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The Strokes to release new album by March

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The Strokes' Nikolai Fraiture has said that the band's long-awaited fourth album will be out "by March", before the five-piece embark on a world tour. The bassist told BBC Radio 1 that the record was currently being mixed, and compared the sound to the New Yorkers' second and third albums. "Sonica...

The StrokesNikolai Fraiture has said that the band’s long-awaited fourth album will be out “by March”, before the five-piece embark on a world tour.

The bassist told BBC Radio 1 that the record was currently being mixed, and compared the sound to the New Yorkers’ second and third albums.

“Sonically, I feel it’s the album which should have been made between [2003’s] ‘Room On Fire’ and [2006’s] ‘First Impressions Of Earth’,” he said, adding that the album echoes the band’s “classic sound”.

Fraiture said a lead single from the album had been chosen, but it didn’t have a title yet.

The Strokes are already confirmed to play European festival shows this summer, with the bassist saying that they will be “touring around the world”.

The as-yet untitled 10-song album 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.

Elle Osborne: “Good Grief”

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Happy new year: I trust everyone had some kind of decent break. I read Robert Byron on Tibet (for climatic context, possibly), watched Robinson In Ruins, played a fair bit of Pharoah Sanders and The Watersons, and rediscovered that a body clock wrecked by parenthood can be very useful during an Ashes series. I was also introduced by another music journalist to a newish British folk singer called Elle Osborne. Osborne has an EP, “Good Grief”, coming out this month, and the press release that comes with it presents her as pretty appealing: a quote from Alex Neilson pitching her as a cross between Lal Waterson and Nico; some connection with Barry Dransfield; support dates with Alasdair Roberts, James Yorkston and Cath & Phil Tyler (I really must get hold of more stuff by that last duo, incidentally). As the Nico/Waterson allusion suggests, “Good Grief” is quite an austere listen, and there’s a sense that Osborne is drawing lines between the drones and atmospheres of the avant-garde and their ancient antecedents in the British folk tradition. Mostly, though, the four songs here put the focus squarely on her quavering, earthy voice; “The Time Of The Small Sun” features little more than a harmony vocal, some found sounds of children in the distance, and lapping water. Like a good few of Roberts’ records (perhaps “No Earthly Man”, a personal favourite, in particular), Osborne is exceptionally good at making unadorned traditional music sound new and otherworldly; the hovering drones and faintly unnerving birdsong of “The Boatman” being especially potent. I’d say her voice reminds me of Anne Briggs as much as Lal Waterson, but this one’s a good start to 2011. The label “Good Grief” comes on, Folk Police, appears to have some other good stuff lined up, including a new Bob Pegg album. In the meantime, I’ll push on with working out a chart from your favourite albums of 2010 submissions, and post it tomorrow, all being well.

Happy new year: I trust everyone had some kind of decent break. I read Robert Byron on Tibet (for climatic context, possibly), watched Robinson In Ruins, played a fair bit of Pharoah Sanders and The Watersons, and rediscovered that a body clock wrecked by parenthood can be very useful during an Ashes series.

Pink Floyd end dispute with EMI

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Pink Floyd have ended a dispute with record label EMI over the use of their songs online. The band, who originally signed to EMI in 1967, have now signed a new contract with the label. They had taken EMI to the High Court over the dispute in March 2010, with a judge ruling in the band's favour. EM...

Pink Floyd have ended a dispute with record label EMI over the use of their songs online.

The band, who originally signed to EMI in 1967, have now signed a new contract with the label.

They had taken EMI to the High Court over the dispute in March 2010, with a judge ruling in the band’s favour. EMI have now confirmed that a new deal between both parties has now been signed.

“All legal disputes between the band and the company have been settled as a result of this new deal,” a statement from the label read, explaining that the company aims to “help the band reach new and existing fans through their incredible body of work”. The deal will last for five years, reports BBC News.

The initial dispute related to a contract between Pink Floyd and EMI that had been negotiated in the late 1990s, which stated that the band’s songs should not be sold individually without their prior permission.

The band argued that the rule should apply to download sales in stores such as iTunes as well as CDs. EMI disagreed, claiming the word “record” in the band’s contract applied “to the physical thing”.

Representatives for Pink Floyd successfully argued their case in court, though Pink Floyd will still be sold individually on iTunes.

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 Rolling Stones and Bill Wyman reunite for Ian Stewart tribute

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The Rolling Stones have reunited with their former bassist Bill Wyman to record a tribute song in honour of their late pianist Ian Stewart. The song, a cover of Bob Dylan's 'Watching The River Flow', is set to be included on a tribute album for Stewart, who died of a heart attack in 1985. He had pl...

The Rolling Stones have reunited with their former bassist Bill Wyman to record a tribute song in honour of their late pianist Ian Stewart.

The song, a cover of Bob Dylan‘s ‘Watching The River Flow’, is set to be included on a tribute album for Stewart, who died of a heart attack in 1985. He had played and recorded with the band since their inception in 1962.

Fansite Iorr.org reports that the Dylan cover features “all Rolling Stones members including Bill Wyman“. Original member Wyman left The Rolling Stones in 1992.

The album, which is called ‘Boogie For Stu’, has been helmed by pianist Ben Waters. It also features a contribution from his cousin, PJ Harvey, reports Spinnermusic.co.uk.

Waters has previously confirmed that Keith Richards plays on three tracks on the album, which is out in March.

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.

Foo Fighters finish recording new album

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Foo Fighters have finished recording their seventh studio album, frontman Dave Grohl has confirmed. Speaking to Zane Lowe on BBC Radio 1, Grohl said the band were in the process of mastering the as-yet untitled album, which has been recorded in Grohl’s house. The former Nirvana drummer said th...

Foo Fighters have finished recording their seventh studio album, frontman Dave Grohl has confirmed.

Speaking to Zane Lowe on BBC Radio 1, Grohl said the band were in the process of mastering the as-yet untitled album, which has been recorded in Grohl’s house.

The former Nirvana drummer said the album is the biggest in sonic terms they’ve ever recorded. “There’s 11 songs and front to back there’s not one sleepy ballad,” he said. “We did it without any computers and it just sounds massive.”

The album, the follow-up to 2007’s ‘Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace’, has been recorded by Nirvana and Green Day producer Butch Vig, marking the first time he and Grohl have worked together since Nirvana’s 1991 classic ‘Nevermind’.

Grohl admitted that he doesn’t “know what the single is going to be… it’s hard to choose because it sounds like there’s more than one”.

The album is expected to be released this 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.

THE KING’S SPEECH

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Directed by Tom Hooper Starring Colin Firth, Geoffrey Rush The King’s Speech arrives at a time when Colin Firth’s career has never been healthier. Garlanded for A Single Man last year, he essays here a sympathetic performance as George VI. As the film opens, he’s the Duke of York – a mar...

Directed by Tom Hooper

Starring Colin Firth, Geoffrey Rush

The King’s Speech arrives at a time when Colin Firth’s career has never been healthier.

Garlanded for A Single Man last year, he essays here a sympathetic performance as George VI.

As the film opens, he’s the Duke of York – a marginal royal, overshadowed by his overbearing father (Michael Gambon) and playboy elder brother Edward (Guy Pearce).

He suffers from a stammer – a considerable handicap in this new era of royal radio addresses – and as events push him closer to the throne, his wife Elizabeth (a feisty Helena Bonham Carter) engages unconventional Aussie speech therapist Lionel Logue (Geoffrey Rush) to help.

A bromance, of sorts, unfolds.

The players are as good as you’d expect and while this is clearly positioned as high-end heritage drama, it shows a keen wit.

Watching newsreels of Hitler at Nuremberg, the future Queen Elizabeth II asks her father what he’s saying. “I don’t know,” says King George VI. “But he seems to be saying it rather well.”

Michael Bonner

HANK WILLIAMS – THE COMPLETE MOTHER’S BEST COLLECTION… PLUS

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Country music has detonated its share of Big Bangs. The 1927 Bristol Sessions, featuring initial recordings by Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter Family, was one; Elvis Presley’s seismic Sun Sessions, firmly rooted in the rural Deep South, turned the page into the rock’n’roll era. Long-obscured, but just as explosive, Hank Williams’ Complete Mother’s Best Collection – vintage, high-calibre radio tapes finally offered up in their entirety – might be considered the ultimate aftershock. A dizzying cache of 143 performances heard by a handful of souls once, then consigned to a trash dumpster until Grand Ole Opry photographer Les Leverett salvaged them in the 1960s, the Mother’s Best tapes are funny, poignant, culturally edifying (witness, especially, a window on unenlightened 1950s gender relations), musically dazzling, and a breathtaking document of a transcendent artist in a bygone era. Bear Family’s spectacular boxset, augmented by fine-as-can-be-expected sound and Colin Escott’s perceptive notes, presents a daunting, sprawling body of work, catching Williams at an artistic peak, armed with the will and freedom to reflect, explore and experiment. Hank Williams, of course, is the father of country music, and the outlines of his meteoric fame and tragic death are well known. A hillbilly Shakespeare who could pen wrenching, soul-searching ballads and rattletrap honky-tonk, Williams’ ‘high lonesome’ tenor and everyman poetry have resounded down through the decades. He recorded for just six years (1947-52), yet left behind a preposterously influential body of work. The biggest hits – “Your Cheatin’ Heart”, “Hey Good Lookin’”, “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry”– are building blocks of American music, yet hardly brush the surface of his grim biography. New Year’s Day 1953, on his way to a gig in Canton, Ohio, he was found dead in the backseat of his Cadillac, aged just 29. In ’51, though, Williams was the hottest star in the country, striking a rich vein with bleak odes to broken love affairs like “Cold, Cold Heart” and “I Can’t Help It (If I’m Still In Love With You)”. In amongst the heavy touring, Grand Ole Opry appearances, and recording dates, Williams, his wife Audrey, and his peerless combo the Drifting Cowboys set up shop at Nashville’s WSM, cutting scores of 15-minute radio slots under the auspices of the local flour mill. The shows – loose, casual, filled with sales pitches, cornball jokes, and idle banter about this year’s crops – reflect the convivial, neighbourly tone of master of ceremonies, one Cousin Louie Buck. The inanities of self-rising cornmeal and garden seed coupons vanish, though, when Williams opens his mouth to sing. Authoritative, mesmerising, passionate, riveting, he consistently throws his all into the music, wringing untold pathos out of morbid ballads like “The Blind Child’s Prayer” and “The First Fall of Snow”, kicking up his heels on oldies like “Howlin’ At The Moon”. The band, particularly steel guitar wizard Don Helms and fiddler Jerry Rivers, are spot-on, virtuosos in mood, revelling in the songs’ grit, sometimes adding churchy harmonies. The clincher, though, is Williams’ astounding repertoire. He digs deep into American music, unearthing lost folk, blues, country, and gospel nuggets of most any provenance (see “I Blotted Your Happy Schooldays”) much as Bob Dylan and The Band did on The Basement Tapes sessions. From covers of contemporary hits by Roy Acuff and Ernest Tubb, to dragging spirituals out of dusty hymnbooks, to parables proffered by his alter-ego, Luke the Drifter, Williams is delightfully all over the map. Along the way he revisits his first studio record, “Calling You”, debuts a tentative take of perhaps his signature song, “Cold, Cold Heart” and delves into virtually everything from his back-catalogue. Friends drop by on occasion, such as country hitmakers Johnnie & Jack, and The Drifting Cowboys, for their part, chime in with stellar instrumentals from the American songbook. There are caveats: you’ll learn more about chick feed, self-rising cornmeal, and fluffy biscuits than you think imaginable, but the pitches get tiresome on extended listening. The Williams estate has also disingenuously parsed some of this material out on previous releases. Most offending by far, though, are Audrey Williams’ inexplicable vocal solos. Still, the simple, soulful beauty of much of this music far outweighs any reservation, and any one of the sublime “Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain”, a nigh-on perfect “Cool Water”, “Move It On Over” or Fred Rose’s chilling “The Prodigal Son” – to cite just a fraction of the highlights – would repay the price of admission. Or as they say here: “Hasta la biscuit, baby!” Luke Torn

Country music has detonated its share of Big Bangs. The 1927 Bristol Sessions, featuring initial recordings by Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter Family, was one; Elvis Presley’s seismic Sun Sessions, firmly rooted in the rural Deep South, turned the page into the rock’n’roll era. Long-obscured, but just as explosive, Hank Williams’ Complete Mother’s Best Collection – vintage, high-calibre radio tapes finally offered up in their entirety – might be considered the ultimate aftershock.

A dizzying cache of 143 performances heard by a handful of souls once, then consigned to a trash dumpster until Grand Ole Opry photographer Les Leverett salvaged them in the 1960s, the Mother’s Best tapes are funny, poignant, culturally edifying (witness, especially, a window on unenlightened 1950s gender relations), musically dazzling, and a breathtaking document of a transcendent artist in a bygone era. Bear Family’s spectacular boxset, augmented by fine-as-can-be-expected sound and Colin Escott’s perceptive notes, presents a daunting, sprawling body of work, catching Williams at an artistic peak, armed with the will and freedom to reflect, explore and experiment.

Hank Williams, of course, is the father of country music, and the outlines of his meteoric fame and tragic death are well known. A hillbilly Shakespeare who could pen wrenching, soul-searching ballads and rattletrap honky-tonk, Williams’ ‘high lonesome’ tenor and everyman poetry have resounded down through the decades. He recorded for just six years (1947-52), yet left behind a preposterously influential body of work. The biggest hits – “Your Cheatin’ Heart”, “Hey Good Lookin’”, “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry”– are building blocks of American music, yet hardly brush the surface of his grim biography. New Year’s Day 1953, on his way to a gig in Canton, Ohio, he was found dead in the backseat of his Cadillac, aged just 29.

In ’51, though, Williams was the hottest star in the country, striking a rich vein with bleak odes to broken love affairs like “Cold, Cold Heart” and “I Can’t Help It (If I’m Still In Love With You)”. In amongst the heavy touring, Grand Ole Opry appearances, and recording dates, Williams, his wife Audrey, and his peerless combo the Drifting Cowboys set up shop at Nashville’s WSM, cutting scores of 15-minute radio slots under the auspices of the local flour mill. The shows – loose, casual, filled with sales pitches, cornball jokes, and idle banter about this year’s crops – reflect the convivial, neighbourly tone of master of ceremonies, one Cousin Louie Buck.

The inanities of self-rising cornmeal and garden seed coupons vanish, though, when Williams opens his mouth to sing. Authoritative, mesmerising, passionate, riveting, he consistently throws his all into the music, wringing untold pathos out of morbid ballads like “The Blind Child’s Prayer” and “The First Fall of Snow”, kicking up his heels on oldies like “Howlin’ At The Moon”. The band, particularly steel guitar wizard Don Helms and fiddler Jerry Rivers, are spot-on, virtuosos in mood, revelling in the songs’ grit, sometimes adding churchy harmonies.

The clincher, though, is Williams’ astounding repertoire. He digs deep into American music, unearthing lost folk, blues, country, and gospel nuggets of most any provenance (see “I Blotted Your Happy Schooldays”) much as Bob Dylan and The Band did on The Basement Tapes sessions. From covers of contemporary hits by Roy Acuff and Ernest Tubb, to dragging spirituals out of dusty hymnbooks, to parables proffered by his alter-ego, Luke the Drifter, Williams is delightfully all over the map.

Along the way he revisits his first studio record, “Calling You”, debuts a tentative take of perhaps his signature song, “Cold, Cold Heart” and delves into virtually everything from his back-catalogue. Friends drop by on occasion, such as country hitmakers Johnnie & Jack, and The Drifting Cowboys, for their part, chime in with stellar instrumentals from the American songbook.

There are caveats: you’ll learn more about chick feed, self-rising cornmeal, and fluffy biscuits than you think imaginable, but the pitches get tiresome on extended listening. The Williams estate has also disingenuously parsed some of this material out on previous releases. Most offending by far, though, are Audrey Williams’ inexplicable vocal solos.

Still, the simple, soulful beauty of much of this music far outweighs any reservation, and any one of the sublime “Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain”, a nigh-on perfect “Cool Water”, “Move It On Over” or Fred Rose’s chilling “The Prodigal Son” – to cite just a fraction of the highlights – would repay the price of admission. Or as they say here: “Hasta la biscuit, baby!”

Luke Torn

LAMBCHOP – NIXON & IS A WOMAN DELUXE EDITIONS

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For most Lambchop fans, Nixon – Uncut’s Album Of The Year in 2000 – remains a singular pinnacle, the band’s masterpiece, a high-water mark of 21st century Americana. On release, of course, it raised eyebrows, surprised a lot of people, the bulk of whom hadn’t properly been listening to what Lambchop had done previously and were therefore unprepared for the record’s extraordinarily rich and intoxicating mix of styles, which elegantly embraced burnished Southern soul, psychedelia, dark country noir, gospel hallelujahs, orchestral pop, feedback psychosis, far-out funky strutting, languid introspection and engulfing ballads. To the extent it was the place their career had been leading them towards, you can hear aspects of it taking shape on the four full-length albums and one EP that preceded it – on, for instance, the call-and-response soul of “Betweemus” and the lysergic shimmer of “Soaky In The Pooper” from their 1994 debut double-album, I Hope You’re Sitting Down/Jack’s Tulips; the increasingly gnomic deadpan turns of Kurt Wagner’s songwriting on the 1996 “Hank” EP and that same year’s How I Quit Smoking; the delicate murmurings of “My Face Your Ass” and horn-fuelled “Your Fucking Sunny Day” from 1997’s Thriller, whose title track was an ambient instrumental, and more immediately the covers of Curtis Mayfield’s “Give Me Your Love (Love Song)” and Frederick Knight’s “I’ve Been Lonely For So Long” on 1998’s What Another Man Spills. Re-released a decade on as part of the City Slang label’s 20th anniversary, Nixon, by virtue of sounding in the first place like it had come from somewhere beyond time, hasn’t dated at all. What was ravishing in every detail 10 years ago is ravishing still. How quickly on re-acquaintance you become immersed again in, for instance, the quizzical narcoleptic drift of songs like “The Old Gold Shoe”, “Grumpus” and “Nashville Parent”, which find Wagner looking at the world in quiet wonder and wondering in turn at its inconsistencies and variables, the fragile perishability and impermanence of things particularly troubling to him. Hence the celebration in his songs – here and elsewhere – of the so-called ordinary, everyday rituals and routines, the stippled repetition of familiar household chores and the talismanic virtues of the morning hug, the barking dog, a dreaming bird, the creak of familiar floorboards, the unfolding universe. The band’s musical palette, meanwhile, would never again seem so lavish. The cunnilingual swirl of strings and brass, in which instruments swim and mingle in blurry sonic alchemy, on tracks like “What Else Could It Be?”, “You Masculine You”, “The Distance From Her To There” and “The Book I Haven’t Read”, is wholly magical. The record’s occasionally spectral cast is nimbly underlined by weird sonic rumblings, guitar static and myriad spooky cracklings, which are especially unnerving on the nocturnal distress of the two songs that end the album – a re-working of their own “The Petrified Florist” and traditional lament “The Butcher Boy”. These are by some distance the darkest moments in Lambchop’s music – “The Butcher Boy” is frankly terrifying – but Nixon will forever be defined for many by the robust holler of “Up With People”, which starts with not much more than a strummed guitar and ends with handclaps, horns and gospel choir. This ‘deluxe edition’ comes with a good-to-have DVD of Lambchop’s May 2000 concert at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, which like the album it closely followed, finds them at a peak, from which they began a slow descent with their next record. Where Nixon was vast, in many respects its follow-up, the somewhat problematic Is A Woman, found Wagner and Lambchop more inscrutably withdrawn than previously. The soaring strings and horns were here replaced as musical focal points by Tony Crow’s limpid jazz piano and the sometimes fuzzy heavy gauge clunk of Kurt’s vintage Gibson L-3 guitar, perhaps the group’s most consistent musical signature. So consistent is the album’s mood and tempo, you may at times think you’re listening to a single song, something evolving at length, in its own time, slowly, with great deliberation, an unhurried yawning followed by a discreet awakening, none of the 11 tracks apparently in a hurry to get anywhere, a somnambulant progression. Even more often than Nixon, and most conspicuously on something like the eight-minute “My Blue Wave” or the sublime “The New Cobweb Summer”, Kurt’s songs were poised between whimsical reflection and grim tragedy. It was the point for many, however, where inscrutability gave way to a kind of obduracy, and they started drifting away, preferring Nixon’s opulence to the sparse sound essayed here and carried over onto the looming landmass of Aw Cmon and No You Cmon, two discs, simultaneously released in 2004, but not, we were given to understand, a double album. Is A Woman also comes with a bonus disc, recommended, that gives home to miscellaneous odds and ends, outstanding among them the exquisite “The Gettysburg Address” (a long-time personal favourite), the beautifully droll “Kurt Wagner’s Heart Attack” and “We Shall Not Be Overwhelmed”, with its muted “Sister Ray” backbeat. Also here are Lambchop’s cover of The Rolling Stones’ “Backstreet Girl”, originally recorded for an Uncut CD, and their simply amazing version of The Sisters Of Mercy’s “This Corrosion”. Allan Jones

For most Lambchop fans, Nixon – Uncut’s Album Of The Year in 2000 – remains a singular pinnacle, the band’s masterpiece, a high-water mark of 21st century Americana. On release, of course, it raised eyebrows, surprised a lot of people, the bulk of whom hadn’t properly been listening to what Lambchop had done previously and were therefore unprepared for the record’s extraordinarily rich and intoxicating mix of styles, which elegantly embraced burnished Southern soul, psychedelia, dark country noir, gospel hallelujahs, orchestral pop, feedback psychosis, far-out funky strutting, languid introspection and engulfing ballads.

To the extent it was the place their career had been leading them towards, you can hear aspects of it taking shape on the four full-length albums and one EP that preceded it – on, for instance, the call-and-response soul of “Betweemus” and the lysergic shimmer of “Soaky In The Pooper” from their 1994 debut double-album, I Hope You’re Sitting Down/Jack’s Tulips; the increasingly gnomic deadpan turns of Kurt Wagner’s songwriting on the 1996 “Hank” EP and that same year’s How I Quit Smoking; the delicate murmurings of “My Face Your Ass” and horn-fuelled “Your Fucking Sunny Day” from 1997’s Thriller, whose title track was an ambient instrumental, and more immediately the covers of Curtis Mayfield’s “Give Me Your Love (Love Song)” and Frederick Knight’s “I’ve Been Lonely For So Long” on 1998’s What Another Man Spills.

Re-released a decade on as part of the City Slang label’s 20th anniversary, Nixon, by virtue of sounding in the first place like it had come from somewhere beyond time, hasn’t dated at all. What was ravishing in every detail 10 years ago is ravishing still. How quickly on re-acquaintance you become immersed again in, for instance, the quizzical narcoleptic drift of songs like “The Old Gold Shoe”, “Grumpus” and “Nashville Parent”, which find Wagner looking at the world in quiet wonder and wondering in turn at its inconsistencies and variables, the fragile perishability and impermanence of things particularly troubling to him. Hence the celebration in his songs – here and elsewhere – of the so-called ordinary, everyday rituals and routines, the stippled repetition of familiar household chores and the talismanic virtues of the morning hug, the barking dog, a dreaming bird, the creak of familiar floorboards, the unfolding universe.

The band’s musical palette, meanwhile, would never again seem so lavish. The cunnilingual swirl of strings and brass, in which instruments swim and mingle in blurry sonic alchemy, on tracks like “What Else Could It Be?”, “You Masculine You”, “The Distance From Her To There” and “The Book I Haven’t Read”, is wholly magical. The record’s occasionally spectral cast is nimbly underlined by weird sonic rumblings, guitar static and myriad spooky cracklings, which are especially unnerving on the nocturnal distress of the two songs that end the album – a re-working of their own “The Petrified Florist” and traditional lament “The Butcher Boy”. These are by some distance the darkest moments in Lambchop’s music – “The Butcher Boy” is frankly terrifying – but Nixon will forever be defined for many by the robust holler of “Up With People”, which starts with not much more than a strummed guitar and ends with handclaps, horns and gospel choir.

This ‘deluxe edition’ comes with a good-to-have DVD of Lambchop’s May 2000 concert at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, which like the album it closely followed, finds them at a peak, from which they began a slow descent with their next record. Where Nixon was vast, in many respects its follow-up, the somewhat problematic Is A Woman, found Wagner and Lambchop more inscrutably withdrawn than previously. The soaring strings and horns were here replaced as musical focal points by Tony Crow’s limpid jazz piano and the sometimes fuzzy heavy gauge clunk of Kurt’s vintage Gibson L-3 guitar, perhaps the group’s most consistent musical signature.

So consistent is the album’s mood and tempo, you may at times think you’re listening to a single song, something evolving at length, in its own time, slowly, with great deliberation, an unhurried yawning followed by a discreet awakening, none of the 11 tracks apparently in a hurry to get anywhere, a somnambulant progression. Even more often than Nixon, and most conspicuously on something like the eight-minute “My Blue Wave” or the sublime “The New Cobweb Summer”, Kurt’s songs were poised between whimsical reflection and grim tragedy. It was the point for many, however, where inscrutability gave way to a kind of obduracy, and they started drifting away, preferring Nixon’s opulence to the sparse sound essayed here and carried over onto the looming landmass of Aw Cmon and No You Cmon, two discs, simultaneously released in 2004, but not, we were given to understand, a double album.

Is A Woman also comes with a bonus disc, recommended, that gives home to miscellaneous odds and ends, outstanding among them the exquisite “The Gettysburg Address” (a long-time personal favourite), the beautifully droll “Kurt Wagner’s Heart Attack” and “We Shall Not Be Overwhelmed”, with its muted “Sister Ray” backbeat. Also here are Lambchop’s cover of The Rolling Stones’ “Backstreet Girl”, originally recorded for an Uncut CD, and their simply amazing version of The Sisters Of Mercy’s “This Corrosion”.

Allan Jones

Ask Brian May!

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Brian May – guitarist, astrophysicist, activist, CBE – is due to answer your questions soon for our An Audience With… feature. And, as ever, we’re after your questions. So, please, let us know what you’d like us to put to the great man when we speak to him early in 2011. He uses sixpence...

Brian May – guitarist, astrophysicist, activist, CBE – is due to answer your questions soon for our An Audience With… feature.

And, as ever, we’re after your questions. So, please, let us know what you’d like us to put to the great man when we speak to him early in 2011.

He uses sixpence pieces as plectrums. How does he replace them when he loses them?

What’s his favourite astronomical body?

What does he consider to be his best guitar solo?

Send your questions to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com by Monday, January 10, 2011.

We’ll put the best questions to Brian — and the interview will appear in a future edition of Uncut.

Tom Waits, Matt Groening pay tribute to Captain Beefheart

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Tom Waits and The Simpsons creator Matt Groening have both paid tribute to Captain Beefheart, who passed away on December 17. Waits hailed Captain Beefheart, real name Don Van Vliet, by comparing him to Miles Davis and Sun Ra, reports the LA Times. "He was like the scout on a wagon train," Waits w...

Tom Waits and The Simpsons creator Matt Groening have both paid tribute to Captain Beefheart, who passed away on December 17.

Waits hailed Captain Beefheart, real name Don Van Vliet, by comparing him to Miles Davis and Sun Ra, reports the LA Times.

“He was like the scout on a wagon train,” Waits wrote. “He was the one who goes ahead and shows the way. He was a demanding bandleader, a transcendental composer (with emphasis on the dental), up there with Ornette [Coleman], Sun Ra and Miles [Davis].

Groening, who enlisted Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band to play the All Tomorrow’s Parties festival he curated in 2003 in California, also spoke of the influence Vliet has had on him.

“Back in my formative years, my buddies and I were looking for the furthest limits in pop music,” Groening explained. “We loved avant-garde jazz, and we loved the blues, and Captain Beefheart melded them in a way that no one else has ever done, with the vocal techniques of Howlin’ Wolf on top of these crazy, angular songs.”

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.

Gorillaz announce tracklisting and details of new album ‘The Fall’

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Gorillaz have announced the tracklisting of their new album 'The Fall', which is due to be released for free on Christmas Day to the band's fan club members. Damon Albarn described the recording of the album, which was recorded on his iPad over 32 days on the band's North American tour this Autumn,...

Gorillaz have announced the tracklisting of their new album ‘The Fall’, which is due to be released for free on Christmas Day to the band’s fan club members.

Damon Albarn described the recording of the album, which was recorded on his iPad over 32 days on the band’s North American tour this Autumn, as a welcome distraction from the monotony of touring.

“I did it because there’s a lot of time that you just spend staring at walls essentially. And it was a fantastic way of doing it,” he told Gorillaz.com. “I found working in the day, whether it’s in the hotel or in the venue, it was a brilliant way of keeping myself well.”

Albarn added that he thinks of the collection, which will be released physically later in 2011, as being “like a diary”.

He added: “I literally wrote everything on the day in each place and there’s a strange sort of sound of America and its musical traditions that comes through. It feels like a journey through America.”

The tracklisting for ‘The Fall’ is:

‘Phoner To Arizona’

‘Revolving Doors’

‘HillBilly Man’

‘Detroit’

‘Shy-town’

‘Little Pink Plastic Bags’

‘The Joplin Spider’

‘The Parish Of Space Dust’

‘The Snake In Dallas’

‘Amarillo’

‘The Speak It Mountains’

‘Aspen Forest’

‘Bobby In Phoenix’

‘California And The Slipping Of The Sun’

‘Seattle Yodel’

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

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

Kings Of Leon postpone London O2 Arena gig due to tourbus fire

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Kings Of Leon's show at London's O2 Arena tonight (February 21) has been postponed because of a tourbus fire at the venue. Around 60 firefighters fought to control the blaze. A spokesperson for the London Fire Brigade told Uncut's sister-title [url=http://www.nme.com/news/kings-of-leon/54342 ]NME[/...

Kings Of Leon‘s show at London‘s O2 Arena tonight (February 21) has been postponed because of a tourbus fire at the venue.

Around 60 firefighters fought to control the blaze. A spokesperson for the London Fire Brigade told Uncut‘s sister-title [url=http://www.nme.com/news/kings-of-leon/54342 ]NME[/url] that the firefighters were called to the scene at 8:18am (GMT) this morning and that the fire was out by 11:33am. No injuries were reported.

The band are planning to reschedule the gig for early 2011.

Their spokesperson said: “The complications and disruption caused by this morning’s fire have meant there is now insufficient time to rig the arena for tonight’s performance.”

They added: “Every opportunity has been made to allow the concert to go ahead as planned and it is a great disappointment to have to postpone the event. We are thankful to report that all crew are safe and no one was seriously injured. Kings Of Leon send their sincerest apologies to all the fans who were planning and travelling to attend what was due to be a triumphant finale to their European tour tonight. The date will be rescheduled in 2011 at the first available opportunity.”

The fire took place in a loading bay at the arena and did not affect the seating or viewing area.

Station Manager Sally Cartwright, who was at the scene, said: “One double decker tour bus within a loading bay was badly damaged by the fire. It was quite a large incident and we had around 60 firefighters there at the height of the blaze.

She added: “Firefighters arrived on the scene quickly and were met by extremely hot and smoky conditions. Our crews should be extremely proud of themselves – they did a fantastic job today and managed to prevent the fire from spreading. We are now working closely with staff from the O2 to ensure that a normal service is restored as quickly as possible.”

Following the announcement bassist Jared Followill posted a message on his Twitter page, Twitter.com/youngfollowill, writing: “Thank God all the crew are safe. Gutted”

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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.

Terry Reid To Headline Club Uncut

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We’re very proud to announce today that Terry Reid will be headlining Club Uncut on Saturday, May 21. The British rock legend’s show takes place at the Jazz Café in Camden, London. Tickets cost £22 and are available now from seetickets.com. To find out more about Reid, pick up the current issue of Uncut for an extensive interview with him and some of his most notable musical collaborators. In the meantime, remember we have a couple of great shows in February and March. Hiss Golden Messenger and Outshine Family at the Slaughtered Lamb on Feb 9 (Tickets £7, from seetickets.com). And Arbouretum at the Borderline on Marc 24 (£8, seetickets.com). Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

We’re very proud to announce today that Terry Reid will be headlining Club Uncut on Saturday, May 21.

The British rock legend’s show takes place at the Jazz Café in Camden, London. Tickets cost £22 and are available now from seetickets.com.

To find out more about Reid, pick up the current issue of Uncut for an extensive interview with him and some of his most notable musical collaborators.

In the meantime, remember we have a couple of great shows in February and March. Hiss Golden Messenger and Outshine Family at the Slaughtered Lamb on Feb 9 (Tickets £7, from seetickets.com). And Arbouretum at the Borderline on Marc 24 (£8, seetickets.com).

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

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

The Wild Mercury Sound 100 Of 2010

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Last blog of the year, I suspect, so I thought it’d be useful to post my whole hundred in one place: apologies for the half-arsed obligation to get extra traffic which compelled me to post it in chunks, at least initially. A couple of weeks on from originally posting this, I still haven’t come across anything signnificant I’ve liked and missed, though I’m sure stuff will flush itself out over the next few weeks. This morning, vague pangs of guilt are directed at the placing of “Admiral Fell Promises”, which feels a bit low. The world will keep turning, I suspect. If you haven’t voted for your own albums of the year, please park your lists over here, and I’ll add them all up in January. Thanks to those of you who’ve already voted, and thanks too to all of you who’ve read and commented on Wild Mercury Sound over 2010: your kindness, tolerance, enthusiasm and keenness to share knowledge is genuinely appreciated. Some nice stuff racking up in the office and on my computer to write about next month, but in the meantime, happy solstice, and take care over the break. 100. Prince Rama – Shadow Temple (Paw Tracks) 99. MV& EE – Liberty Rose (Arbitrary Signs) 98. Actress – Splazsh (Honest Jon’s) 97. Luke Abbott – Holkham Drones (Border Community) 96. Gonjasufi – A Sufi And A Killer (Warp) 95. The Greenhornes - **** (Third Man) 94. Kelley Stoltz – To Dreamers (Sub Pop) 93. Harmonious Thelonious – Talking (Italic) 92. El Guincho – Pop Negro (Young Turks) 91. Mountain Man – Made The Harbor (Bella Union) 90. Disappears – Lux (Kranky) 89. Janelle Monae – The Archandroid (Bad Boy) 88. Barn Owl – Ancestral Star (Thrill Jockey) 87. Kim Doo Soo – The Evening River (Blackest Rainbow) 86. Imaad Wasif – The Voidist (TeePee) 85. Thee Oh Sees – Warm Slime (In The Red) 84. These New Puritans – Hidden (Angular/Domino) 83. Pocahaunted – Make It Real (Not Not Fun) 82. Avey Tare – Down There (Paw Tracks) 81. Zombie Zombie – Plays John Carpenter (Versatile) 80. Omar Souleyman – Jazeera Nights (Sublime Frequencies) 79.Tamikrest – Adagh (Glitterhouse) 78. The Fresh & Onlys – Play It Strange (In The Red) 77. James Murphy – Greenberg OST (Parlophone) 76. Carlton Melton – Pass It On (Agitated) 75. The Coral – Butterfly House (Deltasonic) 74. Elisa Randazzo – Bruises And Butterflies (Drag City) 73. Hayvanlar Alemi - Guarana Superpower (Sublime Frequencies) 72. Caribou – Swim (City Slang) 71. Alasdair Roberts & Friends – Too Long In This Condition (Navigator) 70. Shit Robot – From The Cradle To The Rave (DFA) 69. Mount Carmel – Mount Carmel (Siltbreeze) 68. Diskjokke – En Fid Tid (Smalltown Supersound) 67. Sophie Cooper/Ben Nash – Alchemy (Blackest Rainbow) 66. International Hello – International Hello (Holy Mountain) 65. Vibracathedral Orchestra – Joka Baya//The Secret Base/Smoke Song (All VHF) 64. Sharon Van Etten – Epic (Ba Da Bing) 63. Maximum Balloon – Maximum Balloon (Polydor) 62. Begging Your Pardon Miss Joan – Edges (Blackest Rainbow) 61. Ty Segall – Melted (Goner) 60. Ölöf Arnaldis – Innundir Skinni (One Little Indian) 59. Black Twig Pickers – Ironto Special (Thrill Jockey) 58. Four Tet – There Is Love In You (Domino) 57. The Coil Sea – The Coil Sea (Thrill Jockey) 56. Best Coast – Crazy For You (Wichita) 55. Gayngs – Relayted (Jagjaguwar) 54. The Parting Gifts – Strychnine Dandelion (In The Red) 53. Gil Scott Heron – I’m New Here (XL) 52. Loscil – Endless Falls (Kranky) 51. Sleepy Sun – Fever (ATP Recordings) 50. White Fence – White Fence (Woodsist) 49. Moon Duo – Escape (Woodsist) 48. Kemialliset Ystävät – Ullakkopalo (Fonal) 47. Faun Fables – Light Of A Vaster Dark (Drag City) 46. Vampire Weekend – Contra (XL) 45. Ballaké Sissoko & Vincent Segal – Chamber Music (No Format) 44. Koen Holtkamp – Gravity/Bees (Thrill Jockey) 43. The Sexual Objects – Cucumber (Creeping Bent) 42. Third Eye Foundation – The Dark (Ici D'Ailleurs) 41. Dylan Le Blanc – Pauper’s Field (Rough Trade) 40. Steve Mason – Boys Outside (Double Six) 39. Pantha Du Prince – Black Noise (Rough Trade) 38. LCD Soundsystem – This Is Happening (DFA/Parlophone) 37. Wooden Wand – Death Seat (Young God) 36. Superpitcher – Kilimanjaro (Kompakt) 35. Bill Callahan – Rough Travel For A Rare Thing (Drag City) 34. Grinderman – Grinderman II (Mute) 33. Hiss Golden Messenger – Root Work (Heaven And Earth Magic Recording Company) 32. Hot Chip – One Life Stand (Parlophone) 31. Mark McGuire – Living With Yourself (Editions Mego) 30. AfroCubism – AfroCubism (World Circuit) 29. Fabulous Diamonds – Fabulous Diamonds II (Siltbreeze) 28. Prins Thomas – Prins Thomas (Full Pupp) 27. Arp – The Soft Wave (Smalltown Supersound) 26. Robert Wyatt, Gilad Atzmon, Ros Stephen – The Ghosts Within (Domino) 25. Robert Plant – Band Of Joy (Decca) 24. James Blackshaw – All Is Falling (Young God) 23. Trembling Bells – Abandoned Love (Honest Jon’s) 22. Gunn-Truscinski Duo – Sand City (Three Lobed) 21. Sun Araw – On Patrol (Not Not Fun) 20. Avi Buffalo – Avi Buffalo (Sub Pop) 19. Fool’s Gold – Fool’s Gold (Iamsound) 18. Darker My Love – Alive As You Are (Dangerbird) 17. Oneohtrix Point Never – Returnal (Editions Mego) 16. Forest Swords – Dagger Paths (Olde English Spelling Bee) 15. Sun City Girls – Funeral Mariachi (Abduction) 14. Sun Kil Moon – Admiral Fell Promises (Caldo Verde) 13. Rangda – False Flag (Drag City) 12. Jack Rose – Luck In The Valley (Thrill Jockey) 11. Blitzen Trapper – Destroyer Of The Void (Sub Pop) 10. Emeralds – Does It Look Like I’m Here (Editions Mego) 9. Neil Young – Le Noise (Reprise) 8. Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti – Before Today (4AD) 7. Endless Boogie – Full House Head (No Quarter) 6. Ali Farka Toure & Toumani Diabate – Ali & Toumani (World Circuit) 5. Voice Of The Seven Thunders - Voice Of The Seven Thunders (Tchantinler) 4. Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy & The Cairo Gang – The Wonder Show Of The World (Domino) 3. Magic Lantern – Platoon (Not Not Fun) 2. Hans Chew – Tennessee & Other Stories (Divide By Zero/Three Lobed) 1. Joanna Newsom – Have One On Me (Drag City)

Last blog of the year, I suspect, so I thought it’d be useful to post my whole hundred in one place: apologies for the half-arsed obligation to get extra traffic which compelled me to post it in chunks, at least initially.

Billy Bragg, Franz Ferdinand, Zola Jesus pay tribute to Captain Beefheart

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Franz Ferdinand, Klaxons and The Zutons are among the musicians to pay tribute to Captain Beefheart following his death after complications from multiple sclerosis on Friday (December 17). Captain Beefheart, whose real name was Don Van Vliet, passed away in hospital in California aged 69. Writing ...

Franz Ferdinand, Klaxons and The Zutons are among the musicians to pay tribute to Captain Beefheart following his death after complications from multiple sclerosis on Friday (December 17).

Captain Beefheart, whose real name was Don Van Vliet, passed away in hospital in California aged 69.

Writing on Twitter, Zola Jesus described the influence Captain Beefheart has had on her career.

“Gave my brother my old, worn down copy of ‘Trout Mask Replica’ before I moved as a thank you to introducing me to his music when I was far too young. Nothing he did was a mistake, there were no accidents in his music. Only sheer invention, passion… dear god, why does the world keep losing such important people? Who will fill their shoes? My heart is heavy for you, Don Van Vliet!”

Meanwhile, Billy Bragg tweeted that “there was only ever one Captain Beefheart“, while Franz Ferdinand‘s Alex Kapranos wrote that he had “very much” influenced his own band.

KlaxonsJamie Reynolds took to the site to say a simple “god bless”, and The Zutons frontman Dave McCabe tweeted that the musician “will be missed by all fans across the globe”.

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.

Ronnie Wood hints that The Rolling Stones will play Glastonbury 2011

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Ronnie Wood has said that he'd love The Rolling Stones to regroup to play Glastonbury next summer. The guitarist told the Metro that it was "high time" the band got back together again, having been on a break from band duties for the last three years. "I'd love to do it [Glastonbury]," he said. "I...

Ronnie Wood has said that he’d love The Rolling Stones to regroup to play Glastonbury next summer.

The guitarist told the Metro that it was “high time” the band got back together again, having been on a break from band duties for the last three years.

“I’d love to do it [Glastonbury],” he said. “I’m always up for the festivals. As far as the Stones are concerned we haven’t had a get-together for three years but it’s high time.”

Despite being perennially rumoured to play Glastonbury, The Rolling Stones have never done so.

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.

Madonna looking for new album collaborators via Facebook

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Madonna has taken to her Facebook page to announce that she's gearing up to make a new album. Writing on the social networking site at Facebook.com/madonna the singer added that she is looking for collaborators for the record. "It's official! I need to move," Madonna wrote. "I need to sweat. I nee...

Madonna has taken to her Facebook page to announce that she’s gearing up to make a new album.

Writing on the social networking site at Facebook.com/madonna the singer added that she is looking for collaborators for the record.

“It’s official! I need to move,” Madonna wrote. “I need to sweat. I need to make new music! Music I can dance to. I’m on the look out for the maddest, sickest, most badass people to collaborate with. I’m just saying…”

Madonna‘s last album ‘Hard Candy’ was released in 2008.

Earlier this year [url=http://www.nme.com/news/madonna/50520]the singer was deemed the most played musical act in the UK of the last decade[/url].

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.

Captain Beefheart RIP

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Awful news this morning. I posted a link to this a few months ago, but I think it needs to be seen again today. [youtube]WLdRh7qdi_g[/youtube]

Awful news this morning. I posted a link to this a few months ago, but I think it needs to be seen again today.

THE TRIP

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There’s a moment during The Trip that recalls the contemptuous, conflicted comedy of Woody Allen’s Stardust Memories. It’s a dream sequence in which Steve Coogan is approached by a fan who, after the inevitable greeting (“a-haaaa!”), asks for an autograph and then cheerfully calls his hero a “cunt”. Coogan wakes with a start, realising that the toxic mix of fascination and frank disdain conveys precisely how he feels about the stagnant state of his own career. The Trip is many things – bumbling B-road movie, awkward bromance, nature porn – but its primary purpose is to satirise Coogan’s vision of himself as a tortured, much misunderstood artist. Thematically, it’s an extension of A Cock And Bull Story, Michael Winterbottom’s 2005 feature in which Coogan and Rob Brydon appear as sparring actors jockeying for status. They’re at it again in this similarly metatextual exercise, also directed by Winterbottom, in which they play semi-fictionalised versions of themselves, thrown together when Coogan is commissioned by The Observer to review six up-market restaurants in the north of England. When his on-off girlfriend, Misha, decides to return to America, he invites Brydon instead. Over six improvised half-hours – which Winterbottom has also shaped into a 100-minute film for US release – the pair eat, drink, ramble (in both senses), sing, squabble and shamelessly compete like two rutting comic stags. Dessert wouldn’t be dessert without a Michael Caine face-off and a volley of brisk smack-downs. When Brydon launches into the inevitable Alan Partridge impression, Coogan snaps back: “I’d love to quote your own work back at you, but I don’t know any.” Coogan’s PR compares them to Boswell and Johnson, but which is which? The Trip makes merry work of the pair’s recent contrasting fortunes. Despite branching into mainstream movies, Coogan is still best known for playing Partridge and leading a tabloid-friendly private life. By contrast, his one time protégé has enjoyed a buoyant few years. Gavin & Stacey, a talk show, and a seemingly open invitation to impersonate Ronnie Corbett on numerous panel programmes all suggest a man who has mastered the art of ubiquity. Where Coogan was once top dog, now it’s Brydon who gets recognised in public and repeatedly asked to do his ‘Small Man In A Box’ voice. He cheerfully complies while his friend sneers at the tawdry populism of it all. The Trip finds much humour – and some tenderness – in Coogan’s lofty artistic aspirations. Portrayed as uptight and emotionally distant, he craves gravitas, US success and an art-house film career. “I’ve got an albatross around my neck and it’s got the face of Michael Sheen,” he cries at one point, cranking up Joy Division’s “Atmosphere” on the car stereo. Brydon, on the other hand, is a chattering cipher who filters the world through a small repertoire of impressions, jabbering away as Alan Bennett or an “autistic Al Pacino”. In contrast to Coogan’s complicated existence, he’s a contented family man who recognises showbiz as a mere bagatelle. He’s trying to keep himself amused until he can go home. Nothing much happens. From hotel to hotel and location to location, the pair skim the surface of music, film, poetry, life and love. Coogan beds a couple of passing fancies, smokes dope in Coleridge’s old house, and ponders a Faustian pact in which he wins an Oscar but his son gets appendicitis (“Now we glimpse the real man,” thunders Brydon). Some of the improv is wonderfully Tap-esque: “Never be hot, always be warm,” is Brydon’s sage career advice. “I’d rather have moments of genius than a lifetime of mediocrity,” replies Coogan. “I’d rather be me than you.” The Trip fits neatly into the post-Curb Your Enthusiasm landscape, where everything from Entourage to I’m Still Here features celebrities playing distorted versions of themselves, but it’s much gentler and more hypnotic than those references might suggest. Delightfully daft but with moments of real poignancy, The Trip edges toward some quietly profound conclusions on the meaning of success and the value of friendship. EXTRAS: EPK, set photos, extra sequences. HHH GRAEME THOMSON

There’s a moment during The Trip that recalls the contemptuous, conflicted comedy of Woody Allen’s Stardust Memories. It’s a dream sequence in which Steve Coogan is approached by a fan who, after the inevitable greeting (“a-haaaa!”), asks for an autograph and then cheerfully calls his hero a “cunt”. Coogan wakes with a start, realising that the toxic mix of fascination and frank disdain conveys precisely how he feels about the stagnant state of his own career.

The Trip is many things – bumbling B-road movie, awkward bromance, nature porn – but its primary purpose is to satirise Coogan’s vision of himself as a tortured, much misunderstood artist. Thematically, it’s an extension of A Cock And Bull Story, Michael Winterbottom’s 2005 feature in which Coogan and Rob Brydon appear as sparring actors jockeying for status. They’re at it again in this similarly metatextual exercise, also directed by Winterbottom, in which they play semi-fictionalised versions of themselves, thrown together when Coogan is commissioned by The Observer to review six up-market restaurants in the north of England. When his on-off girlfriend, Misha, decides to return to America, he invites Brydon instead.

Over six improvised half-hours – which Winterbottom has also shaped into a 100-minute film for US release – the pair eat, drink, ramble (in both senses), sing, squabble and shamelessly compete like two rutting comic stags. Dessert wouldn’t be dessert without a Michael Caine face-off and a volley of brisk smack-downs. When Brydon launches into the inevitable Alan Partridge impression, Coogan snaps back: “I’d love to quote your own work back at you, but I don’t know any.”

Coogan’s PR compares them to Boswell and Johnson, but which is which? The Trip makes merry work of the pair’s recent contrasting fortunes. Despite branching into mainstream movies, Coogan is still best known for playing Partridge and leading a tabloid-friendly private life. By contrast, his one time protégé has enjoyed a buoyant few years. Gavin & Stacey, a talk show, and a seemingly open invitation to impersonate Ronnie Corbett on numerous panel programmes all suggest a man who has mastered the art of ubiquity.

Where Coogan was once top dog, now it’s Brydon who gets recognised in public and repeatedly asked to do his ‘Small Man In A Box’ voice. He cheerfully complies while his friend sneers at the tawdry populism of it all. The Trip finds much humour – and some tenderness – in Coogan’s lofty artistic aspirations. Portrayed as uptight and emotionally distant, he craves gravitas, US success and an art-house film career. “I’ve got an albatross around my neck and it’s got the face of Michael Sheen,” he cries at one point, cranking up Joy Division’s “Atmosphere” on the car stereo.

Brydon, on the other hand, is a chattering cipher who filters the world through a small repertoire of impressions, jabbering away as Alan Bennett or an “autistic Al Pacino”. In contrast to Coogan’s complicated existence, he’s a contented family man who recognises showbiz as a mere bagatelle. He’s trying to keep himself amused until he can go home.

Nothing much happens. From hotel to hotel and location to location, the pair skim the surface of music, film, poetry, life and love. Coogan beds a couple of passing fancies, smokes dope in Coleridge’s old house, and ponders a Faustian pact in which he wins an Oscar but his son gets appendicitis (“Now we glimpse the real man,” thunders Brydon). Some of the improv is wonderfully Tap-esque: “Never be hot, always be warm,” is Brydon’s sage career advice. “I’d rather have moments of genius than a lifetime of mediocrity,” replies Coogan. “I’d rather be me than you.”

The Trip fits neatly into the post-Curb Your Enthusiasm landscape, where everything from Entourage to I’m Still Here features celebrities playing distorted versions of themselves, but it’s much gentler and more hypnotic than those references might suggest. Delightfully daft but with moments of real poignancy, The Trip edges toward some quietly profound conclusions on the meaning of success and the value of friendship.

EXTRAS: EPK, set photos, extra sequences.

HHH

GRAEME THOMSON

SUN CITY GIRLS – FUNERAL MARIACHI

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The death in 2007 of Charlie Gocher Jr – surrealist, prankster, and drummer with Sun City Girls since their inception –robbed the psychedelic underground of one of its most remarkable, unpredictable groups. In existence since the early 1980s, the Sun City Girls, with a lineup of Gocher, alongside brothers Alan and Rick Bishop, on bass and guitar respectively, released some of the most confounding records you’re ever likely to hear. They’ve a back catalogue of well over 50 albums, cassettes, and singles, and over time their remit has stretched through dazzling free-rock, abstract acoustic improvisations, eerie forgeries of Third World traditional music, surrealist spoken word suites, and spooked requiems that sound like they’ve fallen from old Italian film soundtracks. Their story is a wild one. Forming in Phoenix, Arizona, the trio spent the ’80s largely undercover, releasing a few limited LPs alongside their self-released Cloaven cassette series, playing baffling live shows with hardcore groups, and taking trips to Third World countries, during which they researched local music and occultism, collected instruments, and made field recordings, some of which have turned up via the Bishops’ Sublime Frequencies label. They ‘broke out’ in the ’90s with albums like Bright Surroundings, Dark Beginnings and Torch Of The Mystics, but there was still something hidden about the trio – to know of them was to partake of arcane knowledge. Rick Bishop, a devotee of tantric goddess Kali, also collects and sells esoterica; he now performs snake-charming solo guitar as Sir Richard Bishop, and shares the Rangda trio with Ben Chasny (of Six Organs Of Admittance) and powerhouse percussionist Chris Corsano. Alan Bishop records solo as Alvarius B, and sometimes as his alter ego, the wiseass humorist and storyteller Uncle Jim. All this means your work is cut out for you if you’re entering the weird world of the Sun City Girls for the first time. Their albums, Torch Of The Mystics (1990) and 1996’s mammoth 330,003 Crossdressers From Beyond The Rig Veda triple-LP set, are among the wildest psychedelic epics of the past 30 years. But beware – tread too far into these murky waters and you’ll encounter the horrific, lounge-chintz covers album Midnight Cowboys From Ipanema, or the stodgy improvisations of Live From The Land Of The Rising Sun. They’re possibly the only group whose triple-CD retrospective, Box Of Chameleons, featured all unreleased material and was at times forbiddingly impenetrable. As Alan Bishop once said to cultural critic Erik Davis: “We leave a few diamonds by the roadside, and we leave a few heaps of pterodactyl shit as well.” Their final album, Funeral Mariachi, has them playing things relatively straight, and it’s definitely one of their ‘diamonds’. Recorded largely before Gocher’s death, and completed by Alan Bishop and long-time producer Scott Colburn, it’s free of the more oblique, scurrilous and downright frustrating sides of their temperament. Funeral Mariachi is luxurious in both recording quality and musicianship – most things are taken at a slow clip, like the opiate-drones and tablas of “This Is My Name”, which blossoms near its end with a lilting melody flourish from guitar. A cover of Ennio Morricone’s “Come Maddalena” touches the same nerve – indeed, the unsettled exotica of the Italian’s scores provides a good reference point for much of what the Sun City Girls are up to here. There is still plenty of weirdness. The album opens with “Ben’s Radio”, which flips through scattered vocal turns and brash, drilling acoustic guitars like a child spinning a short-wave dial, the trio inventing hybrid languages through multi-colour glottal reveries. There’s an almost synaesthetic touch to the psychedelic qualities of Funeral Mariachi, with Alan Bishop’s banshee wail, best heard on “The Imam”, cutting through smoke-rings of reverb. He also resurrects that sound at the start of “Holy Ground”, where a hypnotic, surrealist chant gives way to an almost tender tune for fuzz-tone guitar and old-timey, humming organ. It’s a reminder that the Sun City Girls often peddle in warped, spooked nostalgia. Funeral Mariachi is a great album, torn from the fabric of another time, paying tribute to Gocher and the multi-horned history of the Sun City Girls. Their more unhinged, trickster side, found on 330,003 Crossdressers, could perhaps be more in evidence, but that’s just being picky. This is as riveting and beautiful a valedictory address as you could hope for from these underground heroes. JON DALE Q+A Richard Bishop You’re currently travelling through Syria and Lebanon. Research? Pleasure? We actually just performed two evenings of shows here in Beirut. First night was the two of us together performing Sun City Girls material and the second night we did solo sets. Now that the shows are over I am in full pleasure mode with a little research thrown in. Sun City Girls always had the travel bug. I can hear that musically: what else did you draw from your encounters overseas? In a word: everything. Meeting and talking to the people, watching and sometimes participating in their ceremonial adventures, settling into and studying different aspects of life in foreign lands and realising that most of the time, it is much more intriguing and inspiring than anything from our own country. You and your brother play telepathically. Has your relationship changed much? Nope. We’re as close as ever. I will say Charlie contributed greatly to that idea of telepathy, so that is sorely missed, but the two of us are still capable of getting things done by any means necessary and that includes telepathy if we have to resort to it. INTERVIEW: JON DALE

The death in 2007 of Charlie Gocher Jr – surrealist, prankster, and drummer with Sun City Girls since their inception –robbed the psychedelic underground of one of its most remarkable, unpredictable groups. In existence since the early 1980s, the Sun City Girls, with a lineup of Gocher, alongside brothers Alan and Rick Bishop, on bass and guitar respectively, released some of the most confounding records you’re ever likely to hear.

They’ve a back catalogue of well over 50 albums, cassettes, and singles, and over time their remit has stretched through dazzling free-rock, abstract acoustic improvisations, eerie forgeries of Third World traditional music, surrealist spoken word suites, and spooked requiems that sound like they’ve fallen from old Italian film soundtracks.

Their story is a wild one. Forming in Phoenix, Arizona, the trio spent the ’80s largely undercover, releasing a few limited LPs alongside their self-released Cloaven cassette series, playing baffling live shows with hardcore groups, and taking trips to Third World countries, during which they researched local music and occultism, collected instruments, and made field recordings, some of which have turned up via the Bishops’ Sublime Frequencies label.

They ‘broke out’ in the ’90s with albums like Bright Surroundings, Dark Beginnings and Torch Of The Mystics, but there was still something hidden about the trio – to know of them was to partake of arcane knowledge. Rick Bishop, a devotee of tantric goddess Kali, also collects and sells esoterica; he now performs snake-charming solo guitar as Sir Richard Bishop, and shares the Rangda trio with Ben Chasny (of Six Organs Of Admittance) and powerhouse percussionist Chris Corsano. Alan Bishop records solo as Alvarius B, and sometimes as his alter ego, the wiseass humorist and storyteller Uncle Jim.

All this means your work is cut out for you if you’re entering the weird world of the Sun City Girls for the first time. Their albums, Torch Of The Mystics (1990) and 1996’s mammoth 330,003 Crossdressers From Beyond The Rig Veda triple-LP set, are among the wildest psychedelic epics of the past 30 years. But beware – tread too far into these murky waters and you’ll encounter the horrific, lounge-chintz covers album Midnight Cowboys From Ipanema, or the stodgy improvisations of Live From The Land Of The Rising Sun. They’re possibly the only group whose triple-CD retrospective, Box Of Chameleons, featured all unreleased material and was at times forbiddingly impenetrable. As Alan Bishop once said to cultural critic Erik Davis: “We leave a few diamonds by the roadside, and we leave a few heaps of pterodactyl shit as well.”

Their final album, Funeral Mariachi, has them playing things relatively straight, and it’s definitely one of their ‘diamonds’. Recorded largely before Gocher’s death, and completed by Alan Bishop and long-time producer Scott Colburn, it’s free of the more oblique, scurrilous and downright frustrating sides of their temperament. Funeral Mariachi is luxurious in both recording quality and musicianship – most things are taken at a slow clip, like the opiate-drones and tablas of “This Is My Name”, which blossoms near its end with a lilting melody flourish from guitar. A cover of Ennio Morricone’s “Come Maddalena” touches the same nerve – indeed, the unsettled exotica of the Italian’s scores provides a good reference point for much of what the Sun City Girls are up to here.

There is still plenty of weirdness. The album opens with “Ben’s Radio”, which flips through scattered vocal turns and brash, drilling acoustic guitars like a child spinning a short-wave dial, the trio inventing hybrid languages through multi-colour glottal reveries. There’s an almost synaesthetic touch to the psychedelic qualities of Funeral Mariachi, with Alan Bishop’s banshee wail, best heard on “The Imam”, cutting through smoke-rings of reverb. He also resurrects that sound at the start of “Holy Ground”, where a hypnotic, surrealist chant gives way to an almost tender tune for fuzz-tone guitar and old-timey, humming organ. It’s a reminder that the Sun City Girls often peddle in warped, spooked nostalgia.

Funeral Mariachi is a great album, torn from the fabric of another time, paying tribute to Gocher and the multi-horned history of the Sun City Girls. Their more unhinged, trickster side, found on 330,003 Crossdressers, could perhaps be more in evidence, but that’s just being picky. This is as riveting and beautiful a valedictory address as you could hope for from these underground heroes.

JON DALE

Q+A Richard Bishop

You’re currently travelling through Syria and Lebanon. Research? Pleasure?

We actually just performed two evenings of shows here in Beirut. First night was the two of us together performing Sun City Girls material and the second night we did solo sets. Now that the shows are over I am in full pleasure mode with a little research thrown in.

Sun City Girls always had the travel bug. I can hear that musically: what else did you draw from your encounters overseas?

In a word: everything. Meeting and talking to the people, watching and sometimes participating in their ceremonial adventures, settling into and studying different aspects of life in foreign lands and realising that most of the time, it is much more intriguing and inspiring than anything from our own country.

You and your brother play telepathically. Has your relationship changed much?

Nope. We’re as close as ever. I will say Charlie contributed greatly to that idea of telepathy, so that is sorely missed, but the two of us are still capable of getting things done by any means necessary and that includes telepathy if we have to resort to it.

INTERVIEW: JON DALE