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Trent Reznor set to continue film score work

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Trent Reznor has said he would like to continue to his film score work by getting to grips with the music for more traditional Hollywood films. The Nine Inch Nails man is celebrating an Oscar nomination for Best Original Score for his work on the The Social Network, an accolade he has described as...

Trent Reznor has said he would like to continue to his film score work by getting to grips with the music for more traditional Hollywood films.

The Nine Inch Nails man is celebrating an Oscar nomination for Best Original Score for his work on the The Social Network, an accolade he has described as “surreal, amazing and flattering”.

Speaking to Hollywoodreporter.com, Reznor said of the film: “I didn’t realise it would resonate with people as much as it has. It’s been amazing and flattering to see what’s happened.”

He said he would “absolutely” be interested in composing for more mainstream Hollywood films. “I’m interested in the discipline and I’m interested in the challenge of working in the more traditional sense,” he said. “I look at working with [a traditional orchestra] as something I haven’t done yet and I’ve always been intrigued by it. I would be up for that challenge.”

He and co-composer Atticus Ross are currently writing the score for the Hollywood remake of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.

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 Strokes still battling ‘hostility and resentment’ says guitarist

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The Strokes' guitarist Nick Valensi has said there are still "undertones of hostility and resentment" in the band. The five-piece are gearing up to release their first album in five years, 'Angles', on March 21[/url], and Valensi has described the band's struggle to get the record completed. "It t...

The Strokes‘ guitarist Nick Valensi has said there are still “undertones of hostility and resentment” in the band.

The five-piece are gearing up to release their first album in five years, ‘Angles’, on March 21[/url], and Valensi has described the band’s struggle to get the record completed.

“It took time,” he told MySpace Music. “Maybe everyone needed money or something. ‘We gotta pay our mortgage so may as well get this going again.'”

He added: “The mood was and continues to be light and fun and playful, with mild undertones of hostility and resentment, which is just the way of this band. When we hang out and when we work on stuff, it’s great but I’d be lying if I said there wasn’t elements of hostility there. Undertones of hostility and resentment.”

Valensi went on to say that he thinks the long gap between ‘Angles’ and 2006’s ‘First Impressions Of Earth’ will have an impact on how fans receive the new record.

“You take that much time off [and] no matter what you do it’s not going to be as good as people want it to be,” he said. “I feel like no matter what the record is, or how hard we worked on it, or how much we like it, it’s not going to live up to people’s expectations only because of those five years between the last one and this one.

“If we had just released this a year or two after the last one, I imagine it would have gone better.”

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.

Low: “C’Mon”

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Since I saw them play a series of shows at the Union Chapel in Highbury a good decade ago, I’ve always felt that Low’s music suited churches. Not because of the religious connotations as such, more because they were so suited to the space, stillness and reverberations inherent in those kind of buildings. It makes sense, then, that Low’s new album, “C’Mon”, has been recorded in a church close to their home in Duluth, Minnesota, the better to capture the trio’s monumental gravities. Unlike the frictional, treated environments of “Drums And Guns”, “C’Mon” represents a kind of return to a notionally purer Low, to the sound of an enormously controlled and self-contained band playing in a very big room. It captures a lot of what many of us cherish most about the band; a sound which has incrementally evolved over the space of 15-odd years, but still remained utterly identifiable. While not touching on the more experimental textures of the band represented on “Drums And Guns”, “Songs For A Dead Pilot”, “Bombscare” and so on, “C’Mon” would work pretty well as an introduction to this most stately and moving of contemporary American bands. One of the things that’s so interesting about their sound is how it identifiably emerges from an obliterated post-punk/post-hardcore continuum, but simultaneously flaunts affinities with a much longer lineage of classic folk-rock. When I listen to Low, I often end up thinking a lot about Neil Young, and how they seem to instinctively grasp his stunned dynamics, his uncanny harmonies, on a level that’s far more profound than most of his descendants (please check their collaboration with The Dirty Three on “Down By The River” if you can, an object lesson in impactful understatement). Alan Sparhawk might more overtly reference Young in his work with the Retribution Gospel Choir, but I hear resonances all through “C’Mon”. Sparhawk has recently talked up the new record as akin to Richard & Linda Thompson’s “Shoot Out The Lights”, as an anatomy of a relationship, though the prevailing theme – the trials and consolations of a long-term relationshop, as far as I can tell – is maybe closer to something like Yo La Tengo’s “And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside Out”. The Linda Thompson reference isn’t bad, though, at pinpointing the appeal of Mimi Parker’s voice: its affectingly muscular purity. I frequently think of Parker as kin to Judy Collins, which is a bit baffling, since while I love Parker’s voice, Collins tends to come across as cloying and sanctimonious to me. Even by her standards, she has some extraordinary songs on “C’Mon”: “Especially Me” and “You See Everything”, the latter having, I think, faint echoes of Young’s “Round And Round”. At this point, “C’Mon” feels like the Low album I’ve liked most since “Things We Lost In The Fire”; no mean praise. Pivotal to this are a couple of Sparhawk-fronted songs: “Nothing But Heart”, one of those hard-punching, epically repetitive Low songs, this time elevated further by a solo from Nels Cline. Then there’s “Witches”, which taps into that luxuriant Youngian wallow again and finds Sparhawk dealing with visions, childhood nightmares and a confusing frustration with men who “act like Al Green”, something which evidently makes him so angry he can’t articulate exactly what the problem is. It’s a magnificent song, one of the best I’ve heard in a while, and one, I think, of the best songs in a catalogue that has stealthily built up into one of the strongest of the past two decades. A good few of these songs are out there in live versions on Youtube, I think; if you have time, hunt them down and drop me a line.

Since I saw them play a series of shows at the Union Chapel in Highbury a good decade ago, I’ve always felt that Low’s music suited churches. Not because of the religious connotations as such, more because they were so suited to the space, stillness and reverberations inherent in those kind of buildings.

Michael Jackson’s doctor Conrad Murray trial date set

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Michael Jackson's doctor Conrad Murray will stand trial this March accused of involuntary manslaughter relating to the singer's death in June 2009. The trial, which is expected to last for six weeks, will begin on March 28. Murray has pleaded not guilty, meaning he could be sentenced to four years ...

Michael Jackson‘s doctor Conrad Murray will stand trial this March accused of involuntary manslaughter relating to the singer’s death in June 2009.

The trial, which is expected to last for six weeks, will begin on March 28. Murray has pleaded not guilty, meaning he could be sentenced to four years in prison if convicted. BBC News reports that judges are considering whether to allow television coverage of the trial.

Speaking in court in Los Angeles, Murray said: “I am an innocent man.”

A preliminary hearing earlier this month saw several witnesses testify that he had given Jackson powerful anaesthetics in the hours before his death, and that he had subsequently tried to hide drug paraphernalia.

Murray‘s defence team said that it has not yet been proven how he caused the singer’s death, with defence attorney Ed Chernoff telling reporters outside the court: “Dr Murray is looking forward to finally telling his side of the story.”

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.

Patti Smith writing a detective novel

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Patti Smith has announced she is writing a detective novel. The singer confirmed details of her next book while speaking at the Royal Geographic Society in London last night (January 25) as part of the Intelligence Squared series of talks. "I've been working on a detective story that starts at St ...

Patti Smith has announced she is writing a detective novel.

The singer confirmed details of her next book while speaking at the Royal Geographic Society in London last night (January 25) as part of the Intelligence Squared series of talks.

“I’ve been working on a detective story that starts at St Giles-in-the-Fields in London for the last two years,” she explained.

The singer said that the book had been inspired by a previous trip to the UK capital, and that she now always visits the churchyard “where [the idea] came to me” when in London.

She jokingly suggested that the book was approximately “68 per cent” done, adding that she “loved detective stories” having been a fan of Sherlock Holmes and US crime author Mickey Spillane as a girl.

Smith, who discussed her recent memoir Just Kids and took questions from the audience, performed an acoustic version of her song ‘My Blakean Year’ after the talk.

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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.

Amy Winehouse announces first European festival slot of 2011

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Amy Winehouse has confirmed her first European festival slot of 2011 at Spain's BBK Live event in July. The event takes place on July 7-9 in Bilbao, with Crystal Castles, The Chemical Brothers, Jack Johnson and The Black Crowes also on the bill. Coldplay had already been announced as one of the he...

Amy Winehouse has confirmed her first European festival slot of 2011 at Spain’s BBK Live event in July.

The event takes place on July 7-9 in Bilbao, with Crystal Castles, The Chemical Brothers, Jack Johnson and The Black Crowes also on the bill.

Coldplay had already been announced as one of the headliners of the event. See Bilbaobbklive.com for more information.

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.

PJ Harvey: “Let England Shake”

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The past few days I’ve been reading, on Rob Young’s recommendation, Alexandra HarrisRomantic Moderns, an excellent survey of how British artists and writers in the mid-20th Century tried to reconcile a modernist impulse with the residual lure of English cultural traditions. This morning, I was deep in the chapter on artistic responses during wartime; studies and collections on the subject of Englishness designed as a kind of emotional consolation in the midst of battle and austerity. It provided an interesting analogue to PJ Harvey’s “Let England Shake”, which I was listening to at the same time, a record about nationality and the meaning of nationality, especially in times of war. I’ve been meaning to write about this quite brilliant record for the best part of two months now, and I’m conscious that a lot of what I could say has been effectively superseded by Andrew Mueller’s review in the new issue of Uncut, the work of a man who knows far more about war than I could ever wish to. I can’t recommend his review enough, but I still think it’s worth adding a few notes; after all, one of “Let England Shake”’s many virtues is its easy deployment of ideas, its capacity to be thought-provoking. Increasingly, it’s becoming very clear that PJ Harvey approaches her albums as distinct and self-contained projects, each with a finely-wrought, cohesive and fastidious plan behind the set of songs. With some serendipity, “Let England Shake” arrived at Uncut around the same time as Anna Calvi’s debut album: not a terrible piece of work, by any stretch, but one which seems to take the most obvious and commercial of PJ Harvey’s creative personae and runs with it. Calvi’s album, with its slightly hackneyed, crimson-lipped sense of melodrama, feels very much like the sort of record the more pragmatic parts of the record industry would have liked Harvey to make as the follow-up to “To Bring You My Love”. Instead, she embarked on an unpredictable and generally hugely rewarding trajectory away from what was expected of her, so that in 2011 she’s arrived at an unusual place for an artist of her generation: a genuine auteur who, in spite of being signed to a major label, appears able to develop her career and follow her muse into relatively esoteric corners, more or less unaffected by marketing expediencies. That said, “Let England Shake” is full of catchy, insidious tunes, much more immediate than its uncanny and lovely predecessor, “White Chalk”. It remains, though, a strange-sounding record, at once strident and ethereal. A song like “The Words That Maketh Murder” seems to roll along at an odd bucolic skank, while the spidery guitar jangle vaguely recalls – not for the last time on “Let England Shake” – the hazier reveries concocted by Johnny Marr in the earlyish days of The Smiths. There’s something of The Cocteau Twins here and elsewhere, too; the occasional whoop in Harvey’s voice seems pitched in an unlikely space between Liz Fraser and Ari Up. As the album begins with the title track, the high register she unveiled on “White Chalk” has gained a new pointedness; if the word weren’t loaded with pejorative implications, “witchy” might not be a bad word for it. With the rustic brass puncturing songs at unexpected moments, and a predominantly rickety, handcrafted air, “Let England Shake” sometimes feels like indigenous folk music modernised in an eccentric way, not least when Harvey’s voice is pitted against the blokeish, conversational harmonies of John Parish and Mick Harvey. I keep thinking of Trembling Bells, and their way of finding a new method of negotiating with English tradition. But then again, there’s a spindliness to the sound which also, less canonically, seems to echo a certain strain of wan indie-pop, given an unexpected new imperative: “On Battleship Hill”, in particular, is reminiscent in parts of Belle & Sebastian’s “The State I Am In” (no bad thing, I should say). As an album, dense with allusion and knowledge, constructed with a meticulous thematic unity which extends across both sound and content, and performed with a vigour and passion which belies any suspicions of academic detachment, it’s an unqualified success; a marker for major British records in 2011. As ever, I’d be interested to know what you think, when you’ve heard it…

The past few days I’ve been reading, on Rob Young’s recommendation, Alexandra HarrisRomantic Moderns, an excellent survey of how British artists and writers in the mid-20th Century tried to reconcile a modernist impulse with the residual lure of English cultural traditions.

Warpaint, Friendly Fires, Villagers to play Great Escape 2011

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Friendly Fires, Warpaint and Villagers are among the acts confirmed to play this year's Great Escape festival in Brighton. The three-day event takes place on May 12-14 at various venues in the city, and Uncut will once again be showcasing a number of bands throughout it. More acts are due to be ann...

Friendly Fires, Warpaint and Villagers are among the acts confirmed to play this year’s Great Escape festival in Brighton.

The three-day event takes place on May 12-14 at various venues in the city, and Uncut will once again be showcasing a number of bands throughout it. More acts are due to be announced for the festival soon and see Escapegreat.com for more information.

The line-up so far for The Great Escape is:

Friendly Fires

Katy B

Warpaint

Villagers

Twin Shadow

Brother

Little Dragon

D/R/U/G/S

Becoming Real

PVT

Dutch Uncles

Tribes

SBTRKT

The Heartbreaks

Spark

Nedry

Worriedaboutsatan

Big Deal

The Soft Moon

Teeth

Marques Toliver

Tripwires

Lucy Swann

Vision of Trees

Seams

The Holidays

The Jezabels

Said the Whale

Team Me

Bonjay

Deep Sea Arcade

Seekae

The Mountain and the Trees

Winter Gloves

DZ Deathrays

Woodhands

gaBle

Tickets are on sale now.

The Strokes announce new album release details

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The Strokes have revealed the tracklisting for their fourth album 'Angles'. The album is set to be released on March 21 in the UK and March 22 in the US, with the first single, which does not have a release date yet, set to be 'Under Cover Of Darkness'. 'Life Is Simple' is the only song on 'Angles...

The Strokes have revealed the tracklisting for their fourth album ‘Angles’.

The album is set to be released on March 21 in the UK and March 22 in the US, with the first single, which does not have a release date yet, set to be ‘Under Cover Of Darkness’.

‘Life Is Simple’ is the only song on ‘Angles’ that survived from sessions the band recorded with producer Joe Chiccarelli early last year. They then decided to record in guitarist Albert Hammond Jr‘s own studio, taking on production duties themselves.

The album will be the New York band’s first since 2006’s ‘First Impressions Of Earth’.

The tracklisting of ‘Angles’ is:

‘Machu Picchu’

‘Under Cover of Darkness’

‘Two Kinds of Happiness’

‘You’re So Right’

‘Taken For A Fool’

‘Games’

‘Call Me Back’

‘Gratisfaction’

‘Metabolism’

‘Life Is Simple In The Moonlight’

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.

Lily Allen featured in Bible studying course

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Lily Allen has backed The Bishop Of Sheffield's calls for people to listen to her song 'The Fear' as part of a Bible study course. The expletive-free version of the song was included in a five-week course aimed at church-goers in the city in preparation for Easter on account of its theme of materia...

Lily Allen has backed The Bishop Of Sheffield‘s calls for people to listen to her song ‘The Fear’ as part of a Bible study course.

The expletive-free version of the song was included in a five-week course aimed at church-goers in the city in preparation for Easter on account of its theme of materialism in contemporary culture, reports BBC News.

Writing on her Twitter page, Twitter.com/lilyroseallen, the singer linked to the story and with the message: “Quite right!”

The Right Reverend Dr Steven Croft, who drew up the course, said that ‘The Fear’ saw Allen capture “something of the spirit of the age”.

The song contains the sarcastically-delivered lyrics: “Life’s about film stars and less about mothers /It’s all about fast cars and cussing each other/But it doesn’t matter cause I’m packing plastic/And that’s what makes my life so fucking fantastic”.

However, Croft advised church-goers not to listen to the expletive-ridden version of the track.

Referencing that version of the song, Croft said: “There is a pretty clear instruction in the book to group leaders to check out the lyrics first and to make sure that they use the version that is played on the radio, not the unexpurgated version.”

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 Third Uncut Playlist Of 2011

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Apologies for the lengthy radio silence: a lot of hassle distracting me from blogs last week, not least the small matter of Uncut upping sticks and relocating to the Ninth Floor of the Blue Fin Building. Amidst all the crates, though, some pretty significant new records have turned up. Take a look at this lot… 1 Tim Hecker – Ravedeath 1972 (Kranky) 2 Primal Scream – Screamadelica: 20th Anniversary Edition (Sony) 3 The Unthanks – Last (EMI) 4 Traffic – John Barleycorn Must Die: Deluxe Edition (Universal) 5 Cornershop Featuring Bubbley Kaur – Cornershop & The Double O Groove Of (Ample Play) 6 Obits – Moody, Standard And Poor (Sub Pop) 7 Wye Oak – Civilian (City Slang) 8 Colin Stetson – New History Warfare Vol 2: Judges (Constellation) 9 Cam Deas – Quadtych (Present Time Exercises) 10 Mystery Record Number One 11 Mystery Record Number Two 12 Wolf People – Steeple (Jagjaguwar) 13 D Charles Speer & The Helix – Leaving The Commonwealth (Thrill Jockey) 14 Various Artists – Let The Good Times Roll (Uncut) 15 White Fence – Is Growing Faith (Woodsist) 16 EMA – The Grey Ship (Souterrain Transmissions) 17 Daughters Of The Sun – Ghost With Chains (Not Not Fun) 18 Hunx And His Punx – Too Young To Be In Love (Hardly Art) 19 Drums Off Chaos & Jens-Uwe Beyer – Magazine 3 (Magazine) 20 Michael Chapman – Trainsong : Guitar Compositions 1967-2010 (Tompkins Square) 21 Panda Bear – Tomboy (Paw Tracks) 22 Derek And The Dominos – Layla And Other Associated Love Songs: Deluxe Edition (Universal) 23 Sebadoh – Bakesale (Domino)

Apologies for the lengthy radio silence: a lot of hassle distracting me from blogs last week, not least the small matter of Uncut upping sticks and relocating to the Ninth Floor of the Blue Fin Building. Amidst all the crates, though, some pretty significant new records have turned up. Take a look at this lot…

The Stone Roses’ Spike Island gig resurrected for new film

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The Stone Roses' 1990 Spike Island gig is set to be the backdrop of a new film written by 24 Hour Party People actor Chris Coghill. Coghill played Happy Mondays dancer Bez in the 2002 film about Manchester bands including Joy Division, New Order and svengali Tony Wilson, and has now scripted a fort...

The Stone Roses‘ 1990 Spike Island gig is set to be the backdrop of a new film written by 24 Hour Party People actor Chris Coghill.

Coghill played Happy Mondays dancer Bez in the 2002 film about Manchester bands including Joy Division, New Order and svengali Tony Wilson, and has now scripted a forthcoming new movie helmed by Misfits writer Tom Green.

The project is currently untitled but will revolve around an unsigned band from a council estate in the northern city, with the 30,000-capacity Merseyside gig by the Roses as the backdrop, reports BBC News.

Green said: “This is a raw and truly authentic rites-of-passage story. It’s full of the humour, heartache, dreams and fears of being part of a brotherhood of mates, and set to the greatest record ever written [The Stone Roses‘ 1989 self-titled debut].”

There are likely to be cameos in the film from the musicians originally involved in the Spike Island gig, which took place on May 27, 1990. Filming starts later this year.

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

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

Arcade Fire confirm London Hyde Park show

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Arcade Fire have confirmed that they will play London's Hyde Park on June 30. The show will be the band's biggest UK headline gig to date – with Mumford And Sons, Beirut and The Vaccines to play support slots. Due to its scheduling the announcement has fuelled rumours that Arcade Fire will also ...

Arcade Fire have confirmed that they will play London‘s Hyde Park on June 30.

The show will be the band’s biggest UK headline gig to date – with Mumford And Sons, Beirut and The Vaccines to play support slots.

Due to its scheduling the announcement has fuelled rumours that Arcade Fire will also be playing at Glastonbury this year.

Glastonbury takes place on June 25-27 – a few days before Arcade Fire‘s London show.

Tickets for the Hyde Park show go on sale on January 28 at 9am (GMT).

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

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

Pete Doherty announces UK and Ireland tour

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Pete Doherty has announced details of a UK and Irish solo tour. The singer, who has not toured since he reformed The Libertines last August, will play 18 dates on the jaunt, kicking off on May 3 at Leamington Spa Assembly Rooms. Pete Doherty will play: Leamington Spa Assembly Rooms (May 3) Leice...

Pete Doherty has announced details of a UK and Irish solo tour.

The singer, who has not toured since he reformed The Libertines last August, will play 18 dates on the jaunt, kicking off on May 3 at Leamington Spa Assembly Rooms.

Pete Doherty will play:

Leamington Spa Assembly Rooms (May 3)

Leicester O2 Academy (4)

Bristol O2 Academy (5)

Oxford O2 Academy (6)

Cambridge Junction (8)

Folkestone Leas Cliff Hall (9)

London O2 Shepherds Bush Empire (10)

Southampton University (11)

Norwich UEA (13)

Brimingham HMV Institute (14)

Liverpool O2 Academy (15)

Newcastle O2 Academy (17)

Manchester O2 Academy (18)

Leeds O2 Academy (19)

Glasgow Barrowlands (20)

Dublin Academy (27)

Derry Nerve Centre (28)

Belfast Mandela Hall (29)

Tickets go on sale this Friday (January 28) at 9am (GMT).

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

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

Bruce Springsteen guests on new Dropkick Murphys album

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Bruce Springsteen guest stars on the forthcoming new album by Dropkick Murphys. The New Jersey rocker duets with frontman Ken Casey on a cover of the 1913 song ‘Peg O' My Heart’, which is best known in the UK as the theme from 1986 BBC TV series The Singing Detective. Casey said of the duet: ...

Bruce Springsteen guest stars on the forthcoming new album by Dropkick Murphys.

The New Jersey rocker duets with frontman Ken Casey on a cover of the 1913 song ‘Peg O’ My Heart’, which is best known in the UK as the theme from 1986 BBC TV series The Singing Detective.

Casey said of the duet: “It links two generations. We’re spanning a lot of years of music here, yet our songs share similar themes, stories, and values.”

The track features on the band’s seventh studio album ‘Going Out In Style’, due for release on February 28. The album also features a guest appearance from NOFX frontman Fat Mike.

Dropkick Murphys will tour Europe in April.

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.

Suede to reissue studio albums

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Suede are releasing remastered versions of their five studio albums in June. The band, who are set to play their first three albums in full across three gigs London's O2 Academy Brixton in May, will include previously-unreleased material and unseen DVD footage on the re-releases. The albums in qu...

Suede are releasing remastered versions of their five studio albums in June.

The band, who are set to play their first three albums in full across three gigs London‘s O2 Academy Brixton in May, will include previously-unreleased material and unseen DVD footage on the re-releases.

The albums in question are 1993’s self-titled debut, its follow up ‘Dog Man Star’, which was released in 1994, 1996’s ‘Coming Up’, 1999’s ‘Head Music’ and ‘A New Morning’, which came out in 2002.

Singer Brett Anderson said: “This is the definitive collection of pretty much everything we released in 14 years together and includes unreleased, never-before-heard oddities and gems which even I’d forgotten about. It’s the complete audio history of a band and it’s flawed, strange and sometimes beautiful.”

A formal release date for the repackaged albums has yet to be confirmed.

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.

John Lennon letters to go on public display

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A collection of John Lennon's letters are to be published next year. Lennon was a prolific letter writer and the collection includes hundreds of letters he wrote throughout his life. The letters were sold by the late Beatle's widow Yoko Ono for a reported fee of over £500,000 and have been bought by London-based publishing house Orion Books. The physical copies of the letters were in the possession of The Beatles biographer Hunter Davies, but the intellectual property rights were owned by Ono - it is these that Orion have bought, reports The Guardian. Alan Samson of Orion Books said: “These letters have never been collected in one place before, and for the most part they have never been seen before." He added that the letters are "full of wonderful drawings. They are funny, sad and very human letters". The collection is scheduled to be published in October 2012. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

A collection of John Lennon‘s letters are to be published next year.

Lennon was a prolific letter writer and the collection includes hundreds of letters he wrote throughout his life.

The letters were sold by the late Beatle‘s widow Yoko Ono for a reported fee of over £500,000 and have been bought by London-based publishing house Orion Books.

The physical copies of the letters were in the possession of The Beatles biographer Hunter Davies, but the intellectual property rights were owned by Ono – it is these that Orion have bought, reports The Guardian.

Alan Samson of Orion Books said: “These letters have never been collected in one place before, and for the most part they have never been seen before.”

He added that the letters are “full of wonderful drawings. They are funny, sad and very human letters”.

The collection is scheduled to be published in October 2012.

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.

BLACK SWAN

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Directed by Darren Aronofsky Starring Natalie Portman, Mila Kunis Darren Aronofsky’s previous film, The Wrestler, explored the lengths a person will push themselves to for their art. It’s a theme he revisits here, exchanging the pro-wrestling for the more rarefied, though no less punishing, m...

Directed by Darren Aronofsky

Starring Natalie Portman, Mila Kunis

Darren Aronofsky’s previous film, The Wrestler, explored the lengths a person will push themselves to for their art.

It’s a theme he revisits here, exchanging the pro-wrestling for the more rarefied, though no less punishing, milieu of ballet dancing.

Nina (Natalie Portman) is the new prima ballerina at a New York company, promoted to dance both the Black and White Swan roles in Swan Lake.

The dainty Nina – who lives at home with her domineering mother (Barbara Hershey) – is perfect for the virginal White Swan, but less equipped to play the seductive Black Swan.

Goaded by Vincent Cassell’s sleazy artistic director to seek out her darker impulses, Nina begins to unravel, pushing the film towards a melodramatic but compelling mix of Repulsion-era Polanski and Cronenberg-style body horror. It’s fairly bonkers stuff, but props to Portman, who’s in every scene – and Winona Ryder, brilliant as the neurotic, toxic former prima ballerina.

Michael Bonner

EDGAR BROUGHTON BAND – THE HARVEST YEARS 1969 – 1973

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Most retrospectives of the late 1960s and early 1970s musical counterculture tend to focus on the gentler side, the pastoral underground that kept the spirit of folk Eden alive. What still remains unfashionably overlooked is the scungier reaction to the hippy idyll: those artists whose refusal to smoke the peace pipe was expressed in a rawer, more desperate form of heavy blues-aftermath rock. Cast as willing outsiders from the start, the likes of Groundhogs, Pink Fairies, and Global Village Trucking Company were slated to play outside the fence, slamming and jamming protests and gurning crudities from the back of a flatbed truck. Mudflecked descendants of Winstanley’s Diggers, arriving in clapped-out vans, to announce the wilting of flower power. Music from a paradise garden turned to mud. The most enduring of these were The Edgar Broughton Band, a righteous, Beefheart-loving brigade formed by Broughton brothers Robert (aka ‘Edgar’) and Steve, with bassist Arthur Grant, in mid-’60s Warwick. With in- again-out-again guitarist Victor Unitt, the outfit delivered a pounding to the Tolkien-tranquilised hordes of UFO and Middle Earth, taking up a strategic position in the Notting Hill scene in ’68, from where they were signed to Blackhill Enterprises and became an early addition to EMI’s ‘alternative’ label, Harvest. This generation of the underground – which effectively lasted until the economic crises of the Heath administration, only to dissipate into the nationwide commune scene and the rugged ordeal of outdoor free festivals – fell into a curious blind spot in UK politics, with general rage against the Man and the Machine, but few specific issues to grapple with. How much more angry energy would’ve been generated had Britain stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the US in Vietnam? As this four-CD set – comprising five LPs plus an unreleased Hyde Park concert from 1970 – reveals, EBB had rage (and humour) in spades. “Death Of An Electric Citizen”, from debut Wasa Wasa, is a Beefheartian romp, as is single “Apache Drop Out”, a curious mix of Safe As Milk boogie and pastiche Shadows. And in channelling their hate into “Out Demons Out!”, the ritual chant of the festival community, taped at a ‘live studio’ concert at Abbey Road in December 1969, they found their vocation. Riffing off The Fugs’ Pentagon-cleansing anthem, “Demons” is goof-off protest folk with a throbbing bluesy vein. Shortly after came the single “Up Yours!”, a V-sign to the political process that today’s student dissenters would be wise to adopt. Sing Brother Sing (1970), full of “songs about child molesters, nymphos and the imminent apocalypse”, according to one review, and The Edgar Broughton Band (1971) were the group’s zenith. Concerts reveal EBB in their element, but surprise subtleties such as the string arrangements and stereo guitar effects on “For Dr Spock” and David Bedfords’s orchestrations on “Evening Over Rooftops” show the group – now back with Unitt – to be more inventive in the studio than their scuzzy image might suggest. “... Rooftops” aspires to epic status, a skyline meditation, uncannily pre-echoing Neil Young’s “Like A Hurricane”, while “The Birth” is lanky and goosey-loose, gritted with hoarse harmonica. For Inside Out (1972), they decamped to a Devonshire mansion. Its remoteness from city life is audible in more laidback, country-ish textures, though “Homes Fit For Heroes” and “Double Agent” still dealt with contemporary issues. Oora (1973) keeps on trucking through triumphalist rock (“Things On My Mind”) and austerity folk-rock (“Eviction”); the end of the Harvest story but not the band, who continue the mission to this day. In this new age of cuts, riots and harsh winters, their music might just start making sense. Rob Young Q+A EDGAR BROUGHTON What are your lasting memories of the Notting Hill scene? I mostly remember the characters and the apparent sense of freedom that pervaded everything. It seemed as if music poured out of every window at times. Why did “Out Demons Out!” need to be written? I was a fan of The Fugs, who presided over a mock exorcism outside the Pentagon USA. We adapted this simple idea to focus the frustration of our audience against the things they despised. Much later it took on a life of its own. More recently, it was an expression of political frustration and also tribal unity. There is a humour present in the recordings that was very much a part of our tongue-in-cheek approach to things. It was fun, and looking back I think it proved to be one of the few occasions when the live Edgar Broughton Band was successfully captured on tape. What have you been up to? I’ve always been involved in political action. This year I’m playing a series of solo shows called ‘A Fair Day’s Pay For A Fair Day’s Work’. I play peoples’ private events for a day of their wages – a practical, socialistic exercise. I have 14 dates booked so far. People can book me directly through my website, edgarbroughton.com. I will be involved with the political action that will grow against this nightmare coalition. INTERVIEW: ROB YOUNG

Most retrospectives of the late 1960s and early 1970s musical counterculture tend to focus on the gentler side, the pastoral underground that kept the spirit of folk Eden alive. What still remains unfashionably overlooked is the scungier reaction to the hippy idyll: those artists whose refusal to smoke the peace pipe was expressed in a rawer, more desperate form of heavy blues-aftermath rock.

Cast as willing outsiders from the start, the likes of Groundhogs, Pink Fairies, and Global Village Trucking Company were slated to play outside the fence, slamming and jamming protests and gurning crudities from the back of a flatbed truck. Mudflecked descendants of Winstanley’s Diggers, arriving in clapped-out vans, to announce the wilting of flower power. Music from a paradise garden turned to mud.

The most enduring of these were The Edgar Broughton Band, a righteous, Beefheart-loving brigade formed by Broughton brothers Robert (aka ‘Edgar’) and Steve, with bassist Arthur Grant, in mid-’60s Warwick. With in- again-out-again guitarist Victor Unitt, the outfit delivered a pounding to the Tolkien-tranquilised hordes of UFO and Middle Earth, taking up a strategic position in the Notting Hill scene in ’68, from where they were signed to Blackhill Enterprises and became an early addition to EMI’s ‘alternative’ label, Harvest.

This generation of the underground – which effectively lasted until the economic crises of the Heath administration, only to dissipate into the nationwide commune scene and the rugged ordeal of outdoor free festivals – fell into a curious blind spot in UK politics, with general rage against the Man and the Machine, but few specific issues to grapple with. How much more angry energy would’ve been generated had Britain stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the US in Vietnam?

As this four-CD set – comprising five LPs plus an unreleased Hyde Park concert from 1970 – reveals, EBB had rage (and humour) in spades. “Death Of An Electric Citizen”, from debut Wasa Wasa, is a Beefheartian romp, as is single “Apache Drop Out”, a curious mix of Safe As Milk boogie and pastiche Shadows. And in channelling their hate into “Out Demons Out!”, the ritual chant of the festival community, taped at a ‘live studio’ concert at Abbey Road in December 1969, they found their vocation. Riffing off The Fugs’ Pentagon-cleansing anthem, “Demons” is goof-off protest folk with a throbbing bluesy vein. Shortly after came the single “Up Yours!”, a V-sign to the political process that today’s student dissenters would be wise to adopt.

Sing Brother Sing (1970), full of “songs about child molesters, nymphos and the imminent apocalypse”, according to one review, and The Edgar Broughton Band (1971) were the group’s zenith. Concerts reveal EBB in their element, but surprise subtleties such as the string arrangements and stereo guitar effects on “For Dr Spock” and David Bedfords’s orchestrations on “Evening Over Rooftops” show the group – now back with Unitt – to be more inventive in the studio than their scuzzy image might suggest. “… Rooftops” aspires to epic status, a skyline meditation, uncannily pre-echoing Neil Young’s “Like A Hurricane”, while “The Birth” is lanky and goosey-loose, gritted with hoarse harmonica.

For Inside Out (1972), they decamped to a Devonshire mansion. Its remoteness from city life is audible in more laidback, country-ish textures, though “Homes Fit For Heroes” and “Double Agent” still dealt with contemporary issues. Oora (1973) keeps on trucking through triumphalist rock (“Things On My Mind”) and austerity folk-rock (“Eviction”); the end of the Harvest story but not the band, who continue the mission to this day. In this new age of cuts, riots and harsh winters, their music might just start making sense.

Rob Young

Q+A EDGAR BROUGHTON

What are your lasting memories of the Notting Hill scene?

I mostly remember the characters and the apparent sense of freedom that pervaded everything. It seemed as if music poured out of every window at times.

Why did “Out Demons Out!” need to be written?

I was a fan of The Fugs, who presided over a mock exorcism outside the Pentagon USA. We adapted this simple idea to focus the frustration of our audience against the things they despised. Much later it took on a life of its own. More recently, it was an expression of political frustration and also tribal unity. There is a humour present in the recordings that was very much a part of our tongue-in-cheek approach to things. It was fun, and looking back I think it proved to be one of the few occasions when the live Edgar Broughton Band was successfully captured on tape.

What have you been up to?

I’ve always been involved in political action. This year I’m playing a series of solo shows called ‘A Fair Day’s Pay For A Fair Day’s Work’. I play peoples’ private events for a day of their wages – a practical, socialistic exercise. I have 14 dates booked so far. People can book me directly through my website, edgarbroughton.com. I will be involved with the political action that will grow against this nightmare coalition.

INTERVIEW: ROB YOUNG

JOAN AS POLICEWOMAN – THE DEEP FIELD

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Beauty comes in many guises. On 2006’s Real Life, Joan Wasser’s first album as Joan As Police Woman, it arrived as a fractured, fragile thing, dispensed via pensive piano pieces and a voice that spoke of a life spent on the edge of some vertiginous emotional precipice. Already 36, Wasser was one of those intriguing NYC art-music propositions: classically trained, she was a protégée of Rufus Wainwright and Antony Hegarty who had collaborated with Lou Reed and had also been Jeff Buckley’s lover at the time of his death in 1997. Buckley wrote the slinky “Everybody Here Wants You” as a hymn to Wasser’s magnetism, and listening to Real Life it wasn’t hard to understand why. The beauty in evidence on follow-up To Survive (2008) was sparkier, more diverse. While the emotional centre remained spectral torch songs like “To Be Lonely”, elsewhere Wasser edged towards a funkier, fuller sound. A further hint of changing priorities came last year with the limited-release stop-gap album Cover, where she tackled songs by everyone from Public Enemy to Adam Ant, suggesting she had outgrown her previous parameters. The Deep Field turns that suggestion into fact. There is beauty aplenty in these 10 songs, but anyone yearning for the delicious ache of old will find it only fleetingly. It’s there on the sparse, almost tribal rhythms of “Flash”, which stretches out hypnotically over eight minutes, and most obviously on “Forever And A Year”, a beautiful ballad which Wasser sings like Eurydice at the gates of Hades. Though it’s where we find the album’s title phrase, referencing one of the universe’s furthest flung galaxies, “Forever And A Year”’s ravishing melancholy turns out to be anomalous. Instead, The Deep Field attempts to articulate the beauty of happiness, a trickier concept to convey than sorrow. Wasser has always been in thrall to ’70s soul, but The Deep Field goes in with both feet. It’s a fully fledged attempt to capture the cosmic mixture of funky fun, lush production values and sonic adventurousness heard on Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On, Sly Stone’s Fresh and Stevie Wonder’s Fulfillingness’ First Finale, with a touch of Funkadelic to taste. Odd, layered harmonies break into the mix and then swiftly depart; analog synths squelch; songs wander off into unexpected corners and then zip back to nail a killer chorus. When it all clicks it’s deliriously good. “The Action Man” is rapturously melodic, climbing to a slow fade of warm brass, low strings and blended voices which suggest that all four Stylistics are hiding in the headphones. “Kiss The Specifics” must surely have fallen off the end of Al Green Is Love, while “Chemmie” is Wasser making like post-Supremes Diana Ross and letting biology do all the heavy lifting: “It’s elemental, a force of nature”. This turns out to be a lyrical manifesto for the entire album – stop thinking, start feeling, trust your instincts and keep moving. On “The Magic”, Wasser is looking for “the right way out of my mind”, a question which might seem more profound if the song didn’t sound like Flight Of The Conchords’ “Mutha Uckas”. Even when The Deep Field doesn’t quite work it remains compelling. “Nervous”, a proggy-soul broth with Moog synths and a bit of Bowie thrown into the pot, meanders around trying to work out exactly what it is before stumbling upon a gloriously uplifting chorus. “Human Condition” is strange soul muzak, on which regular vocal foil Joseph Arthur unveils his karaoke Barry White, Wasser comes on like late period Joni Mitchell, and cheesy bass honks over maddening chord changes. It’s intriguing, but you might not want to live there. The Deep Field fearlessly maps out new territory for Wasser without ever quite allaying the suspicion that she’s playing against her more obvious strengths. But that’s the thing about taking a leap forward. It’s almost inevitable that something precious will get left behind. Graham Thomson Q+A Joan Wasser How conscious was the decision to change tack with this album? To Survive felt too heavy, I wasn’t liking some of the vibes, so I did the Cover record to get out of my own boring head. I felt that liking only half the songs on To Survive wasn’t a good enough percentage, so I changed things. I’m sure people do expect something from a new Joan As Police Woman record, but I hope I’ve written music broad enough in the past that there’s space for whatever this record is. It feels the most like me, because it is. You sound much more upbeat. Why? I’ve come out of a really difficult period and I feel a lot happier. I’m sorry if that upsets anyone! I refuse to be in this wonderful life and be miserable. The soul influences have always been there but they’re much more overt this time. I always return to soul music, I listen to it a lot. When I started writing music I felt I wasn’t really worthy or capable of writing the kind of music I really wanted to listen to, but I allowed myself to do that more this time. It’s my favourite stuff, the ’70s soul stuff. That music has carried me through a lot. INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Beauty comes in many guises. On 2006’s Real Life, Joan Wasser’s first album as Joan As Police Woman, it arrived as a fractured, fragile thing, dispensed via pensive piano pieces and a voice that spoke of a life spent on the edge of some vertiginous emotional precipice. Already 36, Wasser was one of those intriguing NYC art-music propositions: classically trained, she was a protégée of Rufus Wainwright and Antony Hegarty who had collaborated with Lou Reed and had also been Jeff Buckley’s lover at the time of his death in 1997. Buckley wrote the slinky “Everybody Here Wants You” as a hymn to Wasser’s magnetism, and listening to Real Life it wasn’t hard to understand why.

The beauty in evidence on follow-up To Survive (2008) was sparkier, more diverse. While the emotional centre remained spectral torch songs like “To Be Lonely”, elsewhere Wasser edged towards a funkier, fuller sound. A further hint of changing priorities came last year with the limited-release stop-gap album Cover, where she tackled songs by everyone from Public Enemy to Adam Ant, suggesting she had outgrown her previous parameters.

The Deep Field turns that suggestion into fact. There is beauty aplenty in these 10 songs, but anyone yearning for the delicious ache of old will find it only fleetingly. It’s there on the sparse, almost tribal rhythms of “Flash”, which stretches out hypnotically over eight minutes, and most obviously on “Forever And A Year”, a beautiful ballad which Wasser sings like Eurydice at the gates of Hades. Though it’s where we find the album’s title phrase, referencing one of the universe’s furthest flung galaxies, “Forever And A Year”’s ravishing melancholy turns out to be anomalous. Instead, The Deep Field attempts to articulate the beauty of happiness, a trickier concept to convey than sorrow.

Wasser has always been in thrall to ’70s soul, but The Deep Field goes in with both feet. It’s a fully fledged attempt to capture the cosmic mixture of funky fun, lush production values and sonic adventurousness heard on Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On, Sly Stone’s Fresh and Stevie Wonder’s Fulfillingness’ First Finale, with a touch of Funkadelic to taste. Odd, layered harmonies break into the mix and then swiftly depart; analog synths squelch; songs wander off into unexpected corners and then zip back to nail a killer chorus.

When it all clicks it’s deliriously good. “The Action Man” is rapturously melodic, climbing to a slow fade of warm brass, low strings and blended voices which suggest that all four Stylistics are hiding in the headphones. “Kiss The Specifics” must surely have fallen off the end of Al Green Is Love, while “Chemmie” is Wasser making like post-Supremes Diana Ross and letting biology do all the heavy lifting: “It’s elemental, a force of nature”.

This turns out to be a lyrical manifesto for the entire album – stop thinking, start feeling, trust your instincts and keep moving. On “The Magic”, Wasser is looking for “the right way out of my mind”, a question which might seem more profound if the song didn’t sound like Flight Of The Conchords’ “Mutha Uckas”.

Even when The Deep Field doesn’t quite work it remains compelling. “Nervous”, a proggy-soul broth with Moog synths and a bit of Bowie thrown into the pot, meanders around trying to work out exactly what it is before stumbling upon a gloriously uplifting chorus. “Human Condition” is strange soul muzak, on which regular vocal foil Joseph Arthur unveils his karaoke Barry White, Wasser comes on like late period Joni Mitchell, and cheesy bass honks over maddening chord changes.

It’s intriguing, but you might not want to live there. The Deep Field fearlessly maps out new territory for Wasser without ever quite allaying the suspicion that she’s playing against her more obvious strengths. But that’s the thing about taking a leap forward. It’s almost inevitable that something precious will get left behind.

Graham Thomson

Q+A Joan Wasser

How conscious was the decision to change tack with this album?

To Survive felt too heavy, I wasn’t liking some of the vibes, so I did the Cover record to get out of my own boring head. I felt that liking only half the songs on To Survive wasn’t a good enough percentage, so I changed things. I’m sure people do expect something from a new Joan As Police Woman record, but I hope I’ve written music broad enough in the past that there’s space for whatever this record is. It feels the most like me, because it is.

You sound much more upbeat. Why?

I’ve come out of a really difficult period and I feel a lot happier. I’m sorry if that upsets anyone! I refuse to be in this wonderful life and be miserable.

The soul influences have always been there but they’re much more overt this time.

I always return to soul music, I listen to it a lot. When I started writing music I felt I wasn’t really worthy or capable of writing the kind of music I really wanted to listen to, but I allowed myself to do that more this time. It’s my favourite stuff, the ’70s soul stuff. That music has carried me through a lot.

INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON