Previously: 50-35, 34-17 16 THE UNDISPUTED TRUTH The Undisputed Truth GORDY, 1971 Norman Whitfield was one of Motown’s most successful producers, working on hits for Marvin Gaye, Edwin Starr and, particularly, The Temptations. But it was with his own group, The Undisputed Truth, fronted by Motown backing singers Billie Rae Calvin and Brenda Joyce, that Whitfield embarked on far more radical experiments into psych soul and political commentary. Whitfield used the Truth to expand on his own material – this hard-to-find debut included the first version of “Papa Was A Rolling Stone”, and a thunderous 11-minute take on “Ball Of Confusion” – as well as funky vamps on intriguing covers like Dylan’s “Like A Rolling Stone”. EXPECT TO PAY: £25 for the UK vinyl 15 PAULINE MURRAY AND THE INVISIBLE GIRLS Pauline Murray And The Invisible Girls RSO RECORDS, 1980 For anyone who knows Murray only as the voice of Penetration, this lost post-punk classic will be a revelation. Produced by Martin Hannett – The Invisible Girls was the band he put together to provide backing on several excellent records by Salford bard John Cooper Clarke – the album sees the legendary Joy Division producer at his poppiest, yet most expansive, too. Drawing on dub, Eurodisco and brittle funk, Hannett crafted a troubled wall of artpop, awash in keyboards, to frame Murray’s wonderfully naïve and breathy vocals –soaring lead single, “Dream Sequence 1”, deserved to be a massive hit. With sublime guitar from The Durutti Column’s Vini Reilly and a Peter Saville sleeve, it’s also a Factory record in all but name – subsequent single “Searching For Heaven” featured Joy Division/ New Order’s Bernard Sumner. EXPECT TO PAY: Still good value at £50 14 PAUL QUINN & THE INDEPENDENT GROUP The Phantoms & The Archetypes POSTCARD, 1992 With a voice pitched somewhere between Bowie’s Thin White Soul and Scott Walker’s deepest melancholy, Quinn ranks alongside The Associates’ Billy Mackenzie as one of the most extraordinary singers out of Scotland. A schoolfriend of Edwyn Collins and associate of Alan Horne’s original Postcard label, Horne’s plans to make him a star on his subsequent Swamplands label ran aground in disputes with owners London Records. Indeed, this album was a major reason behind Horne’s unexpected decision to resurrect Postcard in 1992. Produced by Collins, and featuring original Orange Juicer James Kirk’s guitar genius, Quinn’s voice wandered through dark shadows of soul, pop and country on ballads like “Punk Rock Hotel” and exquisitely desolate covers including The Carpenters’ “Superstar”. A film noir of a record, this has never been re-released, possibly because Horne reckons the world simply doesn’t deserve it. EXPECT TO PAY: £40 if you’re lucky 13 LAL & MIKE WATERSON Bright Phoebus LEADER, 1972 Responding to new directions in folk-rock, the two Waterson siblings hired folk luminaries Martin Carthy, Maddy Prior, Ashley Hutchings, Tim Hart and Dave Mattacks for this chamber folk with an uncanny twist – child sacrifice in “The Scarecrow”, or “Winifer Odd”, smashed by a car while picking up a lucky star from the road. From intimate guitar/voice arrangements to the Nick Drake strings of “Never The Same” and the country rock of “The Magical Man”, the tracks are unpredictable as English weather. Shadows and sunny intervals dominate the lyrics, and the clouds part spectacularly for the closing “Bright Phoebus”, where the sun beams down a spiritual awakening. Aside from a shoddy CD-R from CM Distribution in 2000, this has suffered the same fate as the rest of the Leader/Trailer catalogue (see Dave & Toni Arthur, No 32). EXPECT TO PAY: £30, with a bit of luck 12 T-BONE BURNETT Truth Decay CHRYSALIS, 1980; DEMON , 1997 (CD) T-Bone Burnett was unknown before Dylan recruited him for 1975’s Rolling Thunder Revue, where he met David Mansfield and Steven Soles, with whom he subsequently formed The Alpha Band and recorded three hugely idiosyncratic albums that combined rock, jazz, country, blues, folk and more. Truth Decay was his first solo album and returned him to the roots music he grew up with in Texas and with which he has since become indelibly associated as an award-winning producer. What Truth Decay shared with The Alpha Band was an inclination on songs like “Quicksand”, “Boomerang” and “House Of Mirrors” towards the surreal, satirical and unsettling, clever juxtapositions of off-kilter humour, dark moral fables and a profound disillusionment with a materialistic world, its acidity more brilliantly rendered than any of the infrequent solo albums that followed. EXPECT TO PAY: A tenner for the vinyl, much, much more if you find it on CD 11 VARIOUS ARTISTS Silver Meteor SIERRA, 1980 Subtitled ‘A Progressive Country Anthology’, this excellent set might be noteworthy solely for its brace of rootsy – and rare – 1969 cuts from The Everly Brothers. But the presence of four won’t-find-’em-anywhere-else tracks from The Byrds’ preternaturally talented guitarist Clarence White – recorded in June 1973, just two weeks before his death – have given Silver Meteor elevated status in country rock circles. After The Byrds’ dissolution in late ’72, White secured a solo deal with Warners, and set about pioneering a startling brand of bluegrass and rock with fiddler Byron Berline, guitarist Herb Pederson and mandolin ace (and brother) Roland White. The results – including “Why You Been Gone So Long” with Ry Cooder on slide – are consistently astonishing, and hint all-too-briefly at the directions ’70s country might have taken. EXPECT TO PAY: £30, including shipping – it’s a US-only release 10 JOHN CALE Music For A New Society ZE/ISLAND, 1982; RHINO, 1994 (CD) Even by the frequently disturbing standards of Cale’s many previous excursions into territories of dread and disconsolation, Music For A New Society was daunting, a blasted requiem for an unravelling world and the victims of insane times. It is, in many ways, Cale’s masterpiece. That Music For A New Society is not currently in catalogue is inexplicable. Rhino US licensed the album from Cale, but the term of that licence expired in 2004. Imagine logging onto Amazon to order Blood On The Tracks or Astral Weeks for someone who’d never heard them and discovering they’d been deleted without explanation. You’d be stupefied. Another equivalent would be finding out that someone had taken a tin of whitewash and a very big brush to Picasso’s Guernica, making it disappear beneath a layer of blank undercoat. His previous album, 1981’s Honi Soit, itself now only available as a download, had been a loud, abrasive essay in apocalyptic paranoia, full of squalling guitars and a turbulent sonic mayhem that would be replaced on Music For A New Society by a kind of symphonic minimalism. With the exception of “Changes Made”, which featured a full band, with Blue Öyster Cult’s Allen Lanier on lead guitar, the songs on the album – most of them improvised in the studio – featured not much more than Cale’s handsome Baptist tenor set against brutal reductions of the kind of arrangements he had provided 14 years earlier for Nico’s The Marble Index. There were moments of startling poignancy, among them the exquisite “Broken Bird” and “Chinese Envoy”, and a wracked new version of “I Keep A Close Watch”, an anguished ballad from 1975’s Helen Of Troy. Elsewhere, darkness and violence loomed in livid tandem. “Taking Your Life In Your Hands” and the hugely unsettling “If You Were Still Around” starkly explored three of Cale’s favourite themes: nostalgia, murder and madness. But the album’s grim centrepiece was the long, agonised “Sanities” (originally titled “Sanctus”, but mistakenly re-titled on the album sleeve), on which over an aloof, majestic keyboard drone and fragmenting percussion, Cale’s possessed narration evoked disaster on all fronts, ending with an ominous prediction of terrible things to come, the bleak promise of “a stronger world, a stronger loving world. . . to die in.” ALLAN JONES 9 BIG BLACK Atomizer HOMESTEAD 1986; TOUCH & GO, 1992 (CD) Seething with disgust (at human weakness and perversity) and pummelled by a badass drum machine (succinctly credited as roland: roland), Big Black’s debut took the rage of hardcore punk and fused it with the harsh mechanics of the electronic age. In passing, it established the uncompromising nature of mainman Steve Albini, who’s gone on to engineer more records than any sane human should. Atomizer’s been unavailable for a while because Touch & Go ran out of stock, and Albini and co took the opportunity to remaster it (along with a number of other BB titles). “All of them should be available relatively soon. We intend to keep everything available forever,” Albini says. EXPECT TO PAY: £15 for the vinyl 8 SANDY DENNY & THE STRAWBS All Our Own Work HALLMARK, 1973 The offensively cheap artwork fair screams “cash-in”, and indeed this budget release was designed to capitalise on fan interest. Not in the wonderful Denny, though, but in The Strawbs, who in ’73 were high in the charts with “Part Of The Union”. These tracks were recorded in 1967 in Copenhagen (the sleevenotes erroneously state 1968), before she joined Fairport Convention, and feature the earliest version of her haunting calling card, “Who Knows Where The Time Goes”. Hallmark is not known for its reissue programme, so this seems unlikely to get a re-release soon, although Fairports producer Joe Boyd did compile some other, differently orchestrated material from the Copenhagen sessions for 1991 CD Sandy Denny And The Strawbs. But now that’s out of print, too… EXPECT TO PAY: £15. But search hard enough and it’ll turn up cheaper 7 KRAFTWERK Kraftwerk VERTIGO, 1970 One of 2009’s more disingenuous reissues was The Catalogue, a thorough-sounding Kraftwerk boxset which failed to include their first three LPs. Perhaps that early work was deemed too idiosyncratically human, with the mensch-maschine not yet fully operational and a freestyling hippy fallibility taking precedence. They remain, however, fascinating records, not least the 1970 debut, where Florian Schneider and Ralf Hütter embarked on four capricious avant-jams. The heavy-weight electronics were at a putative stage: Klaus Dinger, soon to form Neu!, contributed live drums; Schneider led, jauntily, with a flute. “I’m working on the album tapes,” Hütter told Uncut last year. “It will be Kraftwerk 1 and 2, Ralf & Florian, and maybe one or two live ambient situations, whatever we find in the archive… It needs some more work, redusting and remastering.” EXPECT TO PAY: Approaching £100 6 TOM WAITS Night On Earth OST ISLAND, 1992 Jim Jarmusch’s portmanteau movie Night On Earth presents five encounters between taxi drivers and passengers, all happening in different cities around the world at the same moment. The film’s much underrated in Jarmusch’s canon, which perhaps helps explain why Waits’ soundtrack – at the time, his first new material in five years – has fallen off the radar. It’s mostly instrumental, a main theme evolving as a series of woozy, junky mood pieces designed to reflect the geographical settings of each story, but which are nevertheless all firmly located in Waits’ boneyard carnival. Among the tunes are three vocal turns, “The Other Side Of The World” and two readings of “Back In The Good Old World”. First taken as a rollicking gypsy stomp, Waits’ closing reprise of the song as an aching waltz ranks among his most heartbreaking. EXPECT TO PAY: Up to about £50. Even the cassette is worth a tenner… 5 JONATHAN RICHMAN AND THE MODERN LOVERS It’s Time For… ROUGH TRADE, 1986 When The Modern Lovers Mark II (or III) broke up at the end of the ’70s, Richman laid low for several years, before returning with a trio of albums that showed him fully reinvigorated: Jonathan Sings! (1983), Rockin’ And Romance (1985) and It’s Time For… All three are long out of print; Richman apparently holds them all in low regard. Produced, like its predecessor, with the lightest of touches by Andy Paley, the last is the pick of the bunch. Showcasing Richman’s love of early rock’n’roll and doo-wop, it’s nostalgic without being sentimental, as warm and true as an old valve amplifier. Opener “It’s You” is plausibly one of the ’80s’ most gorgeous recordings; “Corner Store” a paean to vanishing times to rank with his seminal “Old World”; “When I Dance” is the singer at his most magical. EXPECT TO PAY: A high-end £50 4 THE BEATLES The Beatles At The Hollywood Bowl PARLOPHONE, 1977 Astonishing to think that, save some stuff on the Anthologies, there is no Beatles live material available on CD. And not just because this was a band that famously forged themselves on the live circuit – this is The Beatles, after all, the biggest cash cow in music history. Things never seem to go smoothly with the Fabs’ catalogue, though, and the long and winding story of the original release of these recordings is fascinating, involving abortive attempts by Phil Spector, much dust-gathering in Capitol’s vaults, and, finally, a heroic salvage job by George Martin. While Martin’s selection (from two shows in August ’64 and August ’65) is scarcely a hi-fi listening experience, it’s still revelatory. Clearly audible among the soprano screams and general hysteria are 13 raw, R’n’B-weighted tracks – including a searing “Dizzy Miss Lizzy” – that proved what a spookily tight, breathlessly exciting live act they could be. Great between-song patter, as well… EXPECT TO PAY: £10. It did hit No 1! 3 VAN MORRISON St Dominic’s Preview WARNER BROS, 1972; POLYDOR, 1997 (CD) Morrison had posed with then-wife Janet Planet for the cover of 1971’s bucolic Tupelo Honey. By this follow-up, the marriage was deteriorating, and he sounded more magnificently restless than in years. While continuing the mixture of radio-friendly R’n’B (the belting “Jackie Wilson Said”) and jazzy Celtic folk-rock (“Gypsy”) that had characterised recent albums, St Dominic’s… saw Morrison also reach back toward the beat visionary ground of Astral Weeks on questing epics “Listen To The Lion” and “Almost Independence Day”. Morrison here dubbed his sound “Caledonian Soul” and on the glorious title track, you hear what he means. Warners started to reissue their Morrison titles in 2008, but the project seems to have stalled. In a 2009 Q&A with Time magazine, Morrison, who has had issues with his old label over ownership of his back catalogue, was asked, “When will we see your out-of-print albums in stores?” His ominous response: “There are no plans right now.” EXPECT TO PAY: A reasonable £20 2 CAPTAIN BEEFHEART & THE MAGIC BAND Lick My Decals Off, Baby STRAIGHT, 1970; ENIGMA/RHINO 1989 (CD) Where do you go after Trout Mask Replica? Beefheart’s follow-up was a riot of bamboozling marimbas and jaw-dropping ensemble playing, with the rapid-fire high intellect of chess grandmasters slamming down their pieces. Like many albums released on Frank Zappa’s Straight label, Decals was released on CD in 1989, but was withdrawn for legal reasons. While copyright issues regarding Straight’s catalogue have now been resolved [see Starsailor panel, p49], allowing Rhino to re-release Decals temporarily on vinyl in 2007, other considerations make it unlikely this will emerge on CD in the foreseeable. The permission of Beefheart himself - (Don Van Vliet) is required, and his relationship with Rhino is understood to be poor. He is also ill, and one presumes a CD release of a 40-year-old LP is low on his priority list. No dialogue is currently taking place, we are told. EXPECT TO PAY: CDs change hands for £40 or so 1 NEIL YOUNG Time Fades Away REPRISE, 1973 There’s a long feature on this in Uncut 156 Next: Uncut Readers' Great Lost Albums
Prince Charles makes surprise visit to Glastonbury Festival
Prince Charles made a surprise appearance onsite at the Glastonbury festival this afternoon (June 24). The royal was met by Blur’s Alex James and the band Two Door Cinema Club backstage at the Queen's Head tent on a flying visit to the site. After meeting the band, Prince Charles went onstage before visiting a nearby Water Aid stall, and was then taken to the Pyramid Stage to meet the crew. Details of the Prince’s visit were kept secret as nearly 100,000 festival goers made it to the site ahead of the official start of the music, which kicks off tomorrow morning at 11am (BST). 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.
Prince Charles made a surprise appearance onsite at the Glastonbury festival this afternoon (June 24).
The royal was met by Blur’s Alex James and the band Two Door Cinema Club backstage at the Queen’s Head tent on a flying visit to the site.
After meeting the band, Prince Charles went onstage before visiting a nearby Water Aid stall, and was then taken to the Pyramid Stage to meet the crew.
Details of the Prince’s visit were kept secret as nearly 100,000 festival goers made it to the site ahead of the official start of the music, which kicks off tomorrow morning at 11am (BST).
Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.
Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.
Arcade Fire’s new album ‘The Suburbs’ to be released with eight different covers?
Arcade Fire's forthcoming new album 'The Suburbs' could be set to be released with eight different covers. According to reports on MBVMusic.com, the Canadian group's third studio effort will be released with multiple cover designs. They go on to say that the ADA (Alternative Distribution Alliance), the people who distribute albums to retailers, have listed such information about the band's upcoming August 2 release in their sales catalogue. Despite such reports, neither the group's official website or record label have confirmed such allegations. Earlier this month (June 7), [url=http://www.nme.com/news/arcade-fire/51403]Arcade Fire previewed 'The Suburbs' live[/url] with a comeback gig in Granada Theatre, in Sherbrooke, Quebec - reports Uncut's sister publication NME. Meanwhile, [url=http://www.nme.com/news/arcade-fire/51573]Arcade Fire will perform a warm-up gig in London before their appearance at Reading and Leeds festivals in August[/url]. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.
Arcade Fire‘s forthcoming new album ‘The Suburbs’ could be set to be released with eight different covers.
According to reports on MBVMusic.com, the Canadian group’s third studio effort will be released with multiple cover designs.
They go on to say that the ADA (Alternative Distribution Alliance), the people who distribute albums to retailers, have listed such information about the band’s upcoming August 2 release in their sales catalogue.
Despite such reports, neither the group’s official website or record label have confirmed such allegations.
Earlier this month (June 7), [url=http://www.nme.com/news/arcade-fire/51403]Arcade Fire previewed ‘The Suburbs’ live[/url] with a comeback gig in Granada Theatre, in Sherbrooke, Quebec – reports Uncut’s sister publication NME.
Meanwhile, [url=http://www.nme.com/news/arcade-fire/51573]Arcade Fire will perform a warm-up gig in London before their appearance at Reading and Leeds festivals in August[/url].
Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.
Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.
Michael Jackson sells over 4m records in year since death
Michael Jackson has sold more albums in the year since his death, than any other artist in the UK. The singer died suddenly a year ago (June 25), but has since gone on to sell over four million albums and singles to UK fans. Jackson has sold 2.77m albums and 1.54m single tracks in the UK according to The Official Charts Company. Fans are set to mark the singer’s death across the globe today, while [url=http://www.nme.com/news/michael-jackson/51645]Jackson’s sister LaToya has used the year anniversary to claim Jackson was murdered for money[/url] - reports Uncut's sister publication NME. The top selling Michael Jackson tracks in the UK of the past 12 months are: 1. 'Man In The Mirror' 2. 'Billie Jean’ 3. 'Thriller' 4. 'Smooth Criminal' 5. 'Beat It' 6. 'Dirty Diana' 7. 'Black Or White' 8. 'They Don’t Care About Us' 9. 'You Are Not Alone' 10. 'The Way You Make Me Feel' The top selling Michael Jackson album in Britain was 'The Essential' collection. Jackson's physician [url=http://www.nme.com/news/michael-jackson/50519]Dr Conrad Murray is currently awaiting trial after pleading not guilty to a charge of involuntary manslaughter over his death[/url]. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.
Michael Jackson has sold more albums in the year since his death, than any other artist in the UK.
The singer died suddenly a year ago (June 25), but has since gone on to sell over four million albums and singles to UK fans.
Jackson has sold 2.77m albums and 1.54m single tracks in the UK according to The Official Charts Company.
Fans are set to mark the singer’s death across the globe today, while [url=http://www.nme.com/news/michael-jackson/51645]Jackson’s sister LaToya has used the year anniversary to claim Jackson was murdered for money[/url] – reports Uncut’s sister publication NME.
The top selling Michael Jackson tracks in the UK of the past 12 months are:
1. ‘Man In The Mirror’
2. ‘Billie Jean’
3. ‘Thriller’
4. ‘Smooth Criminal’
5. ‘Beat It’
6. ‘Dirty Diana’
7. ‘Black Or White’
8. ‘They Don’t Care About Us’
9. ‘You Are Not Alone’
10. ‘The Way You Make Me Feel’
The top selling Michael Jackson album in Britain was ‘The Essential’ collection.
Jackson‘s physician [url=http://www.nme.com/news/michael-jackson/50519]Dr Conrad Murray is currently awaiting trial after pleading not guilty to a charge of involuntary manslaughter over his death[/url].
Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.
Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.
Arp: “The Soft Wave”
Some correspondence over the past week or so regarding The Alps, whose new album I must admit I’m yet to hear: the last one was pretty cool, something like a kind of psychedelicised Air, if I remember right. During the exchange, though, I was heavily recommending one of the Alps’ solo project, Arp. Alexis Georgopoulos made an album in 2007 called “In Light”, a terrific early runner in what’s become a quietly expansive kosmische revival. Serendipitously, a new Arp album turned up from Smalltown Supersound a couple of days ago, and it’s fantastic, too. While a lot of the more acclaimed artists in this new kosmische/ambient thing seem to have emerged from a noise background and privilege a fair amount of ‘80s sci-fi chicanery – I’m thinking specifically Oneohtrix Point Never and Emeralds – Arp are part of a more pastoral wing, whose roots lie deep in the ‘70s German countryside. Somewhere near Forst, perhaps, since, crudely, “The Soft Wave” runs the whole gamut of influences from Cluster to Harmonia, with a radical departure into the realm of Eno to change things up a little. It’s not the most original album I’ve heard over the past few months – “From A Balcony Overlooking The Sea” moves beyond being influenced by “Another Green World”-era Eno, towards a transparent, albeit exquisite, homage. But it is quite lovely, a meticulous re-realisation of the percolating landscape music that Cluster perfected around “Sowiesoso”, and onwards through Harmonia (“High Life”, in particular, has a saturated line that recalls Michael Rother’s melodic sensibilities, if not explicitly his guitar playing). The odd drift of piano (on “Catch Wave”, say) also recalls some of Roedelius’ later solo work, not least “Lustwandel”, which fortuitously turned up on reissue the other day. At times, the gentle persistence of this music echoes that of The Alps (“Alfa (Dusted)” in particular). But from the opening and explanatory “Pastoral Symphony”, this is a real keeper – wouldn’t mind hearing the “Pastoral Symphony” remix by Etienne Jaumet, either.
Some correspondence over the past week or so regarding The Alps, whose new album I must admit I’m yet to hear: the last one was pretty cool, something like a kind of psychedelicised Air, if I remember right.
Damon Albarn says Gorillaz will be joined by Lou Reed at Glastonbury
Gorillaz will be joined live by Lou Reed at Glastonbury, Damon Albarn has revealed. The band headline the event’s Pyramid Stage tomorrow night (June 25), and along with some of the [url=http://www.nme.com/news/gorillaz/50898]guests who joined them at the London Roundhouse in April including Mos Def[/url], the former Velvet Underground man is set to join them for the first time. "Lou Reed’s arriving and, fingers crossed, coming straight to rehearsal. And then we watch the game,” Albarn told [url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment_and_arts/10387611.stm]Radio 4’s Front Row[/url] yesterday (June 23). “This morning I woke up and the first thing I felt a wave of anxiety about – is an audience that size going to respond to our songs? I don't know.” Reed has not performed with the band before, but lends his vocals to ’Plastic Beach’ track ’Some Kind Of Nature’. The Fall’s Mark E Smith is also expected to perform live with the band for the first time on ’Glitter Freeze’, while Snoop Dogg is playing his own set ahead of Gorillaz at Glastonbury and should be on hand to give ’Welcome To The World Of The Plastic Beach’ its live debut. "We've got about 50 or 60 people at one point onstage," said Albarn of the set he was invited to put together after U2 were forced to drop out due to Bono sustaining a back injury in rehearsals. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.
Gorillaz will be joined live by Lou Reed at Glastonbury, Damon Albarn has revealed.
The band headline the event’s Pyramid Stage tomorrow night (June 25), and along with some of the [url=http://www.nme.com/news/gorillaz/50898]guests who joined them at the London Roundhouse in April including Mos Def[/url], the former Velvet Underground man is set to join them for the first time.
“Lou Reed’s arriving and, fingers crossed, coming straight to rehearsal. And then we watch the game,” Albarn told [url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment_and_arts/10387611.stm]Radio 4’s Front Row[/url] yesterday (June 23). “This morning I woke up and the first thing I felt a wave of anxiety about – is an audience that size going to respond to our songs? I don’t know.”
Reed has not performed with the band before, but lends his vocals to ’Plastic Beach’ track ’Some Kind Of Nature’.
The Fall’s Mark E Smith is also expected to perform live with the band for the first time on ’Glitter Freeze’, while Snoop Dogg is playing his own set ahead of Gorillaz at Glastonbury and should be on hand to give ’Welcome To The World Of The Plastic Beach’ its live debut.
“We’ve got about 50 or 60 people at one point onstage,” said Albarn of the set he was invited to put together after U2 were forced to drop out due to Bono sustaining a back injury in rehearsals.
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.
Björk and Dirty Projectors announce collaboration EP tracklisting and release details
Bjork and Dirty Projectors have announced details of their forthcoming EP. Entitled 'Mount Wittenberg Orca', the joint studio effort features tracks originally written for a New York benefit concert they did together in 2009. Recorded at the Rare Book Room in Brooklyn with Nicolas Vernhes, all proceeds from the release will go to help marine conservation. "We've decided to give away all the money that 'Mount Wittenberg Orca' generates to the project of creating international marine protected areas," Dirty Projectors' David Longstreth said in statement to Stereogum.com. "Only one per cent of the oceans are protected in any way and this is a huge problem." He added: "We're working with the National Geographic Society to create areas of sustainability, so the oceans don't end up like a giant poisonous corpse hugging the continents." Available exclusively via Topspin.net, pre-orders for 'Mount Wittenberg Orca' are being taken with donations starting at $7. The tracklisting for 'Mount Wittenberg Orca' is as follows: 'Ocean' 'On And Ever Onward' 'When The World Comes To An End' 'Beautiful Mother' 'Sharing Orb' 'No Embrace' 'All We Are' 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.
Bjork and Dirty Projectors have announced details of their forthcoming EP.
Entitled ‘Mount Wittenberg Orca’, the joint studio effort features tracks originally written for a New York benefit concert they did together in 2009.
Recorded at the Rare Book Room in Brooklyn with Nicolas Vernhes, all proceeds from the release will go to help marine conservation.
“We’ve decided to give away all the money that ‘Mount Wittenberg Orca’ generates to the project of creating international marine protected areas,” Dirty Projectors‘ David Longstreth said in statement to Stereogum.com. “Only one per cent of the oceans are protected in any way and this is a huge problem.”
He added: “We’re working with the National Geographic Society to create areas of sustainability, so the oceans don’t end up like a giant poisonous corpse hugging the continents.”
Available exclusively via Topspin.net, pre-orders for ‘Mount Wittenberg Orca’ are being taken with donations starting at $7.
The tracklisting for ‘Mount Wittenberg Orca’ is as follows:
‘Ocean’
‘On And Ever Onward’
‘When The World Comes To An End’
‘Beautiful Mother’
‘Sharing Orb’
‘No Embrace’
‘All We Are’
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.
REM, Tupac Shakur, Patti Smith inducted into Library Of Congress’ National Recording Registry
REM, Tupac Shakur and Patti Smith are among the acts who have been inducted into the Library Of Congress' National Recording Registry. As Reuters reports, the research library preserves "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant" works which are at least 10 years old. Featuring both songs and albums, this year's selection features music from as early as 1913 up until 1995. Of the list of 25, REM's 1981 single 'Radio Free Europe', Patti Smith's 1975 album 'Horses' and Tupac Shakur's 1995 song 'Dear Mama' are arguably the most well known entrants to the registry. Others acts inducted include Willie Nelson's 1975 album 'Red Headed Stranger', Little Richard's 1955 single 'Tutti Frutti' and Howlin' Wolf's 1956 track 'Smokestack Lightning'. In conserving the recordings, the Library Of Congress will preserve and maintain the artist's music and make them available to the American public. 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.
REM, Tupac Shakur and Patti Smith are among the acts who have been inducted into the Library Of Congress‘ National Recording Registry.
As Reuters reports, the research library preserves “culturally, historically or aesthetically significant” works which are at least 10 years old.
Featuring both songs and albums, this year’s selection features music from as early as 1913 up until 1995.
Of the list of 25, REM‘s 1981 single ‘Radio Free Europe’, Patti Smith‘s 1975 album ‘Horses’ and Tupac Shakur‘s 1995 song ‘Dear Mama’ are arguably the most well known entrants to the registry.
Others acts inducted include Willie Nelson‘s 1975 album ‘Red Headed Stranger’, Little Richard‘s 1955 single ‘Tutti Frutti’ and Howlin’ Wolf‘s 1956 track ‘Smokestack Lightning’.
In conserving the recordings, the Library Of Congress will preserve and maintain the artist’s music and make them available to the American public.
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 25th Uncut Playlist Of 2010
Possibly there may be other matters preoccupying English readers today (and some American ones, come to that), and I can’t pretend that all the records here – the new MIA album, for instance – might be suitable for taking the potential pain away. A little Ralph Vaughn-Williams, maybe, which worked well this morning on the way to work, inspired by digging into Rob Young’s “Electric Eden” – every bit as stimulating as I hoped it’d be. Also this week, kind of fascinated by Janelle Monae in a way I haven’t been by R&B for a while (check the psychedelic slow jam “Mushrooms And Roses” for a terrific, if not entirely representative, introduction), and slightly depressed by at least one of the other records in the list (a pox on mainstream contemporary rock producers!). Finally and sadly, respect to Gary Shider, whose death a couple of days ago prompted the playing of the first two records here. 1 Funkadelic – Maggot Brain (Westbound) 2 Funkadelic – Standing On The Verge Of Getting It On (Westbound) 3 Various Artists – Picture Music: Instrumental (Sky) 4 Mogwai – Special Moves (Rock Action) 5 MIA – ///Y/ (XL) 6 Darker My Love – Alive As You Are (Dangerbird) 7 Janelle Monae – The Archandroid (Atlantic) 8 Richard Thompson – Dream Attic (Demos) (Proper) 9 Olof Arnaldis – Innundir Skinni (One Little Indian) 10 Autechre – Move Of Ten (Warp) 11 Imbogodom – The Metallic Year (Thrill Jockey) 12 James Chance – Twist Your Soul: The Definitive Collection (History) 13 Ballake Sissoko/Vincent Segal – Chamber Music (No Format) 14 Various Artists – We Are All One In The Sun: A Tribute To Robbie Basho (Important) 15 Black Mountain – Wilderness Heart (Jagjaguwar)
Possibly there may be other matters preoccupying English readers today (and some American ones, come to that), and I can’t pretend that all the records here – the new MIA album, for instance – might be suitable for taking the potential pain away.
Cast to reform, confirms John Power
Cast frontman John Power has announced plans to reform the band. Power, who was also bassist in The La's, told Uncut's sister publication [url=http://www.nme.com/news/cast/51594]NME[/url] that recently contacted guitarist Liam 'Skin' Tyson, bassist Peter Wilkinson and drummer Keith O'Neill for the first time since they split in August 2001. He explained: "For me to have rang the lads and for the lads to have come and sat in the same room as me is unbelievable because a few years ago I would have laughed. But now something musical is rising inside of me." The singer added that he has started working on a body of new material which he feels would be right for the Liverpool four-piece. "Something’s brewing in my mind and it’s ready to pop," Power explained. "I've been writing a body of work that has made me feel at peace with the stuff I've done in the past and I don't want to think too far ahead, but I thought it would probably work for Cast. So I thought, 'Why don’t we get together?'" The star also hinted that his former band The La's may also resurface at some point in the future. "I was with [singer] Lee [Mavers] the other night," he said. "I'll always be in The La's, regardless of whether that's a physical thing, because these things have touched me and they are there for life just like the Cast songs are. I'm neither one nor the other. I'm all these things and the idea is for all these things to come to fruition." 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.
Cast frontman John Power has announced plans to reform the band.
Power, who was also bassist in The La’s, told Uncut‘s sister publication [url=http://www.nme.com/news/cast/51594]NME[/url] that recently contacted guitarist Liam ‘Skin’ Tyson, bassist Peter Wilkinson and drummer Keith O’Neill for the first time since they split in August 2001.
He explained: “For me to have rang the lads and for the lads to have come and sat in the same room as me is unbelievable because a few years ago I would have laughed. But now something musical is rising inside of me.”
The singer added that he has started working on a body of new material which he feels would be right for the Liverpool four-piece.
“Something’s brewing in my mind and it’s ready to pop,” Power explained. “I’ve been writing a body of work that has made me feel at peace with the stuff I’ve done in the past and I don’t want to think too far ahead, but I thought it would probably work for Cast. So I thought, ‘Why don’t we get together?'”
The star also hinted that his former band The La’s may also resurface at some point in the future.
“I was with [singer] Lee [Mavers] the other night,” he said. “I’ll always be in The La’s, regardless of whether that’s a physical thing, because these things have touched me and they are there for life just like the Cast songs are. I’m neither one nor the other. I’m all these things and the idea is for all these things to come to fruition.”
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.
Frank Sidebottom passes away
Musical comedy legend Frank Sidebottom has died, it has been announced. Sidebottom, whose real name was Chris Sievey, was best known for the giant papier mache head cast that he wore while performing. Sievey was diagnosed with cancer last month and was recovering from an operation to remove a tumour. He collapsed at home yesterday (June 21) and did not recover, according to the Manchester Evening News. After forming punk band The Freshies, Sievey came up with the character of Sidebottom. His surreal humour influenced by the northern cabaret circuit, and he would often perform songs on an organ. Although family-friendly, Sievey's jokes and his songs earned him cult status. In the '80s, Sidebottom became closely associated with the Madchester scene, and regularly appeared on television with the late Tony Wilson. Caroline Aherne's comedy character Mrs Merton started out as a guest character on a Sidebottom radio show. Although he retreated into obscurity in the late '90s, he remained a cult icon, and was still performing last week, when he returned to action after his operation to launch a charity World Cup song called 'Three Shirts On My Line', in aid of cancer charities. 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.
Musical comedy legend Frank Sidebottom has died, it has been announced.
Sidebottom, whose real name was Chris Sievey, was best known for the giant papier mache head cast that he wore while performing.
Sievey was diagnosed with cancer last month and was recovering from an operation to remove a tumour. He collapsed at home yesterday (June 21) and did not recover, according to the Manchester Evening News.
After forming punk band The Freshies, Sievey came up with the character of Sidebottom. His surreal humour influenced by the northern cabaret circuit, and he would often perform songs on an organ. Although family-friendly, Sievey‘s jokes and his songs earned him cult status.
In the ’80s, Sidebottom became closely associated with the Madchester scene, and regularly appeared on television with the late Tony Wilson. Caroline Aherne‘s comedy character Mrs Merton started out as a guest character on a Sidebottom radio show.
Although he retreated into obscurity in the late ’90s, he remained a cult icon, and was still performing last week, when he returned to action after his operation to launch a charity World Cup song called ‘Three Shirts On My Line’, in aid of cancer charities.
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 Black Crowes announce hiatus
The Black Crowes are set to go on indefinite hiatus after celebrating their 20th anniversary with a special acoustic release. The band are celebrating two decades since the release of their debut 'Shake Your Money Maker', and will releasing a new double-disc acoustic album reworking of some of their best-loved songs. Called 'Croweology', the record will be released on August 3 and will be sold for the price of a single disc as a thank you to fans. The band will then head out on a tour of the US dubbed the 'Say Goodnight To The Bad Guys' tour this summer, after which they are planning a lengthy period away. Frontman Chris Robinson said: "With a smile so wide you can count my teeth and with a heart so full of love that it is spilling over the rim, I offer a humble and simple thank you. "Thank you for your time, your imaginations, your heartaches and joy. Thank you for 20 years of cosmic rock'n'roll. 20 years of keeping it weird. 20 years of chasing horizons and before the band that dares to dream out loud puts it down for a while, we are proud to give you our 'Croweology'. This year the music is only for you as we celebrate what has been, what is now and whatever will be." 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 Black Crowes are set to go on indefinite hiatus after celebrating their 20th anniversary with a special acoustic release.
The band are celebrating two decades since the release of their debut ‘Shake Your Money Maker’, and will releasing a new double-disc acoustic album reworking of some of their best-loved songs.
Called ‘Croweology’, the record will be released on August 3 and will be sold for the price of a single disc as a thank you to fans.
The band will then head out on a tour of the US dubbed the ‘Say Goodnight To The Bad Guys’ tour this summer, after which they are planning a lengthy period away.
Frontman Chris Robinson said: “With a smile so wide you can count my teeth and with a heart so full of love that it is spilling over the rim, I offer a humble and simple thank you.
“Thank you for your time, your imaginations, your heartaches and joy. Thank you for 20 years of cosmic rock’n’roll. 20 years of keeping it weird. 20 years of chasing horizons and before the band that dares to dream out loud puts it down for a while, we are proud to give you our ‘Croweology’. This year the music is only for you as we celebrate what has been, what is now and whatever will be.”
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.
Ask Tim Robbins!
Tim Robbins – Oscar-winning actor, political activist and now a recording artist – will be in the hot seat soon to face a grilling from UNCUT readers in our An Audience With… feature.
And, as ever, we’re after your questions.
So, is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask him?
Just how come he persuaded Bruce Springsteen to write the title song for Dead Man Walking?
Did he pick up any musical tips from Tom Waits when they made Short Cuts?
His father was a member of Greenwich Village folk group, The Highwaymen. What does he remember about growing up in the Village in the early Sixties..?
Send your questions to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com by Thursday, June 24.
We’ll put the best ones to Tim!
Robert Plant: “Band Of Joy”
Among the many highlights of Robert Plant & Alison Krauss’ “Raising Sand”, I kept coming back to their take on Gene Clark’s “Polly Come Home”. Had they, and I guess their producer T-Bone Burnett, captured the uncanny gravity of Low on purpose, or by some equally uncanny accident? The arrival of Plant’s follow-up, “Band Of Joy”, suggests the intimations of slowcore were all part of a cunning plan. This time, he goes directly to the source, taking a couple of songs from Low’s terrific “The Great Destroyer” – “Monkey” and “Silver Rider” – and plays them straight. Patty Griffin sits discreetly in the role occupied by Mimi Parker. The guitars glower, the spaces between the notes are vast, at once meditative and threatening. The assimilations are brilliant, and the impending royalties for this most deserving of bands should be brilliant, too. This, though, is only the tip of “Band Of Joy”. The personnel may have been adjusted – chiefly, Griffin subs for Alison Krauss with less prominent, often more menacing harmonies; Buddy Miller takes over the producer’s chair from Burnett – but it still feels very much like a welcome sequel to “Raising Sand”. Again, there’s a sense of Plant making his open-hearted way through American musical history: drawing deeply on blues, folk and country traditions; making good judgments; singing with heroic restraint. The R&B/honky-tonk aspect is more played down on “Band Of Joy”, though, notwithstanding a kicking “You Can’t Buy Me Love” and “Falling In Love Again”, which edges close to doo-wop. If anything, there’s a darker tinge, an engagement with mortality, and a few steps towards more ancient and weird forms of Americana. You can hear Plant artfully joining the dots between British and American folk in more than one song, not least on the opening “Angel Dance”, where he manages to make an old Los Lobos tune sound fit for inclusion on “Led Zeppelin III” (Talking of Los Lobos, I must admit I haven’t paid them much attention for the best part of 25 years, but the new one, “Tin Can Trust”, is really good). I’ll try and write more about “Band Of Joy” nearer the release date. Fine record, anyhow: maybe the next one will find Plant addressing his other great musical love, and making a deep psych jam (a next step on from “Dreamland”, I guess)?
Among the many highlights of Robert Plant & Alison Krauss’ “Raising Sand”, I kept coming back to their take on Gene Clark’s “Polly Come Home”. Had they, and I guess their producer T-Bone Burnett, captured the uncanny gravity of Low on purpose, or by some equally uncanny accident?
‘Sgt Pepper’ cover artist Peter Blake designs special Glastonbury T-shirt
Artist Peter Blake has created a range of new works inspired by the Glastonbury festival for the National Trust. Blake, who designed the iconic cover art to The Beatles' 1967 album 'Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band', has created his latest works after being inspired by the famous Glastonbury Tor, which is owned by the National Trust. His artwork shows the 15th Century St Michael's Tower at the summit of the Tor, surrounded by butterflies. Michael and Emily Eavis, as well as St Michael himself, are incorporated into the design, and the artwork will feature on limited edition T-shirts which will be given away at the Trust's Glastonbury venue, The Outside Inn. Meanwhile, Blake has also created a butterfly tattoo logo which will be available as temporary body art at the site. He said: "The combination of the Tor, the local butterfly and the festival really fired my imagination." 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.
Artist Peter Blake has created a range of new works inspired by the Glastonbury festival for the National Trust.
Blake, who designed the iconic cover art to The Beatles‘ 1967 album ‘Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band’, has created his latest works after being inspired by the famous Glastonbury Tor, which is owned by the National Trust. His artwork shows the 15th Century St Michael’s Tower at the summit of the Tor, surrounded by butterflies.
Michael and Emily Eavis, as well as St Michael himself, are incorporated into the design, and the artwork will feature on limited edition T-shirts which will be given away at the Trust‘s Glastonbury venue, The Outside Inn.
Meanwhile, Blake has also created a butterfly tattoo logo which will be available as temporary body art at the site. He said: “The combination of the Tor, the local butterfly and the festival really fired my imagination.”
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.
Radiohead on the verge of finishing new album
Radiohead are looking to release their new album by the end of the year, according to guitarist Ed O’Brien.
The Oxford band have been working on the follow-up to 2007’s ‘In Rainbows’ for almost a year, and O’Brien has now revealed they are almost done.
Speaking to BBC 6Music‘s Adam Buxton, he said: “We’re in the heart of the record. It’s genuinely exciting. It’s very different from what we did last time. It’s really nice to be doing this. It’s so good to be making music with the band that you feel is still as good as it’s ever been.”
The guitarist added that he wants to see the record out sooner rather than later, though could not confirm any schedule for release.
He said: “Ideally, it would be great if it came out sometime this year. It has got to. I hope so. We’re at the finishing line. When you’re making a record, a film, writing a book for ages and ages you think the finishing line is miles away. Now it feels it’s in touching distance. But of course, it being a creative process, at the last bit also, you have bursts of energy, you achieve a lot of things in a small period of time and then you’re nearly there… it might slow down. But yeah, hopefully it will be a matter of weeks.”
You can read the full interview at Radiohead‘s news service Ateaseweb.
Radiohead are believed to be working with long-standing producer Nigel Godrich.
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.
Stevie Wonder to release retrospective best of in time for UK tour
Stevie Wonder is to re-release his career spanning retrospective collection ‘The Definitive Collection’ this week, ahead of his visit to the UK.
Wonder will play headline slots at Glastonbury and London‘s Hyde Park this weekend (June 25-27), and to coincide, his best of ‘The Definitive Collection’ is being re-issued by Motown.
The full tracklisting is as follows:
Disc 1
‘Superstition’
‘Sir Duke’
‘I Wish’
‘Masterblaster (Jammin’)’
‘Isn’t She Lovely’
‘I Just Called To Say I Love You’
‘Ebony & Ivory’
‘As’
‘Never Had A Dream Come True’
‘I Was Made To Love Her’
‘Heaven Help Us All’
‘Overjoyed’
‘Lately’
‘For Your Love’
‘If You Really Love Me’
‘Higher Ground’
‘Do I Do’
‘Living For The City’
‘Part Time Lover’
Disc 2
‘Signed, Sealed, Delivered I’m Yours’ (feat. Blue & Angie Stone)
‘For Once In My Life’
‘Uptight (Everything’s Alright)’
‘We Can Work It Out’
‘Yester-Me, Yester-You, Yesterday’
‘I’m Wondering’
‘My Cherie Amour’
‘You Are The Sunshine Of My Life’
‘I Don’t Know Why (I Love You)’
‘A Place In The Sun’
‘Blowin’ In The Wind’
‘Send One Your Love’
‘Pastime Paradise’
‘I Ain’t Gonna Stand For It’
‘Fingertips (Part 1 & 2)’
‘Boogie On Reggae Woman’
‘You Haven’t Done Nothin”
‘He’s Misstra Know It All’
‘Happy Birthday’
‘Signed, Sealed, Delivered I’m Yours’
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 Best Of 2010 Thus Far: Your Favourites
I’ve just had a look at all your suggestions on the Best Of 2010 blog from last week, and managed to crunch them all into a chart of sorts. Given there’s been such a wide range of albums mentioned, plenty of them only got one or two votes. But these are the lucky 13 that harvested three votes or more. Interesting – healthy, probably – that seven of them didn’t feature in my original 30. I do have some time, as mentioned before, for Caribou, and while Flying Lotus’ music sometimes makes me feel as if ADD can be infectious, I quite like it in the right mood. The others: not so much. Many thanks, again, for engaging with this. 1 = LCD Soundsystem – This Is Happening 1 = Joanna Newsom – Have One On Me 3 Phosphorescent - Here's To Taking It Easy 4 = Caribou - Swim 6 = The Besnard Lakes - The Besnard Lakes Are The Roaring Night 6 = The Black Keys - Brothers 6 = Flying Lotus - Cosmogramma 4 = Gorillaz - Plastic Beach 6 = Steve Mason – Boys Outside 6 = Spoon - Transference 6 = Sun Araw – On Patrol 6 = Ali Farka Toure & Toumani Diabate – Ali & Toumani 6 = Vampire Weekend - Contra
I’ve just had a look at all your suggestions on the Best Of 2010 blog from last week, and managed to crunch them all into a chart of sorts.
WHATEVER WORKS
DIRECTED BY Woody Allen
STARRING Larry David, Evan Rachel Wood
The opening moments are the funniest. Having outlined his gloomy philosophy about humanity, Boris Yellnikov (Larry David) talks directly to camera about his life as a suicidal divorcee who ekes out a living as a very rude children’s chess teacher.
As he does so, passers by look on, bemused. In a typically improbable plot in which a nubile woman falls for the charms of an ageing, neurotic male (at 73, even Woody Allen realises he can no longer cast himself in this role), lucky Larry’s misanthropic baiting soon becomes tiresome.
If this were Curb Your Enthusiasm, he would be punished, elaborately and hilariously. Here, he is indulged. A too neat, too sweet ending is no antidote to the overall sourness of the film. And while the pairing of Allen and David is tantalising enough, they cancel each other out. Whatever Works is derived from a project Allen sketched out in the ’70s, shelved due to quality concerns. First thought, best thought.
David Stubbs
OASIS – TIME FLIES… 1994-2009
After the last decade of dope opera, any sane person would be forgiven for breathing a sigh of relief at the news that Oasis have packed it in. Time Flies..., which gathers up all the band’s UK singles, serves to remind us why, before the nonsense set in, we loved them so damn much. And how, after that first eruption of stardust-spattered majesty, they’ve drifted off into loud, defiant semi-irrelevance. Oasis emerged from a Britain made gloomy grey by years of Thatcher and Major, and into a musical world dominated by the twin miseries of jittery trip hop and late-period grunge; their first single, “Supersonic”, was released five days after Kurt Cobain killed himself. Driving a Day-Glo coach and horses through this swamp of paranoia and shoulder-shrugging introspection, the Mancs offered positivity, hedonism and skies as blue as a Man City shirt, all powered by heritage Lennon/McCartney melodies and rolling glam rock riffs. In 23 breakneck months between April 1994 and February 1996 Oasis released two unarguably great albums and 11 singles of luminous brilliance. These latter, from “Supersonic” through to “Don’t Look Back In Anger”, were the equal of any run that The Beatles, the Stones, The Who or The Kinks – the bands against whom Oasis so brashly measured themselves – ever put together. The young folks adored them; “Live Forever” was that sod-everyone-else anthem that every generation needs to gird its loins for the road ahead. Old rockers lapped them up, the band’s respectful updating of The Canon affording them another chance to shake a joyous tail feather. With astonishing rapidity, they soon ruled the pop culture roost; you couldn’t start an era-defining comedy (The Royle Family) or end an epochal drama (Our Friends In The North) without using their music. By 1997 they were as big as they always said they’d be; more amazingly, they’d made music every bit as marvellous as they’d sneeringly promised. The masterplan (get nearly as big as The Beatles by sounding quite a lot like The Beatles) had worked. But, it turned out, the masterplan – or maybe Oasis’ execution of it – had a long-term flaw. The band’s best early songs are about yearning and craving and striving. Once the lads had attained all of which they’d ever dared dream – stardom, adulation, girls, hot and cold running drugs – they never quite, despite all Noel Gallagher’s enduring mastery of tune construction, mustered up the passion and desire that made Definitely Maybe and Morning Glory such magnetic brews. More importantly, their major influence changed. The group’s indebtedness to The Beatles had always been obvious and largely undisguised. Occasionally it reached surreal proportions – they were sued for plagiarism (over “Whatever”) by Neil Innes, who, as the main songwriter for The Rutles, had himself made a tidy living aping the writing style of Macca and John L. After Morning Glory, all that changed. Instead of looking to the Fab Four for inspiration, Oasis were increasingly under the thrall of their own initial output. From the careless mess of the third LP (Be Here Now, tossed off, Noel has admitted, in a ‘fuck it’ cocaine haze), through the remainder of the singles contained here, there’s a diminishing-returns search for heights once effortlessly scaled, for missing keys, for lost chords. As if in recognition of these (inevitable, forgivable) declining standards, the compilers of Time Flies... have been careful to avoid strict chronology. By sandwiching it between “Don’t Look Back In Anger” and “Cigarettes…”, they hope, perhaps, to bring glamour-by-association to the limp “Songbird”. By marbling them through the true classics, they believe, maybe, that we’ll see some of the later, slightly wheezing, efforts in a new, more flattering, glow. And to some extent, this strategy works. What becomes evident is that though some of their newer creations are wan retreads of headier templates, Oasis rarely made bad singles, even if 2007’s “Sunday Morning Call”, is only granted inclusion as a secret track on the second disc. The marathon “Falling Down”, for instance, cut loose from its dreary setting in their final LP, sounds like one last tremendous kick against the dying of the light. If what you’re really after is a Best Of, then the nearest you’ll get is 2006’s Stop The Clocks. That collection, put together by Noel and brutally biased toward the earlier vintage, is a proper monument. Time Flies..., though fun, is no more than a handy place to nab all 27 Oasis’ singles in one unfiltered, undiscerning grab. Danny Kelly
After the last decade of dope opera, any sane person would be forgiven for breathing a sigh of relief at the news that Oasis have packed it in. Time Flies…, which gathers up all the band’s UK singles, serves to remind us why, before the nonsense set in, we loved them so damn much. And how, after that first eruption of stardust-spattered majesty, they’ve drifted off into loud, defiant semi-irrelevance.
Oasis emerged from a Britain made gloomy grey by years of Thatcher and Major, and into a musical world dominated by the twin miseries of jittery trip hop and late-period grunge; their first single, “Supersonic”, was released five days after Kurt Cobain killed himself. Driving a Day-Glo coach and horses through this swamp of paranoia and shoulder-shrugging introspection, the Mancs offered positivity, hedonism and skies as blue as a Man City shirt, all powered by heritage Lennon/McCartney melodies and rolling glam rock riffs.
In 23 breakneck months between April 1994 and February 1996 Oasis released two unarguably great albums and 11 singles of luminous brilliance. These latter, from “Supersonic” through to “Don’t Look Back In Anger”, were the equal of any run that The Beatles, the Stones, The Who or The Kinks – the bands against whom Oasis so brashly measured themselves – ever put together. The young folks adored them; “Live Forever” was that sod-everyone-else anthem that every generation needs to gird its loins for the road ahead. Old rockers lapped them up, the band’s respectful updating of The Canon affording them another chance to shake a joyous tail feather. With astonishing rapidity, they soon ruled the pop culture roost; you couldn’t start an era-defining comedy (The Royle Family) or end an epochal drama (Our Friends In The North) without using their music. By 1997 they were as big as they always said they’d be; more amazingly, they’d made music every bit as marvellous as they’d sneeringly promised.
The masterplan (get nearly as big as The Beatles by sounding quite a lot like The Beatles) had worked. But, it turned out, the masterplan – or maybe Oasis’ execution of it – had a long-term flaw. The band’s best early songs are about yearning and craving and striving. Once the lads had attained all of which they’d ever dared dream – stardom, adulation, girls, hot and cold running drugs – they never quite, despite all Noel Gallagher’s enduring mastery of tune construction, mustered up the passion and desire that made Definitely Maybe and Morning Glory such magnetic brews. More importantly, their major influence changed. The group’s indebtedness to The Beatles had always been obvious and largely undisguised. Occasionally it reached surreal proportions – they were sued for plagiarism (over “Whatever”) by Neil Innes, who, as the main songwriter for The Rutles, had himself made a tidy living aping the writing style of Macca and John L. After Morning Glory, all that changed. Instead of looking to the Fab Four for inspiration, Oasis were increasingly under the thrall of their own initial output. From the careless mess of the third LP (Be Here Now, tossed off, Noel has admitted, in a ‘fuck it’ cocaine haze), through the remainder of the singles contained here, there’s a diminishing-returns search for heights once effortlessly scaled, for missing keys, for lost chords.
As if in recognition of these (inevitable, forgivable) declining standards, the compilers of Time Flies… have been careful to avoid strict chronology. By sandwiching it between “Don’t Look Back In Anger” and “Cigarettes…”, they hope, perhaps, to bring glamour-by-association to the limp “Songbird”. By marbling them through the true classics, they believe, maybe, that we’ll see some of the later, slightly wheezing, efforts in a new, more flattering, glow. And to some extent, this strategy works. What becomes evident is that though some of their newer creations are wan retreads of headier templates, Oasis rarely made bad singles, even if 2007’s “Sunday Morning Call”, is only granted inclusion as a secret track on the second disc. The marathon “Falling Down”, for instance, cut loose from its dreary setting in their final LP, sounds like one last tremendous kick against the dying of the light.
If what you’re really after is a Best Of, then the nearest you’ll get is 2006’s Stop The Clocks. That collection, put together by Noel and brutally biased toward the earlier vintage, is a proper monument. Time Flies…, though fun, is no more than a handy place to nab all 27 Oasis’ singles in one unfiltered, undiscerning grab.
Danny Kelly