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The Charlatans drummer Jon Brookes returns to action following brain tumour

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The Charlatans' drummer Jon Brookes has played with the band for the first time since being diagnosed with and treated for a brain tumour in September. The drummer collapsed while onstage with the band in Philadelphia, and has been receiving treatment in the UK since then. On Saturday (October 23),...

The Charlatans‘ drummer Jon Brookes has played with the band for the first time since being diagnosed with and treated for a brain tumour in September.

The drummer collapsed while onstage with the band in Philadelphia, and has been receiving treatment in the UK since then. On Saturday (October 23), he played during the encore of The Charlatans‘ set at the O2 Academy Birmingham.

Writing on Thecharlatans.net after the gig, Brookes admitted that he was feeling nervous ahead of the show.

“A huge feeling of goodwill came head-on towards me as over 2,000 Charlatans fans let me know that I was welcome back onstage,” he wrote.

He added: “I took the deepest breath and tried to let it flow. I hope it sounded OK, but to be honest I have no real measure, it was like I would imagine doing the 100 metres in the Olympic games would feel like! But please let me say thanks again to the Academy crowd for a top night!”

Brookes said that although he “won’t be doing much travelling this side of Christmas” he is “feeling strong and positive”.

The Verve‘s Pete Salisbury has been filling in for Brookes at The Charlatans‘ gigs while he is out of action.

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.

Jimmy Page’s £495 autobiography sells out

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A limited edition photographic autobiography from the Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page has sold out - despite not being officially released yet. 'Jimmy Page By Jimmy Page' – which cost £495 – is 512 pages long and features over 650 images of Page from throughout his career. It sold out through pre-orders. The hefty book is bound in leather and wrapped in silk and was compiled by Page himself, who also wrote the text. A selection of pictures from the book, taken by photographers such as Kate Simon, Neal Preston, Ross Halfin and Pennie Smith will be on display on November 5-6 at Elms Lester Painting Rooms in Covent Garden, London. 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 limited edition photographic autobiography from the Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page has sold out – despite not being officially released yet.

‘Jimmy Page By Jimmy Page’ – which cost £495 – is 512 pages long and features over 650 images of Page from throughout his career. It sold out through pre-orders.

The hefty book is bound in leather and wrapped in silk and was compiled by Page himself, who also wrote the text.

A selection of pictures from the book, taken by photographers such as Kate Simon, Neal Preston, Ross Halfin and Pennie Smith will be on display on November 5-6 at Elms Lester Painting Rooms in Covent Garden, London.

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 ARBOR

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Directed by Clio Barnard Starring Manjinder Virk, Christine Bottomley Andrea Dunbar was a success story of modern British drama – and one of its tragedies. Best known to film audiences as writer of Alan Clarke’s Rita, Sue And Bob Too! (1986), Dunbar grew up on an impoverished Bradford estate ...

Directed by Clio Barnard

Starring Manjinder Virk, Christine Bottomley

Andrea Dunbar was a success story of modern British drama – and one of its tragedies.

Best known to film audiences as writer of Alan Clarke’s Rita, Sue And Bob Too! (1986), Dunbar grew up on an impoverished Bradford estate and established herself, through the Royal Court, as a vital voice of working-class Britain.

However, she died at 29, after a drink-related decline.

Shot on the Bradford estate where she lived, Clio Barnard’s film documents its subject’s life and career, but beyond that, it paints a portrait of a family, a community and a harsh period of modern British history.

Named after Dunbar’s first play and her old street, The Arbor is as much imaginative essay as documentary, with actors lip-synching to the voices of real people – among them, the writer’s daughter, Lorraine.

The effect, distractingly artificial at first, serves to make this distressing story all the more immediate. Revealing, moving and entirely individual.

Jonathan Romney

SUFJAN STEVENS – THE GENIUS OF ADZ

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If you’re hoping to hear the next instalment of Sufjan Stevens’s “50 States Project” – his homage to Rhode Island, perhaps, with songs about the flooding of Scituate and the Gaspée Affair – then you may be waiting a long time. Stevens recently admitted that his pledge to record an album dedicated to every State in the Union was merely a promotional gimmick, although in the light of his erratic output since Illinois – Uncut’s second-best album of the year, 2005 – you kinda wish he’d stuck with the programme. Certainly Rhode Island, or even North Dakota, would have been preferable to The BQE, his multimedia paean to a Brooklyn flyover, or yet another volume of Christmas songs. Music For Insomnia, an album of ambient frittering recorded with his stepdad, at least made good on its promise to lull listeners to sleep. Last month, Stevens suddenly announced he was streaming a new – hour-long! – EP via his Bandcamp page, yet All Delighted People did little to dispel the impression that here was a major artist struggling to regain his focus. It certainly had its moments of trademark Sufjan sublimity, but these were overshadowed by two versions of the rococo title track and a moving ode to his little sister that could only be reached via a petulant ten-minute guitar solo. Now at last comes the official follow-up to Illinois, although it makes All Delighted People feel like a triumph of brevity and restraint. The concept, unusually for Stevens, is that there is no concept. Aside from the title track, which was inspired the apocalyptic collages of schizophrenic folk artist Royal Robertson, this is Stevens writing from the heart. Gone are the Biblical allusions and potted local histories, replaced by meditations on love, sex, ageing and regret, and a fairly brutal excavation of his own neuroses. The downside of Stevens’ inward journey is that it seems to have eroded his confidence, leading to a maddening tendency to sabotage his best tunes. “Futile Devices” is a deceptively sweet and sparing opener, but it’s followed by the (aptly-titled) “Too Much” – the first of several ostensibly pretty songs to be sunk by a tsunami of electronic glitches and orchestral over-indulgence. “I Want To Be Well” does a pretty good job of conveying the mental trauma Stevens suffered during a recent bout of debilitating depression, which is to say it’s virtually unlistenable. Rather than use synthetic beats to lend his music muscle and drive, Stevens treats his drum machines like toys, programming them full of antsy, ungroovy rhythms. Initially, he’d planned to avoid using any live instruments on the record whatsoever, but instead an unhappy compromise has been brokered. Strings, horns, harps and choirs are sliced and diced on the computer, Stevens acting the mad conductor as he triggers torrents of queasy glissando with a click of his mouse. Yet when he calls off the artillery, The Age Of Adz can be stunning. Final track “Impossible Soul”, encapsulates everything that is brilliant and exasperating about this album (and, arguably, Stevens’s career as a whole). Over the course of its 25 astonishing minutes, it evokes in turn Lennon’s Double Fantasy, Radiohead’s In Rainbows, Ne-Yo, Bon Iver, Matmos, and The Langley Schools Music Project version of “I’m Into Something Good”. Stevens begins the track in a loved-up rapture, before gradually picking apart the whole business of love and finally batting his eyelids furiously at anyone in sight. “Girl, I want nothing less than pleasure,” he purrs, as the song-suite flutters toward a dreamy conclusion. “Boy, we made such a mess together…” Hang on, “boy” as in a boy, or “boy” as in American for blimey? At last, Stevens sounds like he’s having fun. Despite much speculation, he’s never come out as either gay or straight, so the matter remains tantalisingly unresolved. As indeed does the question about whether he is one of the most important songwriters of his generation or just an infuriating, neurotic show-off. This album provides plenty of evidence for both arguments. Sam Richards Q+A Who is Royal Robertson and how did he influence the album? He was a Louisiana-based sign-maker and self-proclaimed prophet who suffered from schizophrenia and created weird art that was inspired by his prophetic visions. A lot of his art is centered around spaceships, the Apocalypse, alien monsters and a pantheon of cosmic characters. These songs are preoccupied with primal things – love, heartache, wellness, sexual desire, loneliness, basic needs. But, like Royal, they have this cosmic veneer, this obsession with vast abstractions of the universe. It’s a big hodgepodge. Why did you choose to write this album from a more personal perspective? Everything I write is personal. I don’t think this album is any more or less personal. I would call it more primal, more rudimentary. Maybe it feels more so because I finally I let go of all the conceptual outfits. I guess I got tired of the whole literary narrative approach. It seemed time to narrow the content and focus more on impulse, on instinct. That’s what everyone else is doing, singing about love and sex, letting it all hang out. Why can’t I? You’re quite hard on yourself in the lyrics… I’ve become more and more suspicious of my own motivations. I used to believe in some kind of redemption, but I’ve been abused too many times to invest confidence in anyone, especially myself. I’d rather not dwell on self-deprecating anthems, but these songs have got the best of my insecurities. INTERVIEW: SAM RICHARDS

If you’re hoping to hear the next instalment of Sufjan Stevens’s “50 States Project” – his homage to Rhode Island, perhaps, with songs about the flooding of Scituate and the Gaspée Affair – then you may be waiting a long time. Stevens recently admitted that his pledge to record an album dedicated to every State in the Union was merely a promotional gimmick, although in the light of his erratic output since Illinois – Uncut’s second-best album of the year, 2005 – you kinda wish he’d stuck with the programme.

Certainly Rhode Island, or even North Dakota, would have been preferable to The BQE, his multimedia paean to a Brooklyn flyover, or yet another volume of Christmas songs. Music For Insomnia, an album of ambient frittering recorded with his stepdad, at least made good on its promise to lull listeners to sleep.

Last month, Stevens suddenly announced he was streaming a new – hour-long! – EP via his Bandcamp page, yet All Delighted People did little to dispel the impression that here was a major artist struggling to regain his focus. It certainly had its moments of trademark Sufjan sublimity, but these were overshadowed by two versions of the rococo title track and a moving ode to his little sister that could only be reached via a petulant ten-minute guitar solo. Now at last comes the official follow-up to Illinois, although it makes All Delighted People feel like a triumph of brevity and restraint.

The concept, unusually for Stevens, is that there is no concept. Aside from the title track, which was inspired the apocalyptic collages of schizophrenic folk artist Royal Robertson, this is Stevens writing from the heart. Gone are the Biblical allusions and potted local histories, replaced by meditations on love, sex, ageing and regret, and a fairly brutal excavation of his own neuroses.

The downside of Stevens’ inward journey is that it seems to have eroded his confidence, leading to a maddening tendency to sabotage his best tunes. “Futile Devices” is a deceptively sweet and sparing opener, but it’s followed by the (aptly-titled) “Too Much” – the first of several ostensibly pretty songs to be sunk by a tsunami of electronic glitches and orchestral over-indulgence. “I Want To Be Well” does a pretty good job of conveying the mental trauma Stevens suffered during a recent bout of debilitating depression, which is to say it’s virtually unlistenable.

Rather than use synthetic beats to lend his music muscle and drive, Stevens treats his drum machines like toys, programming them full of antsy, ungroovy rhythms. Initially, he’d planned to avoid using any live instruments on the record whatsoever, but instead an unhappy compromise has been brokered. Strings, horns, harps and choirs are sliced and diced on the computer, Stevens acting the mad conductor as he triggers torrents of queasy glissando with a click of his mouse.

Yet when he calls off the artillery, The Age Of Adz can be stunning. Final track “Impossible Soul”, encapsulates everything that is brilliant and exasperating about this album (and, arguably, Stevens’s career as a whole). Over the course of its 25 astonishing minutes, it evokes in turn Lennon’s Double Fantasy, Radiohead’s In Rainbows, Ne-Yo, Bon Iver, Matmos, and The Langley Schools Music Project version of “I’m Into Something Good”.

Stevens begins the track in a loved-up rapture, before gradually picking apart the whole business of love and finally batting his eyelids furiously at anyone in sight. “Girl, I want nothing less than pleasure,” he purrs, as the song-suite flutters toward a dreamy conclusion. “Boy, we made such a mess together…” Hang on, “boy” as in a boy, or “boy” as in American for blimey? At last, Stevens sounds like he’s having fun. Despite much speculation, he’s never come out as either gay or straight, so the matter remains tantalisingly unresolved.

As indeed does the question about whether he is one of the most important songwriters of his generation or just an infuriating, neurotic show-off. This album provides plenty of evidence for both arguments.

Sam Richards

Q+A

Who is Royal Robertson and how did he influence the album?

He was a Louisiana-based sign-maker and self-proclaimed prophet who suffered from schizophrenia and created weird art that was inspired by his prophetic visions. A lot of his art is centered around spaceships, the Apocalypse, alien monsters and a pantheon of cosmic characters. These songs are preoccupied with primal things – love, heartache, wellness, sexual desire, loneliness, basic needs. But, like Royal, they have this cosmic veneer, this obsession with vast abstractions of the universe. It’s a big hodgepodge.

Why did you choose to write this album from a more personal perspective?

Everything I write is personal. I don’t think this album is any more or less personal. I would call it more primal, more rudimentary. Maybe it feels more so because I finally I let go of all the conceptual outfits. I guess I got tired of the whole literary narrative approach. It seemed time to narrow the content and focus more on impulse, on instinct. That’s what everyone else is doing, singing about love and sex, letting it all hang out. Why can’t I?

You’re quite hard on yourself in the lyrics…

I’ve become more and more suspicious of my own motivations. I used to believe in some kind of redemption, but I’ve been abused too many times to invest confidence in anyone, especially myself. I’d rather not dwell on self-deprecating anthems, but these songs have got the best of my insecurities.

INTERVIEW: SAM RICHARDS

ELTON JOHN AND LEON RUSSELL – THE UNION

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In the mid-’60s, while the teenage piano player Reg Dwight was breaking into showbiz, Leon Russell was building his rep as a top-flight LA session man and a key member of the legendary Wrecking Crew. The transplanted Oklahoman was also the ringleader of LA’s Southern mafia, a talented, hard-living posse of musicians that included Delaney and Bonnie Bramlett, Gram Parsons, Dr John and fellow Tulsa natives JJ Cale, Jim Keltner and Chuck Blackwell, intermittently infiltrated by honorary shitkickers George Harrison, Eric Clapton, Keith Richards and Mick Jagger. One night in August 1970, soon after he’d completed his job as the musical director of Joe Cocker’s Mad Dogs & Englishmen, Russell was among the curious folks packed into the Troubadour on Santa Monica Boulevard to check out a much-hyped young Brit, now renamed Elton John. Russell was impressed, and the feeling was mutual. “I copied Leon Russell, and that was it,” Elton admitted in 1971. Russell’s influence is readily apparent on rollicking uptempo songs like “Take Me To The Pilot”, “Amoreena” and “Honky Cat”. And when Elton broke in America it was with “Your Song”, the kissin’ cousin of Russell’s exquisite love ballad, “A Song For You”. All of that makes The Union, Elton’s heartfelt, T Bone Burnett-curated attempt to give Russell his due, a matter of payback as well as a tribute. Not surprisingly, Elton and lyricist Bernie Taupin, with Russell frequently alongside them, chose to revisit the rustic terrain of Tumbleweed Connection, and their romantically imagined America locks in seamlessly with the 68-year-old Russell’s deep grounding in the real thing. A number of these freshly minted tunes would have fitted comfortably onto any of Elton’s early-’70s classics or Russell’s self-titled 1971 debut album, while the culminating “Never Too Old (To Hold Somebody)” and “The Hand Of Angels” reflect back on those days with a mix of “been there, done that” satisfaction and valedictory nostalgia. The material is designed to showcase the principals’ piano playing, and skilled engineer Mike Piersante has set up the mic’ing and mix by putting Russell’s piano on one side of the stereo spectrum, Elton’s on the other, making the record a particular kick under headphones. Some of these cuts, including the adrenalised “Monkey Suit”, were built on top of basic tracks containing only Russell and Elton’s pianos, played perfectly in sync with each other. “No one uses two pianos on a record anymore, since Phil Spector, probably,” Elton noted. More often than not during its 63-minute length, The Union sounds like an Elton John album, thanks to his signature melodies enwrapping Taupin’s image-filled lyrics, his still-powerful voice and undiminished presence. Only through repeated listenings does Russell’s Hoagy Carmichael-like lazy drawl assert itself, as he sings with disarming poignancy and tenderness, his always-grainy voice now as rutted as a dirt road. (Russell, it should be noted, underwent brain surgery shortly before the sessions began.) For Burnett, who obsessively pursues aural authenticity, this expansive project – with its gospel choir, brass section and an all-star cast including Booker T Jones on Hammond organ and Robert Randolph on pedal steel, along with the producer’s own wrecking crew – is the antithesis of his monophonic, single-mic recording of John Mellencamp’s recent No Better Than This. The arrangements come closer to excess than any of Burnett’s recent productions – perilously close at times. There’s an over-abundance of ballads, some of which feel more ponderous than reflective, and wall-to-wall choral carpeting thickens passages that call out for spare, close-mic’ed intimacy. But these missteps are counter-balanced by the galloping rock’n’boogie of “Hey Ahab”, “A Dream Come True”, “Monkey Suit”, “Hearts Have Turned To Stone” and the elegiac resonance of “Jimmie Rodgers’ Dream”. The most captivating slow-tempoed song is Taupin’s Civil War fable “Gone To Shiloh”, which plays out as a brass-encrusted New Orleans funeral march. Russell takes the first verse and Elton the third, bookending an appearance by Neil Young in a spine-tingling cameo. The pomp of the arrangement almost befits a Broadway production number, and yet its sheer gut impact is immense. If “Gone To Shiloh” isn’t the sort of track you’d go to on a regular basis, it seems tailor-made for special occasions. And that’s perfectly fitting, as this gathering of old-timers with something still to say, if not to prove, seems special indeed. Bud Scoppa

In the mid-’60s, while the teenage piano player Reg Dwight was breaking into showbiz, Leon Russell was building his rep as a top-flight LA session man and a key member of the legendary Wrecking Crew.

The transplanted Oklahoman was also the ringleader of LA’s Southern mafia, a talented, hard-living posse of musicians that included Delaney and Bonnie Bramlett, Gram Parsons, Dr John and fellow Tulsa natives JJ Cale, Jim Keltner and Chuck Blackwell, intermittently infiltrated by honorary shitkickers George Harrison, Eric Clapton, Keith Richards and Mick Jagger.

One night in August 1970, soon after he’d completed his job as the musical director of Joe Cocker’s Mad Dogs & Englishmen, Russell was among the curious folks packed into the Troubadour on Santa Monica Boulevard to check out a much-hyped young Brit, now renamed Elton John. Russell was impressed, and the feeling was mutual. “I copied Leon Russell, and that was it,” Elton admitted in 1971. Russell’s influence is readily apparent on rollicking uptempo songs like “Take Me To The Pilot”, “Amoreena” and “Honky Cat”. And when Elton broke in America it was with “Your Song”, the kissin’ cousin of Russell’s exquisite love ballad, “A Song For You”.

All of that makes The Union, Elton’s heartfelt, T Bone Burnett-curated attempt to give Russell his due, a matter of payback as well as a tribute. Not surprisingly, Elton and lyricist Bernie Taupin, with Russell frequently alongside them, chose to revisit the rustic terrain of Tumbleweed Connection, and their romantically imagined America locks in seamlessly with the 68-year-old Russell’s deep grounding in the real thing. A number of these freshly minted tunes would have fitted comfortably onto any of Elton’s early-’70s classics or Russell’s self-titled 1971 debut album, while the culminating “Never Too Old (To Hold Somebody)” and “The Hand Of Angels” reflect back on those days with a mix of “been there, done that” satisfaction and valedictory nostalgia.

The material is designed to showcase the principals’ piano playing, and skilled engineer Mike Piersante has set up the mic’ing and mix by putting Russell’s piano on one side of the stereo spectrum, Elton’s on the other, making the record a particular kick under headphones. Some of these cuts, including the adrenalised “Monkey Suit”, were built on top of basic tracks containing only Russell and Elton’s pianos, played perfectly in sync with each other. “No one uses two pianos on a record anymore, since Phil Spector, probably,” Elton noted.

More often than not during its 63-minute length, The Union sounds like an Elton John album, thanks to his signature melodies enwrapping Taupin’s image-filled lyrics, his still-powerful voice and undiminished presence. Only through repeated listenings does Russell’s Hoagy Carmichael-like lazy drawl assert itself, as he sings with disarming poignancy and tenderness, his always-grainy voice now as rutted as a dirt road. (Russell, it should be noted, underwent brain surgery shortly before the sessions began.)

For Burnett, who obsessively pursues aural authenticity, this expansive project – with its gospel choir, brass section and an all-star cast including Booker T Jones on Hammond organ and Robert Randolph on pedal steel, along with the producer’s own wrecking crew – is the antithesis of his monophonic, single-mic recording of John Mellencamp’s recent No Better Than This. The arrangements come closer to excess than any of Burnett’s recent productions – perilously close at times. There’s an over-abundance of ballads, some of which feel more ponderous than reflective, and wall-to-wall choral carpeting thickens passages that call out for spare, close-mic’ed intimacy. But these missteps are counter-balanced by the galloping rock’n’boogie of “Hey Ahab”, “A Dream Come True”, “Monkey Suit”, “Hearts Have Turned To Stone” and the elegiac resonance of “Jimmie Rodgers’ Dream”.

The most captivating slow-tempoed song is Taupin’s Civil War fable “Gone To Shiloh”, which plays out as a brass-encrusted New Orleans funeral march. Russell takes the first verse and Elton the third, bookending an appearance by Neil Young in a spine-tingling cameo. The pomp of the arrangement almost befits a Broadway production number, and yet its sheer gut impact is immense. If “Gone To Shiloh” isn’t the sort of track you’d go to on a regular basis, it seems tailor-made for special occasions. And that’s perfectly fitting, as this gathering of old-timers with something still to say, if not to prove, seems special indeed.

Bud Scoppa

BRYAN FERRY – OLYMPIA

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“Take me on a rollercoaster / Take me on an airplane ride...” From the start Bryan Ferry was bewitched by the exotic glamour of pop, its promise of some fabulous elsewhere, “far beyond the pale horizon, some place near the desert strand”. But if he once conjured with the contradictions of dream homes and heartaches, in later years he seemed to elide the difference between the real and make-believe and take refuge in misty never-neverlands: Avalon, Mamouna, the Hollywood Casablanca of “As Time Goes By”. On the face of it Olympia might be the latest station on this wistful tour: vaguely redolent of deco movie palaces or even a Leni Riefenstahl-style propaganda spectacle. Until you realise that it’s likely a more prosaic reference to the West Kensington neighbourhood, all exhibition halls and office blocks, where you find Ferry’s studio. And indeed rather than some great departure, Ferry’s first album of original material since 2002’s Frantic sticks pretty close to home. Neurotically so: just like Frantic, Olympia draws heavily on material originally recorded back in 1996 with Dave Stewart (conspicuously absent from the stellar list of names – Scissor Sisters, Eno, Nile Rodgers, Jonny Greenwood, David Gilmour – highlighted in the advance publicity). At least three tracks here – “You Can Dance”, “Alphaville”, and the closing “Tender Is the Night” – date from those sessions, while the Scissor Sisters collaboration, the coyly titled “Heartache By Numbers”, was apparently recorded over five years ago. And yet Olympia was trailed with such promise. First DJ Hell had stripped down “You Can Dance” to a chilly techno pulse, recasting Ferry as the vampiric crooner we once knew from Roxy tracks like “Ladytron”. Then Groove Armada hit upon one of their seemingly random moments of genius, cutting up Ferry with Truffaut and reworking “Shameless” into a brooding electraglide in blue. Finally Leo Zero joined the dots from Godard to Daft Punk, rerecording “Alphaville” as relentless Parisian funk. All three versions worked brilliantly at reclaiming Ferry as the founding retrofuturist of British avant-pop, but none appear on the album as it now arrives. Instead “You Can Dance” (which in the 1996 version available on bootlegs was actually a curious essay in drum and bass), is draped in the gilded, otiose funk that’s been Ferry’s signature soundworld since 1985’s Boys And Girls – perfectly rendered in the accompanying video, which is like if Gustav Klimt had directed a Robert Palmer promo. In many ways it’s an awesome production – nobody except Sade dares to make records that sound so impeccably imperious any more. But listen to it against the Hellish remix and its finery pales. The tendency to overload and overwork the song, the result of too many hours of Olympian fretting, comes to a head on the cover of Tim Buckley’s “Song To The Siren”. The track credits five guitarists, including Nile Rodgers, Phil Manzanera, David Gilmour and Jonny Greenwood – Eric Clapton and Johnny Marr were presumably out of the country – three drummers, a percussionist, and Brian Eno playing some obscure synth, and the result is a stupendously overblown gas giant of a cover, one that’s simply blown away by Liz Fraser and Robin Guthrie’s spare Mortal Coil version. Ferry clearly realises this – it’s why he enjoys his breezy cocktail jazz outings and bar band Dylan dalliances. And the best tracks on Olympia benefit from a certain lightness of touch: “Me Oh My” fans the embers of torch song – “Everything I care about is gone/I wonder why?” – and makes a virtue of the husk of Ferry’s lunar croon. And the closing “Tender Is The Night” taps into Ferry’s familiar F Scott Fitzgerald feel for fading romance; like Gatsby, enchanted by the green light of promise but, like “Boats against the current/Borne back ceaselessly into the past”. Olympia could do with a little more of that future-facing yearning, the contemporary spirit that crackled through the remixes, to remind us of times when Ferry seemed as much a figure from our future as from our recent past. Stephen Trousse

“Take me on a rollercoaster / Take me on an airplane ride…” From the start Bryan Ferry was bewitched by the exotic glamour of pop, its promise of some fabulous elsewhere, “far beyond the pale horizon, some place near the desert strand”.

But if he once conjured with the contradictions of dream homes and heartaches, in later years he seemed to elide the difference between the real and make-believe and take refuge in misty never-neverlands: Avalon, Mamouna, the Hollywood Casablanca of “As Time Goes By”. On the face of it Olympia might be the latest station on this wistful tour: vaguely redolent of deco movie palaces or even a Leni Riefenstahl-style propaganda spectacle. Until you realise that it’s likely a more prosaic reference to the West Kensington neighbourhood, all exhibition halls and office blocks, where you find Ferry’s studio.

And indeed rather than some great departure, Ferry’s first album of original material since 2002’s Frantic sticks pretty close to home. Neurotically so: just like Frantic, Olympia draws heavily on material originally recorded back in 1996 with Dave Stewart (conspicuously absent from the stellar list of names – Scissor Sisters, Eno, Nile Rodgers, Jonny Greenwood, David Gilmour – highlighted in the advance publicity). At least three tracks here – “You Can Dance”, “Alphaville”, and the closing “Tender Is the Night” – date from those sessions, while the Scissor Sisters collaboration, the coyly titled “Heartache By Numbers”, was apparently recorded over five years ago.

And yet Olympia was trailed with such promise. First DJ Hell had stripped down “You Can Dance” to a chilly techno pulse, recasting Ferry as the vampiric crooner we once knew from Roxy tracks like “Ladytron”. Then Groove Armada hit upon one of their seemingly random moments of genius, cutting up Ferry with Truffaut and reworking “Shameless” into a brooding electraglide in blue. Finally Leo Zero joined the dots from Godard to Daft Punk, rerecording “Alphaville” as relentless Parisian funk.

All three versions worked brilliantly at reclaiming Ferry as the founding retrofuturist of British avant-pop, but none appear on the album as it now arrives. Instead “You Can Dance” (which in the 1996 version available on bootlegs was actually a curious essay in drum and bass), is draped in the gilded, otiose funk that’s been Ferry’s signature soundworld since 1985’s Boys And Girls – perfectly rendered in the accompanying video, which is like if Gustav Klimt had directed a Robert Palmer promo. In many ways it’s an awesome production – nobody except Sade dares to make records that sound so impeccably imperious any more. But listen to it against the Hellish remix and its finery pales.

The tendency to overload and overwork the song, the result of too many hours of Olympian fretting, comes to a head on the cover of Tim Buckley’s “Song To The Siren”. The track credits five guitarists, including Nile Rodgers, Phil Manzanera, David Gilmour and Jonny Greenwood – Eric Clapton and Johnny Marr were presumably out of the country – three drummers, a percussionist, and Brian Eno playing some obscure synth, and the result is a stupendously overblown gas giant of a cover, one that’s simply blown away by Liz Fraser and Robin Guthrie’s spare Mortal Coil version.

Ferry clearly realises this – it’s why he enjoys his breezy cocktail jazz outings and bar band Dylan dalliances. And the best tracks on Olympia benefit from a certain lightness of touch: “Me Oh My” fans the embers of torch song – “Everything I care about is gone/I wonder why?” – and makes a virtue of the husk of Ferry’s lunar croon. And the closing “Tender Is The Night” taps into Ferry’s familiar F Scott Fitzgerald feel for fading romance; like Gatsby, enchanted by the green light of promise but, like “Boats against the current/Borne back ceaselessly into the past”.

Olympia could do with a little more of that future-facing yearning, the contemporary spirit that crackled through the remixes, to remind us of times when Ferry seemed as much a figure from our future as from our recent past.

Stephen Trousse

Bryan Ferry talks to The Mighty Boosh about his new album

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The Mighty Boosh's Noel Fielding has spoken to Bryan Ferry about his new solo album 'Olympia'. The pair spoke ahead of the Roxy Music man releasing his new record on Monday (October 25) - at the studio where Ferry recorded the LP in a video interview with NME. The chat sees them talk about comedy ...

The Mighty Boosh‘s Noel Fielding has spoken to Bryan Ferry about his new solo album ‘Olympia’.

The pair spoke ahead of the Roxy Music man releasing his new record on Monday (October 25) – at the studio where Ferry recorded the LP in a video interview with NME.

The chat sees them talk about comedy and Roxy Music‘s classics gigs and fans, plus Fielding discovers that his hero’s first ever gig was actually a unique moment in rock ‘n’ roll history, Bill Haley And The Comets‘ first ever European tour.

“There was a Radio Luxembourg competition and I won it, it was two front row seats, and it was the first rock ‘n’ roll tour where the Teddy Boys congregated and went down and wrecked the seats,” recalls Ferry. “It was amazing, I was only 10. I took my big sister.”

Asked by Fielding if he was “quite frightened ” by the violence, Ferry replied: “No I was quite up for it! I was sitting in my school blazer just watching.”

Watch [url=http://www.nme.com/news/the-mighty-boosh/53530] Noel Fielding talking to Bryan Ferry now[/url].

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Antony & The Johnsons’ Antony Hegarty hints at quitting touring

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Antony And The Johnsons frontman Antony Hegarty has hinted that he may never tour again. The singer admitted that it took him a year to recover from touring his last 2009 album 'The Crying Light', which left him burnt out and exhausted. "This last year I haven't travelled at all," he told The Ind...

Antony And The Johnsons frontman Antony Hegarty has hinted that he may never tour again.

The singer admitted that it took him a year to recover from touring his last 2009 album ‘The Crying Light’, which left him burnt out and exhausted.

“This last year I haven’t travelled at all,” he told The Independent. “I’ve been in a quandary – I have a problem with the amount of travelling there is, so it’s a huge issue. And does that mean I’m never going to tour again? I don’t really know.”

Hegarty, who recently released his latest album ‘Swanlights’, has yet to line-up any tour dates in support of his current LP other than a show with the Orchestra Of St Luke‘s at the Alice Tully Hall Starr Theater on New York‘s Broadway on October 30.

“It took me a year to recover,” he added. “It wrings out the marrow from your bones. I remember Devandra Banhart once told me, ‘I feel like a piece of charcoal’. When you’ve poured everything out and there’s nothing left, you feel like a piece of coal.”

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Hallogallo 2010: London Barbican, October 21, 2010

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A couple of days ago, I asked here whether anyone had seen the Michael Rother & Friends/Hallogallo 2010 show yet. Olmanal was one person who responded. The show in Ghent was great, he said, but noted, “‘Deluxe (Immer Wieder)’ with Steve Shelley pounding away on the drums, may not be exactly how you remember it.” Watching Rother, Shelley and bassist Aaron Mullan (listed as from Tall Firs, though I prefer his other band, Glass Rock) at the Barbican in London last night, Olmanal’s warning turned out to be something of an understatement. When “Deluxe” hoves into view, you can still pick out that immeasurably beautiful, serene melody from the Harmonia original. But around it, the music is much more bombastic and heavy, and it feels as if the grace has been sacrificed for quite a lot of rock heft. This turns out to be the plot for most of the show. Michael Rother, encamped behind a desk with laptop, water bottles and FX, begins a song with a splutter of electronics and loops, then carves out a frictional, meaty version of one of his strafed riffs. Shelley locks into a generally steroidal version of motorik, so loud that it often dwarfs Rother’s work. Aaron Mullan, mainly, is hard to pick up. At times, the sound they make is genuinely rousing. But more often (and I suspect, judging by most reactions, that I’m very much in the minority with the caveats), it leaves me a little frustrated. There’s much to be admired in Rother’s treatment of his old songs as open-ended; that their arrangements shouldn’t be preserved in aspic, but allowed to evolve over the years. If we continue to celebrate Neu! as a forward-thinking band, it stands to reason we should applaud Rother for handling his mighty consistent music in a contemporary way. But I have to say, I prefer the clean lines and elegant simplicity of the originals to what amounts, cruelly, as a technobludgeoning. “Silberstreif”, for example, still begins with one of those lovely, twanging lines that Rother perfected on his early solo albums. Again and again, though, Shelley’s drumming leaves the delicacies in his dust. He’s a tremendous player, no doubt, and parts of the show feel like a celebration of his resolute, linear pummelling. But for some reason, he plays in a very mechanical way – following the “endless line”, for sure, but in a muscular and somewhat mechanical fashion which misses the bounce – the funkiness, of sorts – provided by Klaus Dinger and Jaki Liebezeit. I kept thinking what a different, lighter tack Joe Dilworth, from Th’Faith Healers and Stereolab, would’ve brought to the show. I have a hunch why Hallogallo 2010 sounds like this, and it comes down not to Shelley’s technique (God knows I’ve seen him play much more subtly many times over the years with Sonic Youth), but to Rother’s musical preferences over the past few years. Time and again, Rother has talked about his love of Secret Machines (Ben Curtis, once of that band, even figured in an early version of Hallogallo 2010, I think), and consequently, he seems to have reconfigured many of his quicksilver old tunes in the thudding image of that band; a kind of bruising, stadium rock revamp of motorik, and not one I particularly liked. It’s only in the encore, really, that the approach totally works for me, when Hallogallo 2010 have a go at one of Neu!’s heaviest, most grinding tunes, “Negativland”. Here, the faintly industrial scrapes, the sheet metal guitar sound, are tremendously effective, and Shelley and Mullan are brilliant at pulling off the lurching changes of speed that punctuate the piece. For the rest: well, I guess I’m just a bit of a lightweight.

A couple of days ago, I asked here whether anyone had seen the Michael Rother & Friends/Hallogallo 2010 show yet. Olmanal was one person who responded. The show in Ghent was great, he said, but noted, “‘Deluxe (Immer Wieder)’ with Steve Shelley pounding away on the drums, may not be exactly how you remember it.”

Laura Marling: ‘I’m not releasing two albums this year now’

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Laura Marling has revealed that she is now not going to release two albums this year - but the extra time will make her third album better. The singer, who features in the 2010 [url=http://www.nme.com/coollist]NME Cool List[/url], [url=http://www.nme.com/news/laura-marling/49306]had originally plan...

Laura Marling has revealed that she is now not going to release two albums this year – but the extra time will make her third album better.

The singer, who features in the 2010 [url=http://www.nme.com/coollist]NME Cool List[/url], [url=http://www.nme.com/news/laura-marling/49306]had originally planned to release a second album in 2010, following the release in March of her second record ‘I Speak Because I Can'[/url].

However Marling now says fans will have to wait a little bit longer for her next release.

“It’s not going to be this year, but it’s good,” she explained. “It will be on its way soon, which is nice. It’s becoming different from the last album actually, because I’ve scrapped a bit of it halfway through. I hope to have it done by February. Setting deadlines is not my favourite thing!”

To see where Marling is in this year’s Cool List and for an exclusive interview get this week’s issue of NME on UK newsstands, or available digitally worldwide right now.

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U2 recruit Danger Mouse to produce new album

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U2 frontman Bono has revealed that Danger Mouse is working on their forthcoming album. The record, which is tentatively titled 'Songs Of Ascent' and is [url=http://www.nme.com/news/u2/53482]due out next year according to the band's manager Paul McGuinness [/url], has been produced by the Gnarls Bar...

U2 frontman Bono has revealed that Danger Mouse is working on their forthcoming album.

The record, which is tentatively titled ‘Songs Of Ascent’ and is [url=http://www.nme.com/news/u2/53482]due out next year according to the band’s manager Paul McGuinness [/url], has been produced by the Gnarls Barkley and Broken Bells man, otherwise known as Brian Burton.

“We have about 12 songs with him,” Bono told Theage.com. “At the moment that looks like the album we will put out next, because it’s just happening so easily.”

The singer also revealed that the band are currently working on two other albums, the first of which is a “club” record featuring Lady Gaga collaborator RedOne, Black Eyed PeasWill.i.am and David Guetta.

U2‘s remixes in the 1990s were a real treasure,” he said. “So we wanted to make a club sounding record. We have a pile of songs.”

The band are also hoping to make a concept album based on songs Bono and guitarist The Edge have written for their Spider-Man musical, [url=http://www.nme.com/news/faithless–2/52501]which opens on Broadway next month[/url].

“We haven’t convinced the rest of the band to do that yet,” added the singer. “[Drummer] Larry [Mullen Jr] definitely has a raised eyebrow.”

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The Slits’ Ari Up dies aged 48

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The Slits' frontwomen Ari Up has died at the age of 48. The singer - real name Arianna Forster - passed away yesterday (October 20). News of her death was confirmed by the Sex Pistols and PiL frontman John Lydon, who is married to Forster's mother. He delivered the news about her death on his we...

The Slits‘ frontwomen Ari Up has died at the age of 48.

The singer – real name Arianna Forster – passed away yesterday (October 20).

News of her death was confirmed by the Sex Pistols and PiL frontman John Lydon, who is married to Forster‘s mother. He delivered the news about her death on his website.

John[Lydon] and Nora [Forster] have asked us to let everyone know that Nora‘s daughter Arianna – aka Ari-Up – died today (October 20) after a serious illness,” was posted on JohnLydon.com. “She will be sadly missed. Everyone at JohnLydon.com and PiLofficial.com would like to pass on their heartfelt condolences to John, Nora and family. Rest in Peace.”

Forster formed The Slits in 1976 at the age of 14. They released two albums, 1979’s ‘Cut’ and 1981’s ‘Return Of The Giant Slits’, before splitting up.

She later went on to release a solo album called ‘Dread More Dan Dead’ in 2005, among other projects, before reforming The Slits later that year.

Johnny Marr has been among those to pay tribute to Up, posting on Twitter: “Respect to Ari Up. The Slits played with The Cribs last year and she was great.”

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Rolling Stones’ Keith Richards: ‘Mick Jagger is still a great friend’

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The Rolling Stones' Keith Richards has insisted that he is still "great friends" with Mick Jagger, despite branding the singer "unbearable" in his new book. The guitarist admitted that his bandmate was angry about certain sections of his autobiography, Life, but they are still close pals. "He was ...

The Rolling StonesKeith Richards has insisted that he is still “great friends” with Mick Jagger, despite branding the singer “unbearable” in his new book.

The guitarist admitted that his bandmate was angry about certain sections of his autobiography, Life, but they are still close pals.

“He was a bit peeved about this and that,” Richards told Rollingstone.com. “[But] Mick and I are still great friends and still want to work together. Can you imagine if life went along smoothly and everybody agreed? Nothing would happen. There’d be no blues.”

The guitarist added that the pair have even talked about more activity from The Rolling Stones in 2011.

Richards‘ comments come after [url=http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/51942/220045]he recently admitted in an interview that the pair do not get on[/url], branding the singer “Brenda” and “Your Majesty”.

He also admitted that he not been in Jagger‘s dressing room for more than 20 years.

Life is set to be released on October 26.

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The Fall’s Mark E Smith: ‘I threw a bottle at Mumford & Sons’

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The Fall's Mark E Smith has claimed that he threw a bottle at Mumford And Sons at a recent festival. The singer said that he took matters into his own hands because he did not like the sound of Marcus Mumford and the gang warming up their vocals. "We were playing a festival in Dublin the other wee...

The Fall‘s Mark E Smith has claimed that he threw a bottle at Mumford And Sons at a recent festival.

The singer said that he took matters into his own hands because he did not like the sound of Marcus Mumford and the gang warming up their vocals.

“We were playing a festival in Dublin the other week,” he told Australian magazine Brag. “There was this other group warming up in the next sort of chalet, and they were terrible.”

He added: “I said, ‘Shut them cunts up,’ and they were still warming up, so I threw a bottle at them. The band said, ‘That’s the Sons Of Mumford [sic] or something, they’re Number Five in charts!’. I just thought they were a load of retarded Irish folk singers.”

The Fall and Mumford And Sons were both on the bill for the Electric Picnic festival, which took place near Dublin last month.

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John Lydon to release ‘scrapbook’ and nursery rhymes

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John Lydon. is set to release a limited-edition photography book called Mr Rotten's Scrapbook. The volume, priced at £379, features photos spanning the singer's life, including "unseen and personal" from throughout his musical career, The images are accompanied by a handwritten commentary from Ly...

John Lydon. is set to release a limited-edition photography book called Mr Rotten’s Scrapbook.

The volume, priced at £379, features photos spanning the singer’s life, including “unseen and personal” from throughout his musical career,

The images are accompanied by a handwritten commentary from Lydon.

“This is my book. It is a scrapbook. It has pictures and writings and x-rays. It has people in it. People that have had an effect on my life, but not all the people, because there are too many to ever catalogue,” he explained. “I would like to thank everyone I ever met and anyone I don’t remember. In fact, I would like to thank anyone.”

Limited to 750 signed copies, the book will also feature a 12-inch vinyl picture disc including live Public Image Ltd recordings from 2009 and spoken word pieces from Lydon, including ‘Mr Rotten’s Nursery Rhymes’.

For more information, samples and pre-orders head to Concertlive.co.uk/mrrottensscrapbook.

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The 40th Uncut Playlist Of 2010

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Spent more time yesterday than I possibly should have piecing together a playlist out of my Neu!, Harmonia and Michael Rother albums, in preparation for tomorrow’s London show by Hallogallo 2010. Anyone seen them yet? I’d be interested to hear your reports if you have. I’ll try and put up a review of my own on Friday morning. In the meantime, have a look at this lot: the Death album is a bunch of recently-uncovered outtakes, and the Earth one is archival, too. Some good things here, I think, not least that Footwork comp. 1 Mark McGuire – Living With Yourself (Mego) 2 Simian Mobile Disco – Delicacies (Delicacies) 3 Death – Spiritual/Mental/Physical (Drag City) 4 Mark McGuire – Tidings/Amethyst Waves (Weird Forest) 5 Gruff Rhys – Shark Ridden Waters (www.gruffrhys.com) 6 Sun City Girls – Funeral Mariachi (Abduction) 7 Earth – A Bureaucratic Desire For Extra-Capsular Extraction (Southern Lord) 8 Various Artists – Bangs & Works Volume 1: A Chicago Footwork Compilation (Planet Mu) 9 Harmonia – Deluxe (Brain) 10 Wild Beasts – Two Dancers (Remixes) (Domino) 11 The Go! Team – Rolling Blackouts (Memphis Industries) 12 Various Artists – A Monstrous Psychedelic Bubble Exploding In Your Head Volume 3/Amorphous Androgynous (History/Monstrous Bubble) 13 Jonny – Jonny (Turnstile) 14 Sic Alps – Napa Asylum (Drag City) 15 Calexico – Feast Of Wire: Deluxe Edition (City Slang) 16 Lou Reed – American Poet (Easy Action) 17 The Sexual Objects – Cucumber (Creeping Bent)

Spent more time yesterday than I possibly should have piecing together a playlist out of my Neu!, Harmonia and Michael Rother albums, in preparation for tomorrow’s London show by Hallogallo 2010. Anyone seen them yet? I’d be interested to hear your reports if you have.

The Hold Steady announce UK tour and ticket details

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The Hold Steady have announced details of a UK tour for early next year. The band, who released their fifth studio album 'Heaven Is Whenever' in May, will play shows in February 2011. They will play: Southampton University (February 4) Bristol O2 Academy (5) Birmingham O2 Academy 2 (6) Newcast...

The Hold Steady have announced details of a UK tour for early next year.

The band, who released their fifth studio album ‘Heaven Is Whenever’ in May, will play shows in February 2011.

They will play:

Southampton University (February 4)

Bristol O2 Academy (5)

Birmingham O2 Academy 2 (6)

Newcastle O2 Academy (8)

Glasgow O2 ABC (9)

Manchester Ritz (13)

Leeds Metropolitan University (14)

Norwich Waterfront (15)

Cambridge Junction (17)

London O2 Shepherds Bush Empire (18)

Tickets go on sale on Thursday (October 21). Check the availability of [url=http://www.seetickets.com/see/event.asp?artist=hold+steady&filler1=see&filler3=id1nmestory]The Hold Steady tickets[/url] now, or call 0871 230 1094.

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Lightspeed Champion covers The Beach Boys with Van Dyke Parks on new EP

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Lightspeed Champion has covered The Beach Boys with the aid of their former producer Van Dyke Parks on his new EP. The 'Bye Bye' EP will feature four tracks of unreleased material and will be available on 10-inch and digital download on December 13. The tracklisting includes a cover of The Beach Bo...

Lightspeed Champion has covered The Beach Boys with the aid of their former producer Van Dyke Parks on his new EP.

The ‘Bye Bye’ EP will feature four tracks of unreleased material and will be available on 10-inch and digital download on December 13. The tracklisting includes a cover of The Beach Boys‘ 1971 track ‘Til I Die’. It was produced by Parks, who worked on some of The Beach Boys‘ most famous ’60s material, including the aborted 1967 LP ‘Smile’.

“It was pretty surreal… he’s (Van Dyke Parks) someone I’ve listened to for what seems like forever,” Lighspeed, real name Dev Hynes, explained.

He added: “I found myself listening to the stems and works in progress as a fan of him, then I’d remember that it’s something we’re working on together… then I’d freak out… Then I’d have a drink and I’d feel fine.”

The full tracklisting for ‘Bye Bye’ is as follows:

”Til I Die’

‘Underwater There Is Nothing’

‘Bye Bye Icarus’

‘The Mess You’re In’

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Rolling Stones’ Ronnie Wood set for ‘Save The 100 Club’ gig?

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Ronnie Wood could be set to join forces with his predecessor in The Rolling Stones for a one-off gig to help London's 100 Club which is threatened with closure. Wood and Mick Taylor, who was in the band from 1969 to 1974, are rumoured to be teaming up with guitarist Stephen Dale Petit for a perfor...

Ronnie Wood could be set to join forces with his predecessor in The Rolling Stones for a one-off gig to help London‘s 100 Club which is threatened with closure.

Wood and Mick Taylor, who was in the band from 1969 to 1974, are rumoured to be teaming up with guitarist Stephen Dale Petit for a performance at the venue on Oxford Street on December 1.

“The first gig I went to in the UK was Alexis Korner at The 100 Club,” said Petit. “There is no other venue like it on earth – when you walk downstairs it’s like entering a magic portal. I always feel honoured to perform there, and this show is going to be extra special.”

Organisers of the gig are expected to confirm the line up in the coming days. For more information go to Stephendalepetit.com.

Meanwhile London ska band [url=http://www.bustershuffle.co.uk/]Buster Shuffle[/url], who are set to stage a gig at the venue on November 3, have recorded a song and video to raise funds for the venue.

“The video and track is intended to be a viral that will spread the message, we cannot let The 100 Club go without a fight,” said frontman Jet Baker. For more information go to Bustershuffle.co.uk. Watch the video below.

Meanwhile the campaign to save the venue, [url=http://www.nme.com/news/oasis/53128]which could close due to spiralling debts this Christmas[/url], has gained over 15,000 members since [url=http://www.nme.com/news/oasis/53128]long-time fans of the central London venue Tony Morrison and Jim Piddington set up[/url] Savethe100club.co.uk last month, and a Facebook page membership was also launched.

The 100 Club been open since 1942, and has played host to acts including the Sex Pistols, The White Stripes and Oasis.

See Savethe100club.co.uk for more.

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Sun City Girls: “Funeral Mariachi”

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How to find a way through the arcane catalogue of the Sun City Girls? Last time I tried to count, there seemed to be around 60-odd releases, mostly rare as hen’s teeth, compounding the mythology of the band as among the most challenging and elusive of the past 20 or 30 years. Now, some three years after the death of Charles Gocher, there’s one last unexpected SCG album, and with characteristically perverse logic, expert word is that it may be their most accessible. I certainly can’t pretend to be an expert, but “Funeral Mariachi” is without doubt the most approachable album I’ve personally heard from SCG. The playfulness is still there, but it comes with an almost elegaic quality that’s far from quirky. There’s little evidence, too, of that pranksterish imperative which often led the trio to attack what they deemed as political correctness and/or good taste, and which never really worked for me. Posthumous work, of course, always comes freighted with a certain set of listener expectations - intimations of mortality and so on – which can be hard to avoid, even with such a wilfully unsentimental bunch as SCG. Consequently, “Funeral Mariachi”, from that title on down, seems to have a recurring atmosphere of twilit melancholy, as the second half of the album fills up with ominous twangs and piano-led nocturnes that privilege ambience over abrasion. That said, this terrific album starts pretty abrasively, with “Ben’s Radio” appearing to be the trio’s organic reconstruction of one of the collage-like comps of oriental street pop on the affiliated Sublime Frequencies label. Among all the chatter, there’s a brief chant of “Rangda! Rangda!”, a sign of where Richard Bishop has subsequently headed (pretty frustrated, incidentally, that the next Bishop/Chasny/Corsano Rangda gig in London clashes with the Wooden Shjips/Howlin Rain double-header) Initially, “Funeral Mariachi” seems to be a mellower reiteration of SCG’s super-intuitive, irreverent take on world musics, throwing in a little eastern, uncommonly graceful, exotica (“Black Orchid”); an eccentric trinket that evolves into a gorgeous acoustic piece reminiscent of the Sumatran devotional group Suarasama (“The Imam”); and a mighty stealthy desert blues (“This Is My Name”) that faintly resembles Tinariwen, allbeit punctuated by waves of east-facing psychedelia. By the end of Side One, though, “Vine Street Piano” is introducing the dominant tone of “Funeral Mariachi”: piano-led, reflective and that most unexpected thing for an SCG record, tender. Side Two asserts this intensively, mixing up similar pieces with a couple of Morricone excursions: one genuine (“Come Maddalena”), one forged (“Blue West”). There’s also “Holy Ground”, a keening and reliably macabre incantation that seems indebted to Syd Barrett and, finally, the title track; not exactly a mariachi, but with a trumpet line (from David Carter) that transforms blasted territory into something not a million miles from “Sketches Of Spain”. With their track record, many would’ve expected SCG’s send-off to Gocher to be full of enterprising vulgarity. How strange, finally, that “Funeral Mariachi” should be poignant, of all things?

How to find a way through the arcane catalogue of the Sun City Girls? Last time I tried to count, there seemed to be around 60-odd releases, mostly rare as hen’s teeth, compounding the mythology of the band as among the most challenging and elusive of the past 20 or 30 years. Now, some three years after the death of Charles Gocher, there’s one last unexpected SCG album, and with characteristically perverse logic, expert word is that it may be their most accessible.