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CBGB owners file for bankruptcy

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The company that owns the name of New York's legendary club CBGB has filed for bankruptcy. The former punk venue, which hosted the Ramones, Talking Heads, Patti Smith and Blondie among many others, closed in 2006. Since then, it has lived on in the form of T-shirts and other memorabilia emblazoned with the club's name. However, CBGB Holdings LLC has filed for bankruptcy, reports Billboard. It lists debts in the range of $1 million to $10 million. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

The company that owns the name of New York‘s legendary club CBGB has filed for bankruptcy.

The former punk venue, which hosted the Ramones, Talking Heads, Patti Smith and Blondie among many others, closed in 2006. Since then, it has lived on in the form of T-shirts and other memorabilia emblazoned with the club’s name.

However, CBGB Holdings LLC has filed for bankruptcy, reports Billboard. It lists debts in the range of $1 million to $10 million.

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

Ozzy Osbourne’s body to become research tool for scientists

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Ozzy Osbourne looks set to undergo tests to see how he is still alive after years of drug and drink abuse. The former Black Sabbath frontman will be one of only a few people in the world to have his full genome analysed by scientists, reports Sky News. US company Knome, who are carrying out the te...

Ozzy Osbourne looks set to undergo tests to see how he is still alive after years of drug and drink abuse.

The former Black Sabbath frontman will be one of only a few people in the world to have his full genome analysed by scientists, reports Sky News.

US company Knome, who are carrying out the test, are hoping to improve their understanding of why some people can live a life of excess and others can not.

The cost of the research will be £27,000, with the results of the tests expected to take three months.

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

Interpol announce new album details

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Interpol have announced the release date for their new album. The New York band's new effort is self-titled, and it's released on September 14, reports Pitchfork. At this point a UK date has yet to be confirmed, although it is expected to be a day earlier on September 13. Matador Records, the labe...

Interpol have announced the release date for their new album.

The New York band’s new effort is self-titled, and it’s released on September 14, reports Pitchfork. At this point a UK date has yet to be confirmed, although it is expected to be a day earlier on September 13.

Matador Records, the label that released their first two LPs, 2002’s ‘Turn On The Bright Lights’ and 2004’s ‘Antics’, will release the record, which is also the last to feature bassist Carlos Dengler, who quit the group earlier this year.

The New York group have recently added two new members to their live set-up. On bass and Dave Pajo, while Secret Machines frontman Brandon Curtis will play keyboards and sing backing vocals.

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

The 24th Uncut Playlist Of 2010

First up, thanks for the fantastic response to the Best Of 2010: Halftime Report. Please keep your own charts coming, and I’ll try and collate them into some kind of masterlist in the next few days. Moving on, this week’s newish arrivals for your delectation. A handful here I’m not really sold on, if you’re taking notes. 1 The Groundhogs – Thank Christ For The Groundhogs: The Liberty Years 1968-1972 (Liberty) 2 Dylan LeBlanc – Paupers Field (Rough Trade) 3 Fennesz Daniell Buck – Knoxville (Thrill Jockey) 4 Various Artists – Epitaph For A Legend (Charly) 5 Cheikh Lo – Jamm (World Circuit) 6 Ufomammut – Eve (Supernatural Cat) 7 Mavis Staples – You Are Not Alone (Anti-) 8 Roedelius – Lustwandel (Sky/Bureau B) 9 Richard Thompson – Dream Attic (Proper) 10 Grinderman – Grinderman 2 (Mute) 11 Phillip Selway – Familial (Bella Union) 12 Isobel Campbell & Mark Lanegan – Hawk (V2) 13 Caitlin Rose – Own Side Now (Names) 14 REM – Fables Of The Reconstruction: Deluxe Edition (Capitol) 15 Omar Souleyman – Jazeera Nights (Sublime Frequencies) 16 The Jim Jones Revue – Burning Your House Down (Punk Rock Blues)

First up, thanks for the fantastic response to the Best Of 2010: Halftime Report. Please keep your own charts coming, and I’ll try and collate them into some kind of masterlist in the next few days.

Primal Scream’s Bobby Gillespie forms new Nuggets covers band

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Primal Scream frontman Bobby Gillespie has unveiled a one-off collaboration covers band featuring members of the Sex Pistols and The Who. Called Silver Machine, the band have been announced to perform a special covers show at London’s 1234 festival in Shoreditch on July 24. Sex Pistols bassist G...

Primal Scream frontman Bobby Gillespie has unveiled a one-off collaboration covers band featuring members of the Sex Pistols and The Who.

Called Silver Machine, the band have been announced to perform a special covers show at London’s 1234 festival in Shoreditch on July 24.

Sex Pistols bassist Glen Matlock, The Who and former Oasis sticksman Zak Starkey, plus Primal Scream guitarists Andrew Innes and Little Barrie‘s Barrie Cadogan will also take part.

The band are set to perform a collection of their favourite songs by band’s including The Creation, The Flamin’ Groovies, The Chocolate Watch Band, The Troggs and MC5.

“We’re great and we can’t wait,” declared frontman Bobby Gillespie.

Festival director Sean McLusky added: “We did a show at the Whitechapel Gallery with S.C.U.M and a bunch of other artists, Bobby was playing and rocked ‘Wild Thing’ by The Troggs with Jamie Hince from The Kills, so I asked him if he would do more of the same at the festival, so now we have….The Silver Machine.”

Tickets are on sale now.

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

Fool’s Gold To Headline Club Uncut

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Fool’s Gold, the eclectic LA collective, will be headlining Club Uncut in August. The date for your diaries is Monday, August 16, and the venue will be Club Uncut’s regular home of The Borderline in London’s West End. Tickets are priced at £8, available as usual from www.seetickets.com. Fool’s Gold’s excellent debut album was released early in 2010, receiving a lot of love for its mix of various African styles with dance music, indie rock and Yiddish lyrics. To read more, check out our Wild Mercury Sound blog here . The next Club Uncut is on June 24, when The Strange Boys play at the Borderline. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Fool’s Gold, the eclectic LA collective, will be headlining Club Uncut in August.

The date for your diaries is Monday, August 16, and the venue will be Club Uncut’s regular home of The Borderline in London’s West End. Tickets are priced at £8, available as usual from www.seetickets.com.

Fool’s Gold’s excellent debut album was released early in 2010, receiving a lot of love for its mix of various African styles with dance music, indie rock and Yiddish lyrics. To read more, check out our Wild Mercury Sound blog here .

The next Club Uncut is on June 24, when The Strange Boys play at the Borderline.

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

The Best Of 2010: Halftime Report

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A bit of anal-retentive listmaking today: my favourite 30 albums of the year so far (though I imagine I’ve forgotten one or two, and there’ll be a bunch more good ones that I haven’t heard as yet). I’m pretty sure these were all released between January and June (hence no July things like Endless Boogie and so on). As a bit of a cop-out, I’ve put them in alphabetical order rather than have a stab at rankings. What I need now, of course, are your lists, please. Looking forward to them… 1. Avi Buffalo – Avi Buffalo 2. Blitzen Trapper – Destroyer Of The Void 3. Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy & The Cairo Gang – The Wonder Show Of The World 4. Bill Callahan – Rough Travel For A Rare Thing 5. Carlton Melton – Pass It On 6. Ali Farka Toure & Toumani Diabate – Ali & Toumani 7. Fool’s Gold – Fool’s Gold 8. Four Tet – There Is Love In You 9. Hiss Golden Messenger – Root Work 10. Hot Chip – One Life Stand 11. LCD Soundsystem – This Is Happening 12. Loscil – Endless Falls 13. Magic Lantern - Platoon 14. Steve Mason – Boys Outside 15. Moon Duo - Escape 16. James Murphy – Greenberg OST 17. Joanna Newsom – Have One On Me 18. Pantha Du Prince – Black Noise 19. Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti – Before Today 20. Rangda – False Flag 21. Jack Rose – Luck In The Valley 22. Sleepy Sun - Fever 23. Sun Araw – On Patrol 24. Tamikrest - Adagh 25. Prins Thomas – Prins Thomas 26. Trembling Bells – Abandoned Love 27. Voice Of The Seven Thunders - Voice Of The Seven Thunders 28. Vampire Weekend - Contra 29. White Fence – White Fence 30. Vibracathedral Orchestra – Joka Baya//The Secret Base/Smoke Song Get Uncut on your iPad, laptop or home computer

A bit of anal-retentive listmaking today: my favourite 30 albums of the year so far (though I imagine I’ve forgotten one or two, and there’ll be a bunch more good ones that I haven’t heard as yet).

The Vaselines announce new album release date, tracklisting and UK tour details

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The Vaselines have announced details of their first album for over 20 years. The Scottish group's second album, 'Sex With An X' is the belated follow-up to their 1989 debut 'Dum-Dum'. Released on September 14 through Sub Pop, the band's core duo of Eugene Kelly and Frances McKee recorded the LP w...

The Vaselines have announced details of their first album for over 20 years.

The Scottish group’s second album, ‘Sex With An X’ is the belated follow-up to their 1989 debut ‘Dum-Dum’.

Released on September 14 through Sub Pop, the band’s core duo of Eugene Kelly and Frances McKee recorded the LP with Jamie Watson, who also produced their debut.

Meanwhile, Belle and Sebastian‘s Stevie Jackson and Bob Kildea play guitar and bass, while 1990sMichael McGaughrin plays drums.

In addition to the album, the band have revealed details of an upcoming UK tour.

Kicking off at Edinburgh‘s Bongo Room on September 15, the 10-date jaunt will finish at Glasgow‘s Oran Mor on September 24.

The tracklisting for ‘Sex With An X’ is as follows:

‘Ruined’

‘Sex With An X’

‘The Devil Inside Me’

‘Such a Fool’

‘Turning It On’

‘Overweight But Over You’

‘Poison Pen’

‘I Hate the 80’s’

‘Mouth To Mouth’

‘Whitechapel’

‘My God’s Bigger Than Your God’

‘Exit The Vaselines’

The Vaselines will play the following dates:

Edinburgh Bongo Room (September 15)

Newcastle Other Room (16)

Leeds Brudenell Social Club (17)

Liverpool Static Gallery (18)

Cardiff Millennium Music Hall (19)

Nottingham Rescue Rooms (20)

Bristol Thekla (21)

London The Scala (22)

Manchester Deaf Institute (23)

Glasgow Oran Mor (24)

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

Pavement set for special one-off show with original drummer Gary Young

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Pavement have announced that original drummer Gary Young is set to join them for a special one-off show. Taking place on June 24 at the Bob Hope Theatre in Stockton, California, the gig is also the group's first ever hometown show. Young, who produced Pavement's early EPs in his home studio, also ...

Pavement have announced that original drummer Gary Young is set to join them for a special one-off show.

Taking place on June 24 at the Bob Hope Theatre in Stockton, California, the gig is also the group’s first ever hometown show.

Young, who produced Pavement‘s early EPs in his home studio, also played drums on their 1992 debut album ‘Slanted & Enchanted’.

Quitting the band in 1993, the drummer was known for his eccentric behaviour which included handing out cabbage and mashed potatoes to fans at the door at gigs, doing handstands and running around the venue and stage while the rest of the band played.

His last recorded effort with the group was on the ‘Watery, Domestic’ EP in 1992.

Set to visit the west coast of the US as part of [url=http://www.nme.com/news/pavement/50043]their current North American reunion tour[/url], the band [url=http://www.nme.com/news/pavement/51016]recently performed a four-night residency at London’s O2 Academy Brixton[/url].

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

Supergrass play final ever UK show

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Supergrass played their last ever UK show in London tonight (June 10). The band, [url=http://www.nme.com/news/supergrass/50616]who announced they are to split after the current mini-tour[/url], played their penultimate date, and their last on home shores, at the O2 Academy Brixton. Fitting the occ...

Supergrass played their last ever UK show in London tonight (June 10).

The band, [url=http://www.nme.com/news/supergrass/50616]who announced they are to split after the current mini-tour[/url], played their penultimate date, and their last on home shores, at the O2 Academy Brixton.

Fitting the occasion, the group performed a set that spanned their career, going backwards from their recent releases to their 1995 debut ‘I Should Coco’.

The band warmed the crowd up with the old public service films they co-opted on their tours in the late ’90s, including the infamous cartoon cat “Charlie” immortalised by The Prodigy‘s 1991 single. They followed that by screening a video montage tracking the band’s recent recordings, and then took to the stage to kick off with 2008 single ‘Diamond Hoo Ha Man’.

“We’re so glad you could come tonight, it’s the last time Supergrass play in the UK,” frontman Gaz Coombes declared ahead of ‘Rebel In You’ to a chorus of joke boos. “This is for you guys, to say thanks. I hope we can go out on a high.”

The band then briefly left the stage, screening another video montage tracking their trip to Rouen for the recording of their penultimate album ‘Road To Rouen’, before they returned to play tracks from that era, confirming the reverse order pattern for the night.

Highlights from 2002’s ‘Life On Other Planets’ followed next, again heralded by studio footage, as the band played the likes of ‘Brecon Beacons’ and ‘Funniest Thing’.

‘Moving’ and ‘Pumping Your Stereo’ were among ther highlights from 1999’s self-titled album, while the selection from 1997’s ‘In It For The Money’ included the title track and UK Number Two single ‘Richard III’.

‘She’s So Loose’ kicked off the closing ‘I Should Coco’ segment, which also featured ‘Mansize Rooster’, ‘Strange Ones’ and ‘Lenny’.

Leaving the stage briefly, Supergrass were soon back for an encore.

“It’s been a pretty fucking mental 17 years, or so, thanks for coming tonight,” declared Gaz Coombes ahead of ‘Alright’ and the band’s first ever single ‘Caught By The Fuzz’, which closed proceedings.

Supergrass played:

‘Diamond Hoo Ha Man’

‘Bad Blood’

‘Outside’

‘Rebel In You’

‘Tales Of Endurance (Parts 4, 5 & 6)’

‘St Petersburg’

‘Fin’

‘Kiss Of Life’

‘Brecon Beacons’

‘Rush Hour Soul’

‘Funniest Thing’

‘Grace’

‘Moving’

‘Mary’

‘Eon’

‘Pumping On Your Stereo’

‘In It For The Money’

‘Richard III’

‘Late In The Day’

‘Sun Hits The Sky’

‘She’s So Loose’

‘Mansize Rooster’

‘Strange Ones’

‘Lenny’

‘Alright’

‘Caught By The Fuzz’

The band’s final ever show is now set to take place tomorrow night (June 11) at ParisLa Cigalle.

Drummer [url=http://www.nme.com/news/babyshambles/51373]Danny Goffey is then going to join Babyshambles for their forthcoming live dates[/url] to fill in for Adam Ficek who recently left Pete Doherty‘s band.

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

BROOKLYN’S FINEST

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DIRECTED BY Antoine Fuqua STARRING Richard Gere, Don Cheadle, Ethan Hawke “It’s not about right and wrong,” one character opines. “It’s about righter and wronger.” While we’re mulling that one over, Training Day director Fuqua introduces three New York cops: Sal (Ethan Hawke) is ang...

DIRECTED BY Antoine Fuqua

STARRING Richard Gere, Don Cheadle, Ethan Hawke

“It’s not about right and wrong,” one character opines. “It’s about righter and wronger.”

While we’re mulling that one over, Training Day director Fuqua introduces three New York cops: Sal (Ethan Hawke) is angry, over-burdened, on the edge. Eddie (Rihcard Gere) is just days away from retirement, and has long since decided to let things slide. And Tango (Don Cheadle) is so deep undercover he’s no longer sure where he stands.

In other words, first-time screenwriter Michael C Martin has come up with three old chestnuts for the price of one – the stories ultimately converging, Crash-like, on a very bad night in the projects. If the casting triggers memories of several prime cop dramas (Internal Affairs, Boiling Point and The Wire, among them), Brooklyn’s Finest can’t shake their influence. Even so, it’s played with considerable intensity – by Hawke especially.

Incidentally, good to have Wesley Snipes back after his run-in with the tax man five years ago.

Tom Charity

THE BROTHERS BLOOM

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DIRECTED BY Rian Johnson STARRING Adrien Brody, Mark Ruffalo, Rachel Weisz From the opening scene, with its arch voiceover about two orphaned brothers in a “one-hat town”, Brick director Rian Johnson tries to imbue this yarn with the warped logic of a fairytale. Iit’s a caper, with the emph...

DIRECTED BY Rian Johnson

STARRING Adrien Brody, Mark Ruffalo, Rachel Weisz

From the opening scene, with its arch voiceover about two orphaned brothers in a “one-hat town”, Brick director Rian Johnson tries to imbue this yarn with the warped logic of a fairytale.

Iit’s a caper, with the emphasis on character, rather than the con. That’s no easy trick. But the characters are appealing. The conmen brothers, Bloom (Adrien Brody) and Stephen (Mark Ruffalo) are sketched from childhood to mid-thirties, by which time Bloom is wearying of his brother’s schemes.

After a lifetime of pretence, he doesn’t know who he is. He signs on for one final job, to con bewildered millionairess, Penelope (Rachel Weisz) out of her fortune. Robbie Coltrane, smoking a pipe, enlists them to steal a book that may not exist, from a museum, which does.

Amid much globetrotting, Bloom grows sadder as Penelope grows happier. The Brothers Bloom is inventive, but its relentless cleverness limits its emotional pull.

Alastair McKay

THE ACORN – NO GHOST

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Although they formed in Ottawa back in 2003, The Acorn only truly arrived with their last album, 2008’s Glory Hope Mountain. It took a few listens for the full scale of its ambition and beauty to really sink in, but when it did you realised that here was one of those rare bands that dealt exclusively in mystery, where everything was at once both familiar and oddly strange: like Talking Heads bumping into Fleet Foxes in dreamtime. The band gathered around the central pivot of Rolf Klausener, who wrote the songs and sung them up and out in a yearning, yelping voice that seemed to constantly be striving for something he couldn’t quite reach. Lyrically, Glory Hope Mountain was a moving account of the early life of Klausener’s mother, who barely survived her birth (“your rosy lungs were empty on the day that you were born”), almost drowned in a flood, ran away from an abusive father aged 12 and emigrated to Canada from Honduras without being able to speak either English or French. The music proved as compelling as the narrative. The Acorn displayed a knack for writing simple melodies stretched out over the bones of indie-folk, afrobeat, crooked rock and a hint of something more epic. It was never quite clear how the shapes fitted together or how the spell was cast, but there was no disputing the wondrous results. For anyone who fretted that Glory Hope Mountain might have been a beautiful fluke, No Ghost confirms The Acorn’s credentials, building thrillingly on the band’s ability to access a variety of moods and textures. It veers from plangent ballads via scrubby experimentation to conventional rock dynamics, and it’s not incidental that No Ghost was recorded in a cottage in the back of beyond in Quebec, the kind of place where phone signals peter out into static. On occasion the songs here are almost hypnotically hushed. At other times they’re both louder and more unhinged than ever before. There’s always been muscle in The Acorn’s music, now it’s simply more pronounced. It’s most evident on the abrasive “I Made The Law”, a minor-key march that unravels like a curse, and the title track, which kicks off like REM’s “Finest Worksong”, the crunchy riff dodging a maze of harmonics before breaking into a sun-dappled chorus. The preppy pop bounce of “Crossed Wires”, written and sung by bassist Jeff Debutte, is something new, but much of No Ghost contains echoes of Glory Hope Mountain. “On The Line” and “Kindling To Creation” convey the sense of weary reflection that follows some great storm, while the band’s propensity for zinging guitars and clacking rhythm lights up “Restoration” and “Bobcat Gold Wraith”, which starts as a burbling pot-boiler and builds to something almost anthemic, kicked forward by heavy bass and horns. “Slippery When Wet” – banish any thoughts of Bon Jovi – enters more fragile territory. It rolls along on a circular folk guitar pattern and gentle fiddle, as Klausener stands amid the fallen leaves and mournfully “counts the colours at my feet”. It’s almost unbearably lovely, but it’s the still simplicity of “Misplaced” that brings it all home. Small and perfectly formed, it’s a vindication of the band’s attitude. Heading towards greatness, but for all that, unassumingly so. Graeme Thomson Q&A Rolf Klausener Glory Hope Mountain was much loved; did you feel more pressure this time? I’d be a total liar if I said that stuff doesn’t linger in the back of your mind: ‘I wonder what reviewers will think of this song?’ The best thing to do is wait for moments where you feel really inspired and don’t have to second guess yourself. As a writer, you know when it works. How does this album differ from the last? This time we had no specific themes, no story, it was just about the song. It was interesting, liberating and terrifying all at the same time. We’d been on the road for 26 months without a real break, so we gave ourselves a holiday and rented a cottage in Quebec. There were no grand expectations, but in the first three days me and Pat [Johnson, percussionist] wrote the skeleton for about 15 songs. What was life like in the cottage? We were completely cut off. We didn’t even know that Michael Jackson had died. My favourite songs on No Ghost, “Cobbled in Dust” and “Misplaced”, were written there. They just kind of happened.

Although they formed in Ottawa back in 2003, The Acorn only truly arrived with their last album, 2008’s Glory Hope Mountain. It took a few listens for the full scale of its ambition and beauty to really sink in, but when it did you realised that here was one of those rare bands that dealt exclusively in mystery, where everything was at once both familiar and oddly strange: like Talking Heads bumping into Fleet Foxes in dreamtime.

The band gathered around the central pivot of Rolf Klausener, who wrote the songs and sung them up and out in a yearning, yelping voice that seemed to constantly be striving for something he couldn’t quite reach. Lyrically, Glory Hope Mountain was a moving account of the early life of Klausener’s mother, who barely survived her birth (“your rosy lungs were empty on the day that you were born”), almost drowned in a flood, ran away from an abusive father aged 12 and emigrated to Canada from Honduras without being able to speak either English or French.

The music proved as compelling as the narrative. The Acorn displayed a knack for writing simple melodies stretched out over the bones of indie-folk, afrobeat, crooked rock and a hint of something more epic. It was never quite clear how the shapes fitted together or how the spell was cast, but there was no disputing the wondrous results. For anyone who fretted that Glory Hope Mountain might have been a beautiful fluke, No Ghost confirms The Acorn’s credentials, building thrillingly on the band’s ability to access a variety of moods and textures. It veers from plangent ballads via scrubby experimentation to conventional rock dynamics, and it’s not incidental that No Ghost was recorded in a cottage in the back of beyond in Quebec, the kind of place where phone signals peter out into static. On occasion the songs here are almost hypnotically hushed. At other times they’re both louder and more unhinged than ever before. There’s always been muscle in The Acorn’s music, now it’s simply more pronounced. It’s most evident on the abrasive “I Made The Law”, a minor-key march that unravels like a curse, and the title track, which kicks off like REM’s “Finest Worksong”, the crunchy riff dodging a maze of harmonics before breaking into a sun-dappled chorus.

The preppy pop bounce of “Crossed Wires”, written and sung by bassist Jeff Debutte, is something new, but much of No Ghost contains echoes of Glory Hope Mountain. “On The Line” and “Kindling To Creation” convey the sense of weary reflection that follows some great storm, while the band’s propensity for zinging guitars and clacking rhythm lights up “Restoration” and “Bobcat Gold Wraith”, which starts as a burbling pot-boiler and builds to something almost anthemic, kicked forward by heavy bass and horns.

“Slippery When Wet” – banish any thoughts of Bon Jovi – enters more fragile territory. It rolls along on a circular folk guitar pattern and gentle fiddle, as Klausener stands amid the fallen leaves and mournfully “counts the colours at my feet”. It’s almost unbearably lovely, but it’s the still simplicity of “Misplaced” that brings it all home. Small and perfectly formed, it’s a vindication of the band’s attitude. Heading towards greatness, but for all that, unassumingly so.

Graeme Thomson

Q&A Rolf Klausener

Glory Hope Mountain was much loved; did you feel more pressure this time?

I’d be a total liar if I said that stuff doesn’t linger in the back of your mind: ‘I wonder what reviewers will think of this song?’ The best thing to do is wait for moments where you feel really inspired and don’t have to second guess yourself. As a writer, you know when it works.

How does this album differ from the last?

This time we had no specific themes, no story, it was just about the song. It was interesting, liberating and terrifying all at the same time. We’d been on the road for 26 months without a real break, so we gave ourselves a holiday and rented a cottage in Quebec. There were no grand expectations, but in the first three days me and Pat [Johnson, percussionist] wrote the skeleton for about 15 songs.

What was life like in the cottage?

We were completely cut off. We didn’t even know that Michael Jackson had died. My favourite songs on No Ghost, “Cobbled in Dust” and “Misplaced”, were written there. They just kind of happened.

Mount Carmel: “Mount Carmel”

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A clusterfuck of heaviness in the past couple of days – Endless Boogie’s Primavera jam, the Groundhogs box set, finally hearing the bonus seven-inch tracks from Magic Lantern’s “Platoon”, news that Eternal Tapestry have signed to Thrill Jockey – reminded me to write about Mount Carmel’s self-titled on Siltbreeze. The whiff of denim on patchouli hangs heavy here, since this Columbus Ohio power trio seem to have mastered retro blues-rock with an accuracy that’s uncanny, as well as pretty crude. I know records are often described as sounding like they could’ve come out in 1971, or whatever. But “Mount Carmel” really, really sounds like it was made in 1971 – just after the group had finished a tour with the Edgar Broughton Band, maybe. Nothing wrong with that, and Mount Carmel certainly attack potential absurdities with vigour: what else should the penultimate track do but degenerate into an extended drum solo? It’s the songs that precede it, though – none better than the opening “Livin’ Like I Wanna” (and how’s that for a historically precise title?) – that really do the business, pitched partway between Blue Cheer and something dank and wasted in the corner of a provincial British student union, circa 1970. Not one, perhaps, for everyone, but bracing for those of us of a certain ideological hair length. It occurs to me, too, that Mount Carmel are one of those new psych-related bands who would’ve also fitted in with the stoner rock scene that flourished about a decade ago. Add a tad more Sabbath, tone down some of the noodle, and you’re not too far away from something that sounds like Nebula. Which, again, is fine by me. Here’s the Mount Carmel Myspace. Enjoy!

A clusterfuck of heaviness in the past couple of days – Endless Boogie’s Primavera jam, the Groundhogs box set, finally hearing the bonus seven-inch tracks from Magic Lantern’s “Platoon”, news that Eternal Tapestry have signed to Thrill Jockey – reminded me to write about Mount Carmel’s self-titled on Siltbreeze.

TOM PETTY – MOJO

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Nine tracks into Mojo, Tom Petty’s first album with The Heartbreakers for eight years, the band fire up a plodding blues groove, and Petty makes a confession: “I’m slowin’ down a little bit.” It’s an assertion which will, by this point, elicit little dispute from anybody who has been listening to Mojo from the top. Can this really be the same performer who fired up his career with the excellent Damn The Torpedoes, and that enduringly awesome eponymous 1976 debut? On paper, this sounded promising. Petty and his Heartbreakers recorded Mojo live in the studio, no overdubs, no re-takes. The no-frills approach should have suited them, allowing the Heartbreakers to bring 35 years of mutual familiarity to bear on the instinctive rapport that first established them, in the late ’70s, as an audacious and refreshing bridge between traditional Southern rock and skinny-tied New Wave (“American Girl” didn’t sound out of place as a minor UK hit in the Summer of Punk). Unfortunately, and rather ironically, Mojo is ultimately undone by the very virtuosity of its creators: the band stumbles repeatedly into that musicians’ trap of making music that sounds intended principally to impress other musicians, every note and beat buffed and synchronised with military fastidiousness. It’s never a good thing to find oneself thinking of a rock’n’roll album as decorous. It starts promisingly, at least. “Jefferson Jericho Blues” is an irresistible opener, a pugnacious choogle in the style of Dylan circa Highway 61 Revisited. It’s a bit more polished than that, inevitably, but not oppressively so. Sadly, it’s an anomaly. The second track, “First Flash Of Freedom”, proves a more accurate indicator of the overall tone – an interminable meander evocative of The Grateful Dead. There’s far, far too much of this sort of thing on Mojo: “Running Man’s Bible”, on which Benmont Tench’s luxuriant Booker T-ish keys don’t save another overlong cut from out-staying its welcome; “Pirate’s Cove”, which all but wheezes for the defibrillator; the dolorous “Lover’s Touch”, which prompts little but bewilderment that its inclusion was deemed necessary to a 15-track album; the inexplicable reggae pastiche “Don’t Pull Me Over”. It’s not just that the above are all dull, it’s that they sound so timid, as if the Heartbreakers played them all on very expensive instruments borrowed from extremely possessive and vindictive owners. The overwhelming seemliness of the exercise is even more frustrating on the cuts – and there are a few – which do sound potentially worthy of the Heartbreakers’ formidable canon. “Candy” is an orthodox but charming Creedence Clearwater Revival-ish chug that barely musters a saunter where it should swagger. “No Reason To Cry” is a judiciously lachrymose country lament in the manner of The Flying Burrito Brothers’ “Hot Burrito # 1” – and Petty’s unmistakeable snarl is, as ever, oddly affecting as a vehicle for balladry. “I Should Have Known It” possesses something of the Heartbreakers’ signature strut, and gets very nearly rocking towards the end – but it still, if measured against “I Need To Know” or “Even The Losers” or “Running Down A Dream” or whatever you’re having yourself, seems somewhat… domesticated. This is not the first time that Petty has prevented himself being all he can be by abasing himself on the altar of good taste (one of the major imperatives of the inventor of the time-travel machine must be to intercept Petty en route to his first meeting with Jeff Lynne). But it doesn’t feel coincidental that the truly great tracks on this album are the ones which are the least restrained: the distorted blues “US 41”, which sounds agreeably like it might have been laid down aboard a rattling boxcar; the fantastic “High In The Morning”, which purrs with idling menace and features great Mike Campbell guitar solos. One supposes one has to grant that Petty will be 60 this year, but there’s surely no reason why he has to sound it. Mojo, in this context, mostly feels less like a title and more like the heading of a “Lost” advertisement. Andrew Mueller

Nine tracks into Mojo, Tom Petty’s first album with The Heartbreakers for eight years, the band fire up a plodding blues groove, and Petty makes a confession: “I’m slowin’ down a little bit.” It’s an assertion which will, by this point, elicit little dispute from anybody who has been listening to Mojo from the top. Can this really be the same performer who fired up his career with the excellent Damn The Torpedoes, and that enduringly awesome eponymous 1976 debut?

On paper, this sounded promising. Petty and his Heartbreakers recorded Mojo live in the studio, no overdubs, no re-takes. The no-frills approach should have suited them, allowing the Heartbreakers to bring 35 years of mutual familiarity to bear on the instinctive rapport that first established them, in the late ’70s, as an audacious and refreshing bridge between traditional Southern rock and skinny-tied New Wave (“American Girl” didn’t sound out of place as a minor UK hit in the Summer of Punk).

Unfortunately, and rather ironically, Mojo is ultimately undone by the very virtuosity of its creators: the band stumbles repeatedly into that musicians’ trap of making music that sounds intended principally to impress other musicians, every note and beat buffed and synchronised with military fastidiousness. It’s never a good thing to find oneself thinking of a rock’n’roll album as decorous.

It starts promisingly, at least. “Jefferson Jericho Blues” is an irresistible opener, a pugnacious choogle in the style of Dylan circa Highway 61 Revisited. It’s a bit more polished than that, inevitably, but not oppressively so. Sadly, it’s an anomaly. The second track, “First Flash Of Freedom”, proves a more accurate indicator of the overall tone – an interminable meander evocative of The Grateful Dead.

There’s far, far too much of this sort of thing on Mojo: “Running Man’s Bible”, on which Benmont Tench’s luxuriant Booker T-ish keys don’t save another overlong cut from out-staying its welcome; “Pirate’s Cove”, which all but wheezes for the defibrillator; the dolorous “Lover’s Touch”, which prompts little but bewilderment that its inclusion was deemed necessary to a 15-track album; the inexplicable reggae pastiche “Don’t Pull Me Over”.

It’s not just that the above are all dull, it’s that they sound so timid, as if the Heartbreakers played them all on very expensive instruments borrowed from extremely possessive and vindictive owners. The overwhelming seemliness of the exercise is even more frustrating on the cuts – and there are a few – which do sound potentially worthy of the Heartbreakers’ formidable canon. “Candy” is an orthodox but charming Creedence Clearwater Revival-ish chug that barely musters a saunter where it should swagger. “No Reason To Cry” is a judiciously lachrymose country lament in the manner of The Flying Burrito Brothers’ “Hot Burrito # 1” – and Petty’s unmistakeable snarl is, as ever, oddly affecting as a vehicle for balladry. “I Should Have Known It” possesses something of the Heartbreakers’ signature strut, and gets very nearly rocking towards the end – but it still, if measured against “I Need To Know” or “Even The Losers” or “Running Down A Dream” or whatever you’re having yourself, seems somewhat… domesticated.

This is not the first time that Petty has prevented himself being all he can be by abasing himself on the altar of good taste (one of the major imperatives of the inventor of the time-travel machine must be to intercept Petty en route to his first meeting with Jeff Lynne). But it doesn’t feel coincidental that the truly great tracks on this album are the ones which are the least restrained: the distorted blues “US 41”, which sounds agreeably like it might have been laid down aboard a rattling boxcar; the fantastic “High In The Morning”, which purrs with idling menace and features great Mike Campbell guitar solos.

One supposes one has to grant that Petty will be 60 this year, but there’s surely no reason why he has to sound it. Mojo, in this context, mostly feels less like a title and more like the heading of a “Lost” advertisement.

Andrew Mueller

THE GASLIGHT ANTHEM – AMERICAN SLANG

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What's American Slang? On the one hand, you could say it’s the poetry of hope, the nation’s real voice, the hardy truth unsullied by spin, the language of people let down by the American Dream, and the hot air of the politicians peddling it, salesmen practised in the grammar of deceit and dubious promise. There’s merit also in the notion of American Slang as a reference to the diverse colloquialism of American music, the myriad vernaculars of the blues, folk, gospel, country, jazz, rock’n’roll, pop, soul, punk and rap and the single tongue in which they speak to the disenfranchised many, words and music at this point combining to lift embattled spirits, rally the troops. American Slang is also, of course, the title of the third album by New Jersey’s Gaslight Anthem, the follow-up therefore to 2008’s The ’59 Sound, which reached out to fans of Bruce Springsteen in the same way as The Hold Steady, whose unshakeable belief in rock music as a rowdy salvation Brian Fallon’s band unswervingly share. Because they are reckoned to owe so much to Springsteen, who famously put in an appearance with them last year at Glastonbury and was on stage with them again a few days later when he headlined Hyde Park, there has been a perhaps inevitable suggestion that American Slang will be The Gaslight Anthem’s Born To Run. The record, in other words, that will carry them into the mainstream after years of making-do and scuffling, playing anywhere that would have them and in earlier days less hospitable places, all the hard work about to pay off now in a possibly big way. It remains to be seen, of course, where American Slang will take them, but they certainly sound here like a band going places in a hurry. American Slang is one of the most exciting rock’n’roll records since global warming hit the headlines. It’s an album of electrifying rapture, massive riffs, songs with verses that sound like choruses and choruses that sound, yes, like anthems, meant to be sung by multitudes. Listening to it, you can almost hear the stadium roar that played live these songs will likely inspire. The ’59 Sound wasn’t exactly short of similarly communal moments, as audience sing-a-longs to many of its songs last year so noisily attested, particularly when the band played the NME Stage at Reading in front of a word-perfect crowd who were perfectly happy to sing most of their songs for them. Neither, it should be said, was their debut album, Sink Or Swim, which was likewise brimful of tracks that crude as they sometimes were still made you want to wave a flag or set fire to something and dance around it, possibly whooping. American Slang delivers spectacularly on all expected fronts. Everything that was great about The ’59 Sound is here, but the sound is even bigger, epic without getting blustery. And there have been great leaps forward in production and the musical arrangements, which have greater depth, atmosphere and texture. Brian Fallon’s writing has moved on, too. Previously, he’s written descriptive vignettes, tales of teenage trauma, frustration and heartbreak, narratives about the lives of others. There’s a great example of that here, a celebratory song about not forgetting where you’re from called “The Diamond Church Street Choir”, whose soulful, finger-clicking swagger owes much to the Van Morrison of “Wild Night” and “Domino” and a little to Mink De Ville, too. By and large, though, Fallon’s new songs are more personal than ever, in many respects the most autobiographical he’s written. In a general sense, they are about being who you want to be, not who you’re told you are. Songs like “Orphans”, “Boxer”, Stay Lucky” and “Bring It On” are about standing your ground, being true to yourself and what you believe in, sacrifice and hard work, a determination to make something of yourself that you may have been told you’d never be. They rail against the definition of self by others, the idea of knowing your place and staying there. They’re a call therefore to a certain kind of insurrection – “Look what you started! I seem to be coming out of my skin,” he roars on the title track, which opens the album with the declamatory knell of “London Calling”. In many ways, they are about Fallon’s own sense of ambition, his career to date an example of where self-belief can take you, Fallon offering himself as an inspiration to others, as Springsteen and Strummer were an inspiration to him. And a consolation, too, when times were tough. “Only I can heal your wounds when you can’t go on, when you can’t go on anymore,” he sings on “The Spirit Of Jazz”, assuming a paternal role quite new to him. “Give me the children you don’t want to raise,” he sings on “Bring It On”. Nothing irks Fallon more than the wasting of opportunity, the settling for easy options. “The Queen Of Lower Chelsea”, which has the strut of The Pretenders’ “Brass In Pocket” and quotes also from the Stones’ “Some Girls” castigates the somewhat easy target of a rich young girl who squanders her life – “Did you grow up a good girl, your Daddy’s pride? Did you make all the right moves, take all the right drugs, right on time?” – but Fallon’s full wrath is exposed on the staggering “Old Haunts”. He clearly has no patience with rueful reflection, and is similarly impatient with the solace some people find in nostalgia for a time before life got tough, a yen for the safety of an usually imagined gilded past. “Don’t sing me your songs about the good times, those times are gone and you should just let them go,” Fallon fairly rages. “And God help the man who says, ‘You shoulda known me when’. . .Shame, shame, shame, shame on you, you sold your youth away.” At the time of writing, a broadsheet has just published a 2010 festival guide, which includes a witty feature on what bands will provide “the definitive fists-in-the-air anthem” this summer. They list U2, Guns N’Roses, AC/DC, Muse and The Libertines. But when at whatever festival they fetch up at in the months to come The Gaslight Anthem close out their set, as they surely will, with “We Did It When We Were Young”, whose haunted atmosphere, so redolent of The Clash’s “Straight To Hell”, also brings American Slang to a dramatic climax, everyone else might as well run for cover. This is the song everyone will be singing, in a language everyone will understand. Allan Jones

What’s American Slang? On the one hand, you could say it’s the poetry of hope, the nation’s real voice, the hardy truth unsullied by spin, the language of people let down by the American Dream, and the hot air of the politicians peddling it, salesmen practised in the grammar of deceit and dubious promise.

There’s merit also in the notion of American Slang as a reference to the diverse colloquialism of American music, the myriad vernaculars of the blues, folk, gospel, country, jazz, rock’n’roll, pop, soul, punk and rap and the single tongue in which they speak to the disenfranchised many, words and music at this point combining to lift embattled spirits, rally the troops.

American Slang is also, of course, the title of the third album by New Jersey’s Gaslight Anthem, the follow-up therefore to 2008’s The ’59 Sound, which reached out to fans of Bruce Springsteen in the same way as The Hold Steady, whose unshakeable belief in rock music as a rowdy salvation Brian Fallon’s band unswervingly share.

Because they are reckoned to owe so much to Springsteen, who famously put in an appearance with them last year at Glastonbury and was on stage with them again a few days later when he headlined Hyde Park, there has been a perhaps inevitable suggestion that American Slang will be The Gaslight Anthem’s Born To Run. The record, in other words, that will carry them into the mainstream after years of making-do and scuffling, playing anywhere that would have them and in earlier days less hospitable places, all the hard work about to pay off now in a possibly big way.

It remains to be seen, of course, where American Slang will take them, but they certainly sound here like a band going places in a hurry. American Slang is one of the most exciting rock’n’roll records since global warming hit the headlines. It’s an album of electrifying rapture, massive riffs, songs with verses that sound like choruses and choruses that sound, yes, like anthems, meant to be sung by multitudes. Listening to it, you can almost hear the stadium roar that played live these songs will likely inspire.

The ’59 Sound wasn’t exactly short of similarly communal moments, as audience sing-a-longs to many of its songs last year so noisily attested, particularly when the band played the NME Stage at Reading in front of a word-perfect crowd who were perfectly happy to sing most of their songs for them. Neither, it should be said, was their debut album, Sink Or Swim, which was likewise brimful of tracks that crude as they sometimes were still made you want to wave a flag or set fire to something and dance around it, possibly whooping.

American Slang delivers spectacularly on all expected fronts. Everything that was great about The ’59 Sound is here, but the sound is even bigger, epic without getting blustery. And there have been great leaps forward in production and the musical arrangements, which have greater depth, atmosphere and texture. Brian Fallon’s writing has moved on, too. Previously, he’s written descriptive vignettes, tales of teenage trauma, frustration and heartbreak, narratives about the lives of others.

There’s a great example of that here, a celebratory song about not forgetting where you’re from called “The Diamond Church Street Choir”, whose soulful, finger-clicking swagger owes much to the Van Morrison of “Wild Night” and “Domino” and a little to Mink De Ville, too. By and large, though, Fallon’s new songs are more personal than ever, in many respects the most autobiographical he’s written. In a general sense, they are about being who you want to be, not who you’re told you are. Songs like “Orphans”, “Boxer”, Stay Lucky” and “Bring It On” are about standing your ground, being true to yourself and what you believe in, sacrifice and hard work, a determination to make something of yourself that you may have been told you’d never be. They rail against the definition of self by others, the idea of knowing your place and staying there.

They’re a call therefore to a certain kind of insurrection – “Look what you started! I seem to be coming out of my skin,” he roars on the title track, which opens the album with the declamatory knell of “London Calling”. In many ways, they are about Fallon’s own sense of ambition, his career to date an example of where self-belief can take you, Fallon offering himself as an inspiration to others, as Springsteen and Strummer were an inspiration to him. And a consolation, too, when times were tough. “Only I can heal your wounds when you can’t go on, when you can’t go on anymore,” he sings on “The Spirit Of Jazz”, assuming a paternal role quite new to him. “Give me the children you don’t want to raise,” he sings on “Bring It On”.

Nothing irks Fallon more than the wasting of opportunity, the settling for easy options. “The Queen Of Lower Chelsea”, which has the strut of The Pretenders’ “Brass In Pocket” and quotes also from the Stones’ “Some Girls” castigates the somewhat easy target of a rich young girl who squanders her life – “Did you grow up a good girl, your Daddy’s pride? Did you make all the right moves, take all the right drugs, right on time?” – but Fallon’s full wrath is exposed on the staggering “Old Haunts”. He clearly has no patience with rueful reflection, and is similarly impatient with the solace some people find in nostalgia for a time before life got tough, a yen for the safety of an usually imagined gilded past.

“Don’t sing me your songs about the good times, those times are gone and you should just let them go,” Fallon fairly rages. “And God help the man who says, ‘You shoulda known me when’. . .Shame, shame, shame, shame on you, you sold your youth away.”

At the time of writing, a broadsheet has just published a 2010 festival guide, which includes a witty feature on what bands will provide “the definitive fists-in-the-air anthem” this summer. They list U2, Guns N’Roses, AC/DC, Muse and The Libertines. But when at whatever festival they fetch up at in the months to come The Gaslight Anthem close out their set, as they surely will, with “We Did It When We Were Young”, whose haunted atmosphere, so redolent of The Clash’s “Straight To Hell”, also brings American Slang to a dramatic climax, everyone else might as well run for cover. This is the song everyone will be singing, in a language everyone will understand.

Allan Jones

Radiohead’s Thom Yorke predicts the demise of the mainstream music industry

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Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke has revealed that he thinks it's "only a matter of months" until the collapse of the mainstream music business. Speaking in an interview for new high school textbook The Rax Active Citizen Toolkit Yorke says that the music industry is dying, reports ThisIsLondon.co.uk....

Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke has revealed that he thinks it’s “only a matter of months” until the collapse of the mainstream music business.

Speaking in an interview for new high school textbook The Rax Active Citizen Toolkit Yorke says that the music industry is dying, reports ThisIsLondon.co.uk.

“[It’ll be] only a matter of time,” Yorke says. “Months rather than years before the music business establishment completely folds.”

Advising aspiring musicians not to tie themselves to such a “sinking ship”, Yorke added that the fall of the music business will be “no great loss to the world”.

The textbook is due out on July 1 and also features interviews with Ms Dynamite and broadcaster Jon Snow. It is aimed at helping 15 and 16-year-olds become more politically literate.

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

U2 producer Daniel Lanois in intensive care after motorcycle crash

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Daniel Lanois has been placed in intensive care following a motorcycle crash. The Quebec-born musician/producer, who is known for his production work on U2's 1987 album 'The Joshua Tree', suffered the accident recently in Los Angeles. As a result, his London show with the Daniel Lanois Black Dub c...

Daniel Lanois has been placed in intensive care following a motorcycle crash.

The Quebec-born musician/producer, who is known for his production work on U2‘s 1987 album ‘The Joshua Tree’, suffered the accident recently in Los Angeles.

As a result, his London show with the Daniel Lanois Black Dub collective, which had been set for the Jazz Café venue on July 27, has been cancelled. Ticket holders can get refunds from points of purchase.

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

The Strokes make UK live return in surprise London gig

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The Strokes played their first gig since October 2006 last night (June 9), performing a secret show under the alias Venison at London's Dingwalls venue. The New York five-piece had flown into the UK capital to prepare for headline slots at the Isle Of Wight Festival on Saturday (June 12) and RockNe...

The Strokes played their first gig since October 2006 last night (June 9), performing a secret show under the alias Venison at London‘s Dingwalls venue.

The New York five-piece had flown into the UK capital to prepare for headline slots at the Isle Of Wight Festival on Saturday (June 12) and RockNess on Sunday. They announced the London gig yesterday, with the show selling out almost instantly last night, reports Uncut‘s sister-title [url=http://www.nme.com/news/the-strokes/51445]NME[/url].

Frontman Julian Casablancas wore sunglasses and a studded leather jacket throughout the set, while guitarist Nick Valensi wore a garish orange jacket with a tiger design. Guitarist Albert Hammond Jr had grown his hair since recently shaving it and wore a smart suit blazer.

The frontman was slight on between-song chat, though he did note the large number of people who had piled to the front for the best views. “You guys alright there?” he asked the front row, joking: “There’s a dead guy there… but it’s cool, keep going.”

The band’s set included the likes of ‘You Only Live Once’, ‘Last Nite’, ‘Take It Or Leave It’ and New York City Cops.

The Strokes played:

‘New York City Cops’

‘The Modern Age’

‘Hard To Explain’

‘Reptilia’

‘What Ever Happened?’

‘You Only Live Once’

‘Soma’

‘Vision Of Division’

‘I Can’t Win’

‘Is This It’

‘Someday’

‘Red Light’

‘Last Nite’

‘Under Control’

’12:51′

‘Juicebox’

‘Heart In A Cage’

‘Take It Or Leave It’

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

Darker My Love: “Alive As You Are”

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A couple of months ago here, I raved some about a self-titled album on Woodsist by White Fence, who turned out to be a guy from LA called Tim Presley with some kind of connection to The Strange Boys. I neglected to mention, however, that Presley was also the leader of another band, Darker My Love, who I’d never really heard, to be honest. I suspect the gothic implications of the name put me off. The third album by Darker My Love, “Alive As You Are”, very much shows what a mistake I was making. If Presley uses his White Fence alias to assail rock classicism with an arsenal of lo-fi warp, it seems Darker My Love is where he fleshes out his jangling fantasies. Much in the vein of Blitzen Trapper’s “Destroyer Of The Void”, “Alive As You Are” is a beautifully-realised evocation of the psychedelic, country-tinged fringes of ‘60s pop, with particular reference to The Byrds (“The Notorious Byrd Brothers” especially) and The Beatles. Hardly audacious new territory for a rock band, of course, and you can follow a trail of kindred spirits to Darker My Love back through the excellent Kelley Stoltz, to LA indie antecedents like The Beechwood Sparks and The Tyde, who always seemed a bit smug and underachieving to me (one of The Beechwood Sparks is in Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti these days, incidentally). No such problems with Darker My Love, though. Basically, “Alive As You Are” manages to be at once languid and punchy, a swift and bracing collection of insidious melodies that are blessed with an uncanny familiarity. Sometimes that nagging sense of knowing the songs from a previous life becomes crystallised: “18th Street Shuffle” bears at the very least a working knowledge of “Within You Without You”, while the outstanding “Split Minute” sounds, as someone here noted, like The Byrds playing “Outdoor Miner”. Many of the other songs, though, are harder to be specific about, and no less strong. Try “Dear Author” at Myspace, and let me know what you think.

A couple of months ago here, I raved some about a self-titled album on Woodsist by White Fence, who turned out to be a guy from LA called Tim Presley with some kind of connection to The Strange Boys. I neglected to mention, however, that Presley was also the leader of another band, Darker My Love, who I’d never really heard, to be honest. I suspect the gothic implications of the name put me off.