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WIRE – RED BARKED TREE

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When we read about British bands and art school, the dominant anecdote, on closer inspection, is seldom a recollection about art, and more one about truancy. In the lenient halls of academe, as prowled by Lennon, Richards and (the comparatively studious) Townshend, there was much smoking and skiffle, but little in the way of, say, actual drawing. Wire, on the other hand, are a band who have spent their 35-year career steeped in the guiding principles, anti-nostalgic thinking, and formal discipline of art school. On one level, it meant that their albums came housed in striking graphic art. On another, it meant that their approach claimed new ground for rock music, the brevity of their compositions a conceptual end in itself – the enduring songs (“I Am The Fly”, “Map Ref”, “Outdoor Miner”) almost a by-product of their process. When I interviewed Bruce Gilbert and Colin Newman in the late 1990s, they never once referred to their band as “us” or “we” – only ever in the third person, “Wire”. This, suffice it to say, is an unsentimental band, for whom reinvention, a search for new ways of doing this an occupation in itself. Their relationship with the legend of their initial activity, the three pivotal albums for Harvest, Pink Flag (1977), Chairs Missing (1978) and154 (1979) is uncomfortable: when they reformed in the 1980s, they employed a covers band to play their old material, so they wouldn’t have to. When in 1991 everyone was dropping E, Wire dropped theirs and became Wir. Wire’s has been a strange journey with guiding principles and a sense of humour that now arrives at Red Barked Tree. It’s not an album that you would call a compromise. But, rather than following the band’s custom of drawing a new template each time it reconvenes, it brokers a peacable accord with some of its most popular work. Since 2003 Wire have slimmed down, (original guitarist Bruce Gilbert is no longer part of the group), and this picks up from where 2008’s Object 47 left off, again finding Wire revisiting its component parts. Red Barked Tree is the most successful product to date of this examination. As interesting as they are as ideas men, Wire’s most successful work finds room in among the thinking for succinct guitar pop, and for their wry vocabulary, and it’s evidently a quality they themselves recognise. Object 47 opened with a song whose hook was: “One of us will come to rue the day we met each other”, and the same mixture of the prolix and melodic is present and correct here. The best Wire records have the air of a code that’s so attractively stated, it demands cracking, and Red Barked Tree is assuredly in that number. It begins with the flanging guitar sound familiar from their earlier works, and of course, with an unwieldy sentiment (“Get the fuck/Out of my face…”) rendered as a hookline. What marks this out as a step on from their recent releases is the lightness of touch. The album continues with the superb “Now Was”, a slightly feistier song, its guitar textures making for a swelling, dynamic tune. The good words (from bassist Graham Lewis) are key: “New broom is coming,” Colin Newman confides, “I feel a close humming…” “Adapt” sees Wire making peace with their influence; slothful and tuneful, it sounds like My Bloody Valentine. “Two Minutes” is a profanity-laced tirade dispensing thoughts on coffee and south east London pubs (“In The Ring/On The Cut/In five minutes!” it demands), while “Moreover” references the band’s historically heavy riffs. It’s familiar, but different. It’s Wire: Ancient And Modern. At times you could feel a bit guilty. Should one be enjoying a new Wire record that sounds quite a lot like an old one? Will a siren sound, a trapdoor open, and a summary trial convict you of Nostalgia Crime? It seems most appropriate to leave those concerns behind, and simply enjoy it. Wire, after all, have moved on. John Robinson Q+A COLIN NEWMAN Is Wire 2011 at all like Wire 1977? What we’ve done is a compressed version of what we did in the 1970s, but with the experience of many years playing. It’s not a question of: “Let’s do it just like we did.” It’s about a moment. When we play live we play Wire music, we don’t stick tags of time periods on it. It’s what we think we can get away with. You made a big break with your older material when you reformed in the 1980s, didn’t you? It was about context. Pop historians talk about “post-punk” but there was no such thing. What there was was pop. People were bored to death with punk rock: if you were more adventurous, you were getting into music from different countries. Bruce’s decision to re-invent the band wasn’t conceptually a bad idea, but we were misunderstood. This version of Wire doesn’t feature Bruce Gilbert. Why? He just left. He didn’t explain why. Around 2006 we thought we’d like to make some more records, so we went to him with a positive proposal. And he said “no”. How did Red Barked Tree come about? I came to the conclusion I needed to write some songs. I strummed away on an acoustic guitar – it allows the band to interface directly with the creation at its most naked. The world doesn’t need a substandard Wire album. INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

When we read about British bands and art school, the dominant anecdote, on closer inspection, is seldom a recollection about art, and more one about truancy. In the lenient halls of academe, as prowled by Lennon, Richards and (the comparatively studious) Townshend, there was much smoking and skiffle, but little in the way of, say, actual drawing.

Wire, on the other hand, are a band who have spent their 35-year career steeped in the guiding principles, anti-nostalgic thinking, and formal discipline of art school. On one level, it meant that their albums came housed in striking graphic art. On another, it meant that their approach claimed new ground for rock music, the brevity of their compositions a conceptual end in itself – the enduring songs (“I Am The Fly”, “Map Ref”, “Outdoor Miner”) almost a by-product of their process. When I interviewed Bruce Gilbert and Colin Newman in the late 1990s, they never once referred to their band as “us” or “we” – only ever in the third person, “Wire”.

This, suffice it to say, is an unsentimental band, for whom reinvention, a search for new ways of doing this an occupation in itself. Their relationship with the legend of their initial activity, the three pivotal albums for Harvest, Pink Flag (1977), Chairs Missing (1978) and154 (1979) is uncomfortable: when they reformed in the 1980s, they employed a covers band to play their old material, so they wouldn’t have to. When in 1991 everyone was dropping E, Wire dropped theirs and became Wir. Wire’s has been a strange journey with guiding principles and a sense of humour that now arrives at Red Barked Tree.

It’s not an album that you would call a compromise. But, rather than following the band’s custom of drawing a new template each time it reconvenes, it brokers a peacable accord with some of its most popular work. Since 2003 Wire have slimmed down, (original guitarist Bruce Gilbert is no longer part of the group), and this picks up from where 2008’s Object 47 left off, again finding Wire revisiting its component parts.

Red Barked Tree is the most successful product to date of this examination. As interesting as they are as ideas men, Wire’s most successful work finds room in among the thinking for succinct guitar pop, and for their wry vocabulary, and it’s evidently a quality they themselves recognise. Object 47 opened with a song whose hook was: “One of us will come to rue the day we met each other”, and the same mixture of the prolix and melodic is present and correct here.

The best Wire records have the air of a code that’s so attractively stated, it demands cracking, and Red Barked Tree is assuredly in that number. It begins with the flanging guitar sound familiar from their earlier works, and of course, with an unwieldy sentiment (“Get the fuck/Out of my face…”) rendered as a hookline. What marks this out as a step on from their recent releases is the lightness of touch. The album continues with the superb “Now Was”, a slightly feistier song, its guitar textures making for a swelling, dynamic tune. The good words (from bassist Graham Lewis) are key: “New broom is coming,” Colin Newman confides, “I feel a close humming…”

“Adapt” sees Wire making peace with their influence; slothful and tuneful, it sounds like My Bloody Valentine. “Two Minutes” is a profanity-laced tirade dispensing thoughts on coffee and south east London pubs (“In The Ring/On The Cut/In five minutes!” it demands), while “Moreover” references the band’s historically heavy riffs. It’s familiar, but different. It’s Wire: Ancient And Modern.

At times you could feel a bit guilty. Should one be enjoying a new Wire record that sounds quite a lot like an old one? Will a siren sound, a trapdoor open, and a summary trial convict you of Nostalgia Crime? It seems most appropriate to leave those concerns behind, and simply enjoy it. Wire, after all, have moved on.

John Robinson

Q+A COLIN NEWMAN

Is Wire 2011 at all like Wire 1977?

What we’ve done is a compressed version of what we did in the 1970s, but with the experience of many years playing. It’s not a question of: “Let’s do it just like we did.” It’s about a moment. When we play live we play Wire music, we don’t stick tags of time periods on it. It’s what we think we can get away with.

You made a big break with your older material when you reformed in the 1980s, didn’t you?

It was about context. Pop historians talk about “post-punk” but there was no such thing. What there was was pop. People were bored to death with punk rock: if you were more adventurous, you were getting into music from different countries. Bruce’s decision to re-invent the band wasn’t conceptually a bad idea, but we were misunderstood.

This version of Wire doesn’t feature Bruce Gilbert. Why?

He just left. He didn’t explain why. Around 2006 we thought we’d like to make some more records, so we went to him with a positive proposal. And he said “no”.

How did Red Barked Tree come about?

I came to the conclusion I needed to write some songs. I strummed away on an acoustic guitar – it allows the band to interface directly with the creation at its most naked. The world doesn’t need a substandard Wire album.

INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

Trish Keenan RIP

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Spent the past few hours hoping against hope that the unconfirmed stories weren't true... [youtube]Zw5ztuhEat4[/youtube]

Spent the past few hours hoping against hope that the unconfirmed stories weren’t true…

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Queens Of The Stone Age to re-release debut album

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Queens Of The Stone Age's self-titled album from 1998 is set to reissued on March 7. The remastered album will feature three additional songs – 'The Bronze', 'These Aren’t the Droids Your Looking For' and 'Spiders And Vinegaroons'. It is being released in the UK by Domino Records after they si...

Queens Of The Stone Age‘s self-titled album from 1998 is set to reissued on March 7.

The remastered album will feature three additional songs – ‘The Bronze’, ‘These Aren’t the Droids Your Looking For’ and ‘Spiders And Vinegaroons’.

It is being released in the UK by Domino Records after they signed a deal with Josh Homme‘s Rekords Rekords which will also see UK releases for other acts on the frontman’s label, including Mini Mansions and Alain Johannes.

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

Arcade Fire, Lady Gaga and Eminem to play at the Grammy’s

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Arcade Fire, Lady Gaga and Eminem all look set to perform live at next month's Grammy Awards ceremony. Gaga's choreographer Laurieann Gibson took to his Twitter page Twitter.com/boomkack, to confirm to fans that the singer will be performing new single 'Born This Way' for the first time at the Febr...

Arcade Fire, Lady Gaga and Eminem all look set to perform live at next month’s Grammy Awards ceremony.

Gaga‘s choreographer Laurieann Gibson took to his Twitter page Twitter.com/boomkack, to confirm to fans that the singer will be performing new single ‘Born This Way’ for the first time at the February 13 show, which takes place at the Los Angeles Staples Center.

Arcade Fire, who are nominated in the Album Of The Year category as well as Best Alternative Music Album and Best Rock Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocals, will also play the event, according to the official Grammy Twitter account, Twitter.com/thegrammys.

Eminem, who is up for six awards, has also been confirmed to perform.

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 reveals cancer scare

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The Who's Roger Daltrey has revealed that he had an operation to remove a pre-cancerous growth on one of his vocal cords in December 2009. The singer said he first became aware of a problem with his voice shortly after finishing a 30-date tour. "My voice wasn't behaving in the normal way," Daltrey...

The Who‘s Roger Daltrey has revealed that he had an operation to remove a pre-cancerous growth on one of his vocal cords in December 2009.

The singer said he first became aware of a problem with his voice shortly after finishing a 30-date tour.

“My voice wasn’t behaving in the normal way,” Daltrey told CBS Los Angeles. “It was becoming hard work to sing. I just got lucky that somebody put me in touch with Steven Zeitels [Director of the Mass General Voice Center in Massachusetts].”

He added: “He told me that he didn’t like what he saw. He took off what he could from the problem area on my vocal cord. He said it wasn’t cancer but it was a pre-cancerous growth and you have to keep an eye on it.”

Following the operation, Daltrey said that, although he was well enough to perform with The Who at the Super Bowl around six weeks later, he initially struggled with the recovery process.

“I got depressed after he did the operation, during what I call the Big Silence,” he explained. “That’s when I realised what it would be like to not have a voice.”

Daltrey, who is a patron of Teenage Cancer Trust, is now having regular check-ups with Zeitels. He paid tribute to The Institute of Laryngology and Voice Restoration, a support group started by patients, saying: “It will give people who have no voice, not even a voice box, a voice again. And that’s going to be an extraordinary achievement.”

Meanwhile, Daltrey will take to the stage with The Who tonight (January 13) to play a gig in aid of the Killing Cancer charity at London’s HMV Hammersmith Apollo. Richard Ashcroft, Debbie Harry and Jeff Beck are also on the bill.

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 Second Uncut Playlist Of 2011

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Some biggish 2011 releases rolling in now, including one which I may draw a discreet veil over. I’m trying, too, to check out a few of your recommendations, following the Date Palms revelation. A couple of you mentioned the Wolf People album in your end-of-year lists; thanks for that, I thought it was much better than the stuff I’d heard from them before. If I can bang on a bit more about Date Palms for one more day, though, Michael emailed me overnight and compared it with an ECM album by Collin Walcott called “Grazing Dreams”, which I’ll try and get hold of later. Good stuff. Here we go with this week’s haul, anyhow. Not all positively enjoyed, exactly, I should say by word of warning. 1 Hayvanlar Alemi – Gaga (iTunes) 2 Hayvanlar Alemi – Guarana Superpower (Sublime Frequencies) 3 The Low Anthem – Smart Flesh (Bella Union) 4 Date Palms – Of Psalms (Root Strata) 5 Rainbow Arabia – Boys And Diamonds (Kompakt) 6 Paul Simon – So Beautiful Or So What (Decca) 7 Nicolas Jaar – Space Is Only Noise (Circus Company) 8 Marianne Faithfull – Horses And High Heels (Dramatico) 9 Low – C’Mon (Sub Pop) 10 Wolf People – Steeple (Jagjaguwar) 11 Mamuthones – Mamuthones (Boring Machines) 12 White Fence – White Fence (Woodsist) 13 Cyclobe – Wounded Galaxies Tap At The Window (Phantomcode) 14 Alela Diane – Alela Diane & Wild Divine (Rough Trade) 15 Jonny Greenwood – Norwegian Wood: Original Soundtrack (Nonesuch) 16 The Pierces – You & I (Polydor) 17 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o5PKULglde8 18 Eternal Tapestry – Beyond The 4th Door (Thrill Jockey)

Some biggish 2011 releases rolling in now, including one which I may draw a discreet veil over. I’m trying, too, to check out a few of your recommendations, following the Date Palms revelation.

The Strokes confirm new album March release date

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The Strokes' bassist Nikolai Fraiture has confirmed that the band will release their new album in the US on March 22. Fraiture used Facebook to respond to speculation about the release, answering a fan's question about when the record was coming out. "Yes! You read right… March 22!" he wrote. "L...

The Strokes‘ bassist Nikolai Fraiture has confirmed that the band will release their new album in the US on March 22.

Fraiture used Facebook to respond to speculation about the release, answering a fan’s question about when the record was coming out.

“Yes! You read right… March 22!” he wrote. “Looking forward to playing the new songs live.”

A UK release date for the album is yet to be confirmed, although if it does coincide with the US release it would come out the day before (21).

The as-yet-untitled 10-song follow-up to 2006’s ‘First Impressions Of Earth’ was produced by the band in guitarist Albert Hammond Jr‘s upstate New York studio after initial sessions with producer Joe Chiccarelli were scrapped.

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.

Green Day to make ‘American Idiot’ film?

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Green Day's American Idiot musical director Michael Mayer has said that a film version of the show is still on the cards. The musical originally opened at the Berkeley Repertory Theatre in California in September 2009, before transferring to the St James Theatre on Broadway, where it has been showi...

Green Day‘s American Idiot musical director Michael Mayer has said that a film version of the show is still on the cards.

The musical originally opened at the Berkeley Repertory Theatre in California in September 2009, before transferring to the St James Theatre on Broadway, where it has been showing since March 2010.

Speaking to The New York Times, Mayer said: “We’re definitely in talks [about a film version]. There are people who have the ability to make it happen, who have expressed genuine interest in it, and we want to do it, so I think it could happen.”

Green Day frontman Billie Joe Armstrong is currently appearing in the musical, in the role of lead character St Jimmy, and when Mayer responded to the question of whether Armstrong would play him in a film version, he replied: “It’s a no-brainer.”

Armstrong has also expressed an interest in writing a musical from scratch, saying: “I think I’d be interested in the future of really getting into writing specifically for a show, that’s something I’d really love to do.”

He also said that he believed writing Green Day‘s brand of pop-punk was the ideal style for a show, adding: “The kind of music that I like is very immediate and very catchy, and you identify with it quickly, and I try to write like that. And in musical theatre it’s the same thing: you identify with the songs immediately, the good ones anyway.”

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

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

Michael Jackson’s doctor Conrad Murray to stand trial for manslaughter

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Michael Jackson's personal physician Dr Conrad Murray has been ordered to stand trial for involuntary manslaughter in relation to the singer's death. Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor made the ruling after a six-day preliminary hearing against the Houston doctor in Los Angeles. A date for the tri...

Michael Jackson‘s personal physician Dr Conrad Murray has been ordered to stand trial for involuntary manslaughter in relation to the singer’s death.

Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor made the ruling after a six-day preliminary hearing against the Houston doctor in Los Angeles. A date for the trial has not been set yet, while Murray pleaded not guilty before the decision for the full trial to go ahead was made.

Pastor has also had Murray‘s license to practice in California suspended in the interest of public safety, reports The Independent. During the hearing it was claimed that on the day of Jackson‘s death, in June 2009, Murray had administered a dose of the anaesthetic propofol, as well as other drugs to the singer, before leaving him unsupervised.

Testimonies from two doctors who claimed Murray‘s actions were outside the usual standards in medical practice were used by prosecutors in the final day of the hearing.

One of Murray‘s defense attorneys, J Michael Flanagan, suggested that Jackson could have self-administered a dose of propofol by swallowing it himself. The prosecution said that when the case goes to trial they expect Murray‘s defense team to claim the singer administered the final dose of propofol himself.

However, witness Dr Christopher Rogers, chief of forensic medicine for the Los Angeles County Coroner, said that even if that was the case Jackson‘s death would still be classed as a homicide due to Murray‘s actions. “If there was propofol there, the doctor should have been prepared for the effects,” Rogers said.

Outside the court members of the singer’s family welcomed the decision to send Murray to trial, with LaToya Jackson telling reporters: “I’m happy so far.”

Earlier in the hearing it was revealed that Murray admitted to police he had been giving Jackson propofol regularly for two months before his death.

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.

Date Palms: “Of Psalms”

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As I mentioned on Friday, I’m indebted to David for turning me onto this album by Date Palms. Quickly, it reminds me of a bunch of my favourite music - Alice Coltrane, Terry Riley, Pandit Pran Nath, Cluster, Sun Araw, Brightblack Morning Light, PG Six – while combining the influences into something relatively original. Essentially, on “Of Psalms”, Oakland's Gregg Kowalsky and Marielle Jakobsons strip a lot of their music back to the drones and devotional ambience of Eastern-facing cosmic jazz records; Alice Coltrane is an obvious reference point, though the record that seems to me the closest fit, especially with the pivotal “Psalm 3”, is “The Elements”, on which she backed up Joe Henderson. “Psalm 3”’s raga tone is what obviously recalls Pandit Pran Nath, too, and there’s some time-lag layering that brings to mind an obsessive Pran Nath scholar, Terry Riley (with particular emphasis on “Persian Surgery Dervishes” and “Descending Moonshine Dervishes”, I’d say). But there’s also a slothfully funky bass cutting through the piece, joined after about ten minutes by a low Fender Rhodes, which is where the Brightblack allusion comes from: there’s also some of that bass groove on the opening “Psalm 7”, which brings to mind the slow, deep grooves of Sun Araw and maybe just about their British analogue, Forest Swords. Also here, there’s the first sighting of what I think is an autoharp (hence the PG Six reference). “Psalm 4”, meanwhile, is more in a kosmische electronic vein, akin to the bucolic percolations of Cluster circa “Sowiesoso”. I’m conscious that this string of specific references doesn’t really do Date Palms justice, and that it’s perhaps not the best way of articulating a record’s precise sound. But “Of Psalms” joins the dots so effectively between so much music that I love, it’s hard not to flag up the serendipitous echoes that pulse through it. As a profound and transporting meditation, it works great in its own right; just the first, I suspect, of a bunch of good records that I’ll belatedly deiscover after having missed them last year.

As I mentioned on Friday, I’m indebted to David for turning me onto this album by Date Palms. Quickly, it reminds me of a bunch of my favourite music – Alice Coltrane, Terry Riley, Pandit Pran Nath, Cluster, Sun Araw, Brightblack Morning Light, PG Six – while combining the influences into something relatively original.

The Fall; “This Nation’s Saving Grace: Omnibus Edition”

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Fans of The Fall are, as a rule, hardy beasts. Complaint may come naturally to them, but then so does loyalty. John Peel’s famous encomium, “They are always different, they are always the same,” is the perpetual excuse for their favourite band, which disregards a certain erosion of Mark E Smith’s charms. What once seemed like iconoclasm can now come across, not least in his autobiography, as reactionary: as if Smith has curdled into a Jeremy Clarkson figure for men who prefer a slightly different cut of leather jacket. In this role as picturesquely gnarled National Treasure, Mark E Smith tends to be portrayed as a genius who can compel any old rabble towards brilliance. But actually, for all his dictatorial impulses, Smith often works best as part of a focused, talented, properly-produced team. It’s no accident that Smith’s finest music in the past decade or so has come away from The Fall, on the 2007 Von Südenfed album, when he shared creative responsibilties with the German electronic producers Mouse On Mars. Latterday Fall lineups and periodic critical rehabilitations (last year’s over-praised "Your Future Our Clutter" being a case in point) are decent enough. But when the band’s never-ending, if capricious, reissue programme recycles an old classic, it inevitably throws most of Smith’s 21st Century endeavours into a pretty unflattering light. So it is with the ‘Omnibus Edition’ of "This Nation’s Saving Grace", an album often cited by Fall part-timers – with some justification, it has to be said – as their very best. Here, in all their menacing and utilitarian finery, is arguably the band’s strongest configuration – the 20th Fall lineup, the sleevenotes reveal. At the back, Craig Scanlon (rhythm guitar), Steve Hanley (bass) and a soon-to-depart Karl Burns (drums) operate with a kind of clockwork belligerence. Listen to Hanley – mesmerisingly staunch, covertly funky – grafting away on the Blackwing Version of “Bombast” that surfaces amongst the rough mixes and out-takes on CD2, and the thought occurs that perhaps he, not Peter Hook, was the pre-eminent Manchester bassist of the period. Upfront, meanwhile, it’s easy to characterise Brix Smith as bringing a certain pop nous to The Fall, and while there are glimpses of that (“Vixen”, the b-side of “Cruiser’s Creek”, especially), closer negotiations with the mainstream remain a year or two away. On "This Nation’s Saving Grace", it’s her psychedelic exuberance that stands out, cutting a swathe through the glowering throb of “L.A.” as she incants, “This is my happening, and it freaks me out!” Just off to the side, there’s Simon Rogers, on keyboards and guitar. Rogers is something of an anomaly among the legions of ex-Fall members, a Royal College Of Music graduate who previously figured in panpipe-toting novelty hitsters Incantation (“Cacharpaya (Andes Pumpsa Daesi)”, Number 12 in December 1982) and would subsequently produce The Lightning Seeds and Boy George, and write incidental music for Dalziel And Pascoe. According to new interviews in the sleevenotes, Rogers was at odds with his speeding bandmates because “the fact that I wanted to eat three times a day was seen as weird.” He did, though, bring a new depth to the band: promoting the looming sequencers on “L.A.”; and facilitating the tape collage of “Paintwork”, superior to most of Smith’s similar lo-fi experiments over the next 25 years. Producer John Leckie suggests that Smith was “suspicious” of Rogers’ musicality, and that “Mark… would always have the last word.” Nevertheless, there’s a clarity and force to "This Nation’s Saving Grace" which illustrates the usefulness of studio professionals as a counter to Smith’s idiosyncracies. None of it sounds much like a compromised record, or one remotely anxious to please. Instead, the likes of “I Am Damo Suzuki” are imbued with the sonic richness, as well as the maverick spirit, of Can, while “Gut Of The Quantifier” has the momentum of a runaway juggernaut, miraculously holding a straight course (a Peel version of the same song, included on CD3, doesn’t quite have the same greased heft as Leckie’s album mix). In the midst of it all, of course, there’s Mark E Smith. As ever, he affects to be oblivious of everything going on around him, but it’s doubtful his gravity and wit have ever enjoyed such a dramatic setting. At the start of the Omnibus’ fourth version of “L.A.” (a Peel session take), Smith begins by redeploying the lyrics from his own “Bombast”. “All those that mind entitle themselves shall feel the wrath of my bombast,” he warns, convincingly. “And Lloyd Cole, whose brain and face is made out of… cowpat. We all know that.” Enhanced by the boldness of Brix Smith’s tunes, by Rogers and Leckie’s clean lines, by the thrust of his doughtiest troops, the bile is positively phantasmagoric.

Fans of The Fall are, as a rule, hardy beasts. Complaint may come naturally to them, but then so does loyalty. John Peel’s famous encomium, “They are always different, they are always the same,” is the perpetual excuse for their favourite band, which disregards a certain erosion of Mark E Smith’s charms.

Nine Inch Nails’ Trent Reznor to score ‘The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo’

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Trent Reznor is set to score the forthcoming remake of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo. The Nine Inch Nails mainman, who has just been nominated for a Golden Globe for his score for The Social Network, confirmed the news in an interview with the New York Times. He will collaborate with producer Att...

Trent Reznor is set to score the forthcoming remake of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.

The Nine Inch Nails mainman, who has just been nominated for a Golden Globe for his score for The Social Network, confirmed the news in an interview with the New York Times. He will collaborate with producer Atticus Ross, as he did on The Social Network.

The film, which is directed by David Fincher and stars Daniel Craig, is currently in production and has a scheduled release date of December 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.

127 HOURS

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Directed by Danny Boyle Starring James Franco Danny Boyle describes himself as ‘an outsider director’, meaning that he doesn’t belong to Hollywood, and that when it comes to content, he goes his own way. Yuppie nightmare (Shallow Grave), Scottish drugs caper (Trainspotting), sci-fi apocalyps...

Directed by Danny Boyle

Starring James Franco

Danny Boyle describes himself as ‘an outsider director’, meaning that he doesn’t belong to Hollywood, and that when it comes to content, he goes his own way. Yuppie nightmare (Shallow Grave), Scottish drugs caper (Trainspotting), sci-fi apocalypse (Sunshine), low-budget zombie thriller (28 Days Later) – Boyle has nimbly vaulted genres. Since he stumbled going mainstream with The Beach, he’s stayed unpredictable. A film about a Bombay slum kid on a quiz show? Line up the Oscars!

Confirmation that Boyle can marry good box office with auteur filmmaking comes with 127 Hours, the harrowing real-life story of Aron Ralston, who on a solo hike through the wilds of Utah had an accident that left his right arm trapped under a boulder. Pinioned for several days with little food or drink, Ralston eventually severed his own arm with a penknife and escaped. He wrote a memoir – Between A Rock And A Hard Place – and these days is a sought-after speaker.

Why anyone would want to commit Ralston’s nightmare adventure to film, or to sit through it in the cinema, is a puzzle (audiences have been known to faint). Plus we already know the ending. But here we are with a completely compelling film that’s already being talked up for awards, not least for James Franco’s bravura lead performance.

We first encounter Ralston as an adrenaline junkie on a high, scrambling across Utah’s canyonland. Early on he befriends a pair of female hikers and the trio skinny dip in an underground pool, a playfully erotic moment that will haunt the trapped Ralston. Stunningly filmed, the landscape’s harsh beauty provides a tactile, overwhelming backdrop to a terrifying but ultimately transcendent experience.

A humming plotline is hard to maintain when it revolves round a man stuck in a hole, groaning and drinking his own urine, but flashbacks and lurid hallucinations swirl us along, while Ralston’s addresses to his own camera become a confessional chamber. We sink into his psyche, confronting the ghosts of childhood and girlfriends and, finally, his own arrogance (he didn’t tell anyone where he was going). Ralston hits on a ghastly truth: “I chose this.” By the time his grisly moment of release comes, we’re rooting for him.

Though 127 Hours is, like Burial, a film about entombment and escape, it’s ultimately a young man’s rite of passage. Boyle’s heroes are cocky outsiders who get in way too deep and must endure a spell in hell – being nailed to the floor (Shallow Grave), a dip in the shit pit (Trainspotting and Slumdog), and here, a spot of self-amputation – before their eventual embrace of humanity. Choose life.

Neil Spencer

THE DECEMBERISTS – THE KING IS DEAD

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The Decemberists have sometimes been daunting. 2009’s The Hazards Of Love, which took its title from a 1964 EP by the English folk singer Anne Briggs, was, for instance, nothing less than a full-blown concept album, a 17-track song cycle about the seduction and ravishing of a fair damsel named Mar...

The Decemberists have sometimes been daunting. 2009’s The Hazards Of Love, which took its title from a 1964 EP by the English folk singer Anne Briggs, was, for instance, nothing less than a full-blown concept album, a 17-track song cycle about the seduction and ravishing of a fair damsel named Margaret by a shape-shifting demon and otherwise populated by a serried cast of faeries, forest queens, rakes and other chimerical characters, the phantasmagorical story on the whole set to the kind of elaborate prog-folk not heard since the cod-pieced heyday of Jethro Tull.

You could have seen this coming, of course. The powerful early influence of The Smiths was still evident even as far into The Decemberists’ career as their third album, 2005’s Picaresque, especially on songs like “We Both Go Down Together” and “This Sporting Life”, which were delivered by frontman Colin Meloy with all the necessary flourish and swoon of vintage Morrissey. But at the same time, however, on tracks like “From My Own True Love (Lost At Sea)” and especially “The Mariner’s Revenge Song”, there was equal evidence of Meloy’s immersion in British folk, especially the recordings of Shirley Collins, which provided him also with the content for the “Colin Meloy Sings Shirley Collins” EP he recorded to sell on a 2006 solo tour.

The blustery musical weather to come was more accurately forecast, however, on an earlier, single-track EP, from 2004. “The Tain” was an 18-minute track in five movements based by Meloy on the seventh century Irish mythological epic, Táin Bó Cúailnge, which featured a heavy metal overture and the kind of bombastic rock riffs that at first seemed wholly unlikely coming from this most bookishly literate of bands. It was something their fans would have to get used to, though.

On The Crane Wife (2006), Meloy turned to Japanese fable, Shakespeare, the American Civil War and the Siege of Leningrad as the inspiration for the content of his songs and, rather more regrettably, The Strawbs, Jethro Tull and even ELP for rather too much of the music, specifically the 12-minute suite, “The Island: Come & See/The Landlord’s Daughter/You’ll Not Feel The Drowning”.

The Hazards Of Love, though, was the apotheosis of The Decemberists’ musical drift towards complex time signatures, gloomy chord changes, ponderous riffs, more words than a dictionary for every song. The record came with a carefully annotated lyric sheet, to help you follow the convoluted narrative, but you’d have been better off negotiating the looming musical landmass of the album with a road map. There was, in fact, so much of it that it was often easy to overlook the singular virtues of individual tracks. “The Hazards Of Love 2 (Wager All)”, “Isn’t It A Lovely Night”, “Annan Water” and the closing reprise of the title track, “The Hazards Of Love 4” were all unquestionably beautiful. Such was Meloy’s dedication to The Hazards Of Love that he couldn’t resist taking it on the road and playing the thing in its entirety. The experience was exhausting for both the band and its audience and by the end of the tour even Meloy felt the need for something less wilfully complex and testing. So here’s The King Is Dead, The Decemberists’ most immediate and outgoing album. Meloy has been happily candid about the music that’s helped shape his songwriting here, Neil Young and REM just two of the influences he’s mentioned on The King Is Dead and its stirring blasts of country rock.

You can hear Neil in the banks of acoustic guitars, pining pedal steel and harmonica gusts that blow through the bulk of the album’s 10 tracks, the bucolic strum of Harvest an obvious template. Gillian Welch on seven numbers adds wonderful harmonies, intended, you suspect, to recall Nicolette Larson on Comes A Time. The REM influence is even more marked, especially, as you might expect, on “Calamity Song” and “Down By The Water”, both of which feature Peter Buck on electric guitar (he plays mandolin on album opener “Don’t Carry It All”). The former particularly recalls “Me In Honey”, and both take you back to the days when REM would regularly take your breath away, in a manner they haven’t done for years.

You have to say the relative simplicity of The King Is Dead suits The Decemberists entirely. These songs and performances sweep you up in much the same way as The Waterboys’ Fisherman’s Blues. There’s not much about the album that isn’t glorious, Meloy’s sublime melodic gifts, allowed here to shine, dazzlingly so on tracks like “January Hymn”, its companion piece, “June Hymn” and the closing “Dear Avery”. The first of this trio is a sweet reverie about the people we leave behind us, Meloy recalling his Montana childhood, the “fleeting beating of hearts” too soon separated by life’s capricious unfolding, with a tune that carries an evocative echo of “Mr Tambourine Man”. “June Hymn”, meanwhile, with its lovely Gillian Welch vocal harmony, is as uncomplicated as anything Meloy will ever write, a love song to a place and time that can perhaps never be returned to, an unattainable bliss. “Dear Avery” is another sublime essay in memory, separation and regret, its luminous hurt enhanced by the sighing voices of Welch, Dave Rawlings and Laura Veirs.

Because of what’s gone before, there’s an irresistible urge to look for an over-arching concept, something that will bind the songs on The King Is Dead thematically, as if on their own they may lack significance. If there’s something that links them, I guess it’s notions of standing up for what you believe in, being brave in the roughest of times, a willingness to pay the price for being free. It’s an admittedly unfashionable idea these days, but self-sacrifice for the greater good is also something Meloy puts forward here as a Good Thing. So “Don’t Carry It All”, with its thrilling fiddles, encourages a sharing of the load among the weak and the strong, in uplifting socialist terms, the song a celebration of communal responsibility. “Rise To Me” and “This Is Why We Fight” are, similarly, rousing calls to arms that make you want to storm the nearest barricade, possibly carrying a flag.

ALLAN JONES

Q&A Colin Meloy

While working on The King Is Dead, did you listen to Neil Young, REM or any of the music that inspired it?

Those records are never far from the record player. I know Reckoning inside and out, but the mastering job on the reissue was so fantastic that listening to it reconnected me with some of my early, primal influences: REM, Robyn Hitchcock, Camper Van Beethoven and things like that.

Bringing in Peter Buck and Gillian Welch seems like a natural extension of the concept.

With Peter Buck, that was a no-brainer. As for getting Gillian on board, in a certain genre – Young’s Comes A Time and Gram Parsons’ GP, going back to Dolly Parton and Porter Wagoner – there’s often the marrying of a male and female vocal hot in the mix, two voices with a solid identity. We wanted to pay homage to that kind of music.

You give Buck some competition with your 12-string playing on “This Is Why We Fight”.

I’m doing my Johnny Marr impression. I’ve listened to The Smiths so much that that pattern is ingrained in my skull and my muscle memory.

So you’re playing your record collection more on this album than you ever have.

On the last couple records, I’ve been playing a certain section of my record collection; this one grabs from all sides.

INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

Beastie Boys’ Adam Yauch issues statement to clarify cancer condition

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Beastie Boys' Adam Yauch has clarified his current health condition after recent reports circulated that he had been given the all-clear from cancer. The rapper released a statement to fans on the group's email mailing list, stating that reports of him being cancer-free are "exaggerated". He said:...

Beastie BoysAdam Yauch has clarified his current health condition after recent reports circulated that he had been given the all-clear from cancer.

The rapper released a statement to fans on the group’s email mailing list, stating that reports of him being cancer-free are “exaggerated”.

He said: “While I’m grateful for all the positive energy people are sending my way, reports of my being totally cancer free are exaggerated.

“I’m continuing treatment, staying optimistic and hoping to be cancer free in the near future.”

Yauch moved to clarify the situation after a UK radio report last week suggested he had been given the all-clear. He was diagnosed with cancer of the preaortic gland and lymph node in 2009.

Beastie Boys are set to release their new album ‘Hot Sauce Committee Pt 2’ in the spring.

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.

Manic Street Preachers’ James Dean Bradfield attacks UK music scene

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Manic Street Preachers frontman James Dean Bradfield has argued many new bands are filled with people on gap years from conventional careers. Speaking to the Daily Record, Bradfield said that being in a band is no longer a "badge of honour" - and claimed he struggles to find "amazing or great" new ...

Manic Street Preachers frontman James Dean Bradfield has argued many new bands are filled with people on gap years from conventional careers.

Speaking to the Daily Record, Bradfield said that being in a band is no longer a “badge of honour” – and claimed he struggles to find “amazing or great” new bands.

“I don’t see a story unfolding with bands because it is gap year music. It seems like somebody has said, ‘I think I’ll do an album then my dad will give me a job in the accountancy firm’,” he commented.

Bradfield also bemoaned the state of the Top 40, stating that it is “depressing” that it is “all pop music”.

“It’s like the indie wars never happened. It’s as if Manchester, Seattle and Britpop never existed,” he remarked.

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

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

Michael Jackson’s doctor ‘unable to administer CPR’

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Michael Jackson's doctor, Conrad Murray, allegedly told his bodyguards he didn't know how to administer CPR as the singer lay dying in June 2009, a Los Angeles court has heard. Members of Jackson's staff have been testifying about the day he died at a preliminary hearing to decide whether Murray sh...

Michael Jackson‘s doctor, Conrad Murray, allegedly told his bodyguards he didn’t know how to administer CPR as the singer lay dying in June 2009, a Los Angeles court has heard.

Members of Jackson‘s staff have been testifying about the day he died at a preliminary hearing to decide whether Murray should be tried for involuntary manslaughter of the singer.

His former security chief Faheem Muhammed described how he saw Murray crouching alongside Jackson “in a panicked state asking, ‘Does anyone know CPR?'” reports CNN.

He added: “We knew Dr Murray was a heart surgeon, so we were shocked.”

Defence lawyer Ed Chernoff then asked Muhammed to clarify his statement, drawing the reply: “The way that he [Murray] asked it is as if he didn’t know CPR.”

Although Muhammed said he didn’t see Murray performing CPR on Jackson, another member of the singer’s security team, Alberto Alvarez, said he was present.

He explained: “After the second time, he gave a breath, he said, ‘You know, this is the first time that I give mouth-to-mouth, but I have to do it, because he’s my friend.'”

Alvarez went on to allege that Murray had also told him to collect various medicines from around Jackson‘s bedroom before paramedics had been called. “He then grabbed a handful of bottles or vials,” Alvarez said. “He instructed me to put them in a bag.”

The preliminary hearing is expected to run into next week. If the case does go to trial and Murray is found guilty, he could face up to four years in jail.

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 says her health problems have ‘been resolved’

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Aretha Franklin has said that her recent health problems have now "been resolved". Speaking to JET magazine, the soul legend said she'd been suffering from "a very hard pain in my side" and had recently undergone a colonoscopy as a result. When this process found nothing negative, she subsequently...

Aretha Franklin has said that her recent health problems have now “been resolved”.

Speaking to JET magazine, the soul legend said she’d been suffering from “a very hard pain in my side” and had recently undergone a colonoscopy as a result.

When this process found nothing negative, she subsequently advised by her doctor to undergone a CAT scan, of which Franklin added: “Thank God he said that because that unfolded what the problem was and everything.”

Franklin gave away few details about her condition, and refused to comment on reports that she’d been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. “I don’t have to talk about my health with anybody other than my doctors,” she said. “The problem has been resolved.”

She did have a message for those who had been worried about her health. “I know my fans are concerned,” she said. “Let them know I am feeling great and coming along.”

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.

Robert Plant dismisses calls for more Led Zeppelin gigs

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Robert Plant has again said that there will be no more live dates from Led Zeppelin - because he "can't relate" to the band any more. Speaking to Rolling Stone magazine, Plant has described the continued calls from fans for more shows as "a bit of a pain in the pisser". He said the reason he wasn'...

Robert Plant has again said that there will be no more live dates from Led Zeppelin – because he “can’t relate” to the band any more.

Speaking to Rolling Stone magazine, Plant has described the continued calls from fans for more shows as “a bit of a pain in the pisser”.

He said the reason he wasn’t up for reuniting again was because he had “gone so far somewhere else that I almost can’t relate to it [Led Zeppelin]”.

Plant said that the band’s reunion show at London‘s O2 Arena in December 2007 “was an amazing evening and represented all that we were trying to capture”. He acknowledged that there is a continued interest in more performances, but said: “I know people care, but think about it from my angle – soon, I’m going to need help crossing the street.”

Plant‘s latest album with new project Band Of Joy was released last September.

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 First Uncut Playlist Of 2011

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Lots of goodness to start the year today, not least the new Low and Eternal Tapestry albums. Thanks, too, to David M, who tipped me off yesterday about an Oakland duo called Date Palms. Playing their Myspace right now and feeling it very much indeed. 1 Low – C’Mon (Sub Pop) 2 Elle Osborne – Good Grief (Folk Police) 3 Boubacar Traore – Mali Denhou (Lusafrica) 4 The Unthanks – Last (EMI) 5 Heavy Winged – Sunspotted (Type) 6 Old Light – The Dirty Future (Arrco) 7 Thousands – The Sound Of Everything (Bella Union) 8 Monotonix – Not Yet (Drag City) 9 Low & Spring Heel Jack – Bombscare EP (Tugboat) 10 Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band – Safe As Milk (Buddah) 11 Lia Ices – Grown Unknown (Jagjaguwar) 12 PJ Harvey – Let England Shake (Island) 13 Marry Waterson & Oliver Knight – The Days That Shaped Me (One Little Indian) 14 Eternal Tapestry – Beyond The 4th Door (Thrill Jockey) 15 How To Dress Well – Love Remains (Tri Angle) 16 Date Palms – Psalm 7 (http://www.myspace.com/datepalms)

Lots of goodness to start the year today, not least the new Low and Eternal Tapestry albums. Thanks, too, to David M, who tipped me off yesterday about an Oakland duo called Date Palms. Playing their Myspace right now and feeling it very much indeed.