Jap’ (full length version)

‘Darkroom’ (full length version)

‘Check My Machine’ (full length version)

‘Wonderful Christmastime’ (full length version)

‘Summer’s Day Song’ (original without vocals)

‘Waterfalls’ (DJ edit)

DVD:

‘Meet Paul McCartney’

‘Coming Up’ (music video)

‘Waterfalls’ (music video)

‘Wonderful Christmastime’ (music video)

‘Coming Up’ ((live at the Concert For The People Of Kampuchea)

‘Coming Up’ (taken from a rehearsal session at Lower Gate Farm, 1979)

‘Making the ‘Coming Up’ music video’

‘Blue Sway’

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.

June 2011

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HAPPY BIRTHDAY BOB - A 70th Birthday Gift To Bob Dylan I STILL HAVE a sense of the vague incomprehension among friends of a certain age in 1991, when Bob Dylan turned 50. When we started buying records, Dylan's early albums would have been among the first precious discs in our collections, which me...

HAPPY BIRTHDAY BOB – A 70th Birthday Gift To Bob Dylan

I STILL HAVE a sense of the vague incomprehension among friends of a certain age in 1991, when Bob Dylan turned 50. When we started buying records, Dylan’s early albums would have been among the first precious discs in our collections, which meant they would always remind us of that time in our lives when growing up and getting old was what other people did, your parents for instance. But there was Dylan, at 50. How had that happened? It seemed inconceivable that one of our teenage heroes had reached such an advanced age, perhaps because we had at some point grown used to the idea of them being dead by the time they were 30 and better off in some addled opinion by not hanging around into what would surely prove to be an embarrassing dotage, their reputations intact, invulnerable to the diminishing of their talents by time’s passing.

Dying young at one point seemed, fatuously you’d have to say in retrospect, the advisable career option. Past a certain age, would there be any point in going on? The answer to which question is yes, if you’re Bob Dylan. The Never Ending Tour had just got into its early stride when Dylan hit his half century and although his first album of new material after turning 50 didn’t come until 1997, the record he then released, Time Out Of Mind, heralded a brilliant late-career renaissance some of the less illustrious albums he made in the ’80s, among them Empire Burlesque and Down In The Groove, did little to predict. As well as LPs of note like

Noel Gallagher calls for LS Lowry artwork to be made public

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Noel Gallagher has called for the artwork of LS Lowry to be made more available to the public. The former Oasis man is backing Sir Ian McKellen's campaign for the Tate gallery in London to display pieces by the painter, whose artwork inspired Oasis' 'The Masterplan' video. Speaking about the avail...

Noel Gallagher has called for the artwork of LS Lowry to be made more available to the public.

The former Oasis man is backing Sir Ian McKellen‘s campaign for the Tate gallery in London to display pieces by the painter, whose artwork inspired Oasis‘The Masterplan’ video.

Speaking about the availability of the artist’s work in McKellen’s documentary Looking For Lowry, Gallagher said: “They’re not considered Tate-worthy. Is it just because he was a Northerner? Does anybody know why? Why? What’s the official line?”

Lowry was famous for his paintings depicting life in the industrial landscapes in the north of England. Oasis‘ 2006 video for ‘The Masterplan’ featured Lowry-inspired animation.

In an interview online at Foxtrotfilms.com, Gallagher was asked about seeing his first Lowry painting. He replied: “I can’t remember [when I saw it], it’s just like someone saying to me, ‘When are the first time you heard The Beatles?'”

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.

Aretha Franklin announces new album details

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Aretha Franklin has announced the release of her new album 'A Woman Falling Out Of Love'. The record, due out on May 2, will be her first new album since 2003’s 'So Damn Happy'. It features production from two of her sons, Kecalf and Eddie, reports Antimusic.com. The album also includes her vers...

Aretha Franklin has announced the release of her new album ‘A Woman Falling Out Of Love’.

The record, due out on May 2, will be her first new album since 2003’s ‘So Damn Happy’. It features production from two of her sons, Kecalf and Eddie, reports Antimusic.com.

The album also includes her version of ‘My Country ‘Tis Of Thee’, which she sang at Barack Obama’s Presidential inauguration, plus two tracks written and produced by Franklin including new single ‘How Long I’ve Waited’.

The tracklisting of ‘A Woman Falling Out Of Love’ is:

‘How Long I’ve Waited’

‘Sweet Sixteen’

‘This You Should Know’

‘U Can’t See Me’

‘Theme From A Summer Place’

‘The Way We Were’

‘New Day’

‘Put It Back Together Again’

‘Faithful (featuring Karen Clark-Sheard)’

‘His Eye Is On The Sparrow’

‘When Two Become One’

‘My Country ‘Tis Of Thee’

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.

Kasabian to release new album in October

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Kasabian will release their new album in October, a record label spokesperson for the band has said. Although the album is still being finished and is currently untitled, the spokesperson said that plans to release it have now been put in place. "They're mixing it," the Sony/BMG rep told Thisislei...

Kasabian will release their new album in October, a record label spokesperson for the band has said.

Although the album is still being finished and is currently untitled, the spokesperson said that plans to release it have now been put in place.

“They’re mixing it,” the Sony/BMG rep told Thisisleicestershire.co.uk, as well as revealing the October release plan. It is believed that the rockers have been working with producer Dan The Automator on the record, and have been recording in San Francisco and Los Angeles.

Guitarist Serge Pizzorno described the sound of the record by saying he thinks the band have bettered their last album, ‘West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum’.

“Well, it’s epic,” he claimed. “It’s big songs that make you feel like anything’s possible. It’s a really positive record. I suppose it’s a combination of all three records but we’ve just taken it a bit further.”

He added: “I’m really excited about it, because after the last record, people really liked it and wanted to know what was next, and I’m happy to say that it’s got better. I’m excited about playing it live – there are tunes on there that are going to take people to a new place.”

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.

PANDA BEAR – TOMBOY

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It ain’t where you come from, it ain’t even where you’re at. For a particular generation these days, it’s all about where you came from. For the new folkies, the hauntologists, the hypnagogues and all those surfing the chillwave, music has become a chess match of reference points, opening moves establishing a time-frame, offensive manoeuvres pushing key genre tics, but all ultimately tending towards an artistic stalemate. Whether it’s the Day-Glo ’80s plastic soul of Dãm-Funk or Toro Y Moi, or the fuzzy-felt folk of Fleet Foxes, the ghosts of past musics seem to have entirely taken over the soul of much of today’s sounds. The Animal Collective trio have previously hovered on the cusp of this tendency, their honeyed, ritualistic tracks touching on a legacy of melancholic American dream pop from The Beach Boys to Don Henley. Individually, though, their offerings have frequently been more than the sum of their parts, especially 2007’s Person Pitch by Panda Bear, the alter ego of Noah Lennox. Now based in Lisbon, Lennox spent a portion of last year letting out his new album in dribs and drabs, on a low-key series of 7” releases on Kompakt, Domino, FatCat and Animal Collective’s own label Paw Tracks. Now, Tomboy has appeared, featuring many of those tracks in different mixes, many of them effected by Pete “Sonic Boom” Kember, one-time guitarist with Spacemen 3 and Spectrum, who contacted Lennox after finding himself namechecked on Person Pitch. Having just produced MGMT’s Congratulations, Kember used the same Blanker Unsinn studio to finish off Lennox’s homebaked nuggets. Although it’s not clear where Panda ends and Boom begins, the soundworld of the whole album is consistent and instantly recognisable: it’s obfuscatory, full of discomfiting aural hallucinations (voices flitting at the fringes of hearing, dublike stabs and delays), while the vocals are like markings on the floor of a swimming pool, perpetually rippling. Like the long-lost days of shoegaze, Lennox’s lyrics are all but swamped in the mixes’ textural scurf, as though he’s buried in sand and lisping through a mouthful of salt water. And the sea never seems far away. “Surfers Hymn” recalls vintage Animal Collective at their most Pet Sounds-ing. “Slow Motion”’s hook line sinks into a stuck-record vortex, a whirlpool whose eddies suck the riffs into melodious spirals. “Last Night At The Jetty” is a doo-wop ballade wearing electronic armature, reminiscent of the way David Lynch dressed up sentimental melodies in the eerie voice of Julee Cruise to claustrophobic effect in Twin Peaks. Here Lennox, trebling his vocal lines, turns himself into a one-man ensemble, tapping in to a peculiarly American dream of starlit dips and beach romance. Yet deciphering these private raptures via their texts alone remains largely a hopeless task. Tomboy largely consists of variations on one sonic texture – the vocals are embedded in echo chambers, bass tones are almost totally absent, and only small signatures define each track: audience and soccer crowd noise intrudes on both “Alsatian Darn” and “Benfica”; while “Afterburner” is the lone mould-breaker, with a minimal techno pulse garlanded with chorused guitar. At times, as on “Scheherazade” or “Friendship Bracelet”, the music achieves an awe-ful beauty. And where Panda Bear transcends his contemporaries is in evoking a sense of nostalgia without entirely giving in to the retro impulse, even when trading King Tubby-style one-drops on “Slow Motion”. The result is a record that demands to live not in some mythologised ’80s, but in the here and now. Rob Young

It ain’t where you come from, it ain’t even where you’re at. For a particular generation these days, it’s all about where you came from.

For the new folkies, the hauntologists, the hypnagogues and all those surfing the chillwave, music has become a chess match of reference points, opening moves establishing a time-frame, offensive manoeuvres pushing key genre tics, but all ultimately tending towards an artistic stalemate.

Whether it’s the Day-Glo ’80s plastic soul of Dãm-Funk or Toro Y Moi, or the fuzzy-felt folk of Fleet Foxes, the ghosts of past musics seem to have entirely taken over the soul of much of today’s sounds. The Animal Collective trio have previously hovered on the cusp of this tendency, their honeyed, ritualistic tracks touching on a legacy of melancholic American dream pop from The Beach Boys to Don Henley.

Individually, though, their offerings have frequently been more than the sum of their parts, especially 2007’s Person Pitch by Panda Bear, the alter ego of Noah Lennox. Now based in Lisbon, Lennox spent a portion of last year letting out his new album in dribs and drabs, on a low-key series of 7” releases on Kompakt, Domino, FatCat and Animal Collective’s own label Paw Tracks.

Now, Tomboy has appeared, featuring many of those tracks in different mixes, many of them effected by Pete “Sonic Boom” Kember, one-time guitarist with Spacemen 3 and Spectrum, who contacted Lennox after finding himself namechecked on Person Pitch. Having just produced MGMT’s Congratulations, Kember used the same Blanker Unsinn studio to finish off Lennox’s homebaked nuggets. Although it’s not clear where Panda ends and Boom begins, the soundworld of the whole album is consistent and instantly recognisable: it’s obfuscatory, full of discomfiting aural hallucinations (voices flitting at the fringes of hearing, dublike stabs and delays), while the vocals are like markings on the floor of a swimming pool, perpetually rippling. Like the long-lost days of shoegaze, Lennox’s lyrics are all but swamped in the mixes’ textural scurf, as though he’s buried in sand and lisping through a mouthful of salt water.

And the sea never seems far away. “Surfers Hymn” recalls vintage Animal Collective at their most Pet Sounds-ing. “Slow Motion”’s hook line sinks into a stuck-record vortex, a whirlpool whose eddies suck the riffs into melodious spirals. “Last Night At The Jetty” is a doo-wop ballade wearing electronic armature, reminiscent of the way David Lynch dressed up sentimental melodies in the eerie voice of Julee Cruise to claustrophobic effect in Twin Peaks. Here Lennox, trebling his vocal lines, turns himself into a one-man ensemble, tapping in to a peculiarly American dream of starlit dips and beach romance.

Yet deciphering these private raptures via their texts alone remains largely a hopeless task. Tomboy largely consists of variations on one sonic texture – the vocals are embedded in echo chambers, bass tones are almost totally absent, and only small signatures define each track: audience and soccer crowd noise intrudes on both “Alsatian Darn” and “Benfica”; while “Afterburner” is the lone mould-breaker, with a minimal techno pulse garlanded with chorused guitar. At times, as on “Scheherazade” or “Friendship Bracelet”, the music achieves an awe-ful beauty. And where Panda Bear transcends his contemporaries is in evoking a sense of nostalgia without entirely giving in to the retro impulse, even when trading King Tubby-style one-drops on “Slow Motion”. The result is a record that demands to live not in some mythologised ’80s, but in the here and now.

Rob Young

EMMYLOU HARRIS – HARD BARGAIN

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She is rarely creatively inactive, almost always touring and joining forces with one fellow traveller or another, but fans of Emmylou Harris might nonetheless feel they have been handed meagre rations over recent years. For all its commercial success, All The Roadrunning, her 2006 partnership with Mark Knopfler, was a patchy affair, at least if you aren’t partial to the Knopf’s growl. 2008’s All I Intended To Be felt even more like a stop-gap, its handful of new songs augmented with judicious covers of Merle Haggard, Tracy Chapman and others. Hard Bargain brings us back to Emmylou herself. All but two of its 13 songs are self-penned, the exceptions being Ron Sexsmith’s title track and “Cross Yourself”, a pleasant but lightweight contribution from Jay Joyce, who also produced the album and multi-tracked its guitars. For company Joyce had just percussionist Giles Reaves, plus Emmylou herself on acoustic guitar. The sound is lean without being minimal – there isn’t much ‘downhome’ about it, no pedal steel or mandolin (though there is a sprinkle of banjo), but plenty of rock muscle when needed. Indeed, Joyce seems to aspire to the cavernous approach of U2 or the ricocheting ambience/empty echo (delete according to taste) that Daniel Lanois brought to Emmylou’s 1995 Wrecking Ball. At times she seems to be singing from the bottom of a well. The opener, “The Road”, is a case in point, its chorus delivered amid a hail of Edge-style twangerama. The song, which has nothing to do with Cormac McCarthy’s novel, is one of Hard Bargain’s talking points, being Harris’ reflections on her long lost creative partner Gram Parsons. It is now approaching 40 years since the death of the wayward singer, yet Emmylou’s wounds are still apparent on verses that admit “I still think about you/Wonder where you are/Can you see from somewhere/Up there among the stars?” There’s another tribute to a fallen friend in “Darlin’ Kate”, a song for the late Kate McGarrigle, Harris’ friend and accomplice. It’s a tear-jerker of a farewell, its line “you slip the surly bonds of earth and sail away” recalling another life-after-death scenario, “Sailing Round The Room” from All I Intended To Be. Heaven knows country music has never shied away from singing of ‘that other shore’, yet there’s a mawkish cast to all these songs. The same might be said of “Emmett Till”, a song that tells the tragic tale of the murdered teenage boy who became an unwitting martyr for the Civil Rights cause in 1962, his death already chronicled by Dylan back in the bard’s early days. Harris’ tribute, written from Till’s perspective, is fine enough, though its timing is a puzzle. Why now? Less unsettling are the midtempo, catchy “Home Sweet Home” and the slower “Goodnight Old World”, which are both as straight ahead as their titles suggest. Likewise “New Orleans”, an uptempo celebration of the Crescent City, while “Big Black Dog” is a canine joke song in the tradition of McCartney’s “Martha My Dear” or Norah Jones’ “Man Of The Hour” – a shaggy oddity. Elsewhere we are returned to portraits of life as a disappointment, its moments of happiness fleeting. “The Ship On His Arm” is a portrait of a soldier in combat missing his sweetheart, “Lonely Girl” ponders a woman finding herself stranded alone, while “Nobody” reprises the theme of the loveless life where “no-one ever stays” and which ends with a child grown to old age, “wondering if there really is a heaven”. Sexsmith’s “Hard Bargain”, while stricken by disappointment, still seems warm by comparison with the majority of the songs here. Perhaps that’s why Harris chose it as the title track for the album. Beneath its appealing veneer this remains a work wracked with personal anguish and doubt, and any positive engagement with life is welcome in it – even if, from necessity, it has to come from someone else. Neil Spencer

She is rarely creatively inactive, almost always touring and joining forces with one fellow traveller or another, but fans of Emmylou Harris might nonetheless feel they have been handed meagre rations over recent years.

For all its commercial success, All The Roadrunning, her 2006 partnership with Mark Knopfler, was a patchy affair, at least if you aren’t partial to the Knopf’s growl. 2008’s All I Intended To Be felt even more like a stop-gap, its handful of new songs augmented with judicious covers of Merle Haggard, Tracy Chapman and others.

Hard Bargain brings us back to Emmylou herself. All but two of its 13 songs are self-penned, the exceptions being Ron Sexsmith’s title track and “Cross Yourself”, a pleasant but lightweight contribution from Jay Joyce, who also produced the album and multi-tracked its guitars. For company Joyce had just percussionist Giles Reaves, plus Emmylou herself on acoustic guitar. The sound is lean without being minimal – there isn’t much ‘downhome’ about it, no pedal steel or mandolin (though there is a sprinkle of banjo), but plenty of rock muscle when needed. Indeed, Joyce seems to aspire to the cavernous approach of U2 or the ricocheting ambience/empty echo (delete according to taste) that Daniel Lanois brought to Emmylou’s 1995 Wrecking Ball. At times she seems to be singing from the bottom of a well.

The opener, “The Road”, is a case in point, its chorus delivered amid a hail of Edge-style twangerama. The song, which has nothing to do with Cormac McCarthy’s novel, is one of Hard Bargain’s talking points, being Harris’ reflections on her long lost creative partner Gram Parsons. It is now approaching 40 years since the death of the wayward singer, yet Emmylou’s wounds are still apparent on verses that admit “I still think about you/Wonder where you are/Can you see from somewhere/Up there among the stars?”

There’s another tribute to a fallen friend in “Darlin’ Kate”, a song for the late Kate McGarrigle, Harris’ friend and accomplice. It’s a tear-jerker of a farewell, its line “you slip the surly bonds of earth and sail away” recalling another life-after-death scenario, “Sailing Round The Room” from All I Intended To Be. Heaven knows country music has never shied away from singing of ‘that other shore’, yet there’s a mawkish cast to all these songs.

The same might be said of “Emmett Till”, a song that tells the tragic tale of the murdered teenage boy who became an unwitting martyr for the Civil Rights cause in 1962, his death already chronicled by Dylan back in the bard’s early days. Harris’ tribute, written from Till’s perspective, is fine enough, though its timing is a puzzle. Why now?

Less unsettling are the midtempo, catchy “Home Sweet Home” and the slower “Goodnight Old World”, which are both as straight ahead as their titles suggest. Likewise “New Orleans”, an uptempo celebration of the Crescent City, while “Big Black Dog” is a canine joke song in the tradition of McCartney’s “Martha My Dear” or Norah Jones’ “Man Of The Hour” – a shaggy oddity.

Elsewhere we are returned to portraits of life as a disappointment, its moments of happiness fleeting. “The Ship On His Arm” is a portrait of a soldier in combat missing his sweetheart, “Lonely Girl” ponders a woman finding herself stranded alone, while “Nobody” reprises the theme of the loveless life where “no-one ever stays” and which ends with a child grown to old age, “wondering if there really is a heaven”.

Sexsmith’s “Hard Bargain”, while stricken by disappointment, still seems warm by comparison with the majority of the songs here. Perhaps that’s why Harris chose it as the title track for the album. Beneath its appealing veneer this remains a work wracked with personal anguish and doubt, and any positive engagement with life is welcome in it – even if, from necessity, it has to come from someone else.

Neil Spencer

THOR

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DIRECTED BY Kenneth Branagh STARRING Chris Hemshaw, Natalie Portman, Anthony Hopkins What to expect, then, from Kenneth Branagh’s take on Thor, Marvel Comics’ spin on the mighty Norse god of thunder? Richard Briers cameoing as a kindly, twinkle-eyed retainer, perhaps? Or Robbie Coltrane as a h...

DIRECTED BY Kenneth Branagh

STARRING Chris Hemshaw, Natalie Portman, Anthony Hopkins

What to expect, then, from Kenneth Branagh’s take on Thor, Marvel Comics’ spin on the mighty Norse god of thunder? Richard Briers cameoing as a kindly, twinkle-eyed retainer, perhaps? Or Robbie Coltrane as a humorously rotund demi-god, with a winning line in bad puns and comedic asides?

In truth, Thor could do with a little more of this kind of off-piste thinking. It’s deathly long, it struggles to be coherent in places and, at times, it’s really just like the last superhero film you saw, but with slightly different costumes. Oh, and it’s in 3D. But then these days, what isn’t?

Certainly, Kenneth Branagh seems to be an unusual choice to direct a superhero movie. But then, you could argue that Thor is the odd-one-out in the Marvel Comics‘ cannon. He isn’t the regular guy, struggling to come to terms with new-found superpowers – the template for most Marvel protagonists. He’s the son of Odin One-Eye, the All-Father, head of the Æsir – a race of gods who watch over the Nine Realms from their home on Asgard.

As you might expect, when Anthony Hopkins (replacing Brian Blessed) arrives sporting a flowing white beard and bellowing heartily as Odin, Thor strives for the kind of sub-Shakespearean gravitas that Hollywood demands accompanies all on-screen portrayals of ancient deities.

A variety of actors – some of them known to us, like Idris Elba, The Wire’s Stringer Bell – appear dressed in colourful body armour declaiming wildly. Fortunately, no-one forsooths. While the splendour of Asgard is realised via typically accomplished special effects – the Bifröst bridge that links worlds, particularly, has requisite wow-factor – you can’t but help feel that in some respects this city of gods resembles nothing more out-of-this-world than a high end hotel complex in Dubai.

It’s only when Thor is banished to Earth, and befriends scientists Natalie Portman and Stellan Skarsgård, that Branagh’s film finally reveals its charms.

Looking more like a bearded, long-haired surfer dude than a Norse god, Chris Hemsworth’s Thor strides manfully at one point into a pet shop and pompously demands a horse. It’s camp-y, fish-out-of-water fun, and offers some diversion from the generic CGI battles between the Æsir and the evil Frost Giants of Jotunheim, or Thor and an enchanted suit of armour called The Destroyer. He spends much of his time on Earth trying to retrieve Mjölnir, his hammer and the source of his powers. The central conflict, though, lies between Thor and the god of mischief, his brother Loki (Tom Hiddleston, a veteran of Branagh’s Wallander series). Hiddleston does sly and manipulative with relative restraint, that balances out Hemsworth’s shouty braggadocio.

But, really, it’s all about a bloke and his hammer.

MICHAEL BONNER

Bon Iver announce new album tracklisting

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Bon Iver have announced that their June-bound new album will be self-titled and released its tracklisting. The album will be released on June 21 in the US – see below for the tracklisting. Each song on the album is named after or represents a place. Frontman Justin Vernon has said of album close...

Bon Iver have announced that their June-bound new album will be self-titled and released its tracklisting.

The album will be released on June 21 in the US – see below for the tracklisting.

Each song on the album is named after or represents a place. Frontman Justin Vernon has said of album closer ‘Beth/Rest’, his favourite on the LP: “It’s definitely the part where you pick up your joint and re-light it.”

The tracklisting of ‘Bon Iver’ is:

‘Perth’

‘Minnesota, WI’

‘Holocene’

‘Towers’

‘Michicant’

‘Hinnom, TX’

‘Wash.’

‘Calgary’

‘Lisbon, OH’

‘Beth/Rest’

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.

Liam Gallagher reveals Beady Eye second album plans

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Liam Gallagher has promised that Beady Eye won't be hanging around when it comes to releasing their second album. The singer told the Irish Times that they wouldn't let promotion for their recent debut 'Different Gear, Still Speeding' run into 2012 and instead would get to work on its follow-up. C...

Liam Gallagher has promised that Beady Eye won’t be hanging around when it comes to releasing their second album.

The singer told the Irish Times that they wouldn’t let promotion for their recent debut ‘Different Gear, Still Speeding’ run into 2012 and instead would get to work on its follow-up.

Comparing life in Beady Eye to his old Oasis regime he said: “We’re not going to put the ball down, sit around in a big house and go ‘We’re great’. We won’t be booking into the studio for months and months on end.”

He added: “We’re not going to be rolling over this album into the next year. There will be an awesome second album coming soon. We’re responsible for our every move. We’re on our own label. We do all our own artwork and videos. It’s not like, ‘Oh, send that off to the visual arts person’.”

‘Different Gear, Still Speeding’ was released in February.

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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 15th Uncut Playlist Of 2011

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Ashley Wales’ remix of “You’re No Good”… the second movement of Fucked Up’s rock opera… “I Had A Dream” by The Long Ryders still sounding levitational, right up to the last second when someone observes, correctly, “That was tight!”… Robert Stillman… The People’s Temple ra...

Ashley Wales’ remix of “You’re No Good”… the second movement of Fucked Up’s rock opera… “I Had A Dream” by The Long Ryders still sounding levitational, right up to the last second when someone observes, correctly, “That was tight!”… Robert StillmanThe People’s Temple ramalam I blogged about yesterday… “The Only Way I Know To Love You” by Joe TexAndre Adams… “Supercollider”… and Sun Araw covering Teenage Fanclub, downloaded from the always on-point Raven Sings The Blues… All good…

Arcade Fire to release two new songs this June

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Arcade Fire are to re-release 'The Suburbs' in June, with the addition of two brand new songs. The tracks, which are titled 'Speaking In Tongues' and 'Culture War', will be released on June 27 in a new, deluxe edition of the band’s third album. The new edition will also include the band's shor...

Arcade Fire are to re-release ‘The Suburbs’ in June, with the addition of two brand new songs.

The tracks, which are titled ‘Speaking In Tongues’ and ‘Culture War’, will be released on June 27 in a new, deluxe edition of the band’s third album.

The new edition will also include the band’s short film, ‘Scenes From The Suburbs’. A ‘Making Of’ documentary will also be part of the package.

The re-release was announced last night (April 18) on Zane Lowe’s BBC Radio 1 Show, which will also be the first radio show to air the tracks, on May 23.

Arcade Fire return to the UK in June to headline Hyde Park.

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.

Rufus Wainwright to play London Royal Opera House residency

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Rufus Wainwright has announced a five night residency at London's Royal Opera House for July. The Canadian singer songwriter will play a different themed concert each night during the run, which takes place from July 18 – 23. The opening night (July 18) will see Wainwright perform his Judy Garl...

Rufus Wainwright has announced a five night residency at London‘s Royal Opera House for July.

The Canadian singer songwriter will play a different themed concert each night during the run, which takes place from July 18 – 23.

The opening night (July 18) will see Wainwright perform his Judy Garland tribute show ‘Rufus Does Judy’, which was released as a live album in 2007. He will also perform this on July 22.

He will then play an evening with his sister Martha the following night (July 19) and his father Loudon Wainwright III on July 21.

The final night (July 23) will see a performance of his 2010 opera Prima Donna, followed by a show, which is titled ‘Rufus Does Rufus’.

The gigs are to support the release of a new 19 disc box set, ‘House Of Rufus’. This features the singer’s six studio albums, two live albums, four additional CDs of rarities and demos and six DVDs.

‘House Of Rufus’ is released on July 18.

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 make Record Store Day single available online

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Radiohead have made their Record Store Day songs 'Supercollider' and 'The Butcher' available to download to fans who bought their 'Kings Of Limbs' album. The tracks were made available on limited-edition vinyl on Saturday (April 16) but in an email that opens with "thank you" in 27 languages, the b...

Radiohead have made their Record Store Day songs ‘Supercollider’ and ‘The Butcher’ available to download to fans who bought their ‘Kings Of Limbs’ album.

The tracks were made available on limited-edition vinyl on Saturday (April 16) but in an email that opens with “thank you” in 27 languages, the band state that the tracks are being given away to reward fans for their support.

“This is not part of a new loyalty points scheme, a Radiohead clubcard or even an air miles redeemable reward type thing… It is just a big old-fashioned thank you!” the email, from their Waste.uk.com merchandise site added.

To download the two tracks go to the band’s official album site Thekingoflimbs.com

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 People’s Temple: “Sons Of Stone”

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The new Black Lips album – produced by Mark Ronson, weirdly – arrived yesterday, and reminded me of a couple of things. First, that I always feel unaccountably guilty for not liking Black Lips records as much as I think I should. And second, I actually have a bunch of good garage records that need writing about. Foremost among them, I reckon, is “Sons Of Stone”, the debut album by The People’s Temple on Hozac. The People’s Temple come from Lansing, Michigan, but their particular strain of garage seems to be derived from further south, rich as it is with allusions to the blasted Texan psych of the 13th Floor Elevators and at least some of the International Artists label. As with so many of these contemporary garage bands, The People’s Temple maintain a peculiar and effective balance between incredible diligence, in their recreation of an antique ‘60s sound, and ramshackle spontaneity. Plenty of “Sons Of Stone” captures the bravura and naivety of a bunch of freshmen who’ve just heard, say, Them (“Where You Gonna Go?”) for the first time, or who’ve dedicated themselves to producing a darker analogue to “Paint It, Black” and then accidentally strayed into “Peter Gunn” in the process (the closing “The Surf”). There are stringy, uncanny echoes of early Love here, too, and, in some of the lysergic twanging lead guitar, surely accidental ones to the first Blur album. On their Myspace, incidentally, The People’s Temple reference The Brian Jonestown Massacre, which I personally find pretty offputting, but “Sons Of Stone” sounds like the most optimistic bits of that band’s rhetoric, rather than the shoey disappointments of their actual music. The People’s Temple have the thrust and the tunes – the title track and “Axe Man”, especially - to carry them through, so that they don’t sound, like a good few garage bands old and new, that they’re still quaintly grappling with the concept of a longplayer. Off the top of my head, it feels like the garage record I’ve most enjoyed since the last Fresh & Onlys and, especially, Ty Segall’s “Melted”. I have the new Segall album here (on Drag City), to listen to some more, and also a record by the Cosmonauts that I really should do something on. In the meantime, check out The People’s Temple on the cursed Myspace and let me know what you think.

The new Black Lips album – produced by Mark Ronson, weirdly – arrived yesterday, and reminded me of a couple of things. First, that I always feel unaccountably guilty for not liking Black Lips records as much as I think I should. And second, I actually have a bunch of good garage records that need writing about.