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Red Hot Chili Peppers reveal new album details

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Red Hot Chili Peppers frontman Anthony Kiedis has revealed that the band are close to finishing their new album – and that they also have a working title. Kiedis said the funk-rockers are currently calling the record 'Dr Johnny Skinz's Disproportionately Rambunctious Polar Express Machine-head' -...

Red Hot Chili Peppers frontman Anthony Kiedis has revealed that the band are close to finishing their new album – and that they also have a working title.

Kiedis said the funk-rockers are currently calling the record ‘Dr Johnny Skinz’s Disproportionately Rambunctious Polar Express Machine-head’ – a title inspired by an acid trip a friend of his once had.

“He [the friend] was reminiscing about one of his legendary acid trips,” the singer told Spin, “and told us that he had been playing a sold-out show to the planets and moons, and his Number One hit was, well, that title.”

Kiedis added that although he is fond of the title the band may change it.

He said: “We found it so funny that we told him for as long as the album was under the radar, that that would be our nickname for it.”

Kiedis added that the follow-up to 2006’s ‘Stadium Arcadium’ has seen Red Hot Chili Peppers‘ sound take on “a whole new dynamic” following the departure of guitarist John Frusciante. Bassist Flea, meanwhile, has been studying music and learning to play the piano.

“Before, some of our jams were a bit hit-and-miss,” Kiedis said. “On this record, a decent number of songs were actually thought out and planned in a way we had never done before. That is, with Flea‘s new knowledge of music theory, we explored the writing process with a bit more precision.”

Flea and Frusciante‘s replacement Josh Klinghoffer visited Africa to gain inspiration for the album, which has been produced by Rick Rubin. The record is still without a release date.

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 and Leonard Cohen’s daughter have a baby

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Rufus Wainwright has had a baby with Leonard Cohen's daughter Lorca. The singer, who is gay and in a long-term relationship with theatre producer Jorn Weisbrodt, announced the news on his website, Rufuswainwright.com. He said: "Darling daughter Viva Katherine Wainwright Cohen was born on February ...

Rufus Wainwright has had a baby with Leonard Cohen‘s daughter Lorca.

The singer, who is gay and in a long-term relationship with theatre producer Jorn Weisbrodt, announced the news on his website, Rufuswainwright.com.

He said: “Darling daughter Viva Katherine Wainwright Cohen was born on February 2, 2011 in Los Angeles, California to proud parents Lorca Cohen, Rufus Wainwright and Deputy Dad Jorn Weisbrodt. The little angel is evidently healthy, presumably happy and certainly very, very beautiful.”

The baby’s name is likely to be a reference to Wainwright‘s mother, folk singer Kate McGarrigle, who passed away in January 2010.

Wainwright said that Lorca Cohen was not a surrogate mother for the child. “Of course, she is no such thing [a surrogate parent],” he said. “She did not carry the child for someone else. Lorca Cohen is the mother of the baby and Rufus Wainwright is the father.”

Wainwright and Weisbrodt have previously hinted of their desire to have a child. The couple got engaged last year.

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.

Eagles, Bryan Ferry confirmed for Hop Farm Festival 2011

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Eagles, Brandon Flowers and Bryan Ferry have been confirmed to play this year's Hop Farm Festival. The acts will play on the Friday (July 1) of the event, which also takes place on July 2. Death Cab For Cutie and 10cc have both also been confirmed for the Friday. None of the Saturday line-up has b...

Eagles, Brandon Flowers and Bryan Ferry have been confirmed to play this year’s Hop Farm Festival.

The acts will play on the Friday (July 1) of the event, which also takes place on July 2.

Death Cab For Cutie and 10cc have both also been confirmed for the Friday. None of the Saturday line-up has been announced yet.

The festival takes place in Paddock Wood, Kent. See Hopfarmfestival.com for details.

Bob Dylan, Mumford And Sons, Neil Young, Pete Doherty and Primal Scream are among the acts who have played the event in the past.

Tickets are on sale now.

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”, second thoughts, + Zomes, “Earth Grid”

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A weekend after Radiohead's “The King Of Limbs” came out, it occurs to me that there’s an interesting experiment to be done sometime about how our responses change to a record over time. Maybe we should do a real-time live blog run-through of the album every Friday for the next six months and see how opinions evolve? My suspicion is that I’d just keep writing “very Flying Lotus” and “liking this a lot”, ad nauseam, and also that a forensic obsession with one record might be somewhat against the spirit of this blog. The ongoing story of how “The King Of Limbs” – or any record, really - will be heard is potentially fascinating, though, assuming that at least a few people will continue to engage with it after Friday’s frenzy. I can say for sure that Uncut, at least, will be mapping that to some degree: our review for the magazine won’t be written for another couple of weeks at least, which should open up some radically different perspectives. All that said, a good weekend of listening hasn’t made me rethink much the ideas I bashed out on Friday, apart from wishing that some of them were expressed more coherently. It still sounds brilliant, I think, and increasingly accessible and memorable. As suspected, “King Of Limbs” is packed with hooks, nowhere near as discreet as they initially appeared: “Lotus Flower” of course, but also “Codex” (in the same way that “Pyramid Song” gradually seemed to shift from a gaseous to solid state), “Separator”, “Little By Little” and especially “Give Up The Ghost”. There’s an intriguing suggestion from Nigel on the last blog that the latter is related in some way to Neil Young’s “Through My Sails”. I haven’t had a chance to check this on “Zuma”, but the fact that I’ve been loosely associating “Give Up The Ghost” with Thunderclap Newman’s “Something In The Air” points up that, at heart, there remains a certain classicism to these songs, however much they might at first seem to have been deconstructed. Even after it’s been removed, you can still detect where the scaffolding stood. I’ve been thinking, too, about some of the issues raised in the posts from Sam and Kris, about developing relationships with Radiohead’s music and about how a band and a listener can follow very different paths to reach the same place: in other words, there’s no hypocrisy or embarrassment in getting into Radiohead at a relatively late stage, even if what they’re doing now is evidence of a very gradual, but logical, evolution. But then I would say that. I do wonder, though, whether I should start again working backwards: whether I can follow the things I like now through the records I didn’t like at the time. The obvious one to work on, I think, is “Kid A”, which a decade or whatever ago I dismissed rather sniffily as a bunch of old Warp and post-rock ideas repackaged for a bigger audience. I usually claim that they sounded too self-conscious back then, too much in thrall to those influences. But as “Feral” plays right now, I have a grave – possibly pleasurable - suspicion I might, to coin a phrase, be wrong. Talking of old Warp records anyhow, the other record I played this weekend a lot reminded me plenty of Boards Of Canada. “Earth Grid” is the second album by Zomes – I wrote about their/his self-titled one here – this time on Thrill Jockey, who seem to be signing up no end of artists I regularly write about. Anyhow, Zomes is basically Asa Osbourne, once of Lungfish, who now makes heavily-distorted little loops and drones, stunned miniature instrumentals that seem imbued with some obscure incantatory properties. The Boards Of Canada reference isn’t immediately apparent, but the tight focus of each track has definite affinities with “Music Has The Right To Children”, but even more there’s a kind of decayed filtering going on that, again like BOC, seems to give Zomes’ tracks the audio equivalent of a sepiatinting. Hauntology for hippies, perhaps, which sounds OK by me.

A weekend after Radiohead‘s “The King Of Limbs” came out, it occurs to me that there’s an interesting experiment to be done sometime about how our responses change to a record over time. Maybe we should do a real-time live blog run-through of the album every Friday for the next six months and see how opinions evolve?

The xx rework ‘Newsnight’ theme tune

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The xx's Jamie Smith has reworked the theme tune to the BBC's late-night current affairs programme Newsnight. Scroll down and click below to hear his version of the theme, which was originally composed by George Fenton. Smith appeared as a guest on the programme on Tuesday night (February 15), tal...

The xx‘s Jamie Smith has reworked the theme tune to the BBC‘s late-night current affairs programme Newsnight.

Scroll down and click below to hear his version of the theme, which was originally composed by George Fenton.

Smith appeared as a guest on the programme on Tuesday night (February 15), talking to host Jeremy Paxman about the art of remixing. It is not the first time he has appeared on the show, having played on it with The xx following last year’s UK general election.

Meanwhile, Smith is set to release his collaboration album with Gil Scott-Heron, ‘We’re New Here’, on Monday (February 21).

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.

Oasis will ‘never’ reform, says Liam Gallagher

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Liam Gallagher has declared that Oasis will "never" reform. The frontman, now singing with his ex-Oasis bandmantes minus brother Noel in Beady Eye, said his new outfit was not a "stopgap". Responding to a question about whether there would ever be an Oasis reunion, Liam replied: “Never. This is...

Liam Gallagher has declared that Oasis will “never” reform.

The frontman, now singing with his ex-Oasis bandmantes minus brother Noel in Beady Eye, said his new outfit was not a “stopgap”.

Responding to a question about whether there would ever be an Oasis reunion, Liam replied: “Never. This is not a stopgap until me and Noel come to our senses and start Oasis again. That is well and truly done.”

Speaking to The Guardian, Liam was also critical of [url=http://www.nme.com/news/oasis/47016]Noel’s statement after he left the band in August 2009[/url].

In the statement Noel bemoaned “the lack of support and understanding from my management and bandmates” he had received.

Liam called the statement “absolute fucking bollocks”.

He added: “I just look at him [Noel] now and think, ‘You’re a fucking fake.’ It’s like, if you want to fucking leave the band, leave the band… if you wanna have five years off, have five years off. We’ll sit down as a band and talk about it. But don’t start going, ‘I was bullied out of the band.’ Fucking shite.”

Gallagher also confirmed that Beady Eye would not play any Oasis material on their forthcoming UK tour.

The band’s debut album, ‘Different Gear, Still Speeding’, is out on February 28.

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 release new album ‘The King Of Limbs’ early

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Radiohead are releasing their new album 'The King Of Limbs' today (February 18). The album contains eight songs and clocks in at 37 minutes long. The follow-up to 2007's 'In Rainbows' had been scheduled to come out tomorrow (19), but the band decided to bring the release date forward by 24 hours. ...

Radiohead are releasing their new album ‘The King Of Limbs’ today (February 18).

The album contains eight songs and clocks in at 37 minutes long.

The follow-up to 2007’s ‘In Rainbows’ had been scheduled to come out tomorrow (19), but the band decided to bring the release date forward by 24 hours. It’s being sent to those who pre-ordered it at Thekingoflimbs.com.

The Oxford five-piece have also posted a new song from the album, ‘Lotus Flower’, on YouTube.

Frontman Thom Yorke had been set to make a broadcast about the new album in Tokyo today, but it was cancelled due to security fears. The broadcast was set to air at Thekingoflimbs.jp instead.

The tracklisting of ‘The King Of Limbs’ is:

‘Bloom’

‘Morning Mr Magpie’

‘Little By Little’

‘Feral’

‘Lotus Flower’

‘Codex’

‘Give Up The Ghost’

‘Separator’

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.

NEVER LET ME GO

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Directed by Mark Romanek Starring Andrew Garfield, Keira Knightley Adapted from Kazuo Ishiguro’s novel, Never Let Me Go initially appears to be another stately piece of Brit heritage drama with its photogenic country house, Keira Knightley and a period setting. But Never Let Me Go gradually rev...

Directed by Mark Romanek

Starring Andrew Garfield, Keira Knightley

Adapted from Kazuo Ishiguro’s novel, Never Let Me Go initially appears to be another stately piece of Brit heritage drama with its photogenic country house, Keira Knightley and a period setting.

But Never Let Me Go gradually reveals itself to be a more subversive undertaking.

This is set in an alternative ’70s where Andrew Garfield, Keira Knightley and Carey Mulligan are students at a public school.

There they learn the truth about who they are, and the fate the state has in store for them as adults.

This is sci-fi, then; but of very English sort.

The trio are resigned to what they consider their duty. Mark Romanek adopts a melancholic palette throughout; from the creepy, post-war vibe, to beige rooms and gloomy afternoons.

Knightley bothers to act and is great as Ruth, initially manipulative then driven by a need for atonement.

Garfield excels as the dim-witted Tommy, caught in a love triangle between Knightley and Mulligan.

Despite the grinding bleakness, it’s a tremendous film.

Michael Bonner

GIL SCOTT-HERON & JAMIE T – WE’RE NEW HERE

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In 2010, it was impossible to listen to Gil Scot-Heron’s I’m New Here album – his first new work for 16 years, produced by XL records boss Richard Russell – without being reminded of the late recordings of Johnny Cash. Russell, like Rick Rubin before him, understood that the best way to modernise a genius that the music industry didn’t understand any more was to strip away all gimmickry and deliver the essence of what people loved about him in the first place. The difference between Russell and Rick Rubin lay in the sound worlds they used to carry their artists back to basics. For Rubin, it was acoustic guitar and an unplugged aesthetic. For Russell, it was all about making his artist rage against the machines – Scott-Heron’s weathered tones were cast against dark electronics rather than rootsy strummings. When producer and artist met, Scott-Heron had, like Johnny Cash, been pondering his own mortality and legacy, and looking back on his hard-knock life. Politics was replaced by the personal: poignant tributes to the strength of his mother and explorations of emotions unleashed by early poverty, addiction, political activism and jail time, connected by spoken-word transitions that defied any attempts to put the album on random shuffle. I’m New Here felt like the album he was born to make. Now it has an evil twin. Richard Russell suggested that Jamie Smith from Gil’s XL labelmates The xx make a dub version of I’m New Here because the production on their Mercury Prize-winning debut was the major influence on Russell’s work for Scott-Heron. The title neatly encapsulates both the generation and cultural gap between the venerable ghetto descendant and the new white hope and graduate of Putney’s Elliott School, the musical petri dish that has also spawned Hot Chip, Four Tet and Burial. Its from the latter that Smith takes his musical cues here, making a music that is closest in tempo and atmosphere to dubstep. You can’t help but admire the ingenuity of the opener and new version of Bill Callahan’s “I’m New Here” (the original’s only acoustic folk song), as Scott-Heron growls: “I did not become someone different/That I did not want to be/But I’m new here… will you show me around?”, before the first glistening electronic chords crash in, ringing and singing and literally introducing Scott-Heron to a place – street-level British urban noise – where he’s never been before. Soon, Gil is adrift among reverb-drenched chipmunk voices and slo-mo reggae drum machine, getting on famously with dubstep’s blend of sinister noir and dreamy reverie. It’s a stunning start. But We’re New Here is not a straightforward dub version of I’m New Here. 15 tracks become 13 tracks. The running order is messed with. The original’s end track “On Coming From A Broken Home Pt 2” is dispensed with and replaced by extraordinary versions of Scott-Heron’s classic “Home Is Where The Hatred Is” and “My Cloud”, which were both originally vinyl-only bonus tracks. Key spoken-word interludes are chopped up or dispensed with entirely. We’re New Here still tells a tale, but it’s a different, more abstract story to the original’s autobiographical narrative. Musically, Jamie xx treats his commission as the opportunity to explore different styles of dance music. Techno and house riffs, classic soul vocal samples, and dislocated jazz and hip hop breakbeats are woven into what feels like a 36-minute suite, while “NY Is Killing Me” becomes a bizarre blend of dubstep, queasy fairground music and Serge Gainsbourg, all tied together by Scott-Heron’s dubbed-up cries for help. If I’m New Here was a triumph for Russell and Scott-Heron, We’re New Here reveals a maverick production talent in Jamie Smith that his band’s records have only hinted at. Now that Rick Rubin has finally run out of Johnny Cash tunes to release posthumously, he could do worse than let Jamie xx loose on his dark materials. Garry Mulholland Q+A JAMIE XX Whose idea was We’re New Here? Richard Russell’s. He said that the production on the original Gil album was heavily influenced by The xx album. My first reaction was amazement. But I was really, really up for it ’cos I’d been listening to Gil since long before I was making music. It was just an honour to be able to make music with him and meet him. So you worked together in the studio? No. I met him at his gigs and one of our shows and hung out afterwards. He obviously wanted to have serious input and have the final word on everything, so I was writing emails to him. Is Gil as intimidating as he seems? Yeah. There’s a vibe about him that makes him quite hard to talk to: he’s always analysing everything you say. Sending him the music and waiting for his response was a bit nerve-racking. But in the end he didn’t change anything. He’s reached a point in his life when he wants to talk about his personal feelings and his family. INTERVIEW: GARRY MULHOLLAND

In 2010, it was impossible to listen to Gil Scot-Heron’s I’m New Here album – his first new work for 16 years, produced by XL records boss Richard Russell – without being reminded of the late recordings of Johnny Cash. Russell, like Rick Rubin before him, understood that the best way to modernise a genius that the music industry didn’t understand any more was to strip away all gimmickry and deliver the essence of what people loved about him in the first place.

The difference between Russell and Rick Rubin lay in the sound worlds they used to carry their artists back to basics. For Rubin, it was acoustic guitar and an unplugged aesthetic. For Russell, it was all about making his artist rage against the machines – Scott-Heron’s weathered tones were cast against dark electronics rather than rootsy strummings.

When producer and artist met, Scott-Heron had, like Johnny Cash, been pondering his own mortality and legacy, and looking back on his hard-knock life. Politics was replaced by the personal: poignant tributes to the strength of his mother and explorations of emotions unleashed by early poverty, addiction, political activism and jail time, connected by spoken-word transitions that defied any attempts to put the album on random shuffle. I’m New Here felt like the album he was born to make. Now it has an evil twin.

Richard Russell suggested that Jamie Smith from Gil’s XL labelmates The xx make a dub version of I’m New Here because the production on their Mercury Prize-winning debut was the major influence on Russell’s work for Scott-Heron. The title neatly encapsulates both the generation and cultural gap between the venerable ghetto descendant and the new white hope and graduate of Putney’s Elliott School, the musical petri dish that has also spawned Hot Chip, Four Tet and Burial. Its from the latter that Smith takes his musical cues here, making a music that is closest in tempo and atmosphere to dubstep.

You can’t help but admire the ingenuity of the opener and new version of Bill Callahan’s “I’m New Here” (the original’s only acoustic folk song), as Scott-Heron growls: “I did not become someone different/That I did not want to be/But I’m new here… will you show me around?”, before the first glistening electronic chords crash in, ringing and singing and literally introducing Scott-Heron to a place – street-level British urban noise – where he’s never been before. Soon, Gil is adrift among reverb-drenched chipmunk voices and slo-mo reggae drum machine, getting on famously with dubstep’s blend of sinister noir and dreamy reverie. It’s a stunning start.

But We’re New Here is not a straightforward dub version of I’m New Here. 15 tracks become 13 tracks. The running order is messed with. The original’s end track “On Coming From A Broken Home Pt 2” is dispensed with and replaced by extraordinary versions of Scott-Heron’s classic “Home Is Where The Hatred Is” and “My Cloud”, which were both originally vinyl-only bonus tracks. Key spoken-word interludes are chopped up or dispensed with entirely. We’re New Here still tells a tale, but it’s a different, more abstract story to the original’s autobiographical narrative.

Musically, Jamie xx treats his commission as the opportunity to explore different styles of dance music. Techno and house riffs, classic soul vocal samples, and dislocated jazz and hip hop breakbeats are woven into what feels like a 36-minute suite, while “NY Is Killing Me” becomes a bizarre blend of dubstep, queasy fairground music and Serge Gainsbourg, all tied together by Scott-Heron’s dubbed-up cries for help.

If I’m New Here was a triumph for Russell and Scott-Heron, We’re New Here reveals a maverick production talent in Jamie Smith that his band’s records have only hinted at. Now that Rick Rubin has finally run out of Johnny Cash tunes to release posthumously, he could do worse than let Jamie xx loose on his dark materials.

Garry Mulholland

Q+A JAMIE XX

Whose idea was We’re New Here?

Richard Russell’s. He said that the production on the original Gil album was heavily influenced by The xx album. My first reaction was amazement. But I was really, really up for it ’cos I’d been listening to Gil since long before I was making music. It was just an honour to be able to make music with him and meet him.

So you worked together in the studio?

No. I met him at his gigs and one of our shows and hung out afterwards. He obviously wanted to have serious input and have the final word on everything, so I was writing emails to him.

Is Gil as intimidating as he seems?

Yeah. There’s a vibe about him that makes him quite hard to talk to: he’s always analysing everything you say. Sending him the music and waiting for his response was a bit nerve-racking. But in the end he didn’t change anything. He’s reached a point in his life when he wants to talk about his personal feelings and his family.

INTERVIEW: GARRY MULHOLLAND

THE LOW ANTHEM – SMART FLESH

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There’s an old Buddhist proverb that goes something like this: “Before you speak, ask yourself, ‘Will it improve upon the silence?’” It’s not a question you can imagine, say, Robbie Williams pondering at length. But it sounds very much like the kind of question Rhode Island’s Low Anthem asked themselves before embarking on Smart Flesh, the follow-up to their breakthrough album, Oh My God, Charlie Darwin. A rootsy evocation of mythical America brimming with banjo, pump organ and a wonderful tumble of voices, Oh My God, Charlie Darwin was pitched somewhere between Fleet Foxes, Little Walter and Walt Whitman. Self-released in 2008, one year and a clutch of swooning reviews later it was remixed, re-ordered and reissued to enormous acclaim. Smart Flesh, then, is the first Low Anthem album to be released into a spotlight rather than a vacuum. It would have been no surprise had the sound expanded to suit the increased dimensions of their appeal, becoming fuller and fatter. Instead, bravely and rather magnificently, they have retreated into something close to silence. The first thing you notice about Smart Flesh is that the rattling garage-blues stampede which characterised songs like “Home I’ll Never Be” and “The Horizon Is A Beltway” is absent. The explanation lies in how the album was made. Much of Smart Flesh was recorded in a vast, abandoned pasta sauce factory in Central Falls, Rhode Island, and the band manipulate the unique sound of the space on almost every track: notes are struck and then slowly decay until what you’re hearing isn’t music but its memory. Opener “Ghost Woman Blues” is more of a suggestion than a song, a spectral incantation unfolding slowly over acoustic piano and lonely woodwind. “I’ll Take Out Your Ashes” uses just stringy banjo to lament a man “beyond all repair”, while “Love And Altar”, where Ben Knox Miller reprises the startlingly pure falsetto first heard on “Charlie Darwin”, sounds suspended in thin air, supported only by the barest strum. It’s all stunningly beautiful. Now a four-piece, with Jocie Adams and Mat Davidson added to the original core of Knox Miller and Jeff Prystowsky, not only has the band’s sound palette expanded but their influences are more diverse. The pump organ and woodwind creaks of the almost static instrumental “Wire” stray into late Talk Talk territory. “Matter Of Time” takes the melody of Donovan’s “To Sing For You” and stretches it out slowly, creating an unsettling lullaby. “Burn” owes much to Leonard Cohen’s early albums, with the same grimly poetic observations declaimed in 3/4 time over a throbbing backing of Jew’s harp and organ. Only two tracks puncture these reveries: the raw, rather workmanlike country-rock barrage of “Hey, All You Hippies!” and the stunning “Boeing 737”, a mighty artillery of sound reminiscent of Arcade Fire at their most uplifting. “Apothecary Love”, meanwhile, ticks along nicely, an easy country waltz – “first she shot me with whisky then she chased me with gin” – with echoes of Gram Parsons’ “The New Soft Shoe”, or perhaps a less tongue-in-cheek take on The Stones’ “Dear Doctor”. The lyrical preoccupations are oblique but death is never far away. “Golden Cattle” is positively hymnal, touching the divine with its talk of “the next life”, while “Boeing 737” seems to revisit 9/11 with lines about “prophets and heaven” and being “in the air when the towers came down”. The seven-minute title track is even more unsparing – “In the end you’ll be alone, for lonely death does creep” – but it’s the one song where an understated arrangement exerts an inertia; what could have been a colourful, carnivalesque finale barely catches light. That disappointment aside, this hushed crawl of a record is anything but tentative. The sounds on Smart Flesh may be muted, but there is power and daring in its pursuit of stillness. File under: a quiet storm. Graeme Thomson Q+A Ben Knox Miller Smart Flesh sounds like the ultimate expression of your more reflective side. The sound of the room is so important to this record. We made it in this cavernous place, and we thought of the room as the main instrument. A lot of our sound is based in the way noise fades. We had designs to do a few more abrasive songs but they seemed to fall flat, the sound was too murky. When we find ourselves in another space everything is on the table again. Was it a smooth process? We thought the record was done when we came out of the session in the pasta sauce factory, but we ended up being unhappy with it. We moved the studio into another building, a garage-y sounding room which trapped the energy in a different way. We recorded another 10 songs there in two weeks, and all of a sudden there was another dynamic to the record. After the success of OMGCD, were you aware of increased expectations? I’ve tried not to think too much about it. We’re heady enough already! I’m much more concerned with the craft than how it is received in the world. That’s a separate thing. INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

There’s an old Buddhist proverb that goes something like this: “Before you speak, ask yourself, ‘Will it improve upon the silence?’” It’s not a question you can imagine, say, Robbie Williams pondering at length.

But it sounds very much like the kind of question Rhode Island’s Low Anthem asked themselves before embarking on Smart Flesh, the follow-up to their breakthrough album, Oh My God, Charlie Darwin. A rootsy evocation of mythical America brimming with banjo, pump organ and a wonderful tumble of voices, Oh My God, Charlie Darwin was pitched somewhere between Fleet Foxes, Little Walter and Walt Whitman. Self-released in 2008, one year and a clutch of swooning reviews later it was remixed, re-ordered and reissued to enormous acclaim.

Smart Flesh, then, is the first Low Anthem album to be released into a spotlight rather than a vacuum. It would have been no surprise had the sound expanded to suit the increased dimensions of their appeal, becoming fuller and fatter. Instead, bravely and rather magnificently, they have retreated into something close to silence.

The first thing you notice about Smart Flesh is that the rattling garage-blues stampede which characterised songs like “Home I’ll Never Be” and “The Horizon Is A Beltway” is absent. The explanation lies in how the album was made. Much of Smart Flesh was recorded in a vast, abandoned pasta sauce factory in Central Falls, Rhode Island, and the band manipulate the unique sound of the space on almost every track: notes are struck and then slowly decay until what you’re hearing isn’t music but its memory. Opener “Ghost Woman Blues” is more of a suggestion than a song, a spectral incantation unfolding slowly over acoustic piano and lonely woodwind. “I’ll Take Out Your Ashes” uses just stringy banjo to lament a man “beyond all repair”, while “Love And Altar”, where Ben Knox Miller reprises the startlingly pure falsetto first heard on “Charlie Darwin”, sounds suspended in thin air, supported only by the barest strum. It’s all stunningly beautiful.

Now a four-piece, with Jocie Adams and Mat Davidson added to the original core of Knox Miller and Jeff Prystowsky, not only has the band’s sound palette expanded but their influences are more diverse. The pump organ and woodwind creaks of the almost static instrumental “Wire” stray into late Talk Talk territory. “Matter Of Time” takes the melody of Donovan’s “To Sing For You” and stretches it out slowly, creating an unsettling lullaby. “Burn” owes much to Leonard Cohen’s early albums, with the same grimly poetic observations declaimed in 3/4 time over a throbbing backing of Jew’s harp and organ.

Only two tracks puncture these reveries: the raw, rather workmanlike country-rock barrage of “Hey, All You Hippies!” and the stunning “Boeing 737”, a mighty artillery of sound reminiscent of Arcade Fire at their most uplifting. “Apothecary Love”, meanwhile, ticks along nicely, an easy country waltz – “first she shot me with whisky then she chased me with gin” – with echoes of Gram Parsons’ “The New Soft Shoe”, or perhaps a less tongue-in-cheek take on The Stones’ “Dear Doctor”. The lyrical preoccupations are oblique but death is never far away. “Golden Cattle” is positively hymnal, touching the divine with its talk of “the next life”, while “Boeing 737” seems to revisit 9/11 with lines about “prophets and heaven” and being “in the air when the towers came down”. The seven-minute title track is even more unsparing – “In the end you’ll be alone, for lonely death does creep” – but it’s the one song where an understated arrangement exerts an inertia; what could have been a colourful, carnivalesque finale barely catches light.

That disappointment aside, this hushed crawl of a record is anything but tentative. The sounds on Smart Flesh may be muted, but there is power and daring in its pursuit of stillness. File under: a quiet storm.

Graeme Thomson

Q+A Ben Knox Miller

Smart Flesh sounds like the ultimate expression of your more reflective side.

The sound of the room is so important to this record. We made it in this cavernous place, and we thought of the room as the main instrument. A lot of our sound is based in the way noise fades. We had designs to do a few more abrasive songs but they seemed to fall flat, the sound was too murky. When we find ourselves in another space everything is on the table again.

Was it a smooth process?

We thought the record was done when we came out of the session in the pasta sauce factory, but we ended up being unhappy with it. We moved the studio into another building, a garage-y sounding room which trapped the energy in a different way. We recorded another 10 songs there in two weeks, and all of a sudden there was another dynamic to the record.

After the success of OMGCD, were you aware of increased expectations?

I’ve tried not to think too much about it. We’re heady enough already! I’m much more concerned with the craft than how it is received in the world. That’s a separate thing.

INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Radiohead: “King Of Limbs”

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OK we're downloading "King Of Limbs" now, and I think we're going to have a go at liveblogging it as we go. Join in,won't you? Bit of fiddling with wires going on here, but I think we're just about ready to rock. Bit of an accident with a banana slowed us down for a moment. Curses! NME are about a minute ahead of us. John Robinson says he's "agreed to something" and is importing now. We're off! tinkling piano loop and heavily chopped edits, sounds like someone's Warp subscription brought them a couple of Flying Lotus records last year. "Bloom", by the way. I was playing "In Rainbows" this morning, and I was reminded how much one of the highlights of that album is the drumming. Feeling it again here. As on "Lotus Flower", Yorke feels subtly processed. Liking this a lot. Wow, dense. A lot of layered orchestral passages now, pretty amazing. Just looked at the tracklisting - quite a short album. Eight tracks, as rumoured, but nothing longer than 5 minutes 20. Anyone else got this yet? "Morning Mr Magpie" has identifiable guitars, and this kind of ominous funk undertow. Lots of looming, ascending atmospherics kicking in now. I'm going to say the vibe thus far is a kind of beatific hyperactivity. Apologies if I'm getting carried away by the whole Eventness of this, but fucking hell it's good, and I write as someone who was pretty equivocal about Radiohead until "In Rainbows". Maybe I'm just a sucker for internet kerfuffle. "Little By Little". Some kind of eldritch jangle going on here, awkwardly tuning, very fragile-sounding, accentuated by the radical editing that seems to be going on. Again, I'm feeling Flying Lotus (who I've just recalled had Thom Yorke on "Cosmogramma"). Maybe Prefuse, too: those LA aesthetic beatmakers that I guess he may have been mixing with during the Atoms For Peace thing. A hint of older Radiohead in this one, as it evolves, like some ghostly, fidgety evocation of something from "OK Computer". Again, though, they seem to be obsessively - and fruitfully, I'd say - pulling back from any obvious anthemics. The power is insidious, cumulative, anything but blustery. "Feral" now. Back to the sliding breaks, super-neurotic rhythms. Yorke's voice is ultra-processed and disorienting. I feel somewhat obliged to mention dubstep at this point - Burial's dystopian soundscapes yada yada - but really they seem much more locked into that evolving Warp continuum, rooted back in their love for Autechre. I know this one, it's that old favourite, "Lotus Flower". Lotus, Flying Lotus - am I being a bit of a stuck record here? It's the hit. I think one of the things I liked about "In Rainbows" was how Yorke's voice seemed more relaxed, less self-conscious, less histrionic. He really sounds soulful here. Interesting how hooky the song sounds second time round. Is it closer to the vibe of "The Eraser", perhaps? "Codex" starting as the obligatory piano ballad, but there's all this subtle processing going on, which'll doubtless bed in on future listens. Apologies for not mentioning any of the lyrics, by the way; I'll try and keep updating this as the day goes on and we listen to the record some, maybe in a less superficial way. Again, ten years ago "Codex" would have been so pumped up, so fraught with a sense of its own importance. Now the way Radiohead seem to approach everything is to keep their music on such a discreet level, with microscopic tonal shifts providing a more mature and satisfying kind of drama. Greenwoodish orchestrations I think. "Give Up The Ghost" seems to start with a kind of blossoming, twittering microscape, then evolves into a miraculously understated acoustic guitar ballad. Again, it's the lovely subtlety that comes through. John Robinson has just mentioned Can, say "Sing Swan Song", which is rather wise. Just thinking about the whole subtlety thing some more; of course that can be a marketing tool, hence the whole 'no-fuss' announcement and release of "King Of Limbs" this week resulting in this whole fuss. It's like a way of shifting responsibility of portentousness from yourself to your fans and your commentators. Let others do the anthemic work for you. Wow, last track already. "Separator", very nimble drums and bass, very intuitive, Robinson has me stuck on Can and remembering how Jonny Greenwood has interspersed his "Norwegian Wood" soundtrack with Can tracks. Lovely delicate electric guitar threading through this now. Think this one's going to end up very memorable, again in such a powerfully understated way. The atmospheric reverberations now that loom in and out throughout the album are making me think of '80s Eno now, but "King Of Limbs" couldn't be more different from the way Eno has subsequently addressed rock music. And it's over already. Very, very good is first hunch; I managed to really enjoy that while typing like a lunatic - I hope I've made some kind of sense. One thing that occurs, right now, is that those who might have been looking for Radiohead as quote/unquote saviours of rock in a mainstream environment where rock bands can't get arrested right now, are probably looking in the wrong place. For a start, there aren't that many obvious guitars on "King Of Limbs". If you're a music business executive hoping that Radiohead will have made a record to inspire a new generation of guitar bands to take on the mainstream, usurp the dread hordes of X Factor or however you choose to demonise chart pop today - you won't be in luck. What Radiohead have done again, I think, is make a record that will open up a lot of minds to the possibilities of music, and especially way beyond the mainstream. They're an international phenomenon who have built a platform from which they can disseminate avant-garde ideas, in a deviously uncompromising way. Which is not to say that "King Of Limbs" is a particularly difficult or inaccessible record, it's just one that's heroically disdainful of what normative behaviour among major rock groups is perceived to be. A few years ago Peter Buck, I think, started called REM "the acceptable edge of the unacceptable". If ever a band deserved that label - as an adventurous positive, rather than a compromised pejorative - it feels like Radiohead today. Think I might play it again, anyhow. I daren't read back what I've written thus far; hopefully, it makes some kind of sense. - I'm not going to do all that again for the second listen, but thanks for your support on this, and thanks for the very perceptive comment from Cetin Cem about it being a Colin Greenwood record, with the bass being so prominent. I always imagine Radiohead as a kind of instrumental democracy, with people swapping instruments a lot, so I'd be wary of drawing such delineations, but I'm not really an expert. Also aware, though, that I'm not always 100 per cent sure what I'm hearing on these records; the treatment being so intense of every sound. A recurrent line on "Little By Little": "I'm such a tease and you're such a flirt". I wonder if we're going to get bandmembers dancing in videos for every track, as with "Lotus Flower"? If so, whoever drew "Feral" may have got their work cut out. Strikes me I should repost the "Lotus Flower" vid here, for the sake of completeness. [youtube]cfOa1a8hYP8[/youtube] "Give Up The Ghost" is just wonderful second time. Has the same kind of valedictory vibe as "House Of Cards", but, like so much here, an ethereal pull, too. While I think about it, I should also mention that we have an interview with Jonny Greenwood in the next issue of Uncut. Out sometime next week, I believe.

OK we’re downloading “King Of Limbs” now, and I think we’re going to have a go at liveblogging it as we go. Join in,won’t you?

Radiohead: “Lotus Flower”

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Really seems churlish not to join in with today's shenanigans. Judging by this, looking like justifiable use of hype. [youtube]cfOa1a8hYP8[/youtube] Liking it. Let me know what you think, especially if your album's turned up.

Really seems churlish not to join in with today’s shenanigans. Judging by this, looking like justifiable use of hype.

Aretha Franklin announces live return following hospitalisation

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Aretha Franklin is to make her live comeback in May. Last month the soul legend [url=http://www.nme.com/news/aretha-franklin/54470]said she was on the mend after being diagnosed with an undisclosed illness[/url]. Now she has announced she will return to the stage at Buffalo's Niagara Casino on May ...

Aretha Franklin is to make her live comeback in May.

Last month the soul legend [url=http://www.nme.com/news/aretha-franklin/54470]said she was on the mend after being diagnosed with an undisclosed illness[/url]. Now she has announced she will return to the stage at Buffalo‘s Niagara Casino on May 28, reports BBC News.

Last November she cancelled all live appearances for six months on her doctor’s advice, but last month said that her medical problem had been “resolved”.

It had been reported that she was suffering from pancreatic cancer, although Franklin has not disclosed details of her illness herself.

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The Horrors to release new album in July

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The Horrors will release their third album this July, according to frontman Faris Badwan. Badwan responded to a forum post on Thehorrors.co.uk, which speculated that the release date for the band's new album had been delayed following the launch of his new band Cat's Eyes. In the post, entitled 'A...

The Horrors will release their third album this July, according to frontman Faris Badwan.

Badwan responded to a forum post on Thehorrors.co.uk, which speculated that the release date for the band’s new album had been delayed following the launch of his new band Cat’s Eyes.

In the post, entitled ‘Album delayed?’, Badwan replied to the speculation by simply writing, ‘JULY’.

The frontman had previously said he wants The Horrors to co-exist alongside Cat’s Eyes, who release their debut album on April 11.

The new record was produced by the band in London, and will be the follow-up to their second album, 2009’s ‘Primary Colours’.

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Elbow to play Glastonbury 2011?

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Elbow's Guy Garvey has strongly hinted his band will play this year's Glastonbury festival. Although they haven't been confirmed for the June 24-26 bash, Garvey told BBC Newsbeat that Elbow will be playing UK festivals this year, and went on to reference Glastonbury. "I'm not sure what I'm allowed...

Elbow‘s Guy Garvey has strongly hinted his band will play this year’s Glastonbury festival.

Although they haven’t been confirmed for the June 24-26 bash, Garvey told BBC Newsbeat that Elbow will be playing UK festivals this year, and went on to reference Glastonbury.

“I’m not sure what I’m allowed to tell you and what I’m not,” he said when asked about the festival. “We are definitely going to be playing some festivals in the UK. All the best ones, let’s put it that way.”

Speaking about one of this year’s Glastonbury headliners, Beyonce, Garvey said: “Glastonbury is the best festival in the world year on year and they know what they are doing. If they chose Beyonce to close it’s because they know it’ll be a fantastic finish.”

Elbow release their new album, ‘Build A Rocket Boys!’, on March 7. The band last played Glastonbury in 2008.

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The Sixth Uncut Playlist Of 2011

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Yet another period of quietness to apologise for, though I do have the excuse this week of having been away working in the States. More about that later, and, hopefully, some more proper blogs next week. Maybe we should start with Radiohead and “King Of Limbs”, do you think? Plenty to get your teeth into on this playlist, as you can see: About Group, if you didn’t know, features Alexis Taylor (Hot Chip) mixing it with Charles Hayward (This Heat) and John Coxon (Spring Heel Jack), among other people. In common with a lot of things here, their album isn’t out for a couple of months at least, which is one good reason why, unfortunately, it’d be hard for us to compile the sort of Spotify playlists that a few of you have been requesting I can totally recommend, though, that you head over to Wolfgang’s Vault, where you can listen to the sensational Terry Riley concert listed below in its entirety, right down to the musicians being introduced. 1. Zomes – Earth Grid (Thrill Jockey) 2. The Strokes – Under Cover Of Darkness (Rough Trade) 3. Moon Duo – Mazes (Souterrain Transmissions) 4. Cat’s Eyes – Cat’s Eyes (Polydor) 5. The Dictators – Manifest Destiny/Blood Brothers (Floating World) 6. Pantha Du Prince – XI Versions Of Black Noise (Rough Trade) 7. Terry Riley – Great American Music Hall 4/23/1983 (Wolfgang’s Vault) 8. Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues (Bella Union) 9. Trembling Bells – The Constant Pageant (Honest Jon’s) 10. EMA – Past Life Martyred Saints (Souterrain Transmissions) 11. Mickey Newbury – An American Trilogy (Sampler) (Saint Cecelia Knows/Mountain Retreat) 12 About Group – Start And Complete (Domino)

Yet another period of quietness to apologise for, though I do have the excuse this week of having been away working in the States. More about that later, and, hopefully, some more proper blogs next week. Maybe we should start with Radiohead and “King Of Limbs”, do you think?

Yoko Ono to speak at SXSW festival

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Yoko Ono is to be a featured speaker at this year’s South By Southwest festival in Austin. Ono will speak on March 18 and answer questions about her career, her art and her marriage to John Lennon. She will also perform at the festival on the following day at the Chimera Music night at the Elysiu...

Yoko Ono is to be a featured speaker at this year’s South By Southwest festival in Austin.

Ono will speak on March 18 and answer questions about her career, her art and her marriage to John Lennon. She will also perform at the festival on the following day at the Chimera Music night at the Elysium venue.

Featured speakers at the Texan festival in the past have included Jarvis Cocker, Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore, The Clash’s Mick Jones and Lou Reed.

The music arm of SXSW runs from March 15–20 across venues in the city. Bands already confirmed to play this year include Yuck, The Naked And Famous and The Vaccines.

See Sxsw.com for more information.

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The Strokes announce Madison Square Garden gig

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The Strokes will play New York's Madison Square Garden on April 1. Frontman Julian Casablancas made the announcement on his Twitter page, Twitter.com/casablancas_j. Tickets are set to go on sale on February 25. According to chiefs at the band's management company, tweeting from Twitter.com/wizkidm...

The Strokes will play New York‘s Madison Square Garden on April 1.

Frontman Julian Casablancas made the announcement on his Twitter page, Twitter.com/casablancas_j. Tickets are set to go on sale on February 25.

According to chiefs at the band’s management company, tweeting from Twitter.com/wizkidmgmt, world tour dates could be announced in late March or early April.

A post on the feed also suggests that the band could be making an appearance at Austin‘s South By Southwest festival next month.

The Strokes‘ comeback song, ‘Under Cover Of Darkness’, was recently released as a free download. Their new album ‘Angles’ is out on March 21.

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Arcade Fire big winners at Brit Awards

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Arcade Fire and Tinie Tempah were the biggest winners at tonight's (February 15) Brit Awards – taking home two gongs each. The Canadian band scooped International Group and International Album (for 'The Suburbs') at the London O2 Arena ceremony, which was hosted by James Corden. Meanwhile, Tinie...

Arcade Fire and Tinie Tempah were the biggest winners at tonight’s (February 15) Brit Awards – taking home two gongs each.

The Canadian band scooped International Group and International Album (for ‘The Suburbs’) at the London O2 Arena ceremony, which was hosted by James Corden.

Meanwhile, Tinie Tempah took home the prizes for British Breakthrough Act and British Single for ‘Pass Out’.

Mumford and Sons won the MasterCard British Album Of The Year prize for ‘Sigh No More’, while Laura Marling was the surprise winner of the British Female Solo Artist award.

Elsewhere, Take That won the British Group gong for the first time in their career after opening the show with a performance of their latest single ‘Kidz’.

Plan B walked away with the British Male Solo Artist prize and also played a medley of tracks from the ‘The Defamation Of Strickland Banks’, a performance which saw a stuntman set on fire.

Rihanna won the International Female prize before performing her own medley of hits. US singer Cee Lo Green scooped the male equivalent of the award before closing the show with his UK Number One single ‘Forget You’, which saw him duet with Paloma Faith.

Other winners on the night included Justin Bieber, who took home the International Breakthrough prize, and Jessie J, who collected her Critics’ Choice award.

Adele, who wasn’t nominated for any awards, performed ‘Someone Like You’, a track from her latest album ’21’, during the show.

See Brits.co.uk for more information.

The full list of winners from the Brit Awards 2011 is:

MasterCard Album Of The Year: Mumford and Sons – ‘Sigh No More’

British Band: Take That

British Single: Tinie Tempah – ‘Pass Out’

British Male Solo Artist: Plan B

British Female Solo Artist: Laura Marling

British Breakthrough Act: Tinie Tempah

International Album: Arcade Fire – ‘The Suburbs’

International Group: Arcade Fire

International Male Solo Artist: Cee Lo Green

International Female Solo Artist: Rihanna

International Breakthrough: Justin Bieber

Critics’ Choice: Jessie J

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Radiohead’s new album to feature eight tracks?

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Radiohead's new album 'The King Of Limbs' is being tipped to feature an eight-song tracklisting. According to fansite Ateaseweb.com the Japanese arm of the band's album sales website, Thekingoflimbbs.jp, provided the information. The download and CD versions of the record offered through the 'newsp...

Radiohead‘s new album ‘The King Of Limbs’ is being tipped to feature an eight-song tracklisting.

According to fansite Ateaseweb.com the Japanese arm of the band’s album sales website, Thekingoflimbbs.jp, provided the information. The download and CD versions of the record offered through the ‘newspaper album’ version of the release were reportedly listed as containing eight tracks.

The information has now been removed from the site. If it is true this would make ‘The King Of Limbs’ the Radiohead album containing the least amount of songs to date.

The album will be released as a paid-for download on Saturday (February 19), then on CD and 12-inch vinyl on March 28. The ‘newspaper album’ version, featuring a CD, vinyl and artwork sheets, will be out on May 9.

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