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Laura Marling and Beth Orton to play Hay Festival

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Laura Marling and Beth Orton are among the acts confirmed to play live at this year's Hay Festival. Taking place in Hay-On-Wye, Wales from May 27-June 6, other musical acts appearing at the predominantly literature and arts orientated festival include Bonobo, Toumani Diabate, Thea Gilmore and Orque...

Laura Marling and Beth Orton are among the acts confirmed to play live at this year’s Hay Festival.

Taking place in Hay-On-Wye, Wales from May 27-June 6, other musical acts appearing at the predominantly literature and arts orientated festival include Bonobo, Toumani Diabate, Thea Gilmore and Orquesta Buena Vista Social Club.

Veteran rock journalist and former NME writer Nick Kent is also in conversation with Dylan Jones, at the festival, and Queen‘s Brian May will chat to Elena Vidal about photography in Oxfordshire in the 1850s.

The line up of musicians playing at Hay Festival is:

Laura Marling

Beth Orton

Alex Valentine

Dennis Rollins

Christy Moore

Bonobo

Toumani Diabate

Thea Gilmore

Orquesta Buena Vista Social Club

Tickets for Hay Festival are on sale now.

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

Gorillaz announce UK tour

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Gorillaz have announced a five-date UK arena tour in September. The band have named the jaunt the 'Escape To Plastic Beach' tour, and it kicks off on September 10 when they play Birmingham. Musical guests set for the shows are yet to be announced, although at the band's recent London Roundhouse sh...

Gorillaz have announced a five-date UK arena tour in September.

The band have named the jaunt the ‘Escape To Plastic Beach’ tour, and it kicks off on September 10 when they play Birmingham.

Musical guests set for the shows are yet to be announced, although at the band’s recent London Roundhouse shows, Damon Albarn was joined by ex-Clash members Mick Jones and Paul Simonon plus guest contributions from the likes of Mos Def, De La Soul and Shaun Ryder.

Gorillaz play:

Birmingham NIA (September 10)

Newcastle Metro Arena (11)

Manchester Evening News Arena (12)

London O2 Arena (14, 15)

Tickets go on sale on May 21 at 9am (BST).

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

Interpol bassist Carlos Dengler quits

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Interpol bassist Carlos Dengler has quit the group, the band have confirmed. In a mailout to fans, the remaining bandmembers explained that Dengler had contributed to the group's recently completed fourth album, but would no longer continue his role in Interpol. "After the completion of the album,...

Interpol bassist Carlos Dengler has quit the group, the band have confirmed.

In a mailout to fans, the remaining bandmembers explained that Dengler had contributed to the group’s recently completed fourth album, but would no longer continue his role in Interpol.

“After the completion of the album, Carlos informed the rest of us that he would be leaving the band. He has decided to follow another path, and to pursue new goals,” they wrote.

“This separation is amicable, and we whole-heartedly wish him great happiness and success. We will remain, as always, deeply respectful fans of this blazingly talented individual.”

Dengler now looks set to work on soundtracks, the likes of which he has previously showcased at Carlosdengler.com. Interpol went on to say the band will tour with a series of replacements for the bassist.

“We can tell you that we have some very exciting new recruits joining us on the road. So stay tuned – we will promptly be revealing the identities of these illustrious players,” they explained.

The band’s new album was recorded at Electric Lady Studios, New York, and mixed with Alan Moulder at Assault And Battery, London.

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

Elisa Randazzo, “Bruises And Butterflies”; Gayngs, “Relayted”

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I haven’t done one of these round-ups for a while and, with a week of probable live reviews looking likely here, it seemed logical to mop up a couple of things this morning. First up, Elisa Randazzo’s “Bruises And Butterflies”, an extremely pretty piece of folk-rock out of LA on Drag City. I guess the most obvious contemporary comparison to Randazzo and Aaron Robinson’s songs would be Espers, or perhaps Marissa Nadler. But Randazzo and Robinson go even further in assiduously recreating a certain rich, mellow early ‘70s aesthetic, drawing equally from Californian and British traditions. One minute, then, you’re aligning Randazzo’s dreamy work with Linda Perhacs, or something more conventionally Canyons-ish, the next she seems to be channelling Mellow Candle or Trees. Perhaps, in fact, the British line just wins out, thanks to vocal and songwriting contributions from the once-elusive Bridget St John. A quick Wiki reveals intriguing lineage, in that Randazzo’s parents are Victoria Pike and Teddy Randazzo, songwriters whose work included (in Pike’s case) The Third Bardot’s killer garage-psych, “I’m Five Years Ahead Of My Time”. Nice record, regardless: check out “Circles” and “Colors” especially. As, I think, is Gayngs’ “Relayted”, though I’ve been dithering a bit over this one, not least because the opener, “The Gaudy Side Of Town”, has something of George Michael about it. A collective centred around Ryan Olson from Minneapolis, Gayngs seem to be pitching themselves rather archly around an indie-rock transliteration of R&B and 10cc’s more aerated moments: a silvery cover of Godley & Creme’s “Cry” makes the latter most explicit. There’s a suspicion that Gayngs aren’t quite as hip and clever as they think they are, but there’s still plenty to enjoy here: a sustained gaseous, occasionally dubbed-out atmosphere; the unmistakeable Justin Vernon floating in and out of the mix, evidently still finding ways to distract himself from the next Bon Iver; some unlikely affinities with equivalent ‘90s projects, probably featuring Shawn Smith (Pigeonhed, maybe?); and some neat songs, of which the relatively punchy “Faded High”, with its “We Are The Robots” synths, feels like the standout at the moment.

I haven’t done one of these round-ups for a while and, with a week of probable live reviews looking likely here, it seemed logical to mop up a couple of things this morning.

Liam Gallagher working on film about latter-day Beatles

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Liam Gallagher is reportedly developing a film about the final years of The Beatles. The former Oasis frontman has not yet spoken to confirm his involvement in the project, but the Daily Mail reports that he has acquired the rights to The Beatles' so-called 'house hippy' Richard DiLello's memoirs. ...

Liam Gallagher is reportedly developing a film about the final years of The Beatles.

The former Oasis frontman has not yet spoken to confirm his involvement in the project, but the Daily Mail reports that he has acquired the rights to The Beatles‘ so-called ‘house hippy’ Richard DiLello‘s memoirs.

Gallagher now looks set to officially announce a film project based on the book at next week’s Cannes Film Festival in France. The singer is reported to be working on the project with Revolution Films, and is currently looking for a screenwriter and director for the project.

DiLello‘s book, called ‘The Longest Cocktail Party: An Insider’s Diary Of The Beatles, Their Million Dollar Apple Empire And Its Wild Rise And Fall’, gives an insiders account of what it was like to work with The Beatles between 1967 and 1970.

Noel Gallagher has previously spoken about his love of the book, hailing it “fucking brilliant”.

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

Blur’s Dave Rowntree loses in bid to become a Labour MP

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Blur's Dave Rowntree has failed in his bid to become an MP. After running as the Labour Party candidate in the Cities Of London And Westminster constituency in yesterday's (May 6) UK general election, Rowntree lost out by 11,076 votes to Conservative Mark Field. "I came second, vote held up well,"...

Blur‘s Dave Rowntree has failed in his bid to become an MP.

After running as the Labour Party candidate in the Cities Of London And Westminster constituency in yesterday’s (May 6) UK general election, Rowntree lost out by 11,076 votes to Conservative Mark Field.

“I came second, vote held up well,” Rowntree wrote on Twitter after the votes had been counted.

The Blur man, who gained 8,188 votes, also paid tribute to fellow Labour candidate Karen Buck who was re-elected in the nearby Westminster North constituency.

Karen Buck kept her seat,” he wrote. “Fantastic result!”

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

Queens Of The Stone Age to re-release ‘Rated R’ album

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Queens Of The Stone Age will reissue their 2000 album 'Rated R' this summer. The new version of the album will include B-sides and live recordings, and frontman Josh Homme told [url=http://www.nme.com/news/queens-of-the-stone-age/50981]NME.COM[/url] that the reissue will probably be released in Ju...

Queens Of The Stone Age will reissue their 2000 album ‘Rated R’ this summer.

The new version of the album will include B-sides and live recordings, and frontman Josh Homme told [url=http://www.nme.com/news/queens-of-the-stone-age/50981]NME.COM[/url] that the reissue will probably be released in July. It will also feature a live recording from one of the band’s past performances at the Reading Festival.

“Am I surprised Queens have survived to the point where we have reissues?” Homme joked. “Yes! And that all the people [other players on ‘Rated R’] are alive too.”

Although Homme is currently working with Them Crooked Vultures, he is set to return to Queens Of The Stone Age to play the Reading And Leeds Festivals this August.

The tracklisting and final release date of the ‘Rated R’ reissue are yet to be announced.

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

Endless Boogie: “Full House Head”

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A comment from Cliff on yesterday’s playlist arrived earlier: “Also, Endless Boogie, more of the same?” It’s difficult to imagine, I suppose, how a band called Endless Boogie could suddenly embark on a radical change of direction. “Full House Head” starts running more or less where its awesome predecessor, “Focus Level”, left off: streamlined rhythms, epic jams, some justifiably strong doses of Canned Heat, Beefheart (with particular attention paid, perhaps inevitably, to “I’m Gonna Booglarise You Baby”), a lot of early ‘70s stuff that I should be more familiar with (someone mentioned Stackwaddy last time), a lot of early ‘70s stuff that almost no-one - save Endless Boogie frontman Paul Major, a reputedly olympian rare record collector –will probably be familiar with. If anything, though, “Full House Head” stretches the bug-eyed motoring ethos of Endless Boogie even further, elevating the lost art of choogling to almost transcendental levels: moments of the 11-minute “Slow Creep”, for example (a song title as reductively blatant as their band name), vaguely suggest “Dog Of Two Head” recalibrated as a meditational tool. The song which precedes “Slow Creep”, conversely, “Tarmac City”, pushes up the pace to a more frenzied level than usual, and betrays what may well be a useful familiarity with the Stones circa “Exile”, albeit a Stones wrangled into a different, Beefheartish shape. It’s here, and on the heroically dumb “Mighty Fine Pie”, that a weird comparison with a band I must admit I’ve never liked, Oasis, recurs from “Focus Level”. It’s pretty implausible, and it doesn’t help explain why I like Endless Boogie so much. But maybe that doggedly relentless streamlining of classic rock, that Oasis came up with on things like “Shakermaker”, has found an unlikely underground analogue here. Don’t let this put you off, of course. It’s a strange, fleeting allusion, and one healthily bulldozed by the two straight-up classics that bookend this heartily enjoyable album. “Full House Head” opens with “Empty Eye”, a wiry nine-and-a-half minute choogle in the dust trails of ZZ Top that culminates in a needling face-off between Major and a guesting Matt Sweeney. “A Life Worth Leaving”, meanwhile, is a monolithic jam that gradually picks up psychedelic momentum over a mighty 22 and a half minutes, occasionally entering the sort of cosmic zones that I always hoped the stoner/desert rock set of the late ‘90s might shoot for more often. Needless to say, it sounds like it would absolutely kill live, which makes next Wednesday’s Endless Boogie show for us at Club Uncut an even more exciting prospect. If you’re still not convinced, check this monster out on Youtube.

A comment from Cliff on yesterday’s playlist arrived earlier: “Also, Endless Boogie, more of the same?”

Roger Waters sorry for painting over Elliot Smith memorial wall

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Roger Waters has made an apology after graffiti artists he commissioned to promote his forthcoming tour accidentally defaced an Elliot Smith memorial mural. The former Pink Floyd man had asked the artists to erect wheat paste posters bearing an anti-war quote from President Eisenhower across Americ...

Roger Waters has made an apology after graffiti artists he commissioned to promote his forthcoming tour accidentally defaced an Elliot Smith memorial mural.

The former Pink Floyd man had asked the artists to erect wheat paste posters bearing an anti-war quote from President Eisenhower across American cities, in promotion of his tour of Pink Floyd‘s ‘The Wall’.

The Eisenhower quote used by Waters reads:

“Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired, represents, in the final analysis, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, who are cold and are not clothed.”

However, one wall that was covered with the slogan was the front of Solutions Audio shop on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles, which has become an unofficial memorial for Smith, who passed away in 2003. It was also the place where the cover image of his album ‘Figure 8’ was shot.

“It was absolutely an accident,” Waters told LA Times in response to the mistake. “I didn’t want to disrespect Elliott Smith‘s fans, and I’ve instructed [the team] to remove the wheat paste immediately. It was a random pasting in the normal course of this, and I want to make it public that we had no intent to offend or cover up something precious.”

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

Antony And The Johnsons announce new album

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Antony And The Johnsons have announced details of a joint album and book called 'Swanlights' to be released later this year. The album will be available independently, while a special edition featuring an 144-page book with writing, paintings, collages and photos by frontman Antony Hegarty will als...

Antony And The Johnsons have announced details of a joint album and book called ‘Swanlights’ to be released later this year.

The album will be available independently, while a special edition featuring an 144-page book with writing, paintings, collages and photos by frontman Antony Hegarty will also be sold.

‘Swanlights’ will be out on October 4. It is the fourth studio effort by the band, and the follow-up to last year’s ‘The Crying Light’.

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

Radiohead’s Thom Yorke reveals ‘election day’ playlist

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Radiohead's Thom Yorke has published a special "election day" playlist featuring the likes of PJ Harvey and Mazzy Star. Scroll down to read his playlist now. Number One in Yorke's list was Fun Boy Three's 'The Lunatics (Have Taken Over The Asylum)'. Thom Yorke's "election day" playlist is: 1. Fu...

Radiohead‘s Thom Yorke has published a special “election day” playlist featuring the likes of PJ Harvey and Mazzy Star.

Scroll down to read his playlist now.

Number One in Yorke‘s list was Fun Boy Three‘s ‘The Lunatics (Have Taken Over The Asylum)’.

Thom Yorke‘s “election day” playlist is:

1. Fun Boy Three – ‘The Lunatics (Have Taken Over The Asylum)’

2. Massive Attack – ‘Splitting The Atom’

3. Matmos – ‘Les Folies Françaises’

4. Lady Chan – ‘Sticky Situation’ (Toddla T & Seiji Mix)

5. Black Lips – ‘Veni Vidi Vici’ (Diplo Remix)

6. Münchner Philharmoniker & Sergiu Celibidache – ‘Mass In B Minor BWV 232, Credo: Chorus: Et Incarnatus Est Bach Mass In B Minor’

7. Mazzy Star – ‘Into Dust’

8. PJ Harvey – ‘My Beautiful Leah’

9. AFX – ‘Analogue Talk (Claknib)’

10. AFX – ‘Backdoor. ‘Spyboter.A’

Meanwhile, Yorke also used Radiohead‘s blog to wade into the US oil slick disaster, attacking BP for their role in the devastating spillage.

“Shouldn’t BP be held criminally responsible for the oil slick?” he said. “Shouldn’t the heads of BP be held to account? This is not just a accident. This is a terrible crime.”

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

The 18th Uncut Playlist Of 2010

One of those weeks where the distractions of putting a magazine together and, right now, England vs Pakistan, have conspired to limit blogging activity. Michael Yardy: I am dumbstruck. Anyway, a good list, I think, with the awesome new Endless Boogie album arriving just in time for their Club Uncut show next week. Looking like a busy work for gigs, actually, with compulsory attendance required at Joanna Newsom, Club Uncut at The Great Escape in Brighton, and of course the Pavement reunion: setlist here from Dublin looking immense. 1 Carlton Melton/Empty Shapes – Split (Mid-To-Late) 2 Endless Boogie – Full House Head (No Quarter) 3 Imelda May – Mayhem (Decca) 4 Department Of Eagles – Archive 2003-2006 (Bella Union) 5 Black Helicopter – Don’t Fuck With The Apocalypse (Ecstatic Peace!) 6 Various Artists – Beyond Berkeley Guitar (Tompkins Square) 7 The Action – Brain (Reaction) 8 Cut Iowa Network – Projector Gunship Held {Ø,{Ø}}(Champion Version) 9 Blitzen Trapper – Destroyer Of The Void (Sub Pop) 10 Various Artists – Next month’s Uncut CD that I’ve been helping compile 11 Honeycomb – Worldwide Electric Inventor’s Kit (Silent Bee) 12 The Coral – Butterfly House (Deltasonic)

One of those weeks where the distractions of putting a magazine together and, right now, England vs Pakistan, have conspired to limit blogging activity. Michael Yardy: I am dumbstruck.

Noel Gallagher ‘not voting’ in general election

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Noel Gallagher has admitted he will probably not vote for any political party in tomorrow's (May 6) general election. Gallagher has previously been linked with the Labour party, even attending a post-election party thrown by a newly elected Tony Blair in 1997. Speaking ahead of tomorrow's election...

Noel Gallagher has admitted he will probably not vote for any political party in tomorrow’s (May 6) general election.

Gallagher has previously been linked with the Labour party, even attending a post-election party thrown by a newly elected Tony Blair in 1997.

Speaking ahead of tomorrow’s election, the former Oasis guitarist/songwriter joked that if he was able to, he’d vote for footballer Carlos Tevez, who plays for his beloved Manchester City.

In an interview with FA TV, Gallagher said: “Me and my missus were going on about [the election], and she’s saying, ‘Who you voting [for]?’ And I said well ‘I’m not voting for anyone. I’m just gonna take me voting card and I’m gonna put in massive letters “Tevez is god!”‘”

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

Pavement kick off UK and Ireland leg of reunion tour

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Pavement have kicked off the UK and Ireland leg of their reunion tour by playing a 30-song set in Dublin (May 4). Taking to the stage at the Tripod venue, the reunited band kicked off with 'Silent Kid', and also played classics including 'Shady Lane', 'The Hexx', 'Trigger Cut' and 'Stereo', accordi...

Pavement have kicked off the UK and Ireland leg of their reunion tour by playing a 30-song set in Dublin (May 4).

Taking to the stage at the Tripod venue, the reunited band kicked off with ‘Silent Kid’, and also played classics including ‘Shady Lane’, ‘The Hexx’, ‘Trigger Cut’ and ‘Stereo’, according to reports on Stephenmalkmus.com.

They are set to play Glasgow tonight (May 5), followed by a four-night run at London‘s O2 Academy Brixton, kicking off on May 10 and a headline appearance at next week’s (May 14-16) ATP Weekender.

Pavement played:

‘Silent Kid’

‘Elevate Me Later’

‘Frontwards’

‘No Life Singed Her’

‘Father To A Sister Of Thought’

‘Rattled By The Rush’

‘Kennel District’

‘In The Mouth A Desert’

‘Shady Lane’

‘Unfair’

‘Spit On A Stranger’

‘Grounded’

‘Two States’

‘Range Life’

‘Perfume-V’

‘Gold Soundz’

‘Fight This Generation’

‘Summer Babe’

‘Cut Your Hair’

‘The Hexx’

‘Give It A Day’

‘D/W Ikea’

‘Trigger Cut’

‘Stop Breathin”

‘Starlings Of The Slipstream’

‘Stereo’

‘Here’

‘Box Elder’

‘We Dance’

‘Conduit For Sale!’

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

Neil Young starts work on new album

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Neil Young has begun work on a new album, and is working with producer Daniel Lanois, whose previous credits include Bob Dylan's 'Time Out Of Mind' and U2's 'Achtung Baby'. News of the sessions was confirmed by Young's longtime cohort and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young bandmate David Crosby, who al...

Neil Young has begun work on a new album, and is working with producer Daniel Lanois, whose previous credits include Bob Dylan‘s ‘Time Out Of Mind’ and U2‘s ‘Achtung Baby’.

News of the sessions was confirmed by Young‘s longtime cohort and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young bandmate David Crosby, who also said he’d offered to help out if needed.

Neil told me last week that he was having a great time talking music with him [Lanois] and just relating to him,” Crosby told Rolling Stone. “I said to him: ‘If you want a harmony, I’m volunteering.’ He said: ‘You know, if I need one you’ll be the first guy I call.’ ”

Crosby also praised Young‘s ability to hold a crowd at his solo shows, and recounted a time that he and Bob Dylan stood “mesmerised” in the crowd.

“He does that [solo acoustic] thing probably better than anybody,” he said. “One of my most favourite concerts of his was him at the Wiltern in Los Angeles. He had a circle of his guitars around him and a chair, and he walked out there and sang. It was mesmerizing. He’s a fantastic musician, but also a great storyteller. I was standing there in the wings with Bob Dylan. He and I are huge Neil fans, and we didn’t move. We stood there the entire concert and just watched. We were as mesmerised as much as the audience was.”

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

The White Stripes to record new material soon?

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The White Stripes could begin work on new material again soon, according to Jack White, who has said he thinks his bandmate Meg White has beaten her issues with anxiety. Her illness forced the duo to curtail their last world tour in September 2007, and the drummer has hardly appeared in public. As...

The White Stripes could begin work on new material again soon, according to Jack White, who has said he thinks his bandmate Meg White has beaten her issues with anxiety.

Her illness forced the duo to curtail their last world tour in September 2007, and the drummer has hardly appeared in public.

Asked if he wanted to reconvene with Meg any time soon, the White Stripes man told The Times: “I would like to,” before adding: “I don’t think [Meg‘s] anxiety exists any more. But I don’t know.”

White is currently gearing up to release his second album with The Dead Weather, ‘Sea Of Cowards’, on May 10.

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

Beastie Boys to release new album this September

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Beastie Boys' are still on course to release their new album 'Hot Sauce Committee Pt. 1' this September - providing bandmember Adam Yauch continues to make a good recovery from cancer. Yauch is feeling "pretty good" at present according to bandmate Mike D, who added that he is continuing to receive...

Beastie Boys‘ are still on course to release their new album ‘Hot Sauce Committee Pt. 1’ this September – providing bandmember Adam Yauch continues to make a good recovery from cancer.

Yauch is feeling “pretty good” at present according to bandmate Mike D, who added that he is continuing to receive treatment for cancer of the salivary gland.

According to D, the album, which was recorded before Yauch was diagnosed in July 2009, is currently being tweaked by the band in time for a release later this year when Yauch is well enough to commit to it fully.

“We’ve been letting it age,” D told Rolling Stone. “The writing is the growing of the grapes, and we’ve already macerated, and at this point, it’s been living in a barrel and being stored in bottles in the cellar, and hopefully by September, we will uncork.”

The rapper also said that the band’s only real priority was for Yauch to get better.

“We make plans and change those plans based on what Adam‘s got to do,” he explained, adding that a sequel album, ‘Hot Sauce Committee Pt. 2’, is also on the cards, though it is “set aside for [release] much later”.

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

Neu!: “Neu! Vinyl Box”

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A café in North London, late 2000. For the first time in an age, Neu!’s three completed albums are to be reissued, and Michael Rother and Klaus Dinger have made a precarious truce to promote them. In the preceding years, there have been endless squabbles preventing this extraordinary music from being restored to the public domain. Dinger, a notably wild-eyed man with the personal grooming of Catweazle and a picture of his girlfriend sellotaped to his shirt, has been releasing Neu! sessions on a Japanese label, Captain Trip. Rother, a calm European technocrat dressed in black, has been pointedly unimpressed. As Neu!’s reputation and influence have increased, it seems the pair’s relationship has exponentially degenerated. “We’ve never been very close,” Dinger counters. “I think the only thing we’ve done is make music together, and in my opinion, it’s the only thing we can do. I mean, we would never go on holiday together.” For most of the interview (which you can read in its entirety: Neu! 2000 interview , they have stiffly disagreed with each other’s interpretations of their shared history. This time, though, Rother’s silence implies total agreement. Neu! are not, of course, rock’s only dysfunctional band. Nevertheless, the tension between the pair – birthed during their brief time in Kraftwerk in 1971, and persisting until Dinger’s death in 2008 – was always strikingly at odds with the harmonious music for which Neu! became renowned. This Neu! Vinyl Box – with a 1972 live session, a 1986 reunion attempt, a t-shirt and a stencil! thrown in – still begins with their first album from 1972, and with “Hallogallo”. Clear-sighted, effortlessly propulsive, it feels like recording started in the middle of a telepathic jam that has already been running smoothly for hours, even days. Neu!’s work is often simplified to this idea of ‘motorik’ – a term which Dinger characteristically disliked, preferring something with less mechanical implications like ‘Lange Gerade’ (Long line) or ‘Endlese Gerade’ (Endless line). Listening to their music in its entirety, however, gathered on Vinyl Box (with free downloads for all purchasers, and not a vulgar old CD in sight), a more complicated picture of Neu! emerges. It might be the pristine motorik pulses that influenced generations of electronic auteurs, post-rockers, dronerockers and most every band who’ve looked for the next hip option after The Velvet Underground. It might be Dinger’s clenched, glammy acceleration of motorik – on Neu! 2’s “Lila Engel” and “Super”, on Neu! ‘75’s “Hero” and “After Eight” – that so invigorated John Lydon and the less cloistered punks. But the corners of Neu!, Neu! 2 and the exceptional Neu! ‘75 are sketchier, unfocused places. After the epiphany of “Hallogallo”, Neu! immediately slides into “Sonderangebot”, the amniotic squelching and scruffy dislocation setting a template for ambient diversions to come. That first album was recorded in four days, the third after an extended hiatus, reinforcing Dinger’s picture of a duo clearly unenthusiastic about each other’s company. Neu! 2 was also completed in four nights, climaxing in a famously expedient rush, with two tracks being re-run at various speeds to pad out Side Two. It’s this oddity which springs to mind when listening to the box’s Neu! ‘86 album, a fraught reunion session previously - and controversially – released by Dinger as Neu! 4. Neu! ‘86’s inclusion signposts a new phase in Rother’s relationship with his own legacy: his new live band (including Sonic Youth’s drummer, Steve Shelley), specifically recruited to play Neu! music, confirms as much. Rother’s version is markedly different from Dinger’s Neu! 4, since he “completely reworked the album from original multitrack and master tapes”, but any fears that Rother’s politeness might take the edge off the sessions can be discounted. Neu! ‘86’s chief pleasure is in how it makes explicit their inchoate bickering, so that “Dänzing”, for example, slings raw guitar chords, bird noises, deranged sing-songs and elements of musique concrète into what is essentially 1980s electropop. Mostly, the album sounds like a messy argument about how Neu! should evolve and transcend their own stereotype. Sometimes, recidivism triumphs; “Crazy” is ostensibly a bubblegum punk retread of “Hero”. At others, the mischief-making can be rather forced; “La Bomba (Stop Apartheid World-Wide)” is basically “La Bamba” being grappled over by Stock, Aitken & Waterman and Throbbing Gristle. It’s easy to see this 1986 session as despoiling the Neu! legacy. But Neu! Vinyl Box is both a tying up of loose ends, and a way of seeing the band’s music as haphazard, multi-faceted and innately impossible to tidy up. It concludes with the 18 minutes of Neu! ’72, a rehearsal tape similar to another clandestine Dinger release, Neu! ’72 Live In Dusseldorf, which reveals how they could be an exhilarating live band – and also how much Conny Plank, as producer, brought to their studio albums. At times, the groove sounds like it will roll on eternally. But then, again and again, the jam collapses in on itself; as fragile and capricious, perhaps, as the band who created it.

A café in North London, late 2000. For the first time in an age, Neu!’s three completed albums are to be reissued, and Michael Rother and Klaus Dinger have made a precarious truce to promote them.

ASK COURTNEY!

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Courtney Love will soon be occupying the UNCUT hot seat to answer your questions in An Audience With… So, what could you possibly want to ask her? Acting versus music. Which is more fun? Who would your ideal dinner party guests be? If you weren’t in a rock band, what would you be doing for a...

Courtney Love will soon be occupying the UNCUT hot seat to answer your questions in An Audience With…

So, what could you possibly want to ask her?

Acting versus music. Which is more fun?

Who would your ideal dinner party guests be?

If you weren’t in a rock band, what would you be doing for a living?

Send your questions, please, to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com by Wednesday, May 5.

MERLE HAGGARD – I AM WHAT I AM

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Merle Haggard has always understood what makes country music really tick. He has, after all, lived it as he’s sung it: fugitive, jailbird, sinner, poor-boy-made-good. It’s the kind of first-hand authenticity most country singers crave, though whether they’d actually survive to sing the tale i...

Merle Haggard has always understood what makes country music really tick.

He has, after all, lived it as he’s sung it: fugitive, jailbird, sinner, poor-boy-made-good. It’s the kind of first-hand authenticity most country singers crave, though whether they’d actually survive to sing the tale is another matter.

And perhaps explains, in part, why Haggard’s able to nail the heart of a song with more precision than almost anybody else. Kris Kristofferson recently lauded him as “the greatest artist in American music history”.

I Am What I Am is the 76th – yes, 76th – album of a storied career. And while it must surely be tempting, at 72, to follow the pared-down-Johnny Cash-Rick Rubin route, Hag clearly prefers to enjoy his sunset years as he’s always done. These songs are full and rich, with longtime foil The Strangers creating honky-tonk, country shuffles and even Tin Pan Alley backdrops that often explode with life. Haggard himself sounds finely weathered, his voice now freighted with the same shrewd wisdom as Kristofferson or Levon Helm.

“Live And Love Always” is typical of the record’s more spirited side, a hi-stepping duet with wife Theresa, bursting with piano, sawing fiddle and ragtime trumpet. As is “The Road To My Heart”, in which Haggard exhorts Doug Colosio to pound out a piano solo, then joshes about Louis Armstrong landing on the moon. But there’s another side to all this too. “Bad Actor” alludes to his own mortality in light of his 2008 cancer scare, while “How Did You Find Me Here” finds him in candid mode, thanking God for salvation. “I hit rock bottom,” he confesses, buffered by a lovely solo from guitar legend Reggie Young.

It’s the title track, though, that seasoned Haggard fans will most relish: it’s a postscript to 1980’s “Way I Am”, in which he reassesses his life 30 years on: “I’m no longer a fugitive/And I’m not on the lam/I’m just a rambler / I am what I am”.

ROB HUGHES